Читать книгу Lichens - Annie Lorrain Smith - Страница 38
D. Continuity of Protoplasm in Hyphal Cells
ОглавлениеWahrlich[271] demonstrated that continuity of protoplasm was as constant between the cells of fungi as it has been proved to be between the cells of the higher plants. His researches included the hyphae of the lichens, Cladonia fimbriata and Physcia (Xanthoria) parietina.
Baur[272] and Darbishire[273] found independently that an open connection existed between the cells of the carpogonial structures in the lichens they examined. The subject as regards the thalline hyphae was again taken up by Kienitz-Gerloff[274] who obtained his best results in the hypothecial tissue of Peltigera canina and P. polydactyla. Most of the cross septa showed one central protoplasmic strand traversing the wall from cell to cell, but in some instances there were as many as four to six pits in the walls. The thickening of the cell-walls is uneven and projects variously into the cavity of the cell. Meyer’s[275] work was equally conclusive: all the cells of an individual hypha, he found, are in protoplasmic connection; and in plectenchymatous tissue the side walls are frequently perforated. Cell-fusions due to anastomosis are frequent in lichen hyphae, and the wall at or near the point of fusion is also traversed by a thread of protoplasm, though such connections are regarded as adventitious. Fusions with plasma connections are numerous in the matted hairs on the upper surface of Peltigera canina and they also occur between the hyphae forming the rhizoids of that lichen. The work of Salter[276] may also be noted. He claimed that his researches tended to show complete anatomical union between all the tissues of the lichen plant, not only between the hyphae of the various tissues but also between hyphae and gonidia.