^^. 



''' for,,: 







eas 



)\ 



And 



! We 



yet; 



must St- 



<^cs of groi 



■ 



^-fbrms, tts 





■ger and 



' and jostf 



nto a groiii 



fi^ 



jscle deveV 



cellular .% I 

 spite of the ^i 



once 



MZ 



into k^ 



d perpetuation >: 

 he \-iiious it^- 



:e 



--es 



ver)' res*; 

 > had been i^ 

 ' sodic pW'^'^ 



that of Wf 



47 ^•) ^ 

 des of f ■ 



at tbey ^^ 





t:/^^' beginnings of life. 



147 



into one of the simpler fungi^ with its various kinds of 



reproductive units 



spores — is most simple^ 



L 



Fig. 49. 



F 

 h 



Development of Torulce found in Cider. (Pouchet.) 



Illustrates the irregular manner in which Segmentation of the Filaments 

 occurs, their irregularities in size, and the separation of ' conidia.' 



and has been well described by M. Trecul\ The means 

 he adopted to observe the development^ also tend to 

 substantiate what I have already said with reference to 

 the cause of continuous as opposed to discontinuous 

 growth^ and the association of the latter process with 

 higher degrees of fermentability. In order to bring 



^ ' Conidia ' is the name applied to the simplest kind of spore — to 

 those which are separated from any portion of the mycelium by a simple, 

 process of strangulation (fission), as in Fig. 49. 



L 2 . 



/ 



