English:
Identifier: phycologiaaustra02harv (find matches)
Title: Phycologia australica; or, A history of Australian sea weeds ... and a synopsis of all known Australian Algae ..
Year: 1859 (1850s)
Authors: Harvey, William H. (William Henry), 1811-1866
Subjects: Algae
Publisher: London, L. Reeve
Contributing Library: MBLWHOI Library
Digitizing Sponsor: MBLWHOI Library
View Book Page: Book Viewer
About This Book: Catalog Entry
View All Images: All Images From Book
Click here to view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book.
Text Appearing Before Image:
the whole frond quicklybreaks up and melts to jelly when put into fresh-water; thecolour also is paler and more fugacious, and the fructificationquite different. The present is a genuine Wrangelia, a genuswhich has many beautiful species in Australia, where it appearsto reach its maximum of development, both as to number andsize. These several species exhibit considerable variety of as-pect, while agreeing in fruit and in essential character. Someresemble Callithamnia, others Dasyce, others Spyridice, othersGriffithsia and Haluri; it is difficult therefore to say whichshould be regarded as the central groups. As this work pro-ceeds we shall figure the more remarkable, omitting those alreadyfigured in the Flora Tasmanica. Fig. 1. Wrangelia Halurus,—the natural size. 2. A joint bearing a ra»?e^ZM5jwith tetraspores. 3. Portion of the same. 4. Short branch, with whorledramelli and a cystocarp. 4. Tuft of spores from the cystocarps:—thelatter figures variously magnified. ?,jf^ :.JlIi.
Text Appearing After Image:
or.cer.ti^r -oJiA.Irr. Ser. RHODOSPERMEiE. Fam. Ceramiacecs, Plate LXXL PTILOTA STRIATA, Haw. Gen. Char. Frond compressed or two-edged, distichous, pectinato-pin-nate, inarticulate, with an articulate monosiphonous axis; the pin-nules sometimes articulate. Fructification: 1, involucrate favellce,containing numerous angular spores; 2, tetraspores attached to thepinnules, sessile or stalked, solitary or glomerulate, tripartite.—Ptilota (4^.), from tttiXwto^, pinnated. Frons compresm v. anceps, disticJia, pectmato-pinnata, corticata, axi artictdatomonosiphonio percursa ; pinnulis scepius corticatis, nunc pellucide aiticulatis.Fruct.: 1, favellce irwolucratce sporas numerosas angulatas foventes; 2, tetia-sporce ad pinmdas sessiles v. pedicellatee, sparsce v. glomerulatce, trianguledivisce. Ptilota striata; frond slender, two-edged, alternately decompound;branches and their divisions subdistant, rod-like, transversely rugu-lose, closely pectinato-pinnate; pinnules alternate, subulate, in
Note About Images
Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.