354 BOTANY. 



(d) Tlie genus Vaucheria may be taken as the type of a group, the 

 VauclieriaeeoB, but whether it is entitled to rank as an order instead 

 of a family cannot be decided in this place. Allied to Vaucheria are 

 UauUrpa, Malimeda, etc., but their exact position is as yet problematical. 



(«) Vaucheria includes in the United States the species V. sessilis 

 and V. polymorpha, which are common in fresh water, besides some 

 others not so frequently seen, some of which inhabit salt water. 



(/) Oaulerpites cacUides is the oldest known fossil species of this 

 class. It occurs in the Silurian : other species have been detected in 

 the Devonian and Tertiary. CauUrpa extends from the Tertiary to 

 the present. 



337.— Order Saprolegniaeeae. The plants of this order 

 are saprophytes or parasites, more frequently the latter ; they 

 are colorless, and generally are to be found in the water or in 

 connection with moist tissues. The plant-body is greatly 

 elongated and branched, and all its Tegetative portion is 

 continuous — i.e., unicellular; the reproductive portions only 

 are separated from the rest of the plant-body by partitions. 



338. — The reproduction is very much the same as in 

 Vaucheria, and, as in that genus, is of two kinds — asexual 

 and sexual. The asexual reproduction may be briefly de- 

 scribed as follows : the protoplasm in the end of a branch 

 becomes somewhat condensed, a septum forms, cutting off 

 this portion from the remainder of the filament, and the 

 whole of its contents becomes conyerted by internal cell- 

 diyision into zoospores provided with one or two cilia 

 (Fig. 171, 1). These soon escape from a fissure in the wall 

 and are active for a few minutes (3-4), after which they 

 come to rest and their cilia disappear (3 and 3, Fig. 171). 

 In one or two hours they germinate by sending out a filament 

 (4, Fig. 171), from which a new plant is quickly produced.* 



339. — The sexual organs bear a close resemblance to those 

 of Vaucheria. The oogonia are spherical, or nearly so (in 

 most of the species), and contain from two to many oospheres, 

 which are fertilized by means of antheridia, which usually 

 develop as lateral branches just below tlie oogonia. In 



* The student is referred to an article, "Observations on Several 

 Forms of Saprolegniese," by F. B. Hine, in American Quarterly Micro- 

 scopical Journal, 1878, p. 18, from which some of the above facts are 

 taken, and the accompanying figures adapted. 



