102 



PLANT STKDCTUEES 



of the capsule like a loose cap or hood, known as the calyp- 

 tra (Figs. 82, c, 107), which sooner or later falls off. As 



stated before, the ma- 

 ture structure deyel- 

 oped from the oospore 

 is called a sporogoni- 

 um, a form of sporo- 

 phyte peculiar to the 

 Bryophytes. 



(JU. The sporogonium. 

 — In its fullest devel- 

 opment the sporogoni- 

 um is differentiated 

 into the three regions, 

 foot, seta, and capsule 

 (Figs. 82, 107) ; but in 

 some forms the seta 

 may be lacking, and 

 in others the foot also, 

 the sporogonium in this 

 last case being only the 

 capsule or spore case, 

 which, after all, is the 

 essential part of any 

 sporogonium. 



At iirst the capsule 

 is solid, and its cells 

 are all alike. Later a 

 group of cells within 

 begins to differ in ap- 

 pearance from those 

 about them, being set 

 apart for the produc- 

 tion of spores. This 

 initial group of spore-producing cells is called the arche- 

 aporkiin, a word meaning "the beginning of spores." It 



Fig. 85. Sporogonium of F'/naria: A, an em- 

 bryo Bporogonium (,/',/'), developing within 

 the venter (b, b) of an archcgonium ; B, C, 

 tips of k-:ify shoots bearing young sporo- 

 gonia, pusliing up cajyptra (c) and archego. 

 nium neck ih), and sending the fnot down 

 into the ajiex of the gametophore,— After 



GOEBEL. 



