EESEARCHES ON FUNGI RESEARCHES ON FUNGI AN ACCOUNT OF THE PRODUCTION, LIBERATION, AND DISPERSION OF THE SPORES OF HYMENO- MYCETES TREATED BOTANICALLY AND PHYSICALLY ALSO SOxME OBSERVATIONS UPON THE DISCHARGE AND DISPERSION OF THE SPORES OF ASCOMYCETES AND OF PILOBOLUS r«A BY A.^H. REGINALD DULLER B.Sf. (LoNi).) ; D.Sc. (BiRM.); Ph.D. (Leip.) PROFESSOR OF BOTANY AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MANITOBA WITH FIVE PLATES AND EIGHTY-THREE FIGURES IN THE TEXT LIBRARY NEW YORK BOTANICAL GAKUEN LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO. 39 PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON NEW YORK, BOMBAY, AND CALCUTTA 1909 All rights reserved ObM^t v.\ TO WILHEL3I FFEFFER UNDER WHOSE STIMULATING GUIDANCE THE AUTHOR ONCE HAD THE PRIVILEGE OF STUDYING crs PREFACE Garden These pages contain a : :::;:' .■.•;■ ;:i :: :':.-: : ".y-i . ry ii:r- t: -'^[y, and physics : r.r: :.; :: :i ::_ :. n :: L;:_y " - -. i also a record of some observations upon the discharrr : ~ o: A- : etes and of Pilobolas. MatnraUy many T)r - - bt-i- 1 :: r-jlved. 1; :: I :re that the new lI,: i. ..ii-t ; i-^ give an ^aaca unities: i^ i^-i^c of onr commonest plants. The delicate adaptations of strocture to fonciion^ as revealed by a study of the firdt-body of a Mushroom, a Coprinus comatu^. or a P'yrorus, have provided me with no small cause for wonder- : . :^: and delight, and tliT v^m well worthy of the attention of all those who do-ir : ; . -:and more fully the ver : -r world by which .:. .: ; ::: ij. 1 i. Tne value of the ii;:e purely physical work must be left to physicists to decide. How- ever, as showinsT how closely the various branches of science may be knit toeetlir:. i: is no: ^iliout interest that the rirs: direct test of Stok s La for liie laii of microscopic spk :r - in :ur has been carried out with the help of a lowly Cryx: _ .m. Tl: search, which has occupied five years, was pre: iri n : si:__ : i by a systematic study of fung".:s srv^ies in tt. r' i . in wlii h I was much assisted by Geo. Mu-- - tidi Futic::.-s i^ i aii'-l M. C. 1/ - i:e's Illustration- y i- .' -' Fwi^. I'':..i-_ ; ..r win: IS :hr x^iLntal work was carri. i n :n my own laborat: rj at the University of Manitoba^ and during the summers in the Pliysi 5 : n d Botanical laboratories at the University of Birm'nj- h;mi. I have much pleasure in expressing my I??: : :: n£:s to F: i " :- Povntioff ;:nii Hiii'; - tor the facilities .. : ' me. I also wish to acknowi :_ ■ :debtedness to !Dr. Guy £arlow ~^ viii IMx'HFACE for v;\lnal>lc hcl]) and criticism in the more purely physical and mathematical parts of the research. Of the photographs here published ten were kindly made for me by Mr. J. E. Titley of Four Oaks, Warwickshire, three each by Mr. J. H. Pi(;k;n(l and Mr. P. Grafton of Birmingham, and two by Mr. C. W. Lowe of Winnipeg. They are all acknowledged in the text. In the final revision of the proofs, Mr. W, B. Grove has been good enough to give me the benefit of his wide mycological knowledge and experi- ence. Lastly, my gratitude is due to the Birmingham Natural History and Philosophical Society for defraying the cost of three of the Plates. A. H. REGIXALJ) BULLER. Winnipeg, Julij 1909. TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE Preface vii PART I An Account of the Production, Liberation, and Dispersion of the Spokes of Hymenomycetes treated Botanically and Physically Introduction 3 CHAPTER I The Hymenium — Basidia and Paraphyses — Nuclear phenomena — The Colour of Spores — Two-spored Basidia in Cultivated Varieties of Psalliota cani- pestris — Occasional Sterility of Coprinus Fruit-bodies — Cystidia — Funj^us Gnats, Springtails, and Mites — Position of the Hymenium — Comparison of the Basidium with the Ascus — The Efiect of Sunli<,'ht upon Spores . 6 CHAPTER II The Extent of the Hymenium — Principles underlying the Arrangement of Gills and Hy menial Tubes — The Margin of Safety — The genus Fomes , 27 CHAPTER III The Functions of the Stipe and Flesh of the Pileus — ^The Gill-chamber . 39 CHAPTER IV Adjustments of Fruit-bodies in the Interests of Spore-liberation — Lentinus lepideu-% Psalliota campestri-<, Polyporus squamnsua, Coprinus plicatilis, Coprinus niveus, and Coprinus plicatiloides — Reactions of Fruit-bodies to Light and Gravity — The Problem of Pileus Eccentricity — Gfjotropic Swinging — Rudimentary Fruit-bodies ....... 47 CHAPTER V Spore-deposits — The Number of Spores ........ 79 CHAPTER VI Macroscopic Observations on thi Fall of Spores of Polyporus squamosns . . 89 X TABLE OF CONTENTS CHAPTER VII l'Air Biologic dvr I'JianM,, 13d. IX., Heft 1, 1904. ^ For references, rirfe I'w/ra, Chap. \'I. * Pfetter, I'hij.'iioloijy of J'Uuits, translated by A. J. Ewart, vol. iii. 1900, p. 410. ^ Bulier, "The Biolofjy of Paliqjorns .s(iuariwsii.<, Huds., a Timber-destmyinf^ Fungus," The Journal of Economic llioloyy, vol. i., 1906, p. 131. INTRODUCTION 5 has taught me that the curves which we shall refer to later on as sporaholas, should have been made to turn more sharply from the horizontal to the vertical direction. This correction is given in Fig. 66 (p. 189). The material for the present investigation has included more than fifty species, chiefly belonging to the Agaricineag and Polyporeffi. Species of Thelephorea3 and of Hydnefe have been used less often. The research has not been extended to the Clavariese, but there seems to be no reason to expect that the mechanism for spore- discharge in this group is ditierent from that in those already named. To what extent my generalisations upon the liberation of spores into the air are applicable to the gelatinous fungi, only further investigations can decide. Spore-discharge was found to take place in the normal manner in Hirneola auricula-juda}, but the mode of spore-dispersion is not clear to me in gyrose Tremellinea?. In the light of my observations upon other fruit-bodies, it seems ditlicult to understand how spores produced on a hymenium which looks upAvarcls can escape into the air. Possibly only those spores are thus set free which are developed on that part of the hymenium which is situated in a vertical or downwardly looking position. Possibly the wind is not the only agent in the dispersion of the spores. This matter certainly requires further elucidation. Un- fortunately, gyrose Tremellineas so far have not been at my disposal. The general result of the observations recorded in this book seems to be that of laying emphasis on the fact that the fruit-bodies of Hymenomycetes are highly efficient organs for the production and liberation of spores. In the case of the Coprini, I believe that the old puzzle as to the significance of " deliquescence " has at last been solved. It can be shown, e.g. in Coprinus comatus, that auto- digestion takes place for the purpose of permitting the spores to be liberated into the air, and is correlated with several other structural and developmental features in the fruit-bodies in question. It has become clear to me that, included in the Agaricinea;, there are two distinct fruit-body types for the production and liberation of spores — the Mushroom, or Psalliota type, and the Coprinus comatus type. The latter appears to have been evolved from the former, and to be, in some respects at least, superior to it in point of efficiency. CHAPTKll I THE HYMENIUM— BASIDIA AND PAEAPHYSES— NUCLEAR PHENO- MENA—THE COLOUR OF SPORES— TWO-SPORED BASIDIA IN CULTIVATED VARIETIES OF I'SALLIOTA CAMI'J'JSTL'IS—OCCA- SIOXAL STERILITY OF COPRINUS FRUIT-BODIES— CYSTIDIA— FUNGUS GNATS, SPRINGTAILS, AND MITES— POSITION OF THE HYMENIUM— COMPARISON OF THE BASIDIUM WITH THE ASCUS —THE EFFECT OF SUNLIGHT UPON SPORES The hynieniuin of most Hymenomycctes is made up of spore- bearing basidia and of sterile paraphyses. In a great many species, it consists solely of these two kinds of elements; but in a number of others, cystidia and other specialised cells enter into its structure. Basidia and Paraphyses. — It is a general rule, Avith compara- tively few exceptions, that each basidium produces four sterigmata. Each sterigma tapers conically, and bears at its apex a single spore which, although sometimes spherical, in most cases is oval in shape (Fig. 55, p. 162). The spore-wall in some species bears spines, but usually is quite smooth. A sterigma, at the point of attachment to its spore, has an extremely small diameter Avhich in many instances measures only 0-5 fi (Plate I., Fig. 34; Plate III., Fig. IG). This narrow neck is of great importance, for, when a spore is set free, the neck breaks across and the spore is projected Avith considerable violence straight outAvards from the basidium.^ It must be at the neck that the propelling force comes to be exerted. The spores of all Hymenomycetes are very adhesive, and on con- tact readily adhere to one another or to any object upon which they settle. As if to prevent them touching one another during develop- ment and discharge, the four spores on a basidium are borne laterally on the sterigmata in such a manner that they are situated as far apart as possible (Plate I., Fig. 3, (' : Plate 111., Fig. IG). * T'idc infra, Cliaj). XI. 6 BASIDIA AND PARAPHYSES 7 In the Coprini, the hymenium, -when seen in face view, presents to the eye a remarkably regular pattern (Plate III., Fig. 15). The basidia, bearing black spores, are evenly spaced between the paraphyses. Adjacent basidia, in a zone proceeding from below upwards on each gill, ripen their spores simultaneously. Hence, on any small portion of a gill, all the basidia are practically in the same stage of development. It appears to be the chief function of the paraphyses to act as spacing agents, so that by their presence they prevent the spores belonging to adjacent basidia from coming into contact. The large, unicellular cystidia which are so prominent on the swollen edges of the gills in many species, e.g. Coprinus comatus, seem to be significant in that they form suitable surfaces of contact where the gills touch one another and the stipe. The swollen gill-margins serve to keep the gills sufficiently separated from one another, during the development of the basidia and spores (Plate I., Fig. 5 ; Plate III., Fig. 14). If the gills were not kept apart, the spores of opposing gills would touch one another, and, owing to their great adhesiveness, would stick together. The proper spacing of the gills during develop- ment, therefore, is essential in securing the efficiency of a fruit- body as a spore-producing organ. Excluding the highly specialised Coprini, we find that in the Agaricinea? generally, as well as in the other groups of Hymeno- mycetes, the basidia do not all ripen on any part of the hymenium simultaneously. Adjacent basidia on the gill of a Mushroom, in the hymenial tube of Folyporus squamosus, &c., are at any one time in the most diverse stages of development (Plate I., Fig. 3). A basidium, bearing ripe spores, may thus have adjacent to it one basidium which has shed its spores some hours or days previously : a second which has spores in the most rudimentary condition ; and, possibly, yet a third upon which not even the sterigmata have appeared. Neighbouring basidia with ripe spores are often very closely situated, but never near enough to touch one another. To what extent this spacing is brought about by the paraphyses, or by other basidia, is difficult to deter- mine. Possibly, the fact that, in a Mushroom, adjacent basidia ripen and shed their spores successively, instead of simultaneously, 8 RESEAKCHES OX FUNGI permits of the hyineniuin beini:^ constructofl ^vi^h less space devoted Fig. 1. — An Elm (Ulnius vwntnna) with five fruit-bodies of Poh/jioriis squatnosit.i growing out from ;i large wound surface where a great brancii had been broken off. Tlie uppermost fruit-budy lias a vertical central stipe in the middle of the pileus. l*iioto;.'raphed by 1{ H. ri(k,ir have observed that each pair of nuclei which undergo fusion in the teleutospore, is derived by a long series of successive conjugate divisions from a pair of nuclei brought into existence by the conjugation of neighbouring mycelial cells. The wall between the two cells becomes perforated and the nucleus of one cell wanders into the other cell. It yet remains to be decided whether or not anything of a similar nature occurs in the Hymenomycetes. In this connection some interesting dis- coveries may be in store for us. In species of Coprinus, &c., where it has been found possible to obtain fruit-bodies from the mycelium produced from a single spore, doubtless cross- fertilisation between two individual mycelia either does not occur or is not necessary for the completion of the life-cycle. Whether or not cross- ^ Miss S. P. Nichols, "The Nature and Origin of the Binucleated Cells in some Basidiomycetes," Trans, of the Wisconsin Acad, of Sciences, Arts, and Letters, vol. xv., 1904, pp. 30-70. Abstract in Bot. Zeit., Abt. II., Bd. LXIV., 1906, p. 266. ' Ibid. 3 Ihid. " Ibid. ^ V. H. Blackman, " On the Fertilisation, Alternation of Generations, and General Cytology of the Uredinese," Ann. of Bot., vol. xviii., 1904. " A. H. Christman, "Sexual Reproduction in the Rusts," Bot. Gaz., yo\. xxxix., 1905; also E. W. Olive, "Sexual Cell Fusions and Vegetative Nuclear Divisions in the Rusts," Ann. of Bot., vol. xxii., 1908. 12 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI fertilisation ever occurs in any species of Hynienoniycetes can only be decided by extended observations. At present no Hymeno- mycetes seem to be known which suggest that they are hybrids produced from two individuals of distinct species. However, it would be interesting to plant the spawn of several distinct varieties of the cultivated Mushroom {Psalliota campestris) side by side in beds of manure, and to observe whether or not under these con- ditions any intermediate fruit-bodies would be produced. It seems probable that the original sexual organs of Hymeno- mycetes — those corresponding to oogonia and antheridia in Asco- inycetes — have disappeared, and that a new form of sexuality has arisen by the fusion in the basidia of the descendants of what were originally merely vegetative nuclei.^ This view is supported by the discovery of Miss Fraser,- that in Huinarut rut Hans, one of the Ascomycetes, normal fertilisation by means of sexual organs is replaced by the fusion of vegetative nuclei in pairs — a process analogous to that which takes place in pseudapogamons fern pro- thallia and also in the Uredinere. The Colour of Spores. — The colour of spores has long at- tracted attention, owing to the fact that it has provided a useful means of subdividing the Agaricinere. It must be admitted, however, that the classification of this great group according to spore colour is a purely artificial arrangement, although it fulfils its primary object of enabling the student the more readily to find the name of a particular species. There is no good reason for believing that the Melanosporas, the Porphyro- sporse, the Ochrospone, the Rhodosporaj, and the Leucospor* are separate and distinct offshoots from a common stock, and this has been fully recognised by Hennings in his treatment of the Agari- cineic in Btc natilrlichen PJianzenfamilien of Engler and Prantl. ' The vegetative origin of the fusion nuclei in Hymenomycetes seems to be generally accepted. Cf. N. Bernard, " Phenomenes reproducteurs chez les Cham- pignons siip('riein\s," JJull. niens Assoc, fr. Avanr. Sc, 1905. Abstract in Hot. Ccntralh., Bd. CI., 1906, p. 39-4; Miss H. C. I. Fraser, ">;uclear Fusions and Eeductions in Ascomycetes," Brit. Assoc. Report for 1907, p. 688; also 0. Brefeld, 1908, loc. cit, p. 256. ^ Miss H. C. I. Fraser, "Contributions in tlie Cytology of Humnria rutilnn.%" Ann. of Bot., vol. xxii., 1908, p. 42. THE COLOUR OF SPORES 13 In a classification purely on the colour basis, we are obliged to place together such diverse black-spored genera as Coprinus, Anthraco- phylluni, and Gomphidius. Coprinus is a highly specialised genus, the fruit-bodies of which are fragile and often " deliquescent." On the other hand, the fruit-bodies of Anthracophyllum are tough and possess leathery or horny gills.^ This genus is evidently much more closely related to the white-spored Xerotus, Lentinus, and Marasmius than to Coprinus. Gomphidius, with its fleshy fruit-bodies and thick, fleshy, non-deliquescent gills, seems to be more closely related to the white-spored Hygrophorus than to either Coprinus or Anthracophyllum. This example will serve to show that spore colour by itself is not a safe guide in deciding generic relationships. During the evolution of the Hymenomycetes there must have been an evolution of spore colour, and it would certainly be very interesting if some law of progressive colouration could be dis- covered. It seems to me that a fairly good case has been made out for the view that, in flowers in general, yellow is a more primi- tive colour than red, and red more primitive than blue ; ^ but no attempt to work out the phylogeny of the colour of spores has yet been made. Massee came to the conclusion that the genus Coprinus is the remnant of a primitive group from which have descended the entire group of the Agaricincce,^ and he then made the deduction that since Coprinus spores are black, blackness in spore colour is a primitive feature. According to this view, the species of Agaricinete with yellow, red, brown, purple, and white spores have descended from black-spored ancestors. In Chapter XIX. I shall bring forward Avhat I believe to be strong reasons for dis- senting from Massee's view as to the ancestral position of the Coprini. If, as I hold, the genus Coprinus has been derived from fungi having radially symmetrical, stiped, non-deliquescent fruit- bodies, with the Mushroom type of spore-liberation, then Massee's ^ P. Hennings in Engler u. Prantl, Die nut. PJianzenfaviilien, Teil I., Abt. \**, p. 222. 2 (Jrant Allen, The Colours of Flovers (Macmillan & Co.), 1891, pp. 17-60. ^ G. Massee, "A Revision of the Genus Coprinus," Ann. of Bot., vol. x., 1906, p. 129. 14 EESEAKCHES OX FUNGI theory of the priinitiveness of blackness its a spore colour loses its chief support. On general grounds, I am inclined to regard colourlessness as the most primitive condition in spores. We may well believe that at first the conidia were as colourless as the basidia off which they became constricted. It seems to me probable that the various pigments were only gradually developed, possibly by a series of mutations. ^lany so-called black spores are not truly black ; thus in Gomphidius the spores are smoky-olive, and in Coprinus atra- mentaritts the spore powder has a brownish tinge. Intermediate gradations of this kind seem to suggest that blackness in spores was not acquired all at once but step by step. This view is further supported by ontogeny. Thus in Coprinus comatus the spores when very young are colourless ; they then become pinkish, and thereby turn the gills pink; they then gradually become black. In many species of Coprinus the spores whilst ripening become brown, and the brown colour then gradually deepens into black. As further support for the view that colourlessness in spores is a primitive feature in Hymenomycetes, may be mentioned the fact that five out of the six genera of Hypochnacete,^ as well as such a primitive genus of Thelephoreie as Corticium, have unpigmented spores. No suggestion has yet been made as to the significance of the colours of spores. It is certain that some colouring matters, r.?W.,p. 9.3). * Kred. V. Theobald, An Acrount of Britisth Flies (DijAera), vol. i., 189:2, p. 94. POSITION OF THE HYMENIUM 21 Position of the Hymenium. — Excepting a few gelatinous species which require further investigation, it is a general rule that in Hymenomycetes the hymenium is situated on the underside of the fruit-bodies. Encrusting forms, developing on logs and twigs, usually produce their hymenium on the under or lateral surfaces of the substratum.^ That the hymenium should not be developed on a surface looking upwards is of great importance for spore-liberation. It was found with the beam-of-light method that, if a fruit-body of a Polyporus, Polystictus, Lenzites, Psalliota, Stereum, &c., is turned on its back, it is unable to liberate its spores into the air. It has been determined that, if the hymenium on the gill of a Mush- room, &c., is made to look directly upwards, the spores can be shot upwards about 0*1 mm. above the basidia.- This does not seem to be high enough to permit of the spores, which fall at the rate of 1-5 mm. per second, being carried off by moderate air- currents. Hence, when a hymenial surface looks upwards, the spores shot upwards from it fall back again immediately on to the hymenium and adhere there. Even when a fruit-body is set in its natural position once more, such spores never regain their freedom. In the great groups of the Agaricinese and the Polyporeffi, the fruit-bodies are characterised by having the greater part of the hymenial surfaces disposed in almost vertical planes. In the Agaricinefe the hymenium is situated on the surfaces of wedge- shaped gills (Figs. 2 and 3; also Plate I., Fig. 4); and in the Polyporea3 it lines the inner sides of cylindrical or slightly conical, vertically-placed tubes (Fig. 7, p. 33, and Fig. 66, p. 189). From observations on the paths and rates of fall of individual spores, as well as by direct beam-of-light studies of spore-clouds produced from fruit-bodies when tilted at various angles, I have come to the conclusion that it is only when the hymenium is vertical or looking downwards at a greater or less angle that successful spore-liberation ^ I have noticed the fruit-bodies of Irpex obliquus growing on the upper side of an inclined tree, but the hymenium appeared to be irregular. Falck {loc. cit.) grew abnormal fruit-bodies of Porta vaporaria and Mernlius lacrirnans on the upper surfaces of wooden blocks in the laboratory. ^ Vide infra, Chap. XI. 22 HKSEAK'CHES OX FUNGI can take placu in ihesc gr()U)).s. '["he iiicchanisni lor liliri'aling spores is of such a nature as to limit the possible forms of the fruit- bodies in question. Comparison of the Basidium with the Ascus. — The vertical or downwardly-looking position of the hynienial surfaces of Hynienoniy- cetcs may be contrasted with the upwardly-looking hynienial surfaces of Discomycetes. From the physiological point of vieAv, the ascus in this great group of fuuLri is siynificant in that it is an apparatus by which spores may bo liberated suc- cessfully, when it looks upwards. It is an explosive mechanism of considerable efficiency. In many instances it shoots out its spores en masse to a distance of one or several centimetres, and thus causes them to be- come effectively separated from the ascocarp.^ It seems to be the development of the explosive ascus which has permitted of the fruit - bodies of Discom3'cetes taking on their saucer- or cup-like shapes. Here again, as in the Hyuienomycetes, spore- liberating mechanism and fruit - body structure go hand Fig. 2. — Gruup of young fruit-bodies of Fleurotns ostreatux (the Oyster Fungus) growintj; from a wound on the trunk of a JJeech. The gills are developing in vertical ])lanes in response to a geo- tropic stimulus. Photographed at Sutton Park. Warwickshire, hy J, E. Titley. About ^ natural size. in hand. There appears to be just as strict a correlation between the •jfeneral structure of an Acjaricus or Polvi)orus and its basidia as between the genei'al structure of a Peziza and its asci. If the basidia and asci in these types were interchanged, each fruit-body would lose its efficiency. The spores could not be liberated, but ' J'ide iiifi-ii, I'art 11. BASIDIA AND ASCI 23 Fig. :J.— Same group of fruit-bodies of Plcurotux ostrcatu.t as shown in Fig. 2, photographed ten days later at maturity. The tops of the pilei have now become flattened. The thin gills, separated by interlamellar spaces, have developed along vertical planes, and are of various lengths, so as to be very compactly arranged. The gills on the stipe of the lowest fruit-body have been damaged by a slug. Photographed at Sutton Park, Warwickshire, by J. E. Titley. About 'i natural size. 24 h'KSKAHClIKS ().\ FrXGI would lie entirely wasted. Not a single basidiospore would lie shot uj) tar enough to succeed in escapins^ from a Peziza cup; wliilst in a Mushrooiu or I'olyporns the ascospores, when discharged, would strike and adhere to tlu; opposite hyinenial surfaces. An upwardly- looking, Peziza-like, cup-shaped Hymenoinycete, provided with typical basidia and liberating its spores into the air, is just as impossible as a Mushroom- or Polyporus-shaped Ascomycete with its hymeniuni composed of typical explosive asci. Where, in the Hymenomj^cetes, as in the genus Cyphella, the fruit-body has the forni of a saucer, a cup, or a filter funnel, with the hymeniuni inside, its mouth looks not upwards but downwards, so that ii resetnbles an inverted Peziza. It is true that the conical Aviue- glass-shaped fruit-bodies of the species of the hymenomycetous genus Craterellus stand erect. Here, however, in contradistinction to Cy])hella, the hynieniuin is borne on the exterior of the fruit - bodies, whilst the interior is barren. The position of the basidia of a Craterellus is exactly the reverse of that of the asci in the erect wine-glass-shaped fruit-bodies of certain Ascomycetes. These remarks may serve to emphasise the close correlation betw'een the mechanism for spore-liberation and fruit-body structure. The Effect of Sunlight upon Spores. — Some years ago, Massee ^ expressed the view that the hymeniuni of the Hymenomycetes, during progressive phylogenetic development, had come to be placed on the lower sides of the pilei, instead of t>n the upper, for the purpose of concealing it from the light. On the other hand, my own researches seem to show that the position ot the hymeniuni has been primarily decided by the necessity of the basidia being so placed that they can readily liberate their spores into the air. Other, but subsidiary, advantages accruing to the hymenium from its position on the lower side of a pileus, rather tlian the upper, are: protectiou from lain, falling leaves, i\;c., and undue transpiration in dry weather. The exact ett'ect of direct sunlijlit npdii the spuns ot Hymeno- mycetes still remains to be worked out. In the ('lavar;e;e. many species live in fields. \c., where their hymenial surfa(;es are freely ■ <;. Massee, "A M x -2 = 1188 mm.