424 PROTOPHYTA 



(auxospore or z3'gosperm) into two symmetrical halves with or without' 

 the intervention of a period of rest. 



Still another mode of reproduction is described by Count Castracane 

 and by some other observers, in Mastogloia (Thw.) and a few other 

 genera, in the production of endogenous spores within the frustules. 



It will be seen that, notwithstanding the great abundance of diatoms, 

 some important points in their life-history still remain unsettled. On 

 the minuter details of the modes of reproduction, the spontaneous 

 motion of diatoms and its causes, the structure of the siliceous cell-wall, 

 and the chemical and physical properties of diatomin, the reader is 

 referred to ihe very extensive literature of the subject ; only the most 

 important memoirs are referred to below. The number of described 

 species certainly exceeds 10,000 ; but this has been unduly increased 

 by want of attention to the necessary variations in size in the same 

 species. Not unfrequently diatoms form a gelatinous yellow scum 

 on the surface of the water, or completely encrust submerged algs 

 and other water-plants; they abound on the surface of wet walls 

 and rocks, and are not unfrequently present in the air. Some species 

 are cosmopolitan ; the marine forms are especially remarkable for their 

 size and beauty. Various deposits found on the surface of the globe, 

 often of very considerable thickness, known as tripoli, ' Kieselguhr,' 

 &c., consist almost entirely of the fossilised siliceous shells of diatoms, 

 and they enter largely into the composition of a variety of earths 

 used for manufacturing purposes. In some countries, such as China, 

 Japan, Siberia, Lapland, &c., they form, cemented together by salts 

 of lime, the edible earths which are mixed with meal to make a kind 

 of flour. They occur also in large quantities in guano. 



As has already been stated, the position of the Diatomacese in the 

 natural system is a point on which there has been much controversy. 

 Those who regard the mode of reproduction already described as a true 

 process of conjugation place them in the class of Conjugatae, near to the 

 Desmidiacese, with which family they present many points of resemblance 

 in external form, phenomena of spontaneous movement, &c. ; and it is 

 possible that the diatoms may be derived from the desmids by retro- 

 gressive metamorphosis. But we are, on the whole, disposed to the 

 conclusion that they have a totally different origin ; their very wide dis- 

 tribution in time and space, the sharp differentiation of the family, and 

 the enormous number of species, favouring the view that they represent 

 a comparatively small ascent from an archaic type which has never 

 attained any higher degree of development. 



Illustrative genera : — Eunotia (Ehrb.), Diatoma (DC), Melosira 

 (Ag.), Gomphonema (Ag.), Navicula (Bory), Rhabdonema (Ktz.), 



