On the ProthalliutH, of Phylloylossum. 287 



enlarged part of the body of the prothallium. This latter part bears 

 the embryo on one side; it is evidently formed by the increase of 

 assimilatory tissues for the nutrition of the embryo. Below this 

 swollen part the body contracts again to a cylindrical shaft, which 

 passes downwards, to swell out again and terminate in the primary 

 tubercle. It is this shaft which varies most; it may be long 

 and narrow, straight or curved, or it may be shorter and stouter, or, 

 occasionally, perhaps when the primary tubercle has been formed 

 near the surface of the ground, it may be almost obsolete. The 

 shorter, thick-set prothallia may be less than 2 mm. long; others 

 may range up to thrice this, according to the length of the shaft. 

 Rhizoids are produced in considerable numbers from the lower part 

 of the prothallium, more especially from the tubercle. 



The whole of the upper part of the mature prothallium is green, 

 except the archegonial necks, but the minute chloroplasts are most 

 abundant in the part below the crown. The cells of the shaft may 

 contain chloroplasts, but the green colour passes away as we follow 

 it downwards into the soil. ^.Sections of the prothallia show little 

 internal differentiation of the tissues, certainly nothing which is 

 comparable to that described in L. complanatum and L. clavatum. 

 The cells of the tubercle appear of a rounded polygonal form. 

 They show scanty protoplasmic contents, and appear partly exhausted. 

 Those of the shaft are elongated, on the surface they are rectangular, 

 in the centre they tend to become longer and more pointed. Starch 

 is often abundantly present in the cells, especially of the central part. 

 An endophytic fungus may be traced in the cells of the lower half of 

 the prothallium. The hyphse are exceedingly fine ; they have been 

 traced passing in through the rhizoids. Around the tubercle they 

 often form a close felt, which may pass below into a strand, which 

 suggests at first sight that the base of the tubercle passes into a root. 

 The tubercle is commonly brownish on the surface, and the strand is a 

 darker brown and almost opaque. But sections show that it consists 

 of fungus hyphae. 



The prothallia are monoecious, arid the archegonial necks are a 

 conspicuous feature on the crown. On a young prothallium I have 

 found two or three only, but on plants bearing an embryo there 

 may be from ten to twenty. They appear to be formed in basi- 

 petal succession. In a young prothallium they may be found on the 

 summit of the crown, but in older ones they seem to occupy a 

 lateral position around about half the circumference. The neck of 

 the archegonium projects from the surface of the crown as a hemi- 

 sphere of colourless cells, usually in two tiers of four cells each. 

 The venter, with the large oosphere, lies at a little depth below the 

 surface. The antheridia can scarcely be said to show in surface 

 views, as they lie sunk in the crown. Sections show that the an- 