^ approximately. Therefore, for 1 cm.-, =100 mm. 2, 11 88 we find that the specific increase = — = 11*8 approximately. In most specimens of the fungus the tubes do not attain-a length of 9 mm. The specific increase is therefore usually less than 1 1 S. By comparison with the results in the table given above, it may be concluded that many Agaricinea; have a larger specific increase than Foli/poruf^ sqitariiosus. However, this species has unusually Avide tubes. When the tubes are very navroAV, as in the cases of Fames vegetiis and F. i(/nl fruit-liody of I'dlypoms nr/uamosug which was 2 ft. 2 in. across. The openings of the hjmenial tubes are polygonal. Natural size. the specific increase may be nmch greater than that in any of the trilled funiji. Fomes vegetus. — The fruit-bodies are perennial and produce a layer of tubes annually (Fig. 11). In the specimen examined it was found that for one year there were 2080 tubes to 1 square cm. The lenc^th of each tube on the averai^e Avas 12 mm. and the diameter 0-17 iiiiii. Hence, the area of the hymenium for each square centimetre= 12 f "_" X ^'1' ) >^ -*^*"'^*-' = l-^'^-'^'-i nmi.- appri)x. Therefore, for 1 cm.-, =100 mm.-, we find that the specific increase 14830-4 1 ,,, ■ . 1 T 4-U • • 1 »!, = =148 approxunatel}'. In the specimen exammed three THE EXTENT OF THE HYMENIUM 33 layers of tubes had been produced, and these possessed a total vertical length of 40 mm. Hence, taking the three years together, the total specific increase amounted to 493. Fomes igniarius. — In this species also, the fruit-bodies are per- ennial and produce successive layers of tubes. In a large specimen it was found for one layer that in 1 sq. cm. the number of tubes was 2000. The breadth of each tube on the average was 0-15 mm. and the length 4 mm. Hence, the area of hymenium for each (22 \ — X 0-15 j X 2000 = 3800 mm.^ approximately. Therefore, for 1 cm. 2, =100 mm.-, the specific increase = — =38 ^ 100 approximately. In the specimen examined there were twenty-five Fig. 7. — View of part of a transverse section through the middle of a mature fruit-body of Polyporus squamosus. The hymenial tubes are directed down- wards. Natural size. layers of tubes, having a total thickness of 100 mm. For the total period of growth, therefore, the specific increase amounted to the high value of 942. From the figures just given, which show that in one year's growth the specific increase for a specimen of Fomes ignarius was approximately 38, and for one of F. vegetus approximately 148, it is clear that the perennial Polyporese with narrow tubes produce much more hymenial surface for a given area of pileus than any of the AgaricineaB. The specific increase for Psalliota campestris, which was the highest in the Agaricineaj investigated, was only 20-04. 34 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI We have seen that in the Aufaricinete the extent of the hymenium has been increased by the production of radial wedge- shaped ujills with vertical median planes, so that the fruit-bodies are characterised by an admirable compactness. However, certain principles underlying the spacing of the gills in reference to one another still require an elucidation. The gills are usually crowded together on the underside of a pileus. Two adjacent gills, how- ever, must be a certain distance apart in order to permit of the liberation of the spores. It will subsequently be shown ^ that for Psalliota cainj^estris, &c., the spores are actually shot horizontally for about 0-1 mm. into the interlamellar spaces before their paths of movement become vertical. Two adjacent gills, where they are closest to one another, i.r. near the pileus flesh, must therefore be separated from one another by a distance which at least just exceeds 0-1 mni. In the Mushroom the minimum space between the gills Avas actually found to be about 0-2 mm. (Plate I., Fig. 4). Probably nearly 50 per cent, of this should be regarded as a margin of safety. When a mature pileus is tilted slightly, so that the plane of the flesh is no longer horizontal, the gills, displaced from their vertical planes, react to the stimulus of gravity by growth in such a manner that they quickly come to take up vertical positions once more.- This, however, entails a reduction in the margin of safety, for the spaces between the gills become narrowed. If the pileus is tilted beyond a certain amount, it neces- sarily follows that, when the gills have adjusted themselves, the margin of safety must have disappeared altogether. This must lead to a diminution in the number of spores escaping from the pileus. In the Mushroom, judging from a study of gill-dimensions as embodied in Plate I., Fig. 4, the margin of safety Avould not be used up until the pileus had been tilted to an angle of about 30°. In this instance, and ])robably quite generally for Agaricineju, pro- vided only that the gills have taken up vertical planes, just as many spores can be liberated from a slightly tilted as from an ^ Vide infra, Cliiq). XL * Cf. A. H. R. Buller, "The Reactions of the Fruit-bodies of LentinK.'i lepidem, ¥r., to External StimuH," Ann. of Hot., vol. xix., 1905, p. 4.'}2. Also vi(le infra, Chap. IV. THE ARRANGEMENT OF GILLS 35 untilted pileiis. This arrangement must be of some value, for in woods and fields slightly tilted pilei with vertical gills are quite com- monly met with. It is now clear that two adjacent gills must be at least a certain minimum distance apart to permit of the successful liberation of the spores. It is equally clear, however, that when the space between two gills ex- ceeds a certain maximum their arrange- ment is a wasteful one, for the underside of the pileus is then not being used up to the best advantage. The gills of Agaricineie are disposed radially, so that in passing from the stipe to the edge of the pileus they necessarily diverge. Near the stipe two adjacent gills may be economically spaced. Further from the stipe, however, owing to divergence, their spacing becomes wasteful. There is much more room left between them than is necessary for the liberation of the spores, and for the provision of an adequate margin of safety. This defect is obviated almost entirely in most Agaricinete by the introduction of shorter gills betAveen the longer ones, in succession, proceeding from the stipe to the pileus periphery (Fig. 8). In some specimens of Marasinius oreades it was found that the gills were of three different lengths, and that in a specimen of Tricholoma jpersonatuin they were of four different lengths. The complexity of the gill-system is usually greatest in pilei with large diameters. Good examples of the economical arrangement of gills, so that the space betAveen any adjacent two shall never exceed a certain maximum width, X3? "vl^ Fig. 8. — A series of gills removed from the pileus of a field ilusliroom (Psalliota campes- tris). Natural size. 36 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI and yet never be less than a certain minimum Avidtb, are seen in the Oyster Fungus (Pleurotus ostreatus, Figs. 2 and 3) and in the Mushroom (Fig. 0 and Plate IV., Fig. 25). Certain species of Russula have gills which arc all of one length, Avith the exception of very occasional shorter ones (Fig. 10). Since the gills in the fully-expanded fruit-bodies diverge considerably in Fig. 9. — Psalliota cavijjoitris. Part of ii pilous photographed from below, showing that the gills are accu- rately a(ljusteilciis in sitace. A finit-liiMly was jilacoil in tlie ])()siti()n sliown at a, and aflcr J lionrs it had assumed tin- ])i>siti(>n sliowii at h. 'I'lic skctdics h-o wcri' made in succession at intervals of lialf-an-lKiur. yMvas drawn 1 liour after . Here, again, the gills do not require to adjust themselves in vertical planes by means of a geotropic stimulus. The part played by the '^ deliquescence" of the gills and the folding of the pileus rim over the top of the pileus ADJUSTMENTS OF FRUIT-BODIES 69 in the process of spore-liberation will be sufficiently discussed in Chapter XIX. The adjustments of the fruit-bodies of Coprinus nivens in the interest of successful spore-liberation may be summed up as follows : (1) Heliotropic curvature of the stipe, which causes the pilei to be brought out of crevices in the substratum into the open ; (2) erection of the pileus by a negatively geotropic curvature of the stipe ; (3) raising of the pileus by elongation of the stipe; (4) adjustment of the gills by the expansion of the pileus ; and (5) deliquescence of the gills and the folding of the pileus rim over the top of the pileus. Coprinus plicatiloides, Buller.^ — This species, like the foregoing one, is coprophilous and occurs on horse dung. Its fruit-bodies are often very tiny and rank among the smallest in the whole group of the Agaricinea3. I have seen specimens less than 1 cm. long and with the expanded pileus only 2 nmi. wide. The average length of the stipe is about 3 cm. and the width of the pileus about 5-6 mm., but in large individuals, produced on sterilised horse dung, these dimen- sions may be doubled. The fruit-bodies are extremely delicate and can only stretch their stipes and expand their pilei under very moist conditions. When exposed to moderately dry air they wither up in a few minutes. The life-history of the fungus requires but little time for its completion. Some sterilised horse-dung balls were infected with spores and kept in a warm room. On the tenth day after infection young fruit-bodies made their appearance, and by the fourteenth day spores were being freely liberated. The fruit-bodies of C. plicatiloides react in succession to the stimuli of light and gravity in the same manner as those of C niveus. One evening, a fruit-body which had begun to grow vertically upwards from its substratum was covered over with a cap of stanniol paper opened at one end (Fig. 26, A and B). During the night the upward growth continued. Next morning, in response ^ This name has been given for the sake of convenience in reference. The fungus was obtained at Winnipeg. I have not been able to identify it with any described species, but it much resembles Coininvji iMcatilin. Its disc is depressed at maturity, as in C. plicatilis, but it is narrow instead of being broad. The gills are not attached to a collar, and the spores are oval. 70 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI to unilateral illumination, the stipe made a positive lieliotropic curvature, and oblique n a black background when they were observed at a distance of ten yards from the fruit-body. The log upon which the fruit-body was growing was watered MACROSCOPIC OBSERVATIONS 91 from time to time, but the air of the greenhouse was dry. It seemed of interest to find out whether or not moist air causes a diminution in the rate of spore-fall. Accordingly, the log was removed to the Hymenophyllum house after this had been so well syringed that its warm atmosphere appeared to be saturated Avith moisture. The spores, however, continued to fall for two hours quite as rapidly as in the dry greenhouse. Wreaths and curls of spores floated slowly aAvay from the fruit-body. The log was then taken back to its former dry situation, where the visible fall of spores Avent on unabated. Ordinary variations in Fig. 36. — Spores leaving a fruit-body of Polyporus squamosus and being carried away by slow air movements. ^ natural size. the hygroscopic state of the atmosphere, therefore, do not appear to affect appreciably the fall of the spores. Some very young fruit-bodies Avhich just shoAved the earliest indications of the development of hymenial tubes Avere found groAving upon a log of Avood in the open. The log was immediately removed and placed in a dark room. Under these conditions the hymenial tubes developed in a normal manner {cf. Figs. 5, 6, and 7, pp. 29, 32, and 33), and on the fourth day abundant spore- clouds Avere produced. These continued to fall for eleven days, at the end of Avhich time the fruit-body had begun to Avither. The production and liberation of spores, therefore, appear to be carried on quite independently of light. The hymenial tubes begin their development as saucer-shaped structures on the underside of the pileus. The Avails of the tubes, which are positively geotropic, then groAv vertically doAvuAvards for some days. By elongating in this manner, the tubes, although often shorter, may attain a length of a centimetre (Fig. 7, p. 33). 92 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI Their polygonal pores are shown in Fig. G, p. 32. By making suitable sections and using the microscope, it was found that ripe spores were being discharged when the tubes on a young fruit- body were only 1 mm. long. These observations lead me to suppose that, in the case of the fruit-body for which it was found that the spore-fall period lasted sixteen days, spore-emission had already been in process for about a week before the spore-clouds were dis- covered. Probably, therefore, in that instance the total spore-fall period extended over about three weeks. By placing black paper beneath a ripe fruit-body for the purpose of collecting the spores, it may easily be proved that each tube emits spores continuously for several days. It may also be shown that, except for a small zone about 1 mm. high at the mouth where no spores are developed, every part of a tube produces spores. A very large fruit-body, '2 ft. 2 in. across, was gathered from a tree and a vertical section made through the pileus (Fig. 7, p. 33). The section Avas placed on black paper. In twenty-four hours each half-tube had produced a spore-deposit. The tubes were on the average about 9 mm. long, and the spore-deposits, which Avere of an even character, 8 mm. long, spores not having been produced by a zone round the tube mouths. A photographic reproduction of the deposits is shown in Plate IV., Fig. 28 ; and Plate IV., Fig. 27, gives a spore-deposit collected from the mouths of hymenial tubes disposed on a square inch of the pileus. We may draw the con- clusion from these macroscopic observations that each hymenial tube during its development liberates spores for several days from every part of its spore-producing surface. The chief reason why one can see the clouds of spores so easily in Polyporus squamosus is that the spores come off from the fruit- liodies in such vast numbers. In one case, as already stated, a single square centimetre of a fruit-body produced at the very least 44,450,000 spores in two or three days. A spore-cloud resembles a steam cloud : the whole becomes visible owing to the vast number of the microscopic constituent particles. The spores, too, are com- paratively large (14-() x ■")13 /x) and also colourless. They absorb very little of the light falling upon tiiem, but reflect and refract most of it, so that they glisten. Like all other particles, the spores MACROSCOPIC OBSERVATIONS 93 fall by their own Aveight in the air. Since the rate of fall in quite still air is uniform and only about 1 mm. per second/ whilst air- currents and convection currents beneath the fruit-bodies have proportionately a much greater speed, which amounts, even in a quiet greenhouse, to several feet per minute, it is not astonishing that the spore-clouds appear to float away from the fruit-bodies as if they were not sinking at all. ^ Vide infra, Chaps. XV. and XVI. CHAPTER \ II THE DEMONSTRATION OF THE FALL OF SPORES BY MEANS OF A BEAM OF LIGHT After I h;id made the observations upon Pol)jporiis squamosus which have just been described, it occurred to me that il might be possible to see the clouds of spores falling from any hyiiiuno- mycetous fungus with the aid of a sufficiently strong beam of light. Accordingly, a hirge Horse-mushroom (Fsalliota arvensis) w\as obtained and placed as a cap on an open glass box. The light from an electric arc was allowed to pass through a small hole in a dark screen, and the rays were then collected and turned into a strong parallel beam by means of a biconvex lens. The beam was then directed so that it passed through the glass box. At once a very striking and remarkable result made itself apparent. On looking at the beam of light in the box, one could see the spores floating in the air in countless thousands. It seemed as if, in miniature, a heavy broAvn-flaked snow-storm was taking place. Curls and wreaths of spores, formed by convection currents, w^ere constantly proceeding from the gills, and the air in the box quickly became densely laden with spores. In the course of a few minutes the density of the spore-cloud in the box became constant. At this stage, doubtless, just as many spores settled on the bottom of the box as were given off at the top by the Mushroom gills. The spores were not to be seen merely as clouds. One could clearly perceive any individual spore floating in the light, and follow its course for some distance.^ It has thus fallen to my lot, by using a very simple method, to be the flrst actually to observe the ^ On the same principle tliat one can see a star, altliou;,^! it lias no appreciable disc, or a spider's web in strong sunlight at a distance of several j'ards. One does not perceive the dimensions and shape of a .spore owing to the insufficient resolv- ing power of the eye. One is simply aware that it send-s out liglit. 94 THE BEAM-OF-LIGHT METHOD 95 fascinating spectacle of millions of spores leaving the gills of a Mushroom. It must not be supposed that the ordinary dust particles, which are always present in the air in countless numbers, were mistaken for spores. With a concentrated beam of light it is very easy to see the dust particles. In my laboratory they are roughly of two classes : the coarser ones are comparatively rare and consist of fibrous matter, &c., whilst the finer ones are extraordinarily numerous and doubtless of the most varied origin. The coarser particles alone can be mistaken for spores, but a very little experience is sufiicient to prevent confusion. These dust particles never occur in the form of wreaths or curls, and only occasionally float into the beam of light. Further, they are irregular in shape and rarely affect the light in the same manner as a spore. The finer particles are distinctly smaller than spores, never so regular in size, and more numerous. They are also somewhat difificult to see individually, for they do not glisten in the light nearly so brightly as spores. It is evident, therefore, that spores and ordinary dust particles can be distinguished in a beam of light with great ease. After finding that the beam-of-light method could be applied with so much success to a Mushroom, I made general use of it in investigating the spore-fall of a large number of other species. It has proved of great service in determining whether or not spore- discharge was taking place in any particular fruit-body, in finding out the length of the spore-fall period, and in studying the effect of various external conditions upon spore-liberation. It may be stated quite generally that, w^henever spores are falling from a fruit-body, they can be observed with the unaided eye in a strong beam of light. So far as my experience goes, there are no species of Hymenomycetes of which the spores are too small to be seen in this macroscopic manner. Even a very slight discharge from a fruit-body may be detected. Sufiicient evidence of its occurrence is provided by a dozen spores streaming through a beam. It was found convenient in my own department to carry out observations with the beam-of-light method in the following manner. The lecture-theatre lantern, provided with an electric arc, was set 96 KESEARCHES ON FUNGI upon a suitable Avoodco stand, so that the front lens Avas about 5 feet above the ground. To the lens was attached a black cap, in the middle of which a round aperture, one and a half inches in diameter, had been made. A bull's-eye condenser — a plano-convex lens mounted upon a stand adjustable for any position, such as is com- monly used for illuminating opaque objects — was then placed in front of, and close against, the aperture so that, when the arc was turned on, the condenser formed a concentrated beam of light. The chamber into which the spores were liberated usually consisted of a beaker, G inches high and 4 in diameter, closed above by a circular glass plate (Fig. 37). A piece of sheet cork was fixed on to the middle of one side of the plate by means of sealing-wax. A living fruit-body, to be tested, was pinned on to the cork so that, when the plate was placed on the beaker, the fruit-body had its normal orientation, the hymenial side looking downwards. The beaker Avas then set close in front of the condenser in the beam of light. If a fruit-body is active, a stream of spores can be detected coming from it within a few seconds after it has been placed in position above the beam. The stream is carried slowly round and round in the beaker by convection currents. It gradually breaks up so that in a few minutes the spores are well scattered (Fig. 37). A maximum density of spores is soon attained. At this stage as many spores settle as are liberated. If one directs the beam of light so that it passes through the air just beneath the gills or hymenial tubes, &c., one can observe the spores slowly emerging into vicAV. They are then simply falling by their oAvn weight, at the rate, in many species, of 1-2 mm. per second.^ Convection currents sweep the spores, as they emerge from the gills, hymenial tubes, &c., slowly in one direction, and it is thus that a steady stream of spores arises. The density of the stream remains very regular for hours or even days. There is no evidence Avhatever that the spores are discharged intermittently. The most remarkable thing about the liberation of the spores is just its constancy for considerable periods of time. An unbroken stream of spores was observed to be emitted from the fruit- bodies of species of Polystictus, Lenzites, Schizophyllum, Stereum, &c., for days and in some cases for more than two Aveeks. ^ Vide infra, Chaps. XV. iui>»: •--^";i-<^-*v' ^KTl'lIll ■ ' ■ -i'V :■"•*''• ' •' • ' ■ • '. "^ .■••ii--'v'-'''-:.v ■ .3^'.''.' •'•■ ■■ ■'■■' •;.'< ■ ■ . ■ M: m:s^ ••.■;<•■: ■ n:M .■■■•";■■■ ■■■:. •:-.^/- / ■'.' :■./■:■"•■• FlC4. 37. — Diagram illustrating the discharge of spores from a fruit-body of Poli/stictus versicolor as seen by the beam-of- light method. The fruit-body is pinned in its natural position to a piece of cork attached to a circular glass cover placed upon a beaker. A stream of spores is carried round within the beaker very slowly by convection cur- rents and gradually breaks up so that the spores become scattered fairly uniformly. Reduced to about %. Mushroom and the black ones of Coprini present brownish and dull metallic appearances respectively. It has been determined, by methods to be explained subsequently, that very small spores, such as those of CoUybia dryopkila, in still air fall at the rate of about 0"o mm. per second, and that the very largest, such as those of Coprinus plicatilis, fall at the rate of about G 98 RESEARCHES OX FrXCil 5 mm. per second. Mushroom spores fall at a speed of about 1 mm. per second. It is not surprising, therefore, that convection currents carry the spores round in the beakers for a considerable time before they settle down, and that the spores become spread fairly uniformly in the air of any small closed chamber. In one experiment I placed a piece of a Mushroom [PsaUiota campestris) at the top of one end of a box which was 107 cm. long, 7 mm. Avide, and 13 cm. high, and which was illuminated with a parallel beam of light sent through it lengthwise. The spores Averc gradually scattered in the enclosed air. Some Avere even carried to Avithin a fcAv centimetres of the end of the box opposite to that in Avhich the fungus had been placed. This observation shoAvs that very small convection currents are capable of carrying the spores over a metre from a fruit-body in the lateral direction. From observations Avhich I have made upon the fall of spores in glass chambers of various sizes, it seems that convection currents are such that the spores in a sufficiently large chamber (large beakers, &g.) tend to spread themselves uniformly Avithin its con- tained air, so that equal numbers of them come to occupy each available unit of space. Richard Falck ^ observed the spore-deposits made by fruit-bodies placed in chambers provided Avith vertical series of small paper shelves, and he found that the sheh'es, even Avhen they had been placed one above the other at short intervals, became equally covered Avith spore-dust. My own observations upon falling spores, made by the beam-of-light method, have enabled me to explain Falck's results in the following manner : CouA-ection currents are usually of such strength in the chambers that the spores are moved about by them so that equal numbers come to occupy each unit of space. As a result of this, there is the same number of spores in the layer of air immediately over each shelf. As the spores are falling by their own Aveight at the rate of about 1 mm. per second,^ a certain number settle each second. Since the conditions for the settling doAvn of spores oA'cr each shelf iire ^ R. Falck, " Die Sporenverbi-eitung bei den Basidiomyceten," Jleifruge zia- Bioloijic der Pflan::en, Bd. IX., 1904. ^ The rate varies accordinif to the species ; rf. the Table of velocities in Chap. XV. THE BEAM-OF-LIGHT METHOD 99 approximately the same, the shelves must eventually all become uniformly covered with a spore-deposit. Falck has also called attention to the fact that, when the pilei of certain fungi are suspended in a glass chamber, one sometimes obtains curious and fantastic spore-deposits on paper placed at the bottom of the vessel. These irregular spore-deposits are in my opinion entirely due to the nature of the convection currents in the glass vessels. Observations with the beam-of-light method have taught me that, when the velocities of the convection currents are high compared with the constant rate of fall of the spores due to gravity, the spores become evenly distributed in each unit of space in the chamber, and that a uniform spore-deposit collects in con- sequence upon the bottom of the chamber, shelves, &c. If, how- ever, the spores, such as those of various species of Coprinus, are large and heavy, and fall at the rate of several millimetres per second, and if, in addition, the convection currents are not strong compared with this rate of fall, then we have the conditions for the formation of a localised and irregular spore-deposit at the bottom of the chamber. In general it may be stated that the appearance of any spore-deposit is decided partly by the speed and nature of the movements of the air through which the spores have fallen, and partly by the rate of fall of the spores themselves. The pileus of a small Coprinus fruit-body which came up on horse dung and was liberating its spores, was suspended at the top of a closed glass chamber which was about 6 inches high, 4 inches wide, and covered below with white paper. The chamber was placed in front of the condensing lens of the lantern. It was observed that a black spore-deposit was accumulating on the white paper along one side of the base of the chamber. After about an hour it was assumed that the chamber had taken on the room temperature. The arc- light was suddenly turned on, and with the beam a stream of spores could be seen leaving the gills, falling obliquely at a rate of several millimetres per second, and settling w^here the spore-deposit had been accumulating. Owing to the sides of the vessel becoming warmed by heat accompanying the beam of light, new and marked convection currents were soon formed. The result was that the stream of spores lOO RESEARCHP]S OX FUXGI became deflected into a new ])ath, and the spores became scattered fairly re,u:ularly. In quite still air in very small chambers, Coprinus spores fall quite vertically.