+! 
Mr. J. Miers on Ephedra. 429 
during this action (except the lengthening of the micropyle of 
the secundine) are precisely analogous to those which occur in 
the fecundation and production of seeds in the higher order of 
exogenous plants. 
In Ephedra, if we look upon its style as being entirely reduced 
so that its hollow stigma becomes in consequence depressed 
and fixed in the apex of the ovarium, we have nothing in such 
a case but a modification of the ordinary pistillum ; and under 
this point of view we have no sound reason for giving the name 
of gymnospermous or naked ovules to the germens of the Gneta- 
cee. In support of the view thus taken, we find here the female 
organ in its development following the same changes as in some 
of the higher orders of dicotyledonous plants; for the nucleus 
of a single erect ovule grows into a regular embryo, enclosed in 
albumen, its proper integuments (primine and secundine) finally 
close over the nucleus, and become the testa and tegmen of the 
seed, while the shell of the ovarium, in the usual manner of 
phanerogamous seeds, becomes a coriaceous pericarp formed of 
ligneous fibres (in Gnetum intermixed with peculiar acicular 
pungent crystals, perhaps analogous to the cystoliths of the 
Urticacee). 
The only circumstance that has favoured the notion of naked 
ovules in the Gnetacee is the absence of a style in the ovary, as 
just mentioned, and the more immediate impregnation of the 
ovule, by the entrance of pollinic boyaux through the aperture 
in its apex, without the intervention of any apparent placentary 
channels. But a very similar mode of impregnation exists in 
numerous other families, where the style is hollow for its whole 
‘length, leaving a pervious opening into the cell of the ovary : 
this exists im Styracee, Olacacee, and many others. Schleiden 
figures it in Helianthemum*, where several pollinic boyaux are ~ 
seen descending through the styles into the cell of the ovary, 
and fixing themselves upon the micropyle of its several ovules. 
This fact, though not distinctly seen by Brown, was ingeniously 
inferred by him a long while beforet. Mirbel shows how this 
is effected in Staticet, where a cylindrical process (probably 
formed of the usual conducting-tissue combined with pollinic 
boyaux) descends from the united styles through an aperture in 
the apex of the cell of the ovary, and fixes itself upon the micro- 
pyle of the ovule, by which means it becomes fecundated in the 
same direct manner as in the Gnetacee. Griffiths also remarks § 
that he could not detect any conducting-tissue in the wall of the 
* Nov. Acta Czs.-Leop. xix. p. 56, tab. 8. figs. 131-133. 
+ Gen. Remarks, p. 58. 
t Mem. Acad. Inst. ix. 625, tab. 4. figs. 2, 3, 4. 
§ Notule, p. 169, pl. 52. figs. 13-20. 
