ALGAE. RHODOPHYCEAE. 



79 



segmented filaments and produce a closed envelope, which opens after a time at the 

 apex, the trichogyne and trichophore being still to be seen outside it (Fig. 51, tg). In 

 the RHODOMELEAE the envelope of the fructification appears in its rudimentary form 

 as a circular wall. We noticed a similar investment of the sexually generated 

 spores in Coleochaele, a genus of the Chlorophyceae, while the oosphere of Chara has a 

 similar covering before fertilisation ; but we shall lay no great stress on this difference, 

 if we take into consideration analogous cases in other plants. For instance, the arche- 

 gonia of Marchantia have an outer covering, which exists in a rudimentary form before 

 fertilisation, but developes only after fertilisation, while the archegonia of Junger- 

 mannia, another of the Hepaticae, are invested before fertilisation and quite in- 



FlG. 51. Lejolisia tnediterranea. A small piece of a creeping filament with a rhizoid and an erect branch, the 

 lower cell of which bears a branch with tetragonidia it. B a sexual (monoecious) plant ; TV rhizoids of the creeping stem, 

 the apical cell of which is at s and its erect branches bear the sexual organs ; a a autheridia, in which the axile cell-row 

 is unfortunately not shown ; tg trichogyne beside the apex iof the fertile branch ; h the envelope of the sporocarp ; at 

 sp a spore which has escaped from the sporocarp. C an empty sporocarp, the outer covering of which is formed of 

 cell-rows. After Bornet, Ann. d. sc. nat 1859, magn. about 150 times. 



dependently of it ; but in this case the outer covering encloses a whole group of 

 archegonia ; similar cases might be adduced from the Phanerogams. 



There are other Florideae in which the organs of fertilisation are of a more complex 

 character. This is the case with the CORALLINEAE'. In this group, which includes 

 the Melobesieae mentioned above, the walls of the vegetative cells are thickly incrusted 

 with calcium carbonate. The thallus of the Melobesieae takes the form of creeping 



1 Solms-Laubach, Corallina (Aus Fauna u. Flora des Golfes von Neapel u. d. angrenzenden 

 Meeresabschnitte, herausgeg. von d. Zool. Station in Neapel, IV. Monographic, Leipzig, 1881). 



