Q PLANT STRUCT QKES 



of the compound microscope to marine forms with enor- 

 mously bulky bodies. In general they are hydropliytes — that 

 is, plants adapted to life in water or in very moist places. 

 The special interest connected with the group is that it is 

 supposed to be the ancestral group of the plant kingdom — 

 the one from which the higher groups have been more or 

 less directly derived. In this regard they differ from the 

 Fungi, which are not supposed to be responsible for any 

 higher groups. 



9. The subdivisions. — Although all the Algae contain 

 chlorophyll, some of them do not appear green. In some 

 of them another coloring matter is associated with the chlo- 

 rophyll and may mask it entirely. Advantage is taken of 

 these color associations to separate Algse into subdivisions. 

 As these colors are accompanied by constant difEerences in 

 structure and work, the distinction on the basis of colors is 

 more real than it might appear. Upon this basis four sub- 

 divisions may be made. The constant termination phycew, 

 which appears in the names, is a (Ireek word meaning " sea- 

 weed," which is the common name for Algse ; while the pre- 

 fix in each case is the (Ireek name for the color which char- 

 acterizes the group. 



The four subdivisions are as follows : (1) ('i/aixipliycem, 

 or " Blue Algse," but usually called " Blue-green Algip," as the 

 characteristic blue does not entirely mask the green, and 

 the general tint is bluish-green ; ('2) ('hlorophi/n-a\ or " Green 

 Algse," in which there is no special coloring matter associ- 

 ated with the chloroiDhyll ; (3) I'luropJijiccw, or " Brown 

 Algffi " ; and (4) Rhodojihiicece, or " Red Alga3." 



It should be remarked that probably the C'yanoi)hycetB 

 do not belong with the other groujjs, but it is convenient to 

 present them in this connection. 



10. The plant body. — By this phrase is meant the nutri- 

 tive or vegetative body. There is in plants a unit of struc- 

 ture known as the cell. The bodies of the simplest plants 

 co]isist of but one cell, while the bodies of the most com- 



