204 



ELEMENTS OF STKUCTUftAt BOTANY. 



Fig. 254. 



aquatics by the whorls of so-called 

 leaves which encircle the stem, and 

 also by the general gritty nature of 

 the plant. A very offensive odour 

 is emitted by the plant in the course 

 of decay. Its green colour shows at 

 once the presence of chlorophyll. On 

 the branches you may observe num- 

 bers of minute, more or less rounded, 

 bodies ; Fig. 255 is an enlarged view 

 of one of them. Here, at b, is shown 

 a large central nucleus (the nucule) 

 enclosed in a spiral coveting. This 

 spiral consists of five long cells side 

 by side, all of which wind about the 

 central body, and have their ends 

 projecting above it. The nucule is a 

 row of cells of which the highest is 

 the germ-cell, and the whole answers, 

 in fact, to the archegonium of the 

 Bryophytes and Pterldophytes. It 

 is, in this plant, called the carpo- 

 gonium. Just below it is a globular 

 body made \\p of eight triangular 

 shield - shaped segments arranged 

 about a central cavity. From the 

 inner end of each segment several 

 coiled filaments of many cells each 

 project into the cavity. At maturity 

 the shields separate, and, the fila- 

 ments eventually break up into their 



Fig. 2bi.~CharafragUi8; natural size, (Ttiom&) 



