406 BRYOPHYTES (MOSS PLANTS) 



and the air soon diics them out. To live on land a plant must be 

 protected against transpiration, and to become large and erect, a 

 plant must have structures for connecting it to the ground and 

 a stem to support it against the wind. It is believed that the 

 land plants came from Algae, and this means that certain Algae 

 must have acquired the land habit and in so doing ceased to be 

 Algae and became Bryophytes. One can imagine that this trans- 

 formation came about by some Algae gradually becoming more 

 and more adapted to living on the shore, where they were often 

 stranded, until finally they became so modified as to be fitted to 

 live permanently on land. 



Liverworts 



The Liverworts are thought to be the group that first acquired 

 the land habit, for, as a group, they are less complex than the 

 Mosses and are also more like the Algae in their moisture re- 

 quirements. While many of them live on land, there are some 

 forms which still live in water, and it is, therefore, in the Liver- 

 worts that the connection between water forms and land forms 

 is most evident. Even most of those Liverworts that live on 

 land are not able to endure dry air and hot sunshine, for, in most 

 part, they must grow in places that are moist or at least shaded. 

 But the Liverworts did much toward establishing the land habit, 

 and it is thought that our strictly land plants originated from 

 such forms as the Liverworts. 



The plant body of most Liverworts is a flat body, known as 

 a ihallus, but in some forms it is differentiated into stem- and 

 leaf-like structures. The thallus form of plant body, although 

 varying much in form according to the species, is usually lobed 

 and often branched. Often the thalli are liver-shaped, and 

 their shape was once thought to signify that these plants 

 possess special virtues in the cure of liver diseases — whence 

 the name Liverworts. 



The thallus forms of Liverworts often form mat-like coverings 

 on moist soil or on moist rocks, such as the sides of a cliff. Those 

 Liverworts having better differentiated plant bodies and re- 

 sembling Moss commonly grow on logs and tree trunks in moist 

 and shady woods. There are about 4000 species of Liverworts 

 and they vary widely in complexity. They are commonly sub- 