^ These observations seem to me to warrant the belief that the localised and irregular spore-deposit formed by the Coprinus in the first instance was due to convection currents which kept circulating in a constant path, thereby deflecting the rapidly falling stream of spores out of the vertical toward one side of the jar. It is scarcely necessary to discuss how regular convection currents might arise in the closed system which was employed, but it may be pointed out that the living and actively respiring Coprinus pileus might Avell be responsible for them. Falck arranged tiers of circular paper discs, one above the other, in a tall cylindrical glass chamber where a pileus was liberating its spores. Under these conditions he often obtained very curious radiating spore-deposits on each disc. Here, again, the assumption that convection currents taking regular paths existed in the chamber, seems to me quite sutHcient to give a basis for an ex- planation of the results. As one may readily observe by means of the beam-of-light method, the spores are carried away from the underside of the pileus in the form of a comparatively thin, dense, and continuous stream. The stream Avhich reveals the presence of convection currents, doubtless, would be carried along slowly, flrst over one surface, then over another, dividing here owing to this obstacle, and turning back there owing to another, until finally it would be broken up. Where on any surface a dense trail of spores has accumulated, it may be assumed that the spore stream took a regular path just above. If the convection currents arc only fairly constant in their directions, then owing to the fact that the spores in the tirst instance are swept aAvay from the pileus in the form of a stream, fantastic spore-patterns seem to be just what should be expected under the conditions provided by Falck's experiments. In concluding my remarks in this chapter, 1 wish to recommend the demonstration of spore-fall by the beam-of-light method to all those who give lectures or laboratory courses which include a treatment of the fruit-bodies of Hymenomycetes. It is ditticult ^ Vide infra, Chay). XW THE BEAM-OF-LIGHT METHOD loi for a student to realise that millions of spores are falling each hour from a ripe Mushroom before his or her very eyes, and yet unseen. A sinole demonstration of the kind that I have described is likely to impress the fact indelibly on the memory. The demon- stration can be carried out on any day in the year, even in the depth of winter. Subsequently, it will be shown that there are many species belonging to the genera Lenzites, Polystictus, &c., which can be kept dry in bottles for months or even years, and which yet shed spores again for days after they have been revived by being placed for about six hours under moist conditions. A stock of such fruit-bodies may be kept in the laboratory, and revived at any time with great ease and certainty by placing wet cotton-wool on the pilei. Instead of a strong artificial beam of light, sunlight, let through a slit in a dark room, is equally effective for the purpose of illumination. CIIATTEK \ ril THE 8 PORE-FALL PERIOD The spores of a hymenomycetous fruit-body, under favourable conditions, are liberated continuously at a fairly constant rate. They are never all discharged simultaneously or set free in inter- mittent showers. The falling spores may be compared to raindrops steadily falling from the clouds on a wet day. Tlic process of spore-discharge often requires a considerable period of time. This may be conveniently called the spore-fall period. In any given fruit-body, the spore-fall period varies in length according to the rate of development of the spores. This depends on internal organisation and also upon external conditions, more particularly of temperature. For many corky or leathery fruit- bodies, such as those of Lenzites, Polystictus, Stereum, ike, ■which readily become dried up in a dry atmosphere and quickly absorb free water through the upper surfaces of their pilei, rainfall and dew formation are distinctly favourable to the discharge of spores, whilst drought must often temporarily interrupt it. It has already been recorded^ that a large specimen of Foly- porus squcLinosus, growing on a log, Avas observed to shed its spores continuously for sixteen days. Reasons were also given for sup- posing that in this case the spore-fall period nuist have extended over at least three weeks. The length of the spore-fall period was determined for a number of xero phytic fruit-liodies by means of the beam-of-light method. The fruit-bodies which had been detached from the substrata and allowed to dry up were revived in a dainp-chaiiibcr, sus])ended in beakers, and examined usually several times a day with a beam from an arc-light. The beakers were kept in a well-heated labora- Chap. VI. 1 <"'. 102 THE SPORE-FALL PERIOD 103 tory. Moisture was supplied to each fruit-body by means of wet cotton wool placed on the upper surface. An apparently full-sized fruit-body of SchizopJtyllum coniTnune, less than a square inch in area, shed its spores for sixteen days continuously. The density of the spore-stream leaving the gills seemed to remain almost constant from a few hours after its formation onwards, until about three days before the end of the spore-fall period, when it began to grow distinctly feebler. A small fruit-body of Poly>y means of hot air. During the drying process the tieshy pileus became quite DESICCATION OF FRUIT-BODIES 107 stiff and white, and the gills shrivelled up (Fig. 40, A, B, and C). After the fruit-bodies had been kept in the dried state for twenty- four hours, free water was allowed to come into contact with the upper surfaces of the pilei and with the stipes. It was readily absorbed. The fruit-bodies became swollen, and completely resumed their normal appearance in the course of a few hours (D and F). At the end of this time they were actively shedding spores. Thick spore - deposits collected beneath the pilei on black paper (E), and the dis- charge of spores from the sterigmata Avas watched by means of microsco- pic sections. Convincing proof was thus obtained that the fruit-bodies of Marasmius oreades, after complete desiccation, are capable of reviving on access to moisture and of resuming their normal activities. The retention of A'itality in the dried-up condition, however, is only temporary. It was found by subsequent experi- ment that fruit - bodies which had been kept stiff and hard were still capable of recovery after six weeks but not after three months. Fruit-bodies of Marasmius peronatus and of Collyhia dryophila were allowed to dry on a laboratory table. They were then tested at intervals for revival. The tests showed that recovery was possible Avhen the desiccated condition had lasted for only a few days, but not when it was continued for a month. On hot days in summer and early autumn, one not infrequently sees shrivelled-up fruit-bodies of Marasmius oreades in " fairy rings " Fig. .39. — Marasmius oreades. To the left a fruit- body shrivelled up during drought. To the right a fruit-body which after becoming shrivelled up was revived under moist coziditionsand is again shedding spores. Natural size. io8 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI ill meadows (Fig. 30). The fruit-bodies are developed during a spell of wet weather, luit, when the air and soil become reduced in moisture, and especially when the radiation of the sun is intense, they sloAvly dry up and cease to shed spores. As soon as rain comes again, water is quickly reabsorbed through the top of the pileus, and the spore-liberating function is resumed. There can be no doubt that the revival of the fruit-bodies of Marasmii after desiccation is an advantageous adaptation which prevents a great loss of spores. Fig. 40. — Marasmiu.s orrade.t. A and B, the under surfaces, and C, the upper surface of the pilei of three fruit-bodies after desiccation. D and F are the pilei A and C respectively three hours after the commencement of revival by absorption of water through their upper surfaces. E, a spore-deposit from the i)ilens D (A revived). Natural size. During dry weather in early autumn I have several limes gathered shrivelled-up specimens of Collybui dryupliila growing among leaves ill woods. Upon being wetted, the pilei soon became fully expanded again, and spore-liberation was then actively resumed. It is evident that the fruit-bodies of CoHyhia dryopJilla retain their vitality after desiccation in just the same manner as those of Mcrdsmiiis oreades. As a result of experiments upon a considerable number of typical species, the names of which will shortly be given in a Table, it seems A XEROPHYTIC FUNGUS FLORA 109 safe to state that very many, and possibly all, of the small leathery and corky fruit-bodies of Hymenomycetes which are to be found developing on fallen logs and sticks in woods, are capable of com- plete recovery after desiccation. In a number of instances they can be kept dry for months or even for several years, apparently without the smallest detriment to their power of liberating spores after absorbing water once more. Among the species in question one may mention those belonging to the following genera : Schizophyllum, Lenzites, Trogia, Dsdalea, Polyporus, Polystictus, Merulius, Phlebia, Stereum, and Corticium. These fungi must be regarded as xero- phytes, for their fruit-bodies are capable of withstanding drought by drying up without any loss of vitality and of reviving again under moist conditions. Fruit-bodies of Lenzites, Polystictus, S:g., which were required for testing:, were sfathered durinsf October and November from stumps, logs, and sticks in the woods near Winnipeg, and placed on a table in the laboratory. There the air was very dry, so that desiccation took place rapidly. A dried fruit-body, still living, revived when it had been set in a damp-chamber and wet cotton- wool had been placed on the top of its pileus. It quickly absorbed the free water, expanded, and soon came to have a fresh appear- ance. After a few hours spore-liberation was resumed. This was proved in my first experiments by collecting spore-deposits on paper, but subsequently this method was discarded and the beam-of-light method used instead. It has already ^ been made sufficiently clear that a strong beam of light, directed beneath a fruit-body in a closed beaker, readily enables one to determine whether or not spore-fall is taking place. As a rule, only a very few hours are required for a dried-up fruit-body to regain its spore-liberating function. A specimen of SchizopJii/llum commune, kept dry for six months, recovered in three hours. Merulius corium and Polystictus versicolor, kept dry for six months, and Lenzites betulina, kept dry for two years and six months, all required about four hours to recover. In other cases it was found that spore-fall usually recommenced within six hours after the fruit-bodies had been placed under moist conditions. A 1 Chap. VIIT. no RESEA1?CHES ON FUNGI fruit-bod}' of D.'cdalea unicohn-, kept dry for two years and six months, recovered in about four hours, but another fruit-body of the same species, kept dry for four years, recovered in about T'o hours. This observation indicates that those fruit-bodies which have been kept longest in the desiccated condition are the slowest to revive. All the fruit-bodies tested were found to retain their vitality for several months, some of them for more than two years, and one, namely, Dirdidra unicolor, for more than four years. Only in a few species, owing to lack of material old enough, has it been possible for me to determine within what period death occurs. However, the investigation seems to indicate that every dried fruit-body exposed to the air loses its vitality in the course of a few months or years, just as does a seed.^ In the Table opposite is given a list of the fungi which were tested, and also the results of tests made after various periods of desiccation. Some well-grown specimens of Lenzites hetidina and of Sdiizo- pJiyllu7n commiune were collected. Doubtless, they had already shed an abundance of spores before they were gathered. They were kept dry for a whole year, and then revived in a damp- chamber, whereupon they shed clouds of spores. Again, by drying, they were put to rest for another year, and at the end of this second period of desiccation they were again allowed access to free water. They revived and shed spores once more. A similar revival was found to take place even after desiccation for a third year, but an attempt to revive the fruit-bodies after a fourth year of desiccation Avas unsuccessful : the fruit-bodies became discoloured and putrid without shedding any spores. Sticks, dead branches, and logs in woods are all liable to become dried up. AVhen this happens the mosses, lichens, and fungi upon them must gradually dry up too. It is not surprising, therefore, that these plants are adapted to withstand temporary desiccation. ^ Paul Becfiuerel (loc. cil., p. 1 1 78) foiiiul that dried seeds of various kinds placed in pure and dry nitrogen in the dark for a year, did not lilierate a trace of carbon dioxide, and yet germinated subsequently. It will l>e of interest to determine whether or not dried fruit-bodies of fungi are also capable of retaining their vitality without any evidence of resjjiratorj' activitj'. Tf life may become latent in dry seeds, it may also do so in dried fruit-bodies. A XEROPHYTIC FUNGUS FLORA III They survive through periods of drought by drying up and retain- ing their vitality. The hyinenomycetous stick or log flora is therefore xerophytic. While it has now been demonstrated that many of the fruit- bodies of wood-destroying fungi are able to withstand desiccation unharmed, the resistance of the mycelium to dry conditions still requires an experimental investigation. Quite possibly in some List of Hymenomycetes with Fruit-hodies wMcJi can become Desiccated without losing their Vitality. i Recovered after i Failed to Recover Family. Species. Desiccatiou for after Desiccation for / Corticium Iseve 1 year 1 Thelephore?e •, Stereum hirsutum 1 year ! ,, purpuieum 1 year 1 year 6 months „ bicolor 1 year 6 months 2 years Hydneje . . ^ Phlebia pileata 2 years 8 months 4 years 4 months „ zonata 1 year 3 years 6 months Merulius coriuni 2 years • .. ' Gloeoporus coiichoides 1 year Djedalea unicolor 4 years „ confragosa 1 year „ quercina 1 month 5 years Polyporese . - Polyporus conchifer 4 months 5 months „ rigens 2 years 1 ,, carneus 2 years 1 Polystictus versicolor 2 years 4 years ,, hirsutus 3 years ... \ ,, pei-gamenus 1 year Trogia crispa 4 months ] year Schizophyllum commune 2 years 16 years Lenzites betulina 3 years 5 years Agaricinese . ■ „ spepiaria Crepidotus sp. (?) 4 months a few weeks Marasmius oreades 6 weeks 3 months „ peronatus a few days 1 month V Collybia dryophila 1 week 1 month cases the xerophytism of a fungus is only partial, so that desicca- tion is fatal to the mycelium but harmless to the fruit-bodies. However, the rapidity with which fruit-bodies, on the advent of rain, develop upon sticks which have been dried up for Aveeks in summer, points to the conclusion that the mycelium in the wood must very frequently retain its vitality in a state of desiccation. A somewhat striking laboratory experiment with Polystictus versl- 112 RESEARCHES OX FUNGI color lends considemble support to these general field observations. A stick, about 4 cm. thick and ."SO cm. long, bearing a number of fruit-bodies of the fungus in question, was gathered by myself and kept in a dry state as a museum specimen. After an interval of four years it was found that the fruit-bodies, on being moistened in the usual manner, did not shed any spores, but appeared to be discoloured and to have lost their vitality. The stick was then given to Miss J. S. Bayliss for certain investigations which she was then carrying on. It was set in a damp-chamber with one end in water. Four weeks later Miss Bayliss observed that a number of new fruit-bodies of Poly st ictus versicolor had begun to develop upon it. In the course of a few weeks some of them attained considerable size.^ This observation seems to me to prove con- clusively that the mycelium in the wood must have retained its vitality for four years in the desiccated condition. It is well knoAvn that the mycelium of PsaUiota camjiestris, when kept dry as "spawn" in compressed horse-dung bricks, re- tains its vitality for years. According to Falck,- the mycelium of Coprinus sterqitilinus is still able to continue its development after the horse-dung balls, in Avhich it has existed, have been kept dry for a year. In both these instances the vegetative part of the fungus is resistant to desiccation, whereas the reproductive part is not. The xerophytic, hymenomycetous fruit-bodies growing on logs, such as those named in the Table, have several features in common. This is only what might be expected when it is remembered that they are all adapted to the same external conditions, i.e. to develop on a wooden substratum chiefly in the cool and late autumn months. The points of agreement are as follows : — 1. They retain their vitality for months or years after desiccation. 2. They are all firmly built and resemble in consistency leather, cork, or wood. Tluir toughness renders them inedible to slugs and favours their persistence through periods of drought and frost. ^ Miss J. S. Bayliss, "The Bioloi^y of Polif-iticliis versicolor (Fries.)" Journ. of Economic liioloijij, vul. iii., 1U08, p. 2U. - R. Falck, Ikitrdije ::ur liioloyie der PJlanzcii, Bd. \'l 1 1., 1902, p. ;517. SCHIZOPHYLLUM COMMUNE 113 3. The upper surface of the pileus is usually hairy or woolly. A means is thus provided for the rapid absorption of water on the advent of rain. Free water placed at one edge of the pileus quickly passes by capillarity over the entire upper surface. Since in many species the fruit-bodies more or less overlap one another, this arrangement may be of advantage in hastening recovery after desiccation. The hairs, like those on the leaves of certain xero- phytic Phanerogams, are doubtless of some service in diminishing the rate of transpiration in dry weather. Direct evidence of this is afforded by an experiment made by Miss J. S. Bayliss,^ who found that the removal of the hairs from the upper surface of a pileus of Polystictus versicolor increased the rate at which the process of drying took place. 4. They are able to withstand prolonged and severe frost (such as occurs at Winnipeg). 5. They shed their spores at low temperatures. A number of them can perform this function even at 0° C.^ 6. Their attachment is unilateral. This is connected with the fact that they grow on stumps, sticks, and fallen logs. The dimidiate form of the fruit-bodies is as well adapted to the posi- tion of the woody substratum as the radial form is to the position of the earth in the Mushroom and Boleti, &c. The Genus Schizophyllum. — The genus Schizophyllum is unique among the Agaricinete in that it is characterised by possessing gills which are either partially or completely divided down their median planes into two parts. We shall now proceed to interpret this remarkable morphological fact in the light of observations made upon Schizophyllum commune. Schizopliyllain coTnmune is a species comparatively rare in England but extremely common in Manitoba, where it is found on sticks, logs, and stumps. The fruit-bodies, which are usually attached laterally, attain a width of about o cm. They occur singly or, more frequently, in imbricated groups. Their general appearance is shown in Fig. 41, A and B, and Fig. 42. The gills are in distinct fasciculi, each pair of deeper and longer ones being ^ Miss J. S. Bayliss, loc. cit., p. 17. * Vide infra, Chap. X. H 114 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI separated by from three to five others which are shallower and shorter (Fig. 41, E). The upper layer of the pileus presents a Fig. 41.— Schizophy/I um communr — a specialised xerophyte. A and 15, fruit-bodies seen from above {^rowing on wood. Natural size. C and D, two fruit-bodies seen from lielow and in section respectively. About twice natural size. E, section through a pileus during wet weather showing the gills, which are split down their median planes. F, section through a pileus after desiccation. E and F about 12 times the natural size. woolly appearance and is made uj) ut" tangled hypha' which extend downwards tOAvards the median planes of all the deeper gills. SCHIZOPHYLLUM COMMUNE 115 The under layer of the pileus, the firm flesh which is produced Fig. 42. — Schizophyllum commune. The lower photograph shows a jjroup of fruit-bodies in the desiccated condition. The gill-fasciculi are closed up. Natural size. The upper photograph shows the same group of fruit-bodies after being revived. The gill-fasciculi are now open. About ^ natural size. downwards to form the gills, thus becomes divided into radiating portions (Fig. 41, E). ii6 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI The area of a fruit-body is increased by marginal growth. The peripheral walls of the iuterlaniellar spaces protrude outwards as crenatures, and more or less resemble the heels of slippers placed side by side in a row (Fig. 4;')). These crenated walls constitute growing regions by means of Avhich the older gills arc lengthened and new ones added. Whilst a pileus is extending by marginal growth, the interlamellar spaces gradually widen. When a space has at- tained a certain Avidth, it Dccomes divided into two down the middle, owing to the formation within it of a new gill which arises as a short median downgrowth from the pilous flesh (Fig. 413, a). The upper half of every new gill is undivided, but the lower half is made up of two plates, the inner Fig. -13. — Schizopkyllum commuiie. Piece of a pileus seen r i • i from below sliowin^ the arran-jement of the gills. SUriaCCS 01 wllicll are a-(j, stages in gill development; h. part of"^ the ;„ pr-^it-iPt -ind plntliPrl woolly layer covering the top of the pileus and here ^" conLaet auu ClOUiea extended over the pileus margin ; i, interlamellar with loOSC hvuhai (cf space. Semidiagrammatic: the gills are represented , ' ^^ '' _ * as cut through transversely so that the surfaces of Fig.41.E). Agill,whilst section lie in one plane. About 13 times the .