660 



THE SUBDIVISIONS OF THE VEGETABLE KIXGDOM. 



form a crown surmounting the oogonium (fig. 374--). At fertilization the spermato- 

 zoids penetrate between the cells of the crown, so reaching the egg-cell. The whole 

 oogonium is soon detached and remains dormant through the winter. In the spring 

 it germinates, pushing out a tube which becomes transversely segmented. This is 

 the pro-embrj^o. From it, as a lateral bud, the adult sexual plant arises. This 

 process resembles that of the Mosses, in which the leafy 3Ioss-plant arises from 



Fig. 37-1.— Structure and reproduction of Chara/ragilis. 



A portion of the plant. * A piece of tiie axis with appendayes, upon which are inserted the sexual organs. » A single 

 appendage, showing the flask-shaped archegonia and spherical autheridia. * A single autheridiura. * \ plate of an 

 antheridium with manuhrium and whip-like filaments of cells containing spenuatozoids. * .Several cells from one of the 

 whip-like filaments : the cells in the middle contain each a sperniatozoid ; the spermatozoid is escaping from the upper- 

 most cell; the lowest cell is already vacated. ^ A single spermatozoid, s Archegonium inclosing the egg-cell- inat. size; 

 >xlO; 'xl5; <x35; »xlOO; 'xSOO; 'xaQO; sxoO. 



the protonema as a lateral bud. But the comparison with Mosses must not be 

 pushed too far, as in Ckara there is no sporogonium. There are some 67 species of 

 Chara, of which C. fcetida is also very common. Many of them are covered with 

 stiff hairs, and they are for the most part brittle owing to the incrustation of 

 carbonate of lime (c/. vol. i. p. 260). The phenomenon of parthenogenesis in Chara 

 crinita has already been described in detail (pp. 463, 464). 



In Chara atelligera ( = Tolypellopsis tdvoides) the nodes of the stem become 



