SEA- VVKKDS. 
1J7 
ling of houses, stopping crevices in walls, packing brittle wares, and 
the roots of plants, for distant conveyance. 
" To which may be added, that all in general contribute entertain- 
ment and agreeable instruction to the contemplative mind of the 
naturalist, at a season when few other plants offer themselves to his 
view. 
" The Fungi have been suspected by some to be, like sponges and 
corals, the habitations of some unknown living beings, and being al- 
kaline, have been classed in the animal kingdom ; but they are known 
\^ to produce seeds, from which perfect plants have been raised ; and 
the celebrated Hedwig, by great dexterity of dissection, and by using 
microscopes of very highly magnifying powers, assures us that he 
has discovered both stamens and pistils, not only in this order of 
plants, but in the other orders of the Cryptogamous family."* 
Order HepaticcB, or Liverworts. 
The 3d Order contains the Liverworts, which are more succulent 
or juicy than the mosses ; they have four-valved thecse, which cir- 
cumstance, and that of their not opening with a lid, distinguish them 
from the mosses. Their name, Hepaticse, signifies liver ; but it is 
not yet known whether they received that name on account of some 
supposed virtue in curing diseases of the liver, or whether it was 
because they were thought to resemble the lobes or divisions of that 
organ. One of the most common genera of this order is the Junger 
mannia ; you may here see (Fig. 154) a species of this, the compla 
nata, with its parts, as represented under a magnifier. 
a, is a plant of 
natural size, in 
fruit, b, the fruit 
magnified, show- 
ing the sheath, the 
peduncle rising 
from it, and the 
theca at top, not 
yet burst, c, the 
open capsule 
splitting and dis- 
'.harging the seeds, d, the theca empty, showing its four valves. 
Order AlgcE, or Sea- Weeds. 
The ith Order includes the sea-weeds and frog-spittle ; these have 
leathery fronds, with fine dust-like seed, enclosed in inflated portions 
of the frond. They are almost always aquatics ; generally green or 
reddish. One genus of this family is the Fucus. The Fucus nuians, 
sometimes called the gulf weed, is very abundant in the Gulf of Flo- 
rida, and is found m vhhous parts of the ocean, forming masses or 
floating fields, manv miles in extent. The plant seems to possess 
no distinct root, th ,agh it perhaps originally vegetated on some sea- 
beaten shore, from whence it was by accident thrown upr»n the 
ocean's wave. 
The Focus giganteus is said to have a frond of immense length • 
from whence its specific name, signifying gigantic. You are here 
* Notwithstanding the weight which Thornton, author of the above quotation, 
pives to the opinion of Hedwig and others, it is, at present, much doubted by natural 
ists, whether the Fungi have organs analogous to stamens and pistils. 
Describe Fig. 154— Liverworts— Derivation of the name— Sea-weeds— Fuci— Gulf, 
weed. 
17** 
