i i; i:s n-\\ A i i: n A.LQJE OF TLIK INITED STATES. 



cells. I have never been able to identify an entirely sterile filament of this species; 



the measurements and des< nation of the sterile cells were taken from infertile cells 

 in filaments which in other places had produced spores. 



l-'ig. '2, pi. 14, represents a fertile filament, magnified '.'(it) diameters. 



B. Co.NJ UOATIO 8CALARIFOKMI8 (Sl'llUKITKA VKRA). 



a. Cytiodermait! utroque fine ]>rult:ngum et rejilicatum. 

 a. Cytioderm folded in at the end. 



* Fascia tpiralis unica. 



* Spiral filament single. 



Sp. Welicri, KTZ. ? 



S|>. Nitunite viridis, lubrica ; articulis Yegetativis diamctro 3-20 plo longloribns; fructiferis 

 nonnihil inflatis; fascia dcnttitu, jtlcruiuquc unica sed fasciis duabus in quavis cellula; spine 

 anfractibus 3-8; cytiodermate pleruiuque utroque fiucprotenso ct replicato ; zygoHporis ellip- 

 UeU. 



l>i,im. Artie, stcril. T jW' T&TT" -0008" .0012". 



. ,s. Weberi, KCTZI.NO. KAUEN HURST, Flora Europ. Algarum, Sect. III. p. 233. 



llnli. In stagnis, prope Philadelphia. 



Ir,-|> LTITM, slippery; sterile joints 3-20 times longer than brpad; fertile joints not swollen; 

 riili>r"]iliyl liluiiK'iits mostly single, but sometimes two in certain cells, dentate; turns of the 

 spiral 3-8 ; cytioderm protruded or infolded at the ends ; zygoeporcs elliptical. 



.1. This species, which is abundant around Philadelphia in stagnant 

 ditches, 1 have found fruiting in the month of April. The number of spirals fre- 

 quently varies even in the same filament. The infolding of the walls at the end 

 of the cells is very often wanting in the fertile cells and occasionally is absent from 

 one end of an ordinary vegetative cell. The American form agrees pretty well 

 with the European, but is, however, larger, and also attains in its cells a greater 

 proportionate length and has more turns of its chlorophyl spirals. The lower 

 limits of the American form arc, however, so overlapped by the upper limits of the 

 European, that it seems to me they must be considered identical. 



I ;:,'. 19, pi. 12, represents a pair of fertile filaments of this species, magnified 

 260 diameters; 19 o, part of a sterile filament, magnified 260 diameters ; 19 b, out- 

 line of a couple of fertile cells, magnified 260 diameters. 



Sp. prolecta, WOOD. 



Sp. saturate viridia.lnbrica; articulis sterilibns diametro 6 plolongiorihus; sporifcrisvix tumidis; 



cytiodermate utroque fine protenso et replicato; fascia uuica; aufractibus 6; sporis oblongis 



vel ellipticis : menibrano crassissimo. 

 Diam. Art. stcril. T JJ " =.00146" ; epor. lat. T lg " j\fa" = .00133" .0016" long. 7 2 " 



= .0033". 



Syn.Sp. protecta, WOOD, Prodromus, Proc. Am. Philos. Soc. 1869, p. 131. 

 Sp. deep proon, slippery ; sterile joints 6 times longer than broad ; fertile cells scarcely swollen ; 



cell wall folded in at the ends; chloropbyl band single ; turns 6 ; spores oblong er elliptical, 



spore wall very thick. 



Remark*. I found this species in the latter part of April fruiting in a ditch 

 in a meadow a little south of the mouth of AVissahicon Creek, near this city, 

 and as late as the 25th of May in the "neck" below the city. It is remarkable 