\, , , natural size. Still very short, occu- pies an isolated, sub- terminal position within the interlamellar space in which it has been formed. However, as growth proceeds, its distal end gradually approaches the pileus margin and eventually joins with it (Fig. 4."), a-f). All gills at their first-formed, stipe cuds are shallow and only partially divided. However, at their peripheral growing ends they gradually become deeper and more divided, SCHIZOPHYLLUM COMMUNE 117 until at length they come to consist solely of two deep, apposed plates. After a young gill has become connected with the pilens margin, its two plates separate from one another slightly at their peripheral ends. This separation of the gill plates, as growth proceeds, becomes more and more marked, and at length involves the pileus flesh. The peripheral end of every long and deep gill thus comes to resemble in cross section the deepest gills shown in Fig. 41, E. The whole gill system may be regarded as being made up of branched fasciculi. SchizopJtylhwi commune, as we have already seen, is a xero- phyte. In moist weather the gills all look vertically downwards, as in the Mushroom, and spore-discharge takes place for days from their hy menial surfaces (Fig. 41, E). When dry weather comes, and the wooden substratum gradually loses its water, de- siccation of the fruit-body sets in. The emission of spores soon ceases, and the two halves of each gill begin to diverge below (Fig. 44). As desiccation proceeds, the gill plates become curled outwards at their edges. When a fruit-body has become quite dry, one finds that the longest gills which have separated into two halves to their bases, have covered in the shorter ones. Each fasciculus of gills in cross section now presents a very curious appearance (Fig. 41, F). It is evident that the relative sizes and amounts of spHtting of the different gills are admirably adapted to facilitate the closing up of the fasciculi. In a state of desiccation a fruit-body has its hymenium completely hidden from external view, and the pileus is temporarily provided below with a hairy covering. Whilst in the dried condition a fruit-body can retain its vitality for at least two years, and, with intermittent revivals, for at least three years. When rain comes again, the woolly upper surface of the pileus sucks water in by capillary attraction, and the gill halves at once begin to unroll and reappose themselves Fig. 44. — Section through a fasciculus of gills of Schizo- phylium comiminc showing an early stage in the divergence of the gill plates. About 8 times the natural size. ii8 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI in pairs. Id Llic courso of two or three hours the gills become perfectly reconstructed, and they are then directed downwards in the normal manner (Fig. 41, E, and Fig. 42). The hymenial layer resumes its activity, and, after three or four hours of access to moisture, the emission of spores is vigorously recommenced. The mechanism involved in the closing and opening of a pileus can be partially explained from anatomical considerations. The main mass of each gill plate consists of downwardly running Fig. 45. — Schizophyllum commuiu. Above, a transverse section through a half-gill taken in a vertical direction ; below, another transverse section taken in a horizontal direction, h, the hy- menium ; s, the subhymeniuni ; t, the trama ; i, the inner free hairy surface of the half-gill which becomes exposed on desic- cation of the fruit-bodv. Magnilication, 688. tramal liyphffi, which have very thick walls and are strongly attached together at intervals. On the other hand, the hymeniuni and subhymenium arc composed of elements with relatively very ihin walls (Figs. 4ri). When a fruit-body dries up, the cell-walls of the hymenial and subhymenial layers contract much more strongly in the vertical direction than those of the tramal layer. This being so, the curling up of each gill plaii:. when water is lost from it, is a mechanical necessity. When a gill reabsorbs moisture, the w'alls of the hymenial and subhymenial layers expand to a greater extent than those of the trama. The tramal hyph.e are SCHIZOPHYLLUM COMMUNE 119 thus permitted to straighten themselves again. The straightening out of the gill plates, however, is brought about by something more than mere cell-wall imbibition and stretching. This is proved by the fact that the dry gills of dead fruit-bodies are not capable of becoming entirely uncurled. Partial recovery of the gills was observed : (1) In fruit-bodies which had lost their vitality when kept for sixteen years in the dried condition, and (2) in fresh fruit-bodies which were dried and then caused to absorb a solution of 1 per cent, corrosive sublimate through their upper surfaces. The first and major part of the straightening out of the gills we may regard as a mechanical process connected with the swelling of cell-walls. On the other hand, the final apposition of the two plates of each gill appears to be brought about by the resumption of turgidity by the hymenial and subhymenial elements. The finer part of the whole readjustment, according to this interpretation, is traceable to the semipermeable properties of living protoplasm. The division of the gills of Schizophyllum into two plates is significant in that it permits of the hymenial surfaces being pro- tected during periods of drought. The rapid curling up of the gill plates on the advent of dry weather must serve to check the rate of loss of w^ater from the fruit-body by limiting the amount of gill surface exposed to the outer air. This closing off of most of the transpiring gills at the beginning of desiccation, finds its analogy in the curling up of the leaves of many xerophytic Phanerogams under similar atmospheric conditions. However, I am not inclined to think that reduction in the rate of transpiration is the chief advantage gained by the opening out of the gill plates. Periods of drought are often very long, and when they occur it may be of considerable advantage for a fruit-body to have its delicate hymenial surfaces, covered as they are with millions of spores, made as inac- cessible as possible to various small marauding animals. However, the exact ecological significance of the opening out of the gill plates would best be elucidated in the tropics, where the genus Schizophyllum is richest in species. CHAPTER X EXTERNAL CONDITIONS AND SPORE-DISCHARGE— THE EFFECTS OF LKJHT, (iRAVITY, HYDROSCOPIC CONDITION OF THE AIR, HEAT, ALTERATION IN THE (JASEOUS ENVIRONMENT, AND OF ANAESTHETICS Like all other active processes of living organisms, the discharge of spores can only be carried on when external conditions arc favour- able. It is now necessary to consider these conditions in detail. The Effect of Light.^ — Whilst in some species, e.g. the Mush- room, the fruit-bodies can undergo perfect development in total darkness, in a number of others the pilei cannot be produced without a morphogenic stimulus given by light. Among the latter are Lentinus lejndeus and Folyporus squcwiosus. When a fruil- body of either of these species is grown entirely in the dark, it develops into a horn-like process Avithout the least trace of a pileus or hymenium (Fig. 16, D, p. 48, and Fig. 20, p. 58). It was found for Folyporus squamosus, however, that, when the development of the pileus has once been initiated in response to the stimulus of light, if the fruit-body is then placed in the dark, further development continues in a normal manner : the usual hymenial tubes are produced and the hymenium gives rise to ordinary basidia which liberate spores in continuous clouds. The production of spores in clouds in the dark, Avhich in one instance lasted for eleven days, proves conclusively that, for Poly poms squamosus at least, the liberation of spores is quite independent of light conditions. For species of Polystictus, Lenzites, Schizophyllum, S:g., spore-discharge was found to be quite continuous. The alternation of night and day appeared, as judged by the beam-of-light method, to make no difference whatever to the rate at which spores left the fruit-bodies. It is probably correct to state quite generally for the Hymeno- mycetes that, whilst the morphogenic stinudus of light may or may EXTERNAL CONDITIONS AND SPORE-DISCHARGE 121 not be necessary for the production of the hymeniuin, when once the hymenium has begun its development, the basidia discharge their spores quite independently of light conditions. In the case of certain Ascomycetes, e.g. Ascobolus, it has long been observed that spore-discharge is periodic, a certain number of asci ejecting their spores each day. This phenomenon has come more particularly under my notice in the case of Ascobolus immersus growing on horse dung. The periodicity depends on the alternation of day and night, and can be given an easy ecological explanation. It is important for the purpose of distribution that the ejected spores should be thrown clear of obstacles, e.g. dung balls, &c. The asci are positively heliotropic, and during the day always turn themselves in response to the stimulus of light, so that they point toward open spaces. Such an adjustment would be impossible at night. The periodic discharge of asci each day is therefore of advantage in that it ensures that these structures shall burst only after the light has caused them to take up the most favourable positions for spore- dissemination. On the other hand, as my observations have made clear, spore-discharge in the Hymenomycetes is continuous and does not take place at intermittent periods. The general arrange- ment of a Mushroom or Polyporus is such that, under normal conditions, the basidia never face obstacles. All that is required for the successful liberation of the spores is that the basidia shall shoot them straight outwards from the hymenium for a minute distance. After being violently expelled from their sterigraata, the spores drop into the spaces between the gills, in the hymenial tubes, &c., and thus fall from the fruit-body and are carried off by air-currents without coming into contact with any impediment.^ Almost without exception in the Hymenomycetes, the orientation of the hymenium, and with it the direction of spore-discharge, is finally determined by the stimulus of gravity, and is of such a nature as to ensure that the spores shall fall out of the fruit- body. The perfect indifference to light as regards spore-discharge by the fruit-bodies of Hymenomycetes in comparison with certain Ascomycetes is thus elucidated. ^ Vide infra, Chap. XVII. 122 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI The Effect of Gravity. — Gravity is the chief orienting stimulus acting on the fruit - bodies of Hymenomycetes. In FoLyporus sguamosus, for instance, as we have ah-eady seen from the dis- cussion in Chapter IV., it causes : (1) The stipe to turn the rudimentary and terminal pilous into a horizontal position, (l*) the pileus to grow with a symmetry suited to the position of the stipe, (3) the pileus flesh to grow parallel to the earth's surface, and (4) the hymenial tubes to grow towards the earth's centre. The stiped Agaricinea^ usually have stipes which are negatively geotropic and gills which are positively geotropic. Although the stimulus of gravity is of the greatest importance in orienting the hymenium and the basidia which it contains, it appears to have no direct effect on the process of spore-dis- charge. When a hymenium has once started its development, ripe spores continue to be developed and separated from the basidia, independently of the direction of gravitational attraction. Thus, if a gill be placed so that the basidia on one side look upward or downwards or at an}- angle with the vertical what- soever, spore - discharge takes place equally well in all cases. Evidence of this was obtained by watching spores leave their sterigmata with the microscope, and will be given in the next chapter, which deals with the violent projection of spores from the hymenium. The Effect of the Hygroscopic Condition of the Air. — It has been mentioned already ^ that for Folyporus squamosus, so far as it was possible to judge from the spore-clouds seen by daylight, the liberation of spores takes place equally well both in a dry and in a saturated atmosphere. For this species, therefore, ordinary variations in the hygroscopic state of the atmosphere do not appear to appreciably affect the rate of discharge of the spores. When a small portion of a pileus of Folyporus squamosus, Psalliota campestris, or Ainanitopsis vaginata, &c., was placed in a vertically disposed compressor cell {cf. Fig. 58, p. 167, and Plate IV., Fig. 29), so that the fall of spores could be Avatched with a hori- zontal microscope, it was found that spores fell continuously when ^ Chap. VI. EXTERNAL CONDITIONS AND SPORE-DISCHARGE 123 the chamber was saturated with moisture. When crystals of calcium chloride were placed in the cell, the spores continued to fall for some time, until the piece of pileus had shrunk appreciably and was evidently drying up. It can easily be observed with the beam-of-light method that, if a fruit -body of Poly st ictus versicolor, Lenzites betidina, &c., is allowed to dry up slowly, when a certain amount of water has been lost, the rate of spore-discharge becomes slower and slower. As desiccation proceeds spore-fall ceases altogether. Insufficient access to water must often, in nature as in the laboratory, especially in the case of the xerophytic fruit-bodies growing on logs and sticks, lessen the rate of spore-discharge and lead to a corresponding increase in the length of the spore-fall period. The general conclusion, to which numerous observations of the kind just described have led me, is that, so long as a fruit- body has sufficient moisture in itself, the dryness or dampness of the atmosphere without makes no appreciable difference to the rate of spore-discharge. The Effect of Heat. — The liberation of spores, like all other vital processes, can only be carried on within certain limits of temperature. Doubtless each species has its own particular minimum, optimum, and maximum for this function. In all the species so far investigated, the discharge of spores takes place rapidly at ordinary room temperatures. It slackens, however, when the temperature is sufficiently lowered ; but in several instances it was found to continue even at the freezing point of water, although with much diminished vigour. A slowing down of the rate of spore-discharge also occurs when the tem- perature is gradually raised above the normal ; and when a certain temperature has been reached, the hymenium becomes altogether inactive. The maximum temperature for the discharge of spores, however, is appreciably lower than the maximum for vitality. For the purpose of determining whether spore-fall still continues at freezing point, a cold-room was made use of. The room had two doors, one opening out-of-doors and the other into a passage within the University building. The temperature of the room 124 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI remained for hours, and .sometimes for days, between 0° and o° C. By opening the outer door for a few minutes the air of the room could easily be reduced to 0° C, and this temperature was often maintained for several hours. So far experiments have been limited to species which grow upon wood and have proved capable of withstanding uninjured the prolonged and severe frost of the Manitoban winter. Dried fruit-bodies of Lenzites hetulma, Polystictus versicolor, P. hirsutus, D.vdalea unicolor, and Scliizopliylliiin comviune were placed in a damp-chamber with wet cotton-wool upon the upper surfaces of their pilei. They soon re- vived, and at the end of six hours, upon being ex- amined Avith a beam of light, they were found to be vigorously shedding spores. A fruit-body, to • 41). — Apparatus for demonstrating the fall of spores from Up fpcfprl \\--i« fruiL-bodies at 0° C. A glass dish u is placed on a wooden "^ tehLeu, u .ib shelf ?P in the cold-room. An inverted glass dish i is packed taken tO the round with snow s so as to leave the space within it unfilled. To the cork c is attached the fruit- body /, below which is Cold-room and placed a glass slide rj for the purpose of catching the falling • i . i spores. About J actual size. pmned to a CorR attached liy means of sealing- Avax to the bottom of a small crystallising dish. This was then inverted and packed round with melting snow contained in another and much larger crystallising dish, as shown in Fig. 4i). After two hours, when the fruit-body had become cooled to freezing point, the cold-room air was reduced to 0° C. by opening the outer door for a few minutes. The inverted crystallising dish, to which the fruit-body Avas attached, was then lifted out of the snow, so that fresh spore-free air at 0° Centered it. A glass slide (Fig. 40,;/) was then placed so that when the crystallising dish was replaced in position, the fruit-body had its natural orientation, its under, spore-producing surface looking directly down on the glass slide. EXTERNAL CONDITIONS AND SPORE-DISCHARGE 125 After two hours the slide was removed and examined under the microscope. Any spores which had fallen upon it could be detected with ease. The results, obtained from a number of experiments of the kind just described, have served to convince me that Dmdalea unicolor, Lenzites betulina, Polystictus versicolor, and P. Itirsutus continue to shed their spores at the freezing point of water. However, the comparatively small number of spores which settled upon the glass slides each hour showed that spore-discharge is not nearly so active at 0° C. as at higher temperatures. From a succession of tests it was found that Lenzites hetulina continued to shed its spores at 0° C. for at least three days. A fruit-body of this species, whilst enclosed in the snow-chamber, set free sufficient spores in a few hours to make a distinct, although faint, macroscopic pattern of the gills upon a glass slide. Probably, in all species which shed spores at 0° C, the discharge of spores continues for an indefinite period of time until the fruit-bodies become exhausted. No spore-deposit was detected as being pro- duced by Schizophyllum comraune at 0° C, although spores were vigorously shed by this species at 5° C. Ontogenetic study shows that the basidia of a hymenium come to maturity successively, and part with their spores as soon as these are ripe. The shedding of spores by Lenzites betulina, Diedalea unicolor, &c., in a snow-chamber indicates that in these fungi the development of the hymenium can still continue at the freezing point of water. At first, the fact that growth is still possible in a hymenomycetous fruit-body at 0° C, may seem surprising, but parallel instances of growth at this and even lower temperatures in other plants are by no means unknown. Thus in Pfeff'er's ^ list of cardinal points for growth, the minima for Sinapis alba (Kirchner and de Vries), Ulothrix zonata (Klebs), and Bacillus cyano-fuscus (Beyerinck) are given as 0° C, and on Arctic coasts, according to Kjellman,^ algae flourish in sea-water whose temperature falls to — I'S and perhaps never exceeds 0° C. The fruit-bodies of species of Stereum, Corticium, &c., often appear ^ Pfeffer, Physiology of Plants, translated by A. J. Ewart, vol. ii., 1903, p. 77. 2 Kjellman, Bot. Zeit., 1875, p. 171. 126 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI to be at their best in the middle of an Eughsh winter, from which fact it seems justifiable to conclude that cold weather is favourable to their development. The effect of high temperatures upon spore-discharge has been investigated only in the case of Lenzites hetidina. The fruit-body to be tested was first determined to be freely shedding spores by the beam-of-light method. It was then pinned to a cork fixed to a glass plate, after Avhich the plate was placed over a beaker, so that the fruit-body assumed its normal orientation {cf. Fig. -ST, p. 97). This beaker with its cover, and another similar but uncovered beaker, were then placed in the incubator, the air of which had been raised to the desired temperature. After from thirty minutes to two hours, w^hen doubtless the fruit-body had assumed the temperature of the incu- bator, the plate w\as quickly taken from the first beaker and set upon the second. The air within the second beaker before this operation was, of course, free from spores, whereas that of the first might still have contained spores which had been liberated by the fruit-body before this had become heated. After another fifteen or thirty minutes, the second beaker was removed from the incubator and immediately examined by the beam-of-light method. If spores had been liberated into it, they could easily be seen floating in the air. As a result of experiments of the kind just described, it was found that the discharge of spores took place slowly at 29° C, but not at 33°, 43°, or 46°. The fruit-bodies, however, were not killed by exposure for forty-five minutes to these high temperatures, for when they were afterwards placed in a moderately heated room, in the course of several hours they recovered and shed spores again in abundance. The modes of action of extreme cold and of extreme heat are doubtless different. Extreme cold must slow down the metabolism and hence prevent spore development. No injury in the case of Lenzites, Daidalea, and other similar fruit-bodies growing on logs, results from a long exposure to very low temperature, e.g. from — lo** to — 40°C., such as occur often for weeks together in the course of winter at Winnipeg. As soon as a fruit-body is warmed sufficiently, spore-fall begins anew. Fruit-bodies oi Lenzites hetidina,' StereiiTnjnir- pureiini, and Schizophylluni commune were gathered from a wood- EXTERNAL CONDITIONS AND SPORE-DISCHARGE 127 pile in March at about — 17° C. after being exposed for several months to severe frost. When brought into the laboratory they soon began to shed their spores, and within a few hours produced well-marked spore-deposits.^ On the other hand, extreme heat probably causes a heat rigor, for when some fruit-bodies of Lenzites betulina were exposed to a temperature of 39° C. for half-an-hour and then cooled to an ordinary room temperature, two hours passed by before the fall of spores was resumed. The range of temperature which permits of spore-discharge — for Lenzites betulina about 0° to 30° C. — probably coincides with the range of temperature permitting the growth and development of the spores. As soon as the spores are ripe they are probably shot off. If one watches the discharge of spores from the basidia with the microscope, one finds that spores which look ripe, i.e. which have attained their full size and proper colour, do not long remain on their sterigmata. The rate of spore-discharge seems, therefore, to be an indication of the rate of spore development. So far, opportunity has not been found for determining the range of temperature within the limits of which the liberation of spores is possible for succulent, non-xerophytic, ground Agarics which flourish during summer. It seems to me probable, however, that for many species, e.g. the Mushroom, the minimum temperature for shedding spores is several degrees above the freezing point of water. To what extent frost is fatal to the reproductive organs of Hymenomycetes still requires investigation. The Effect of Alteration in the Gaseous Environment. — The pileus of a small fruit-body of Marasmius oreades, about 1 inch in diameter, was divided into three portions. One of them was placed in a suitable glass vessel of about 0*75 litres capacity, through which a strong stream of hydrogen was made to flow for ten minutes. The stop-cocks were then closed. By similar means the second portion of the pileus was surrounded by an atmosphere of carbon ^ Possibly the fruit-bodies began to shed their spores immediately they had been unthawed and raised to the temperature of the laboratory. Unfortunately, when these expernneuts were made, I had not developed the beam-of-light method, and the formation of a macroscopic spore-deposit was relied upon as a test for the liberation of spores. 128 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI dioxide, Avhilst the third wus set in a chamber containing ordi- nary air. Glass slides were employed to catch any spores which might fall. The piece of pilens in air slud abundance of spores, a good deposit outlining the gills being collected in the short space of ten minutes. A thick deposit had formed in an hour, and in the course of twenty hours tens of thousands of spores had collected. The ]nece of pileus placed in hydrogen shed a few spores during the first hour. Al the end of this time it w'as removed to a new position on the glass slide. During the subsequent nineteen hours scarcely a spore fell. The few spores found on the slide with the microscope certainly did not make up one five-hundredth ])art of the number which fell from the piece of pileus placed in air. A similar result was obtained with the piece of pileus placed in carbon dioxide. During the first hour in that gas a few spores were liberated. The piece of pileus was then pushed to a new position on the glass slide. During the subsequent nineteen hours practically no further spores became deposited. The conclusion to which the experiments just described appear to point is that, in the absence of oxygen, spore-discharge soon ceases. Doubtless for some time after a piece of pileus has been placed in hydrogen or carbon dioxide, the basidia have access to a certain amount of oxygen diffusing outwards from the pileus through the hymeniura. Possibly it is on this account that a few spores still continue to be liberated for a short time after the oxygen has been removed from the surrounding atmos})here. We may conclude by analogy that the direct action of hydrogen on the pileus is harmless, but that that of carbon dioxide may possibly be poisonous. Removal of oxygen from the atmosphere probably causes cessa- tion of growth of the basidia. With this cessation of growth the fall of spores must cease, for the continuous raining down of spores from the gills depends on the successive development of the basidia. Two small })ilei, one of Marasinius oreades and the other of Psilocybe fcenisecii, were halved. One piece of each was covered by a glass vessel containing air, and the other pieces were placed in a EXTERNAL CONDITIONS AND SPORE-DISCHARGE 129 chamber of 0'75 litres capacity, through which a strong stream of oxygen was made to flow for some minutes. The stop-cocks were then closed. The pieces of pileus were set on glass slides so that any falling spores might be caught. After an hour, apparently equally thick deposits of spores had been shed both in air and in the pure oxygen. The half-pilei were then placed in new positions on the glass slides. During this opera- tion air was kept out of the oxygen chamber by means of a strong stream of oxygen passed through it. Five hours subsequently the new spore-deposits Avere examined. They appeared to be equally thick in both air and pure oxygen. The half-pilei were again placed in new positions on the glass slides. These were once more examined after an interval of eighteen hours. Heavy spore-deposits resembling each other had again formed both in the air and in the oxygen. This experiment seems to prove that, in an atmosphere of pure oxygen, the fruit-bodies of the two species examined continue to develop their basidia and to shed their spores in the usual manner. This need not occasion surprise, for many even of the higher plants develop normally in pure oxygen or under a pressure of five atmospheres of air.