XXXII CHARACTERS OF THE PHYLA 433 



sometimes placed in a distinct group. It must, moreover, 

 be remembered that most botanists include Haematococcus, 

 Pandorina, and Volvox among Algae, and place the Myce- 

 tozoa either among Fungi or in a separate group of chloro- 

 phyll-less plants (p. i8i). 



The Muscinea are the mosses and liverworts, the former 

 of which were fully described in Lesson XXX. 



The Vascular Cryptogams are flowerless plants in which 

 vascular bundles are present. Together with the Phanero- 

 gams they constitute what are known as vascular plants, in 

 contradistinction to the non-vascular Algae, Fungi, and 

 Muscineae, in which no formation of vessels takes place. The 

 group contains three subdivisions. 



The first division of Vascular Cryptogams, the Fiiicina, 

 includes the ferns, an account of which has been given in 

 the previous lesson. It will be necessary, however, to devote 

 some attention to an aquatic form, called Sa/vim'a, which 

 differs in certain important particulars from the more familiar 

 members of the group. 



The Equisetacece include the common horsetails (genus 

 Eqtasetum\ a brief account of which will be given, as they 

 form an interesting link in their reproductive processes 

 between the ordinary ferns and Salvinia. 



The Lycopodinece, or club-mosses, are the highest of the 

 Cryptogams or flowerless plants. A short description of one 

 of them, the genus Se/aginei/a, will illustrate the most 

 striking peculiarities of the group. 



The Phanerogams, or flowering plants, are so called from 

 the fact that their reproductive organs take the form of 

 specially modified shoots, called cones or flowers. They are 

 sometimes called by the more appropriate name of Sperma- 

 phytes, or seed-plants, from the fact that they alone among 

 plants reproduce by means of seeds structures which differ 



F F 