^ The Effect of Anaesthetics. — An observation with an anaesthetic has already been made by Falck. He found that a fruit-body of Agaricus nebularis, on being subjected to chloroform vapour, ceased to shed spores, and he drew the conclusion from this fact that spore-liberation is an active process.- Experiments with anesthetics, hoAvever, do not decide whether the spores are set free by a process of growth and thus simply fall when ripe like apples, or whether, on the contrary, they are shot outwards from their sterigmata with force. In the next chapter this matter will be dealt with in detail. In order to test the effect of ether vapour upon the liberation of spores, the following method was resorted to. A piece of cork was 'fixed by means of sealing-wax \to the middle of a circular ^ Pfeffer, Physiology of Plants, vol. i. p. 540. ^ R. Falck, "Die Sporenverbreitung bei den Basidiomyceten,'' Beitrage zur Biologie der Pflany.en, Bd. IX., 1904, p. 27, footnote. I I30 RESEAKCHES ON FUXGI plate of glass, and to it a fruit-body to be tested was pinned. The glass plate was then placed on the ground top of a cylindrical glass jar of 1-25 litres capacity, so that the fruit-body had its natural orientation {cf. Fig. 37, p. 97). A piece of blotting-paper was attached with sealing-wax to the bottom of the jar. The fruit-body was first tested in the usual way with a beam of light to find out whether spore-discharge was taking place. Ill all cases a cloud of spores could easily be seen coming from the lower surface. When it had thus been determined that spores were being freely liberated, the glass cover, with the fruit- body attached, was removed, inverted, and placed on a table. Fresh spore-free air was caused to enter the now open jar. By means of a pipette 0-5 cc. of S(|uibb's ether was then quickly dropped on to the blotting-paper in the jar and the latter immediately inverted over the glass cover, to which it became closely attached by means of vaseline. When a fruit-body is upside down it is unable to liberate any of its spores into the air in a glass chamber. So long, therefore, as the fruit-body was kept inverted, the air in the jar above it remained spore-free. When it was desired to find out whether spores could still be liberated, the antesthetised fruit-body was turned info the normal position again by means of another inversion of the jar. The air beneath the now downwardly-looking hymenium was then examined for spore contents with a beam of light. It was found that, when the jar was placed upright again two minutes after its first inversion, no spores fell into the air within. The ether vapour, therefore, caused cessation of spore-discharge in two minutes. When the ether was added to an upright jar, and the cover, bearing a normally oriented fruit-body, was placed on the top, at first the spore clouds could easily be seen coming off from the underside of the fruit-body with the beam of light ; but the spore stream quickly diminished in density and its emission ceased after about two minutes. The spores which had already entered the jar then spread themselves evenly in the air which it contained. When the jar in the first described experiments was placed in the upright position a few minutes after the ether had been EXTERNAL CONDITIONS AND SPORE-DISCHARGE 131 added, the fruit-body was always found to have lost its power of shedding spores. Not a single spore could be seen floating in the beam of light, nor, so long as the fruit-body remained subjected to the anaesthetic, were any spores liberated. When, however, the fungus was removed from the glass jar and exposed to ordinary air, it gradually recovered. It was found that, even after treat- ment with ether vapour for a week, recovery could still take place and active spore-discharge be resumed. The length of time during w^iich fruit-bodies were exposed to ether vapour, and the length of time required for recovery of the spore-liberating function after removal from the anaesthetic, are given in the following table: — Lenzites hetulina. 0'5 cc. Squibb's ether in a 1*25 litre jar. ngth of Exposure Ether V:»])Our. to the Time takeu for Kecovery of the Spore- liberatiiii!- Function after Keiuoval from Ktlier Vapour. 5 minutes ... . Less than 30 minutes. 30 minutes • • . . More than 2 hours. ] 2 hours . • . * . About 3 hours. 24 hours . \ More than 3 hours 45 minutes, . ( Less than 4 hours 35 minutes. 7 days . > . 6 hours 30 minutes. It is clear that the longer the fruit-bodies were exposed to the anoesthetic, the longer was the time required to recover from the effects. The chief result of these experiments is to show that spore- discharge may be inhibited by ether without any apparent permanent injury to the fruit-body. The shooting off of the spores, and probably their development, ceases under the in- fluence of ether just as does protoplasmic movement in the cells of higher plants and the reactions to mechanical stimuli in the leaves of Mimosa pud lea, the stamens of Berber is, &c. As in these cases, the active process is resumed again when normal conditions are allowed to supervene. Chloroform has a similar effect to ether. O'o cc. of chloroform was introduced into the 1*25 litre jar in the manner already described. Under these conditions the liberation of spores ceased in about one minute. The fruit- body was exposed to the chloro- 132 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI form vapour for five minutes and then placed in ordinary air. Recovery of the spore-liberating function took place after about fifteen minutes. It might be expected from analogy that chloro- form Avould prove more poisonous to the fruit-bodies than ether. No attempt, however, has been made to obtain an experimental basis for this assumption. CHAPTER XI THE VIOLENT PEOJECTION OF SPORES FROM THE HYMENIUM— METHODS I., II., III., IV., AND V.< In order to understand the arrangements for liberating the spores from the fruit-bodies of Hymenomycetes, it is of great importance to bear in mind that the spores are very adhesive. After they have settled on paper, glass, a pileus, or stipe, the most violent shaking will not separate them from the surface to which they have become attached. They cling to each other with great tenacity, for from spore-deposits one may scrape up spore ribbons several millimetres long. If a ripe Mushroom or other fruit-body be turned upside down so that the spores after leaving the sterigmata settle upon the basidia and paraphyses of the hymenium, when the fruit-body is again placed in the natural position not one of the fallen spores succeeds in freeing itself. One can see with the microscope that the spores remain fixed where they fell. When a fruit-body is inverted for an hour, some millions of spores leave the sterigmata and settle on the gills. If the spores were not adhesive, on replacing the fruit- body in its natural position and observing with the beam-of-light method, one should be able to see these millions of spores falling in the form of a dense and very temporary cloud. No such cloud, however, can be detected. These and other observations of various kinds have convinced me that, if a spore after leaving its sterigmata happens to touch the hymenium in its fall, even when it strikes it very obliquely, it immediately gets stuck there, and never succeeds in reaching the outer air. In discussing the general structure of the fruit-bodies it Avas pointed out that in many cases the hymenium is disposed for the most part in almost vertical planes. In the Agaricineie it is situated on the surfaces of very acutely wedge-shaped gills, and in the Polyporefo it lines the surfaces of very slightly conical tubes. In 133 134 RESEARCHES OX FUNGI many fruit-bodies of Agaricinea) the declination of the gill surfaces from the vertical is only from one to three degrees. Whilst reflecting on the adhesiveness of the spores and the ver- tical position of the hymenial surfaces, I asked myself the question : By what means are the spores enabled to fall from the basidia without contact with one another, and in such a manner that they find their way down hymenial tubes or between gills without becoming attached to the sides ? Taking into consideration that the horizontal basidia are crowded one above the other (c/. Fig. 56, p. 1G5, and Plate I., Fig. 3), it was argued that if the adhesive spores merely fell from the sterigmata in a passive manner, they would very frequently fall upon one another, and that of necessity they would fall rather inwards toward the hymenial surface than outwards, OAving to the tendency they would have to swing beneath the sterigmata. On the assumption of passive fall it seemed impossible to imagine how the adhesive spores could be liberated. Before any observations were made, therefore, it appeared to mo highly probable that in some manner the spores must be projected for a short distance straight out from the hymenium in which they are produced. This deduction has been verified in various Avays. My observations seem to indicate that violent spore-projection is of general occurrence throughout the Hymenomycctes. So far as I am aware, hitherto Brefeld alone has made observa- tions on the separation of spores from the basidia. In the case of Amanita muscaria ^ he simply says, " In diese [the spaces between the gills] werden die Sporen durch schwache Ejaculation geworfen und fallen dann zu Boden." In a footnote in his account of the life-history of Coprimes stercorarius,^ he states that the spores are shot outwards in consequence of the bursting of the sterigmata. He believes himself to have seen small drops left on the sterigmata, and also on the spores after spore-discharge, and states that all four spores are shot off from a basidium simultaneously. With regard to violent spore-ejaculation being a fact, I am in entire agreement Avith Brefeld, but am unable to confirm his description of the process in detail. The spores, so far as my experience with several species of ^ Brefeld, Botanische Untersnchnvgen iiber Schimmelpilze, III. Heft, p. 132. 2 Brefeld, loc. cit., pp. 65, 66. THE VIOLENT PROJECTION OF SPORES 135 Coprinus and of many other genera goes, are never shot off simul- taneously. I have also not been able to obtain any evidence that the spores are projected forwards owing to ejaculation of the contents of the basidia. The mechanism of spore-discharge, however, will be discussed more conveniently in the next chapter. Several methods have been used to determine whether or not the spores are shot off the sterigmata. The first one, which seemed for some time to give convincing evidence of spore-projection, led to the discovery of an unexpected optical illusion. Method I. — The first method employed for observing spore-fall microscopically was that of placing hymenial surfaces in vertical planes and observing them from above with an ordinary upright microscope. Through the middle of some of the hymenial tubes of a freshly grown fruit -body of Poly poms squamosus, a transverse section 1-2 mm. thick was made (Fig. 47). This was then placed on a glass slide, covered with a cover-glass, and looked down upon from above with the low power of the micro- scope. Immediately the remark- able fact was observed that the spores were apparently being shot outwards from the hymenium towards the middle of the tubes. Apparently one could see them taking part of their curved and out- ward course through the air. They were also seen to settle below on the glass slide on the average at a distance of 0-1-0-2 mm. (6-20 times their own length) from the hymenium. In this Avay the spores collected in a zone about 0*5 mm. wide around the base of each tube. In the course of a few minutes I watched the discharge of hundreds of spores. Not only to myself, but to others, the apparent bombard- ment of the spores into the lumina of the tubes seemed to afford clear and convincing proof of the violent projection of the spores from the basidia. Similar observations to those just recorded were then made upon Fig. 47. — Diagram to show the shape of a transverse section through the hy- menial tubes of Polyporus squamosus. About 6 times natural size. 136 EESE ARCHES ON FUNGI other species of Polyporus, and also upon species of Polystictus, Dfedalea, and Boletus. The hymcnial tubes of many members of the Polyporese are extremely narrow. Thus with the aid of the drawing apparatus and a stage micrometer, it was found that the diameters of the tubes at the mouths were on the average : for Polyporus hirsutus, 0*3-0*4 mm. ; for Fomes vegetus, 0'15-0*2 mm. ; for Fomes igniariiis, O'lo mm. ; and for Polystictus versicolor, 0*2- 0*25 mm. In Polyporus hirsutus and Polystictus versicolor, for which species alone fresh material was available, the spores seemed to be bombarded from the hymenium just as in the case of Polyporus squaTnosus. They appeared to be projected outwards from the hymenium and were seen to descend near the centres of the tubes, at the mouths of Avhich they collected in heaps. Polyporus hirsutus had tubes in the centre part of its fruit-body 2 cm. long. However, by making transverse sections at different heights it was observed that the spores were discharged throughout the whole length of a tube. For Polystictus versicolor the tubes were often only 0'2 mm. wide. Yet even in these the spores seemed to be shot outwards from the hymenium. They appeared to travel a distance of about Ol mm. toward the middle of the tubes before the horizontal velocity had been reduced to zero. The species of Boletus investigated and the diameters of their pores, as given by Massee/ were as follows : Boletus cltrysenteron, 1-1-5 mm.; B. felleus, up to 1 mm.; B.fiavus,^-! mm.; B. subto- nientosus, f-1 mm. ; B. scaber, O'5-l mm. ; B. badius, 0"5-l mm. Here, again, sections 1-2 mm. high were taken transversely through the hy menial tubes, and looked into from above with the low power of the microscope. In each, again, the spores were apparently shot off from the hymenium into the tubes. In the wider tubes the spores were seen to collect at the mouths in a zone around the walls, and in the narrower ones they gradually formed a central heap. The im- pression gained was that the spores Avere projected horizontally on the average O'2-O-l mm., or about the same distance as for Polyporus squamosus. Dxdalea unicolor (a very common fungus at Winnipeg) behaved like the Boleti. In order to observe the fall of spores in members of the Agari- ^ G. Massee, British Fumj us- Flora, 1892, vol. i. THE VIOLENT PROJECTIOX OF SPORES 137 cinese, tangential sections about 1-2 mm. thick were made through the pilei, so as to cut the gills transversely. The sections were then placed on a microscope slide, by which means the hymenial surfaces took up a vertical position (Fig. 48). Sometimes the sections were placed in a glass cell closed with a cover-glass, but this precaution for keeping off air-currents w^as usually found unnecessary in a quiet room where the air was still. The spores appeared to be violently projected from the hymenium into the spaces between the gills in all the species which w^ere examined. As in the case of Polyporiis squamosus, however, only part of the path of each spore could be observed, owing to the fact that only one plane can be focussed at one time by the microscope. The discharge of the spores could usually be detected almost immediately the section had been made, and continued for some minutes until loss of water from the gills interfered with the process. In small, closed glass chambers, where loss of water vapour was prevented, the discharge of spores continued in some in- stances for several hours. The spore zone of discharged spores on the glass slide between two gills and adjacent to the base of each was in most cases about 0*2 mm. wide. The impression was gained that the spores had been projected about 0"1 mm. before the horizontal motion was destroyed. The Agaricinese used as material for these observations consisted of thirty-one species common in the Midlands of England, and included in the following genera: Psalliota, Stropharia, Anellaria, Galera, Amanitopsis, Amanita, Lactarius, Russula, Pameolus, Psilocybe, Collybia, Cantharellus, Laccaria, Hygrophorus, Nolanea, Hypholoma, Marasmius, Entoloma, Mycena, and Armillaria. The first method of observing spore-fall with the microscope in the Polyporese and Agaricinete appeared to yield two facts in favour of the supposition that the spores are violently discharged from the sterigmata: (1) The spores could apparently be seen travelling horizontally away from the basidia, and (2) the spores Fig. 48. — Diagram to show the shape of a section from the pileus of an Agaric with gills. The hymenial surfaces are vertical. About 4 times natural size. 138 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI i° settled some distance from the vertically-placed hymenium. The latter fact I regard as good evidence of spore-projection, but the former, -which for some time seemed to yield convincing proof of the phenomenon, has been found by subsequent investigation to be misleading and based upon a curious optical illusion. As a result of further observations and calculations it can be shown that the spores are really projected from the basidia with a high velocity, but nevertheless it is most improbable that one should observe directly the horizontal motion of a spore because it is performed too rapidly. The apparent travelling outwards of a spore from the vertically- placed hymenium, which one can observe ■\' \y so easily in Agaricinese and Polyporete, is really no travelling outwards at all. The spores, when seen in motion, are in reality falling vertically. Fig. 49.— Diagram of a tiny cvliuder MN on a glass '' " . slide S, viewed from above "in the direction of the For SOmc months thlS arrow O with the low power of the microscope, -ii • ^ • j ABCD is a section of the cylinder within the liil^^Slon Qeceivea me, range of focus. X and Y show the paths of two .^g indeed it had dc- spores falling vertically. To the right is shown ' ' ' ' how the section and the paths of the spores appear ceived Others tO whom to the observer. t i t i -^ tt I had shown it. Mow- ever, the possibility of the apparent fact of horizontal movement of the spores being in some way deceptive, caused me, after a while, to make a careful study of the appearance of vertical surfaces under the microscope. A tiny brass cylinder was constructed, placed upright on a glass slide, and observed from above with the Ioav power of the microscope. It was found that, wherever placed in the field, any part of the vertical surface observed appeared to slope at an angle from the vertical. The result of the observations may best be made clear by means of a diagram (Fig. 49). Let MN be the cylinder standing vertically upright on the glass slide S, and let the arroAV O indicate THE VIOLENT PROJECTION OF SPORES 139 i' i° i' A i 1 \ " B i\/. i \/:. B the direction in which the cyhnder is viewed with the microscope. Let A B C D be a section of the cylinder placed within the range of focus. Then to the observer the section will have the appearance of a truncated cone, ahcd. The truly vertical sides of the section of the cylinder will appear inclined as shown in the figure.^ Now let the arrows X and Y indicate the truly vertical paths of two spores falling parallel to the sides AB and CD of the cylinder. Then, when observed with the microscope, the course of the spores will appear to be as indicated by the arrow^s X and y, i.e. the illusion will be created that the spores are moving more or less horizontally outAvards from the cylinder. The apparent bombardment of the spores into the spaces between the gills, which one sees on looking vertically downwards upon a section like that in Fig. 48, may now be explained. Let AA in Fig. 50 represent a vertical section taken transversely through three of the gills, and let the arrows placed parallel to, and at a little distance from, their vertical sides, represent the true paths of six spores falling vertically. Then, as shown at BB, when the low power ob- jective of the microscope is placed in the position of the arrow 0, one apparently observes spores being shot outwards from both sides of the gill immediately below, and, when one observes in the direction indicated by either of the arrows P or Q, one apparently sees the spores being shot outwards from two gills into the interlamellar spaces. ^ The explanation of the phenomenon seems to be due to the fact that the area of the objective is lari^e compared with diameter of the cylinder, so that different parts of the objecti\e, as it were, can see different parts of the cylinder. With the low power of the microscope one can see simultaneously both sides of an ordinary glass slide placed vertically. Fig. £0. — Above at AA is shown a ti'ansverse and vertical section through three gills of a piece of a pileus like that in Fig. 48. When observed from above in the directions of the arrows O, P, and Q, the range of focus is supposed to be between the dotted lines. The four arrows between the gill-sections indi- cate the laaths of four spores falling parallel toandabout one- tenth of a millimetre from the hymenial surfaces. Below at BB is shown the apparent shape of the parts of the gills in focus and the apparent paths of the spores. The latter, although falling vertically, appear to be shot outwards from the hy- menial surfaces into the spaces between the gills. 140 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI It is now clear to me that the apparent shooting out of spores from the vertically-placed hymenium in the many Agaricine;i3 and Polyporea3 observed by my first method is simply an illusion. During the apparent bombardment of hundreds of spores into a cross section of a tube of Polyporiis squamosus, or into the spaces between two gills in a Mushroom (which one sees in looking down upon such sections as those represented in Figs. 47 and 48), one does not really see a single spore performing any part of its horizontal motion. The spores are falling vertically as soon as ever perceived. By methods to be described in Chapter XVII. it has been found that for Aonanitopsis vaginata the total horizontal distance to which the spores are projected, namely, about 0-2 mm., is accomplished in approximately only -^ho second, and that the initial velocity with which each spore is shot forward is about 400 mm. per second. From a consideration of these remarkable figures, and also the fact that the spores must be considerably magnified in order to be seen at all, it seems to me very improbable that the human eye, aided as it must be by the microscope, will ever be able to detect the horizontal motion of a spore. Whether or not it is possible to do so must be left to the experimental psychologist. That the downward motion of a spore, which is performed at a constant speed in response to gravity, should be observed as described is easily understood, for it is performed relatively much more slowly and for a much longer distance than the horizontal motion. In the case of Ainanitopsis vaginata the terminal vertical velocity is only about 5 mm. per second. In most other species, where the spores are smaller, the velocity is usually only 1-2 mm. per second.^ These theoretical considera- tions, which it has been necessary to introduce in this place in order to explain the results of observations with Method I., Avill doubtless become clearer to the reader when the curious nature of the "sporabola" has been discussed in a subsequent chapter. Observations, with the special object of seeing the horizontal flight of particular spores on leaving the sterigmata, were made with sections of Folyporus squamosus like that in Fig. 47 on several occasions, but they gave only negative results. With a vertical ^ Vide infra, Chaps. XV. and XVI. THE YIOLEXT PROJECTION OF SPORES 141 microscope a ripe spore on its horizontal sterigma was carefully watched until it Avas discharged. One mo- ment it was in view : the next it had dis- appeared, but in what direction could not be detected. The eye had not been able to follow the motion. Method II. — The second method em- ployed to determine whether or not violent spore-projection takes place was as follows : A piece of a gill, 4-5 mm. high and 2-3 mm. broad, was cut from a ripe fruit-body of Amanitopsis vaginata and placed in a vertical, but inverted, position on a tiny glass shelf in a vertically-disposed compressor cell. A horizontal microscope, with a magni- fication of about 25 diameters, was then employed to observe the fall of spores from the piece of the gill when seen end-wise [cf. Plate IV., Fig. 29). The gill segment thus came to be so placed that the sides bearing the hymenium were inclined to the vertical, as shown in Fig. 51. The hymenium, there- fore, looked very slightly upwards. Usually it was found convenient to concentrate the attention on one side of the gill, and in all cases, by tilting the compressor cell held in a clamp, the side in question was made to incline distinctly upwards at a slight angle from the vertical. It was argued that, if the adhesive spores only drop oft" the sterigmata passively, they would never be seen in the air, whereas, if indeed they are projected violently outwards, although one might not be able to see them in their horizontal flight, yet one should 'often be able to see them falling vertically at a little distance from the gill surface. On actually making the observations, it was found that the Fig. 51. — Diagram show- ing a piece of a gill inverted and placed on a tiny horizontal shelf, AA, in a vertically- disposed compressor cell. The piece of gill is seen edgewise with the hori- zontal microscope. H is the hymenium. S, S, show the paths of the spores when seen falling. The spores first come into view about one-tenth of a millimetre from the hy- menium. About 20 times natural size. 142 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI spores came suddenly iuto view at a distance of 0-1 -0-2 mm. from the gills. As soon as seen, the spores were falling vertically at a constant speed.^ The diagram, Fig. o], shows the courses of a few spores as seen with the horizontal microscope. These observations seem to me to afford conclusive proof of violent spore-projection. They ma}^ be repeated without difficulty. One may have to wait a few seconds or minutes before a spore springs into view, but this is merely a question of patience. The species used for these ob- servations, in addition to Ainanitopsis vaginata, were : Psalliota campestris, Marasiniibs oreades, and Polyporus squamosus. For the Polyporus a piece of the wall between two hymenial tubes took the place of a piece of gill. The horizontal distance from the hymenium, at which a spore, Avhen first perceived, appeared to be, was compared with the dis- tance between tiny irregularities on a silk thread of the Ramsden eyepiece of the horizontal microscope. The latter distance was then carefully measured with a standard micrometer scale. After a number of observations had been made in each case, the con- clusion was arrived at that the spores of Ainanitopsis vaginata are often shot to a horizontal distance of 4 mm., and that those of the other three species are often shot y\f mm. and sometimes a little further. Method III. — The third method employed for demonstrating the violent projection of spores from the sterigmata is perhaps the most conclusive of all. It can be carried out most certainly and easily with fruit-bodies of the Coprini. Coprinus plicatilis was made chief use of in these experiments, but C. comatus and C. niicaceus gave similar results. One takes a gill that is shedding spores and lays it Hat in a closed compressor cell, and observes it from above with the low power of an ordinary micro- scope. Under these conditions the basidia are pointing ujawards. One can then very readily observe the disappearance of the spores from the sterigmata near the " deliquescing " gill edge, for it is here and here alone in the Coprini that active discharge of spores takes place (Plate II., Fig. 12). If one focusses a plane at a little ^ The air in a compressor cull is practically quitu still. The spores fall verti- cally in it, and are not carried about by convection currents. THE VIOLENT PROJECTION OF SPORES 143 distance above the plane of the hymenium, so that the basidia are just out of view, one finds that spores spring into view and immediately disappear again. This proves conclusively that the spores have been projected violently upwards from the sterigmata. The fine adjustment screw of the microscope was carefully cali- brated by the glass plate method, and it was then found by measure- ment with it that in the case of Coprinus plicatilis the spores were projected upwards, so that they came into view in a plane 0-08-0-12 mm. above the plane of the spores on the sterigmata. It has been found possible to observe the upward projection of spores in the Mushroom, and also in a species of Psilocybe. In these cases, however, observations can only be made with consider- able difficulty. In the Coprini the spores in a zone parallel with, and adjoining, the deliquescing gill edge are all being discharged almost simultaneously (Plate II., Fig, 12), The gills of Coprini are also very thin and allow ample light to pass through them. In all other species of Agaricineic, however, the spores are discharged irregularly over the whole surface of a gill and there is no special region of activity. Adjacent basidia are in very various stages of development. When one looks down on a piece of gill of one of these fungi, one but rarely sees the spores disappear from a basidium. This is due to the fact that the ripe basidia are relatively far apart. The gills are also much thicker than in the Coprini and allow but little light to pass through them. The observations on the Mushroom were carried out in the following manner. A fresh specimen was obtained from a field and part of one of the pink gills placed flat in a closed compressor cell. The latter was then placed on the stage of the microscope and this tilted to an angle of about 45°. The tilting ensured that if a spore was shot off a sterigma in the field of view, it would remain longer in view than it would if the microscope were vertical. A plane situated a short distance above the hymenium was focussed so that one could not see any of the basidia distinctly. After several hours of watching, on three separate occasions a spore was clearly seen to come into view in the plane above the hymenium and to travel a little way across the field of view before disappearing. The only explanation of these observations seems to be that the 144 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI spores had been shot off the sterigmata just as in the Coprini. A species of Psilocybe yielded a similar result. Method IV. — A piece of a gill of a Mushroom was i)laccd flat in a closed compressor cell and observed from above Avith an ordinary vertical microscope. An endeavour was made to see the spores leave the sterigmata of individual basidia. It was argued that, if the spores merely fall passively from the sterigmata, after liberation they ought to lie below their respective sterigmata, whereas, if they are discharged violently, they should often take up other positions. Apparently ripe basidia were focussed and watched. After some X A B ^2 C ^2 D ^2 3 4 5 4 .-^ ^^ ^^ ™ Fig. 52.— The successive and violent discharge of the four spores from the basidiura of Psalliota campestris. Part of a gill was laid flat in a compressor cell. The basidium looked upwards and was observed from above. X the basidium, with its four rii^e spores. The appearance of the basidium imme- diately after the discharge of spores I, 2, 3, and 4 is shown at A, B, C. and D respectively. hours had been spent at this task, a basidium was seen to discharge all its spores. Sketches were made after the discharge of each spore and are reproduced in Fig. 52. When one watches the dis- charge of a spore, all that one can see is that the spore suddenly disappears from its sterigma and immediately appears again in a new position on the hynienium. In Fig. 52, X shows the ap})ear- ance of the four spores on the basidium before discharge, and A, B, C, and D illustrate what was seen immediately after the discharge of spores Nos. 1, 2, [3, and 4 respectively. It is clear that the spore No. 2 (B) must have jumped over No. 4 to get into the position it came to occupy after discharge. Similarly, No. 4 (D) must have jumped over No. 3. A study of this case THE VIOLENT PROJECTION OF SPORES 145 and many others, where only the last spore or the remaming two or three spores were observed to be discharged, has convinced me that the spores when liberated must be shot upwards for a little distance before falling on to the hymenium. Doubtless the spores were shot not quite vertically upwards, but nearly so. Hence the various positions of the spores after settling. In the Coprini, it is exceedingly easy to observe the discharge of spores from the basidia near the edge of a " deliquescing " gill. As before, it is necessary to place the gill or piece thereof fiat in a closed compressor cell to prevent too rapid loss of water and consequent collapse of the basidia. With the low power of the microscope one can then observe large numbers of basidia actively shedding their spores (Plate II., Fig. 12). The phenomenon has quite a fascination of its own. The spores, after disappearing from the sterigmata, very frequently immediately reappear on the hymenium at some distance from the basidia on which they have been developed. There is no essential difference between the Mushroom and the Coprini in regard to what one sees by using Method IV. Fig. 52 might equally well apply to the basidium of a Coprinus coTnatus or C. plieatilis. One fact which is yielded by the above observations, and has an important bearing in explaining the mechanism of spore-discharge, is that the four spores of a basidium are not shot off their sterigmata simultaneously but successively. The succession of discharges in the particular instance shown in Fig. 52 occupied twenty minutes. There was an interval of a few minutes after each one before the next took place. It is quite certain that usually the four spores of a basidium are not discharged together. When one looks at the hymenium of a Mushroom gill in face view, it is easy to observe that many of the ripe basidia have only one, two, or three spores left upon them. In many instances the successive discharge of two or three of the spores was actually watched. In Coprinus comatus one can make similar observations with great ease. I have watched hundreds of basidia discharge their spores in this species, yet never once have I seen all four spores of a basidium discharged together. Here, as in the Mushroom, the four spores of a basidium disappear from their sterigmata one by one, in the course of one or a few minutes. K 146 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI The same results Avcrc obtained with Chprinu.s pllcdt'dis and C. micaceufi. In the already-mentioned footnote to Brefeld's description of C. stercorariuf<, it is stated that the spores are all discharged simultaneously. Although 1 have not had an oppor- tunity of examining this species, I think it highly probable that it discharges its spores in the same manner as other Coprini, and that Brefeld's statement will not be corroborated by further observation. Whilst using Method I. it was often easy to observe single ripe basidia and to Avatch the disappearance of some of the spores. Thus, in the case of Poly- porus squamosus, in one instance three spores left a basi- dium at intervals of twenty seconds, whilst the fourth remained on its sterigma for some minutes afterAvards and was not seen to disappear. In an- other instance tAvo of the four spores left a basidium Avi th- in a fcAV seconds of Fig. 53. — Diagram showing the appearance of part of the hymenium at the base of a section of a hymenial tube of Polyporus squamosus {cf. Fig. 47. p- 135). The arrow indicates the direction of observation. A basidium bearing four ripe spores and tlie top of the glass slide were included in the range of focus. The figure shows the position of one of the spores on the glass slide after being discharged to six times its own length from the basidium. one another. A large number of observa- tions, obtained by using Methods I. and IV., have convinced me that in very many species the spores are discharged from a ripe basidium, not simultaneously, but successively one after the other. It seems to me highly probable that this is a general rule throughout the Hymenomycetes. Method V. — A transverse section through the hymenial tubes of Folyporus sqiuuau.-ius (Fig. 47) was made and placed on a glass slide in the same manner as Avas done for Method I. The basidia thus came to occupy their normal horizontal positions. The discharge of spores Avas Avatched Avith the ordinary vertical microscope. I con- THE VIOLENT PROJECTION OF SPORES 147 centrated my attention upon a ripe basidium which projected horizontally from the hymenium in one of the tubes at a very short distance above the glass slide (Fig. 53). So near was the basidium to the slide that I was able to have both spores and glass surface within the range of focus at the same time. After I had watched for a long time, one of the spores suddenly left the basidium and became deposited on the glass slide some six times its length from the basidium. It had therefore been shot along just above the glass surface for a distance of 6 x 13 /z or 0"078 mm. The observation just recorded, although the only one of its kind that I have been able to make, seems to give another convincing proof of the fact of violent spore-projection. The actual movement of the spore from the basidium to its place of rest on the glass slide was not seen, although I was watching with concentrated attention for the express purpose of observinQf it. However, certain mathematical considerations soon to be treated of, indicate that it is highly improbable, if not im- possible, that one should perceive the horizontal motion, however carefully one might make one's observations. CHAPTER XII THE MECHANISM OF SPORE-DISCHARGE In the last chapter it was shown that the spores of Hymenomycetes are discharged from the sterigmata in a violent manner. The mechanism by which this process is brought about will now be discussed. Brefeld/ in a footnote to his account of the life-history of Coprinus stercorarius, has stated that all the four spores of a basidium are discharged simultaneously, and that, immediately after a discharge, small drops are left upon the vacant sterig- mata and also on the spores. He came to the obvious and apparently sufficient conclusion that the spores are shot forward on account of the bursting of the sterigmata and the ejacu- lation of their contents. However, after studying the discharge of spores in several species of Coprinus, as well as in Polypcn^us squaTiiosus, Psalliota campestris, &c., I find myself unable to confirm Brefeld's observations. The facts brought forward in the last chapter ^ afford conclusive proof that the four spores of a basidium are discharged not simultaneously but successively. By applying my Method IV.^ to the examination of a gill margin (Plate II., Fig. 12) of a ripe Coprinus fruit-body, any one may observe the successive discharge of the four spores from scores of basidia in a few minutes. The shooting off of all four spores usually occupies from about one to several minutes. At the moment of discharge of the spores from the basidia of Coprinus comatus, Folyporus squamosum, &c., I have endeavoured to observe drops on the vacant sterigmata, but without success ; nor, by using .my Method I.,^ have I been able to detect drops on any spores as 1 Brefeld, loc. cit. ^ Under Method IV. " Chap. XI. * Chap. XI. 148 THE MECHANISM OF SPORE-DISCHARGE 149 soon as they have settled on glass immediately after leaving the basidia.^ For the purpose of finding out the mechanism of spore- discharge, a transverse section through the hymenial tubes of Polyporus squamosus was cut, and the horizontal basidia looked down upon with the vertical microscope as already described for Methods I. and V.^ A particular basidium, bearing four ap- parently ripe spores, was carefully focussed. After a watch had been kept for some time, one of the spores suddenly disappeared. The end of the sterigma left vacant was then seen to be pointed and entirely devoid of any drop of fluid {cf. Fig. 53, p. 146 ; also Plate I., Fig. 3, and Plate III., Fig. 16). The vacant sterigma also appeared to be quite as long and as turgid as the other three still bearing spores. The basidium did not seem to have altered in volume. There was nothing to suggest that the sterigma had opened and discharged a mass of fluid through its very fine neck. The end of the sterigma, which is only about 0*5 /^ wide, gave the im- pression of being closed. Subsequently two further discharges of spores were observed. There was an interval of a few minutes between two successive discharges. Again, each sterigma, im- mediately after discharging its spore, appeared to be pointed at its end and devoid of any terminal drop of fluid. Even when three spores had been discharged, I was unable to observe any collapse of the basidium. All four sterigmata appeared to be equally turgid. The fourth spore remained on its sterigma for more than half-an-hour after the discharge of the third and was not seen to disappear. In several other instances one or two ^ Massee, in his Text-Book of Fungi (London, 1906), says : "In the Hymeno- mycetes the mature spore is cut oft' from the apex of its sterigma by a transverse wall. The sterigma retains its parietal protoplasm after the spore is cut oft', and its elastic wall continues to stretch as the tension due to the accumulation of water increases. When the tension reaches a certain point, the wall of the sterigma ruptures in a circular manner just below the septum at its apex ; the elastic wall of the sterigma instantly contracts and forces its contained water to strike the apical transverse wall, which is thus thrown oft" along with the spore seated upon it." The reader is unfortunately left in doubt as to the authority upon whom reliance has been placed for these statements. The account of spore- discharge, however, is similar to that of Brefeld and merits the same criticisms. "" Chap. XI. 150 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI spores -were observed to be discharged from the sterigmata in precisely the same manner as that described. Simihir results were obtained with Marasmius oreades and Coi^rinus comatus. The small size of the basidia and the difficulty of seeing the narrow neck of a sterigma where it is joined on to a spore, make it extremely difficult to observe what physical change takes place at the end of the sterigma at the moment of spore-discharge. However, after consideration of all the observed facts, it seems to me that some conclusion as to the mechanism of the process may be drawn. The first theory of spore-discharge which we may consider is, that the four spores are shot off the sterigmata owing to the latter breaking at their ends and discharging drops of fluid consisting of cell-sap driven out of the basidium by the contraction of the cell-wall.^ I fail to find any facts in favour of this con- ception. No drops could be detected on the sterigmata or spores immediately after discharge. The disappearance of the spores did not lead to any observable collapse of the sterigmata or basidium. A strong adverse argument may also be derived from the fact that the spores are discharged successively. A basidium is unicel- lular. If, when a spore was discharged, the sterigma broke across and a drop of fluid was forced out, the hydrostatic pressure in the basidium would be very considerably lessened. There would be a puncture in the cell. Under such conditions it seems diffi- cult to imagine how the pressure could be used again for the successive discharge of the three remaining spores. It seems to me that the clue to explain the mechanism of spore-discharge can be obtained from comparative studies in other groups of fungi. In the Ascomycetes, e.g. Ascobolus, the spores are evidently driven out of the ascus by the pressure of the cell- wall upon the cell-sap. The end of the ascus suddenly breaks open, the ascus collapses, and the eight spores are discharged simultaneously along with the cell-sap. A similar mechanism is to be found for Pilobolus and Emj^usa Musciv. There is, however, ^ We may suppose by analogy with other plant cells that the pressure of the cell-sap upon the protoplasm and wall of the basidium is due to the process of osmosis, and amounts to several atmospheres. THE MECHANISM OF SPORE-DISCHARGE 151 another way in which the hydrostatic pressure may be used as a driving force. This is iUustrated in several Entomophthorinese. In Empusa Grylli, according to Nowakowski.^ the wall separating the conidium from the basidium is double. There is a tiny colu- mella projecting into the former. When the conidium is ripe, the two walls separate by mutually bulging in opposite directions in response to hydrostatic pressure both in the conidium and the basidium. In consequence of the bulging taking place very rapidly, the spore is shot forwards to some distance. It thus happens that the basidium is not punctured in discharging its spore, and therefore does not lose any cell-sap. The basidium merely alters its shape. It becomes slightly enlarged terminally, whilst doubtless contraction takes place laterally. Probably during this process the hydrostatic pressure of the cell-sap upon the cell- wall becomes slightly diminished. We have a process which we may distinguish as the jerking discharge as opposed to the squirting discharge of Em/pusa^ Musca} and Ascobolus, &c.- It appears to me very probable that the four spores are dis- charged from the basidia of Hymenomycetes by a jerking process essentially similar to that just described. This hypothesis involves the assumption of a double wall separating the sterigma and spore, and that the two walls mutually bulge so as to press against one another when spore-discharge takes place. That such a double wall in each sterigma must be present seems to be proved by the fact that both spore and sterigma are turgid after discharge. The pointed " tail " of each spore and the pointed end of the sterig- mata after becoming naked are facts in favour of the idea of a mutual bulging of the two walls which were in contact. The hydrostatic pressure in the basidium would be only very slightly diminished as each spore was shot off and would be available ^ Quoted from Die Pflanzen-familien of Engler and Prantl, who reproduce Novvakowski's figures. Teil 1, Abteil 1, Entomyphthorinese, p. 135. - In Basidioholus ranarum we have both squirting and jerking processes in succession. The basidium first breaks across, and the outer end with the spore is shot away by the squirting process. The spore is then shot off the collapsed end of the basidium by the jerking process. The spore-wall at the place of attachment bulges out so as to become pointed. In Conidioholus utriculosus, apparently, sometimes the squirting process is used and sometimes the jerking. See Engler and Prantl, loc. cit. 152 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI for the discharge of them all. The great difficulty in verifying this hypothesis is that of observing what happens to the end of the sterigma at the moment of spore-discharge. However, the following facts seem to be distinctly in its favour: (1) Successive discharge of the four spores, (2) absence of drops, on the end of the sterigmata or on the spores immediately after discharge, (3) apparent closed condition of the sterigmata after ejecting their spores, and (4) non-collapse of the sterigijiata and basidium as the spores disappear. CHAPTER XIII THE SPECIFIC GRAVITY OF SPORES The measurements described in this and the following chapter were made chiefly with the object of testing Stokes' Law. In order to determine the specific gravity of spores, the heavy- fluid method was employed. Owing to the minute size of the spores and their very slow rate of fall even in water, and also in order to reduce convection currents to the least possible minimum, it was found necessary to use a special small chamber with which to carry out the tests. After several chambers had been tried, the most suitable one proved to be an ordinary Leitz-Wetzlar counting apparatus, such as is used for estimating the number of blood-corpuscles in drops of blood. In the chamber in question the distance between the cover-glass and the central disc is only O'l mm. The mode of procedure in making the experiments was as follows : A fresh fungus was obtained, and its pileus was cut off and placed on a piece of glass or paper, where, in the course of a few minutes or hours, a spore-deposit collected. Some drops of the solution to be tested, namely, calcium chloride of known specific gravity, were then poured into a small beaker. Spore masses were scraped up from the spore-deposit with a needle and placed in the solution. This was then stirred vigorously, so that the spores became well separated and fairly evenly suspended in it. A drop of the fluid containing the spores was next placed in the Leitz-Wetzlar apparatus and the cover-glass applied. If the spores were heavier than the medium in which they were suspended, they gradually sank and collected on the bottom of the chamber. If they were lighter, they gradually rose and collected beneath the cover-glass. The end-result by this means could usually be determined in a few minutes. Convection currents 153 154 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI -tire pructically reduced to nothing in the chamber, and the spores had to travel at most upwards or downwards only a distance of O'l mm. By focussing and watching an individual spore in the fluid, one could quickly decide whether it was falling or rising. The results of the tests for Psalliota cainpestris, Coprinus plicatilis, and Amanitopsis vaginata are given in the following table, where R indicates that the spores rose in the fluid, S that they sank, and RS that about equal numbers rose and sank respectively : — Specific Gravity Ueterininatioiis. Apparent Sp. Gr. of Spores in Heavy Fluid, by Observation. "3 a Sp. gr. of CaCl, solu- tions Coprinus plicatilis 1-5 R 1-45 R 1-44 R 1-43 S 1-41 S 1-4 S 1-355 1-325 S S 1-305 S 1-43 1-21 Sp. gr. of CaClo solu- tions Psalliota campestris 1-5 1-34 1-32 ] R R R I 1-31 S 1-305 1-293 ] S ' S ' 1 L-2' s '1-00 1-31 s 1-2 1-02 1-02 i 1 Sp. gr. of CaCl, solu- tions Amanitop)sis vaginata 1-1 R 1-05 R 1-025 R 1-015 S(?) 1 1-01 100 102 S S i Sp. gr. of cane-sugar solutions Amanitopsis vaginata 1-03 R 1-025 R 1 1-02 RS 1 1-015 S 1 1-00 1-02 s When fresh spores are placed in water they are turgid and fully expanded, and present the same appearance as they have when just about to be liberated from their sterigmata. However, in solutions of calcium chloride the spores decrease in size. In many species they become obviously deformed. The spores of Psalliota cain2)estris in a calcium chloride solution of sp. gr. 1-32 are indented on one side, and the spores of Coprinus plicatilis in a solution of sp. gr. 1-44 have the shortest of their three axes (c/. Fig, 55, A, p. IGi') reduced to nearly one-half. The decrease THE SPECIFIC GRAVITY OF SPORES 155 in volume, if sucli there is, in spores of Amanito'psis vaginata in a solution of sp. gr. 1-02 is so small as not to be observable. The heavy-fluid tests only give us the apparent specific gravity of the spores. There seems to be little doubt that the decrease in volume is due to loss of water which passes out from the spores by osmosis in accordance with well-known laws. Loss of water from the spores must of necessity increase their specific gravity, for the salts and other bodies heavier than water must thereby become concentrated. We can conclude, therefore, that the apparent specific gravity of the spores in the heavy fluid is greater than the specific gravity of the spores when fully expanded in water. The tests with the solutions inform us that the true specific gravity of the spores is between 1 and 1'43 for Coprhius plicatilis, between 1 and 1*32 for Psalliota camjpestris, and between 1 and 1-02 for Amanitopsis vaginata. In the last-named species the result obtained with calcium chloride was confirmed by means of a solution of cane- sugar. By determining the loss of volume of spores of Coprinus plicatilis when placed in a calcium chloride solution of sp. gr. 1-43, I have been able to calculate approximately the true specific gravity of the spores in water. With the aid of a Poynting Plate Micrometer the spores were measured with a considerable degree of accuracy. Ten long, ten short, and ten intermediate axes were measured, each measurement being made on a different spore. The average size of the spores was thus found to be — In water 12-54 x 10-33 x 8-14 In CaCl2 solution, sp. gr. 1-43 . 11-76 x 10-18 x 4-5 By multiplying the three axes together we can calculate that on the average for each spore — (volume in water) : (vol. in CaCl., solution, sp. gr. 1-43) : : 1054 : 538. We may conclude, therefore, that when a spore is taken from water and placed in the calcium chloride solution, its volume is approximately halved. Now, it may be shown that (1 — x)vs + xvs" = vs 156 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI where x represents the fractional loss of volume in the heavy fluid, V the volume of the spore in water, s the apparent specific gravity of the spore in the heavy fluid, s' the true specific gravity of the spore in water, and s" the specific gravity of water itself. Since x = l, s=l'43, and .s" = l, we find that s'= 1-215, or the true specific gravity of the Coprinus spores in water is approxi- mately 1*21. In the case of the Mushroom, owing to the spores becoming indented on one side, the exact loss of volume of the spores in a calcium chloride solution of sp, gr. l-ol could not be measured directly. However, it Avas estimated by inspection as being from about one-third to one-half of the volume in water. On this assumption we may calculate from the equation already given that the specific gravity of Mushroom spores is approximately 1*2. The Amanitopsis spores did not show any appreciable con- traction in the calcium chloride solution or cane-sugar solution of sp. gr. 1-02. Since we have already found that the real specific gravity of the spores in water must lie between 1 and 1*02, we may take it that the real specific gravity is approximately 1-02. This approximation must certainly be correct to within 1 per cent, of the actual specific gravity. Another method for estimating the specific gravity of spores is that of measuring the rates of fall of the spores in air and in water. The data so obtained are then used in the following equation, which can be deduced from Stokes' Law which must be assumed to be true : — V' _p-l /X V p ^' where v' is the velocity of the fall of spores in water, v the velocity of fall in air, ^ the viscosity of air, fi' the viscosity of water, and'/) the specific gravity of spores. A counting apparatus, with a chamber 1 cm. square above and below and 0-2 mm, deep, was used for estimating the rate of fall of the spores in water. The chamber was filled with water holding spores in suspension and covered with a cover-glass. A microscope was then turned into the horizontal position and the counting apparatus clamped down to the now vertically-placed stage. The THE SPECIFIC GRAVITY OF SPORES 157 convection currents in the chamber, although not entirely absent, appeared to be negligible. In the case of Coprinus ijlicatilis, ten spores were carefully timed in falling through a field of 1-6 mm. in width. On the average each spore took 2 mins. 57 sees, to fall this distance. The velocity of the fall of the spores in water was thus found to be 0-00090 cm. per second. The velocity of fall of the spores in air was found by finding the time required for them to fall vertically through a distance of -i-o.D mm. from pieces of gills placed in a small compressor cell.^ The speed was found to be 0*429 cm. per second. Putting v' = 0-0009, i; = 0-429, /i =1-8x10-4, and /=l'2xl0-2, we get p, the specific gravity of the Coprinus spores, = 1-16. With Mushroom spores it was found that v' = 0-00025 and V = 0*13, whence p = 1-15. Both results are within 6 per cent, of those obtained by the other method. The present method seems to me to be less reliable than the first on account of its indirectness and the assumptions involved. Stokes' Law was assumed to be true : the spores were not spherical. Possibly the errors in estimating the rates of fall of the spores in water are quite appreciable. Never- theless, the result may be correct to within 10 per cent. If we take the results given by the heavy-fluid method to be fairly reliable, we may conclude that the specific gravities of the spores are as follows: for Coprinus plicatilis 1-21, for Psalliota campestris 1*2, and for Anianitopsis vaginata 1-02. The spores of the last-named species are much lighter than those of the other two. This is probably due to the very large amount of oil which the spores of Amanitopsis contain. The oil is certainly a very light constituent of each cell, for, when a spore is falling in water, the large oil mass, as seen with the horizontal microscope, occupies the highest position possible. On account of the spores of Amanitopsis vaginata having about the same specific gravity as water, it was not found possible to measure the rate of their fall in that medium. Their motion was so slow that even minute convection currents proved to be a serious source of error in making the measurements. ^ Vide infra, Chap. XV. CHAPTER XIV THE SIZE OF SPORES— POYNTING'S PLATE MICROMETER Each species produces spores of a definite shape and size. The spores vary in size about a mean, doubtless in accordance with the now well-known laws of continuous variation. The variations as a rule are within fairly restricted limits, so that fungus spores, when observed with a microscope, appear to resemble one another very much as do eggs laid by a fowl. By measuring the diameters of twenty-five spores of any fruit-body, one can obtain an average size which is correct to within a very small percentage of the real average for all the spores. It must not be assumed, hoAvever, that all the individual fruit-bodies of a species have spores of the same average size. Thus, for instance, three specimens of Amanitopsis vaginata, obtained from the same wood on differ- ent days, possessed spores with an average diameter of ll*6r. yit, 10-87 /i, and 10-19 fi (Fig. 55, B, C, D, p. 162). It is not sur- prising that the spore sizes for species as given by systematists often disagree. For the purpose of measuring spores rapidly and accurately I have made use of Poynting's Plate Micrometer,^ a simple and exact piece of apparatus which should come into general use in all inves- tigations where it is necessary to measure the sizes of numerous small bodies. Since it seems that I am the first to apply the Plate ^ The Plate Micrometer with which I worked was Profe.«sor Povntinc's original instrument. My thanks are due to him for kindly permitting me to use it in his laboratory. It was exhibited at an Optical Convention held in London four years ago. In the Proceeding.^ of tlie Optical Convention, No. 1, Lon- don, 1905, a one-page account of the principle of the micrometer is given, but this would be of little use to any one wishing to understand how the measurements of spore dimensions were made. Professor Poynting has informed me that he has not yet published an adequate description of the Plate Micrometer as applied to the microscope, but he has consented to my attempting to show how the in.strument may be used in practice. >58 THE SIZE OF SPORES 159 Micrometer in a biological research, a brief description of it here will not be out of place. The apparatus is provided with a stand, Plate IV., Fig. 26, st, attached to which is a horizontal arm, a, bearing at its end a vertical scale, sc. The scale is divided into fifty parts, with the zero at the top. A carefully prepared plate of glass, 6 mm. thick, p, with parallel upper and lower faces, is attached to a horizontal rod, r, which is fixed to the stand so that it can be rotated about its axis by means of a lever, I. The end of the lever carries a small frame- work in which is placed a piece of glass. On the latter is scratched a fine line parallel to the arm of the lever. The line serves to indicate the position of the lever on the scale. The microscope is provided with a mechanical stage. It also has a slot, si, in the tube above the objective, of such a size that the glass plate can readily be inserted into it. The eyepiece contains a transverse silk thread. When the apparatus is about to be used, the glass plate is inserted into the slot so that it becomes entirely enclosed in the microscope tube, which, however, it does not touch. The eyepiece is then rotated until its silk thread comes to be parallel to the rod, r, bearing the glass plate. The scale, sc, is calibrated as follows. The lever is first raised until the line in the terminal framework exactly crosses the zero of the scale. A stage micrometer is then placed on the microscope stage so that its dividing lines are parallel to the thread in the eye- piece. By using the mechanical stage one of the micrometer lines is made to coincide with the thread of the eyepiece. The lever is then depressed. This causes the glass plate to rotate slightly. As one looks down the microscope, the micrometer line appears to move parallel to itself away from the eyepiece line. By depressing the lever far enough, one can make a second stage micrometer line coincide with the eyepiece line. Let us suppose that the distance between the two micrometer lines is 10 /x, and that the lever has been moved downwards through twenty-six divisions on the vertical scale, it is then clear that each scale division has the value ' u. 13 ^ By making ten measurements between ten successive divisions of the i6o RESEARCHES ON FUNGI stage micrometer, one can obtain a very accurate value for each division of the plate micrometer scale. When the scale has been calibrated by the method just described, one proceeds to measure the size of spores. These are mounted in water on a glass slide and covered with a cover-glass in the usual way. The lever is placed at zero. One then hnds a spore with the axis to be measured directed at right angles to the eyepiece line.^ Let us suppose that one wishes to measure the long axis. With the mechanical stage one moves the spore so that one end of it just touches the eyepiece line (Fig. 54). One then depresses the lever from the zero of the scale, and as one does so the spore appears to move across the eyepiece line from loft to right, until finally it comes to touch it with its other end. At this point one ceases to depress the lever and reads off the number of divisions on the scale through Avhich it has been moved. By measuring twenty-five spores in this B -Measurement of a spore ^^.^^^ ^^^ ^^^ ^b^.-^jj^ ^ ^,gj,y ^^^^ ^^^j,. Fig. 54. by means of the Poynting Plate Micrometer. By depressing the age on the scalc for the dimensions lever the spore appears to move • i o- across the eye-piece line EE from required. Smcc the actual valuc of a position A to position B. i , • , i i • • • i ^ ^ plate micrometer scale division has previously been found by caUbration, the dimensions of the spores can readily be calculated. The advantages of the apparatus are: (1) Its optical soundness — each division on the vertical scale has the same value ; (2) the apparatus is entirely detached from the microscope, so that, when the lever is moved, the microscope cannot be shaken in any way ; (3) the accuracy with which the scale can be calibrated ; (4) its simplicity ; (.5) the speed and ease with which large numbers of observations can be made Avith it. The range of variation in the sizes of spores may be gathered ^ With the addition of a rotating stage one could place any spore with its axis in the desired direction. My microscope, unfortunately, was without this retine- ment. There is, however, very little ditticulty in finding as many spores as one requires with their axes in the right direction. THE SIZE OF SPORES i6i from the following example, which gives the plate micrometer scale figures obtained for the diameters of 100 fresh spores of Ainanitopsis vaginata (Specimen III.) measured in water : — 41-0 43-0 40-1 45-5 40-7 41-3 40-8 47-5 38-5 42-7 39-5 41-5 39-5 3(V0 43-6 430 38-6 40-2 431 39-0 40-0 36-5 43-4 42-0 47-0 42-7 37-4 38-0 400 41-8 - 450 38-0 38-0 39-5 40-7 36-8 44-7 36-0 45-0 43 0 40-2 45 5 39-2 40-8 43-5 42-5 39-8 43-4 39-8 39-4 42-8 4] -5 390 44-0 42-3 39-7 39-8 48-0 41-4 46-2 35-6 38-0 38-7 41-0 43-4 38-2 43-0 39-5 40-4 36-1 40-8 39-4 40-0 41-0 40-5 36-1 40-0 41-0 42-1 41-3 410 38-4 42-0 43-6 40-7 39-2 40-5 38-0 38-1 41-0 41-6 42-5 41-4 40-5 40-8 45-4 43-9 40-8 39-4 36-6 407-5 404-3 401-5 413*9 422-6 404-9 408-5 412-4 407-8 407-1 The average scale measurement for the spore diameters of 100 spores was found to be 40-905. The calibration figures for ten suc- cessive distances of 10 fi each on a stage micrometer were as follows : 1 34-5, 36-1, 35-0, 35-1, 36-0, 34-5, 34-5, 35-4, 36-0,34-5, whence it was calculated that /a = 3-51 plate micrometer scale divisions. The average diameter of 100 spores, therefore, = _ ' =11-65 At. The Table on page 162 gives some of the results of measurements with the Poynting Plate Micrometer. Each measurement given is the average of 25 or 50 measurements of 25 or 50 spores respec- tively. The last column gives the value Vloi^© ^^is x short axis. Illustrations of all the spores in the Table are given in Fig. 55. From the Table the general range in size of the spores of Agaricinese may be gathered.- The very large spores of Goprinus plicatilis are about twenty-two times the volume of the very small spores of Collyhia dryophila. In all cases, however, and this may be stated quite generally for the Hymenomycetes, the spores are so small that they must fall in the manner indicated by Stokes' Law, i.e. almost immediately after liberation (within a very small ^ The differences between these readings are due to errors in the construction of the stage micrometer, and not to any want of delicacy on the part of the Plate Micrometer. ^ The largest spores of any known Agaric are those of the exceptional Goprinus gigasporus, which measure 28-30 x 14-16 ^. G. Massee, "A Revision of the Genus Coprinus," Ann. of Bot., vol. 10, p. 123. L 1 62 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI fraction of a single second) they must fall without acceleration at a uniform speed. The size of the spores is also such that this Geometrical Species. Long; Axis in iJL. SI ort Axis in fx. MciMi of llie Two Axes — in fi. Collybia dryophila Pluteus ceivinus . 5-44 5-95 3 23 4-57 4-2 5-2 Paxillus involutus 7-48 4-88 6-0 Psalliota campestris : Grown on a bed, I. . 7-17 5-41 6-25 " " " III 7-20 7-32 5-35 5 -64 6-25 6-4 From a field, IV. 9-7 5-80 7-4 Marasmius oreades 9-5 5-6 7-4 Boletus badius . 12-8 4-29 7-4 Amanita rubescens 9-38 6-53 7-8 Galera tenera 10-47 6-06 7-96 Russula emetica . 8-82 7-50 8-2 Polyporus squamosus . Coprinns comatus 14-6 12-5r) 5-13 7-48 8-7 9-8 Amanitopsis vaginata, I. 55 55 ^^' 10-19 10-87 10-19 1087 ni. 11-65 11-65 Coprinus plicatilis 12-9 10-7 7-9 11-8 uniform speed is only about 0*5-6 mm. per second. The spores, therefore, are so tiny that even the slightest air-currents can B D E F C H I J A K L M N 0 0 R • • • • t « I .1 1 lO/U. ao, OIM Fig. 55. — The average spores of iudividual fruit-bodies of various species of Hyiuenomycetes. A, Coprinus plicatilis; B, C. and D, three individuals of Arnanitopxix vayinata ; E, Coprinus comatus; F, Russula emetica; G, I'oly- porus squamosus ; H, Galera tenera; I, Aiitanita rubescens ; J, Boletus badius ; K, Marasmius oreades ; L, M, X, and O, four individuals of Psalliota campestris ; P, Paxillus involutus ; Q, Pluteus cerrinus; H, Collybia dryophila. carry them long distances aAvay from the fruit-bodies upon which they have been developed. THE SIZE OF SPORES 163 The difference between the average size of the spores for individual fruit-bodies is indicated by the results obtained for Psalliota campestris and Amanitopsis vaginata. The field Mush- room probably belonged to a variety distinct from that of the cultivated ones. It was characterised not only by relatively much longer spores but also by much deeper gills. The average diameter of the spores for Specimen III. of Amanitopsis vaginata was 14-3 per cent, larger than the average size for Specimen I. It is clear from this instance that fruit- bodies of the same species may have considerable individual variability in regard to the average size of their spores. CHAriKR X\' THE RATE OF FALL OF SPORES AND STOKES' LAW— APPENDIX So long ago as 1851 Stokes ^ published a ])aper called "On the Effect of Internal Friction of Fluids on the Motion of Pendulums." In the course of a mathematical treatment of his data, he deduced an equation expressing the relations between the density of a falling microscopic sphere, the size of the sphere, the velocity of its fall, the density of the fluid through which it may fall, and the viscosity of the fluid. The equation represents what is known as Stokes' Law : - 9 M where V = the terminal j velocity, p = t\ui density of the falling sphere, o- = the density of the medium, (j = t\\Q acceleration due to gravity, « = the radius of the falling sphere, /x = the viscosity of the medium. For more than forty years this equation remained untested for the fall of small particles in air and other gases. This, no doubt, was due to the technical difficulties of procuring microscopic spheres of known density and size, and of dropping them through gaseous media in such a manner that their rate of fall could be measured. The verification of Stokes' Law by means of such experiments has recently become of some importance owing to the necessity of assuming it in investigations upon the electronic charge as made by J. J. Thomson^ Avith the cloud method. The only evidence hitherto ^ adduced to show that Stokes' Law • G. Stokes, (Javih. Phil. Tnmy., vol. ix., J'urt II., p. 8. * Cf. the Appendix to Chap. XVIL ' J. .f. Thomson, Phil. Mail., December 1898; Decemher 1899. ' This was written in 1907. Since then Zeleny and M'Keehan have recorded experiments with lycopodium powder. ViOe the Appendix. 164 THE RATE OF FALL OF SPORES 16= holds for the fall of small spheres in air appears to be that obtained by J. J. Thomson, whose value of the electronic charge, obtained by Wilson's^ cloud method involving the assumption of Stokes' Law, was found to agree with the generally accepted value of the electronic charge as calculated by application of the kinetic theory B Fig. 5(). — Amanitopsis vaginata. Relations of the spores to the fruit-body. A, transverse section through two gills showing the hymenium, h, from which basidia are projecting. The arrows indicate the paths of spores which, after discharge from their basidia, have fallen in still air. Magnification, 15. B, vertical section through the hymenium and subhymenium. p, paraphyses : a-c, basidia ; a, with rudimentary spores ; b, with ripe spores ; c, with two spores discharged ; d, with three spores discharged ; c. with all the spores discharged : s, the subhymenium. Magnification, 370. C, isolated basidium with two spores discharged showing mode of attachment of spores to their sterigmata. Magnification, 1110. D, discharged spore. Magnification, 1110. E, basidium with rudimentary spores. Magnification, 1110. of gases. This verification of the applicability of Stokes' LaAv is, of course, very indirect. It seemed to me of interest to attempt to determine experi- mentally whether the spores of Hymenomycetes fall in accordance with Stokes' Law. It Avas hoped that, by making three separate measurements of the specific gravity, size, and velocity of fall of 1 C. T. R. Wilson, Phil. Trans., 1897. ^n h cT. 1 66 HP:sEAIU HKS ox FUNGI the spores, one might obtain a direct test. It was also thought that an actual determination of the rate of fall of spores Avould throAv light upon the distribution of bacteria, spores, and other organic particles in air, and also help to explain fruit-body structure. A considerable amount of preliminary experimentation was undertaken, during Avhich observations Avere made upon the rates of fall of spores of various shapes and sizes in still air. The spores of Amanitopsis vaginata were then chosen as material for a critical test of Stokes' Law for the folloAving reasons : (1) They are spherical except for a tiny " tail," and smooth-coated (Fig. 55, A, B, and C, p. 1G2). (2) They are comparatively large, so that one can measure their diameters, which are about 10 fi wide, very accurately with the Poynting Plate Micrometer. (o) Their density is almost that of water, and can be measured within 1 per cent, of ac- curacy.^ (4) They could easily be procured, for the fruit-bodies of Amanitopsis vaginata came up in sufficient abundance in Sutton Park, which was not many miles from the laboratory. -Diagram to Fresh fruit-bodics (Plate IV., Fig. 30) could be iSon^a^ViL: Obtained throughout August and September, placed in the com- during which time the critical experiments were pressor cell. The gills , ^ . are directed vertically made. Tho relations of the spores to the fruit- downwards. 11 1 . -r-i- _,. body are shown m rig. ;)0. An experiment to measure the rate of fall of Amanito})sis spores was carried out in the following manner. A fresh fruit-body was obtained from the woods and used within a few hours of being gathered. Due care was taken in carrying the fruit-bodies to the laboratory, upon reaching Avhich they were immediately })laced upright in a Avet sand-bath and covered over Avith a large bell-jar. A small piece of the pileus, including portions of three gills, Avas then dissected out (Fig. 57) and placed in a compressor cell in the position shoAvn in Fig. 58, p. To prevent the falling spores from drying, tAvo soaked pieces of blotting-paper or cotton-Avool, h, and a few drops of Avater, w, Avere then added. Upon the cap being adjusted, the piece of fungus became fixed by slight compression and hermetically 1 riW(;Chap. XTIT. Fig. i>t.- THE RATE OF FALL OF SPORES 167 sealed in the disc-shaped chamber of Avhich the base and top con- sisted of glass. The compressor cell was then placed in the vertical position (i.e. with the glass plates vertical) and clamped by one end to a stand. By this means it was possible to cause the gills to look vertically downwards in the natural manner. Thus enclosed in the chamber, the gills continued to rain down spores for some hours. In order to observe the falling spores, a special micro- '^^ scope on a stand of simple construction 1 was employed. The microscope tube was placed in the horizontal position (Plate IV., Fig. 29), and could be screwed upwards and down- wards by means of a rackwork on the stand. The amount of rise or fall could be read off on a vertical scale to which a vernier was attached. The microscope tube was arranged at such a height and at such a distance from the chamber as to focus a field (shown by the dotted ring in Fig. 58) immedi- ately beloAv the gills where the spores were falling. To illu- minate the microscope, diffuse daylight, obtained from the glass roof, was reflected into the tube by means of a plane mirror (Plate IV., Fig. 29). The observations were made in a basement room where the temperature was very constant for considerable intervals of time. The horizontal microscope was provided with a Ramsden eye- piece. Three fine silk threads were attached to it so as to cross the field of view. The distance between the extreme threads, as seen in the field of view when the microscope was focussed, was 4'55 mm. 1 Made by Pye & Co. Fig. 58. — The compressor cell used for measurlDg: the rate of fall of spores. A section of the cell is shown above : the chamber c can be varied in size by rais- ing or pressing down the cap. g, glass. Below is shown the cell when in use. ■}>, a piece of pileus with gills looking down- wards {cf. Fig. 57) ; 6, b, wet blotting- paper or cotton-wool ; ^v, a free drop of water. The dotted circle shows the field of view of the horizontal microscope when focussed just beneath the gills. The three arrows show the courses of three spores falling from between the gills and crossing the field. The horizontal lines in the latter are produced by three silk threads in the Ramsden eye- piece. Actual size. i68 EESEARCHES ON FUNGI (Fig. 59), while above and below them there was a further space of 0*5 mm. The magnification, namely, about 25 diameters, was obtained by using a No. 1 Leitz objective and extending the draw- tube. On viewing a field just below the gills, spores can be seen as distinct but only just visible, very minute, dark objects, steadily crossing the field in a vertical direction, apparently from below upwards. Every spore so falling is not in focus, but, when the fungus material is in good condition, spores in focus come into view at least ,,. — ,_ every five seconds. Often one can see three, four, or five spores in focus at the i^ same time. The spores fall vertically downwards (apparently upwards). In the small cham- ber employed, convection currents are re- "^~ '' duced to a minimum and produce no Fig. 59.— The field of the -,■ , ■ n- , i horizontal microscope, apparent disturbmg ettects on ones obser- Ipa^rt TThT'uppe^'^mi vations. Doubtlcss, there are very slow lower horizontal threads air-curreuts in the chamber, but I have in the eye-piece when seen in the field of view no reason to suppose in my critical experi- was 4'55 mm. • , ■, ^ r * •. • ments with the large spores oi Amamtopsis that they produced an error in the record of speeds of 2 per cent. Even with the small spores of CoUyhia drijcypldla, which often take eleven seconds to cross the field, the direction of the paths of fall is vertical and there is practically no swerving from the course. The records of the velocity of fall of the spores whilst crossing the field of the horizontal microscope were made with the aid of a large drum, which was driven by electricity and provided Avith a delicate regulator (Plate lY., Fig. 29). A recording fountain-pen produced a continuous spiral line upon the paper as the drum rotated. To the pen Avas attached an electric tapping key, which could be placed in a convenient situation near the microscope. When the knob of the contact apparatus was depressed, the pen immediately deviated from its course upon the paper. When the apparatus Avas ready, the drum was set going and the THE RATE OF FALL OF SPORES 169 fall of spores watched through the microscope. As soon as a spore clearly came into view at the bottom of the field, it was followed C c <0 C bo c3 C ■ tc > -^ 2 ^ a o & a o . > tc cc '^ & tfi (U O ^ - a a© 2 -* O 'It 3^ & ■" . 0) a o •" CO a •- , <^ o ^ a 3 c3 ' o 3 en o . a. e to • 'i' 2 ;- o, a las ^ QJ O O -1^ ° .5 >.a a-X'" q a CD 9 c= o _^ ja o *^ c ^ ^ ■3 0 ^ S " ^ 8 c a <^ ^ o c "^§ a' .2 a a ^ Qj g.2 5 is iJ o o H & CO . O) a 5 ~ m 0) -S CD u_, CO with the eye. When it crossed the first line of the field, a con- tact was made with the finger by depressing the key. Similarly, I/O RESEARCHES ON FUNGI C c ^ o- c c c _J f-J* C^ c <* c < V, second ^ and third contacts Avcrc made as the spore crossed the second and the third Hnes respectively. Thus for the fall of each spore the 3^^ o ^ pen deviated three times from its normal path on ^ 5 ttj the paper of the drum (Fi^s. 60 and 01). The 5 V cS ' "" » fall of about 100 spores o n !r: ^^,^g recorded in this way as rapidly as possible, the entire record usually be- ing completed in less than fifteen minutes. A time record of ten seconds was I j '-T •? S ^2 always made on the drum before and after each series of observations by means of a chronometer L^- [ -^ ^ - ticking half-seconds. The drum kept up a very con- stant peripheral velocity, which was usually TIG cm. per second. When the records had been made, they were measured off on the drum by means of r I ^ Ma steel tape, added up, and the average taken. By I measuring the distance run by the drum in ten seconds, the speed of the drum could be determined. The average length of time represented by the average ^ There was no absolute necessity to record the passinf^f of the middle line by a spore, but it was found convenient to do so for the purpose of distin^ijuishing the individual spore-rucords from one anotlier on tlio drum. Every ett'ort was made to make the lirst and third contacts precisely at the times tlie upper and lower lines were bein a ci ■*^ ■ a "^ 6 M THE RATE OF FALL OF SPORES 171 record of the spores on the drum could then be calculated. Since this average time was that required for the spores to fall through a distance of -t'SS mm., the average velocity of fall of the spores could be calculated. The following figures give the drum records of 200 spores of Amanitopsis vaginata} The first series of 100 took about twelve minutes to record. After an interval of forty minutes, the second series of 100 was made. The drum records, measured on the drum by means of a steel tape, are given in centimetres. Series I. Series II. 0-85 0-80 0-85 0-95 0-88 0-70 1-05 0-85 0-74 0-85 0-95 0-86 0-87 0-97 0-89 1-03 0-91 0-75 0-68 0-84 0-95 0-89 0-89 0-93 0-65 0-88 0-88 0-75 0-75 0-85 0-95 0-90 0-78 0-91 0-75 0-96 0-76 0-99 0-76 0-80 0-84 0-80 0-88 0-90 0-89 0-80 0-81 1-00 0-80 0-74 0-71 0-88 0-82 0-95 0-90 0-80 1-05 0-75 0-84 0-76 0-85 0-95 0-85 0-75 0-82 1-01 0-94 0-99 0-86 0-77 0-92 0-89 0-86 0-99 0-78 0-95 0-94 0-75 0-87 0-76 0-84 0-85 0-94 0-82 0-84 0-90 0-75 0-79 0-79 0-82 0-96 0-89 0-90 0-93 0-90 0-99 0-85 0-83 0-80 0-94 0-84 0-80 0-92 0-89 0-94 0-93 0-85 0-68 0-92 0-88 0-80 0-94 0-94 0-99 0-64 0-92 0-80 0-92 0-91 0-89 0-73 0-94 0-89 0-78 0-75 0-95 0-84 0-89 0-88 0-92 0-82 0-99 0-85 0-81 0-72 1-08 0-90 0-85 0-92 0-96 0-84 0-89 0-82 0-85 0-74 0-93 0-65 0-85 0-80 0-94 0-84 0-89 0-85 0-84 0-92 0-96 0-85 0-75 0-85 1-04 0-97 0-93 1-00 0-79 0-91 1-04 0-91 0-81 0-94 0-89 0-90 0-89 0-97 0-85 0-85 0-99 0-95 0-90 0-91 0-95 1-00 0-90 0-80 0-74 0-60 0-91 0 82 0-90 0-94 0-88 0-77 0-87 0-95 0-90 0-95 1-00 0-90 0-90 0-90 0-81 17-33 17-75 17-68 17-54 16-32 18-73 17-41 16-90 16-86 17-29 Sum of totals . . 17-33 Sum of totals . . 18-73 17-75 17-41 17-68 16-90 17-54 16-86 Grand total . . 16-32 cm. Grand total . . 17-09 . 86-62 . 87-19 cm. Average distance on drum in Series I. = 0-8662 cm. Average speed of drum = 1-16 cm. per second. Hence average time of fall of each spore in falling through a field of 4-55 mm. = 0-747 seconds. Hence average velocity of fall = = 6-09 mm. per second. Average distance on drum in Series II. =0-8719 cm. Average speed of drum = ri6 cm. per second. Hence avei-age time of fall of each spore in falling through a field of 4-55 mm. =0-752 seconds. 4*55 Hence average velocity of fall = ^_ " = 6-05 mm. per second. Hence average velocity for both Series together = 6-07 mm. per second. ^ Specimen I. in Chap. XIV. 1/2 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI The Table on the next page gives asuumiary of the data obtained for testing Stokes' Law with faUing spores of Amanitopsis vagindta. The velocities given are the average velocities of 200 spores in Specimen I,, of 100 in Specimen II., and of 50 in Specimen III. The densities are certainly correct to within 1 per cent.^ The diameters are the average diameters for at least 50 spores, these being spherical. The measurements were made with a Poynting Plate Micrometer in the manner already described. The spores of Specimen I. were those collected at the bottom of the compressor cell Avhilst observa- tions on the fall of some of them were being made. The spores of Specimen 11. were obtained from another part of the fruit-body from Avhich the piece had been di-ssected out for velocity observations in the compressor cell. The spores of Specimen III.^ were those col- lected from the piece of fungus used for the velocity records, but collected from it immediately after these had been taken. It is clear, therefore, that I was unable to measure the diameters of exactly those spores for which the velocity of fall had been recorded. This is a defect in my method. HoAvever, the defect seems to me of little importance, for it was found that any 50 spores, taken at random from any part of a single fruit-body, have the same average size. In order to obtain the average size of the spores of Avhich the velocity had been recorded, it was therefore only necessary to measure the average size of any 50 spores obtained from the fruit- body. In making calculations with Stokes' equation, the viscosity of air 2 was assumed to be 1*8 x 10~* and its density negligible compared Avith that of a spore. The value of ^ Avas taken as 9S1. From the Table it is clear that the figures obtained by observation for the rate of fall of the spores are of the same order of magnitude as those demanded by Stokes' Law. Hoav- ever, the LaAv is not confirmed in detail, for as an average for the three cases it Avas found that the actual velocity of fall of the spores Avas 4G per cent, greater than the calculated. 1 Vide Chap. XIII. * For actual measurements, r/(/« Chap. XIV. * l'8x 10 * is the vahie usually taken for dry air at room temperatures. The effect of moisture is to very slij^htly reduce the viscosity. THE RATE OF FALL OF SPORES 1/3 Amamtopsis Vaginata Chamber, containing soaked blotting-paper or cotton-wool and free water below, closed for half-an-hour before observations for velocity were taken. Field of microscope close under gills. — t*. 1- ;- <^ c -- O eter of Spores in /u. rvcd Terminal city of Kill of ores in mm. er Second. » ^ . s = e 'V-. ual Velocity ded Calculate! I'ercentiije of Ills ^ o o s.;- ^ ■-■ — ' "-■ w +i tt o J - ;-■-. o-M S -e" Calc Vel mm a Spl an i to tl 5 s i a .:; Specimen I. 1-02 11-65 6-07 4-14 47 14-0 -16-8 Specimen II. 1-02 10-19 4-85 3-21 51 12-52 -18-6 Specimen III. 1-02 10-87 5-11 3-64 40 12-9 -15-0 It is difficult to explain why the observed velocities of fall should be nearly 50 per cent, greater than that demanded by Stokes' Law. However, perhaps the explanation has some con- nection with the fact (to be discussed more fully in the next chapter) that, even in an apparently saturated chamber, the spores in falling even such a small distance as 5 mm. lose a certain amount of water. It was found that after leaving the gills, the rate of fall of the spores slightly decreases. Further experiment showed that this was due to the contraction in the volume of the spores consequent on drying up.^ It has been suggested to me by Professor Poynting, that the loss of water by a spore during its fall might lead to an evaporation pressure of such a kind that the spore would be forced more quickly down- wards than would be the case if no loss of water were taking- place. Owing to the impossibility of employing perfectly dry spores in my experiments, there seems to be no way at present to test this hypothesis. That the speed of fall on the average was found to be 46 per cent, greater than that given by Stokes' Law may possibly be accounted for by surface slip. With very minute particles Stokes 1 Vide infra, Chap. XVI. 174 RESEAKCHES ON FUNGI has calculated that the maximum effect of slip is to increase the terminal velocity by 50 per cent. Therefore, if we assume that the slip actually takes place, the discrepancy between observation and theory would be fully accounted for. It seems, however, that the spores are not small enough to permit of our assuming slip to the extent required. The most serious objection to my method for testing Stokes' Law seems then to be that it has so far been found impossible to get the spores to fall with a quite constant speed in an apparently saturated chamber. Now the spore diameters were measured when the spores were in water, i.e. when fully turgid, just as spores are upon the sterigmata immediately before their fall. In order, therefore, to observe the fall of the spores when they were in as turgid a condition as possible, the two precautions (1) of placing the field of the microscope immediately under the gills, and (2) of saturating the chamber so far as possible with water-vapour, Avere taken. If the velocity of the spores could have been measured immediately they left the sterigmata instead of when they came into view beneath the gills, probably it would have proved even greater than that recorded. All the measurements for density, size, and velocity of the spores could be made with great exactness. It seems to me most unlikely that the large discrepancy between theory and observation can be due to errors in these measurements. Unless loss of water from the spores in some way is capable of accel- erating their rate of fall, for the present it would seem as though the spore-fall method of testing Stokes' Law shows that the actual velocity of fall of spheres about 10 i^ in diameter is some 50 per cent, greater than the Law demands. The appended Table, giving the results of observations upon the rates of fall of spores of various species, was compiled before the tests for Stokes' Law were made. The air in the chamber of the compressor cell was not saturated and sim])ly contained the required piece of fungus. The field of the microscope was usually near the gills. The rates of fall of spores of a single fruit-body, as the spores dry up, gradually decrease after the spores have left the gills. The figures given in the Table serve merely THE RATE OF FALL OF SPORES 175 to show the speed of fall of the spores at a certain distance from the gills in the unsaturated air of the chamber. If V be the velocity of a spore when fully expanded by osmotic pressure, i.e. just after liberation, and V be the velocity of the same spore when it has dried up, then the velocities given in the Table lie between V and V. The value of V, as farther experiments have shown, may be as much as 3V'. It will doubtless be different for each species, but it is evident, from results given in the Tables in the next chapter, that up to 60 per cent, should be added on to the velocities given in the present Table in order to obtain approximately the true rate of fall of the fully turgid spores of which the dimensions are given. On the other hand, if one wishes to calculate the velocity of the spores when dried up, as they must often be in nature within one or a few minutes of leaving the fruit-body, one must subtract up to GO per cent, of the velocities determined. Spore Dimensions in /n. Velocity of Fall iu mm. per Second. Long- Axis. Short Axis. Collybia dryophila Pluteus cervinus Psalliota campestris : Grown on a bed, I. . From a field, III. Polyporus squamosus . Boletus badius . Paxillus involutus Boletus felleus . Marasmius oreades Russula emetica . Amanita rubescens Galera tenera Amanitopsis vaginata . Coprinus comatus Coprinus plicatilis 5-44 5-95 7-26 7-32 9-7 14-6 12-8 7-48 1459 9-5 8-82 9-38 10-47 9-64 12-55 12-9 10-7 3-23 4-57 5-35 5-64 5-80 5-12 4-29 4-88 3-78 5-6 7-50 6-53 6-06 9-64 7-48 7-9 0-49 0-67 1-06 1-30 1-61 1-03 1-09 1-10 1-22 1-34 1-64 1-54 2-13 2-95 3-96 4-29 It was found possible to measure the rates of fall of individual spores over longer distances than 4*55 mm. in the following manner. A field just below the gills in the compressor cell was focussed with the horizontal microscope. When a spore crossed the upper line, a drum contact was made by depressing the knob 176 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI of the tapping key with the left hand. The microscope was then lowered with the right hand by means of a rackwork on the stand so that the spore was still kept in view. When the field arrived at the bottom of the compressor cell after having been lowered in this way for about 8 mm., the spore crossed the lower line of the field, whereupon a second drum contact was made. The time of fall could therefore be calculated from the drum record in the usual way. The distance of fall could be deter- mined by adding to the distance between the upper and lower lines of the field, namely 4'55 mm., the distance through which the microscope had been lowered. The latter was found in each case by reading a vertical scale which was situated on the microscope stand and provided with a vernier. From the time and distance data thus obtained the velocity of fall could be calculated at once. Fifty measurements with the spores of Boletus felleus were made in the manner just described. The average observed distance of fall was 12-05 mm. and the average time required to fall through it 10*57 seconds. Hence, the average velocity of fall through 12"05 mm. below the gills was 114 mm. per second. Doubtless by this method the rate of fall of small particles might be measured througfh ofreater distances than 12 mm. Whilst measuring the rates of fall of spores the magnification was kept as low as practicable, so that the observed distance of fall should be as large as possible. Under those conditions the spores were seen merely as just visible specks, the shape of which could not be determined. It seemed, however, of interest to attampt to find out what positions the spores assumed Avhilst falling. The magnification of the microscope, therefore, Avas increased by using a No. 3 Leitz objective. Into the much lessened field of view, spores in focus fell relatively less often, and in passing across the field appeared to fall with a relatively much greater velocity. However, the shape of the spores could often be distinctly observed. It was found that the spores, whilst falling the first few millimetres after leaving the gills, often turn round and round upon themselves in an irregular manner. Longer spores often oscillate from side to side and probably fall in very THE RATE OF FALL OF SPORES 177 steep corkscrew-like paths. Special attention was paid to the fall of the spores of Polyporus squamosus, which are nearly three times as long as they are Avide. It Avas found that on emerging from the hymenial tubes many of them have their long axes nearly vertical, and that whilst falling they often appear to turn over and over on themselves or to rock from side to side. HoAvever, by folio Aving the spores individually Avith the help of a mechanical stage, it Avas plainly seen that after falling about 5 mm. they Avere almost Avithout exception nearly or quite horizontal, and that they then rotated in a horizontal plane very slowly or not at all. The final position Avhich the spores took up in still air Avas therefore such that the greatest surface Avas presented to the resistance of the air. We may conclude, there- fore, that long spores tend to fall in a similar manner to that assumed for the simple, prismatic ice-crystals Avhich cause the phenomena of sun-dogs, &c., in northern regions. APPENDIX The compressor-cell method of measuring the rate of fall of spores was devised in 1905. I then came to the conclusion that the spores of Hymenomy- cetes fall at a rate which is roughly in accordance Avith 8tokes' formula, and this fact was announced by A. J. Ewart in his translation of Pfeflter's Physiology of Plants.^ During the summer of 1906, I carried out a large number of measurements of the size, specific gravity, and terminal velocity of spores, and in 1907 Chapters XIII., XIV., and XV. Avere communicated to the Royal Society as sections of a paper which I subsequently AvithdreAv.- Recently Zeleny and M'Keehan ^ of the UniAersity of Minnesota haA^e announced that they have made a direct test of Stokes' formula by using lycopodium poAver. Their method of measuring terminal velocity consisted in allo\^'ing the powder to fall in wide tubes and noting the rate of movement 1 Vol. iii., 1906, p. 416. ^ The paper called "The Production, Liberation, and Dispersion of the Spores of Hymenomycetes " was accepted for publication in the Pliilnsophical Transactions of the Royal Society, but on conditions which I was unable to accept. ' John Zeleny and L. W. M'Keehan, "An Experimental Determination of the Terminal Velocity of Fall of Small Spheres in Air." A paper read at the meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, held December 1908. Abstract in Science, March 19, 1909. M 178 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI of the centre of the (•loud. They came to the conclusion that for lycopodiuin spores tlie formula gives velocities 50 per cent, in excess of those (jbserved. My method for testing Stokes' formula appears to have various advantages over that used by Zeleny and M'Keehan for the following reasons. Amani- to2)sis spores have smooth walls and are practically truly spherical, whereas lycopodium spores have sculptured walls and are four-sided. Amanitopsis spores have a diameter oidy about one-third as great as lycopodium spores. In the tube method convection currents cannot be eliminated, and it must surely be somewhat difficult to decide the exact centre of the si)ore clouds. By my method of using a very small chamber, the difficulty of convection currents was reduced so as to be negligil)le, and the velocities of the individual spores could be measured with consideral)le accuracy. Amanitopsis spores are liberated spontaneously by the fungus, W'hercas lycopodium powder requires to be set in motion by artificial means. ^ ^ The substance of this Appendix is contained in a letter to Nature on " The Rate of Fall of Fungus Spores in Air," April 14, 1909. CHAPTER XVI THE EFFECT OF HUMIDITY ON THE RATE OF FALL OF SPORES It can be shown on mathematical grounds that, when bodies the size of spores are allowed to fall freely in still air, they reach their constant terminal velocity before they have gone their own diameter or a distance of less than 10 li,} It was expected at first, therefore, that a spore would fall through the space in a compressor cell, i.e. a distance of about 13 mm., at a uniform speed. Accordingly, in order to test this supposition, the rate of fall of spores through a field of 4"5o mm. at diiferent distances below the gills was measured. It was soon discovered that the velocity of a spore gradually diminished as the spore fell after emerging from the gills. It was suspected that this was due to the gradual diminution in size of the spore owing to loss of water from it by drying. Comparative experiments with the air in the chamber in difterent states of humidity were then undertaken. The air of the chamber was first made as moist as possible by means of soaked blotting-paper, next the ordinary air of the laboratory was employed, and finally the air was dried as far as possible with crystals of calcium chloride. A different piece of the same fruit-body was used in each case. The results of the observations are recorded in the Tables on p. 180. The figures give the velocities in millimetres per second. From these results we may conclude that, as a general rule, the spores fall most rapidly on leaving the gills, and that the rate of fall gradually diminishes. This appears to be so, even in chambers which contain a free drop of water and soaked blot- ting-paper (Fig. 58, p. 1G7), and in which the air must therefore be saturated with moisture. The tiny oval spores seem to be capable of giving off water vapour in an atmosphere saturated so far as flat surfaces are concerned. 1 Vide infra. Chap. XVII. 179 i8o RESEARCHES ON FUNGI It is also evident that the dryer the air, the more slowly do the spores fall. At the same distance from the gills, for CoUyhla dryophila, the velocity of fall in a dry chamber was only about CollyJiia rfyi/ophila Field. Soaked l{li)ttiiiL;-i>:ii>(i- in (Jliainlier. Ordinary Air of I/iboratory. Crystals of Calcium Chloride in Chamber. At First. Two lldurs Later. Touchiiii^ gills 5 mm. lower . 10 mm. lower . 0-73 0-72 0-68 0-87 0-74 0-49 0-39 0-37 0-34 0-28 0'27 Polyporus squamosus Field. Soaked TSlotting-- paiM'r in Chamber. Ordinary Air of Laboratory. Crystals of Calcium Chloride in Cliamber. Touching gills . 3 mm. lower 6 mm. lower 7'5 mm. lower . 1-83 1-85 1-73 1-34 1-17 o-8r> 0-71 0-70 0-6') Field just above crj-stals Psalliota campestris Field. Soaked Blottinsr- paper in Chamber. Ordinary Air of Laboratory. 1-27 1-20 11!) Touching gills 3 mm. lower .... 6 mm. lower .... 1-48 1-47 1-39 one-half of that in a moist chamber contaiiiing wrt M()ttiiin-pa[)cr. In the most dried condition the spores Avere falling at only one- third the speed at which they fell in the most moist condition. The obvious explanation of the decrease in speed of spores THE EFFECT OF HUMIDITY i8i after leaving the gills, seems to be that the spores diminish in size owing to the loss of water. According to Stokes' Law the velocity varies as the square of the radius of a sphere. One must remember that a spore has an enormous surface compared with its mass, and therefore, when falling, can readily and quickly part with some of its contained water. In falling 5 mm. in ordinary air, when leaving the gills, spores of Collyhia dryophila (the smallest with which I have yet worked) were found to lose 20 '4 per cent, of their velocity ; in falling 6 mm. the spores of Poly])orus squamosus lost 12*7 per cent., and those of Psalliota cainpestris 6*3 per cent. The results are collected in the following Table :— Diminution in Velocity of Falling Spores [ ■■■■ Species. Distance of Fall in Millimetres. Time in Seconds. Diminution of Velocity expressed in Percentai:e of Initial Velocity observed. Collybia dryophila . Polyporus squamosus Psalliota campestris 5 6 6 11-4 4-8 4-8 20-4 12-7 6-3 Further observations were then made upon decrease in velocity when spores were allowed to fall through a distance of 15 cm. For this purpose a brass chamber (Fig. 62) was constructed. The space within it was 16 cm. long, 11 cm. wide, and 0*6 cm. deep. To one side of the chamber a glass plate was fixed with cement, and to the other side a long cover-glass could be affixed with vaseline. A piece of the fungus fruit-body, which included parts of three or four gills, was placed in the chamber at one end. When the latter was set in the upright position, spores fell from top to bottom. With the horizontal microscope, obser- vations on the velocity of the spores were made at different distances from the gills. The retardation in the velocity of fall was found to be most rapid immediately after the spores had left the gills, and to I 82 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI continue in a more or less niiirkcd manner for about 10 cm. A final, terminal, and fairly uniform velocity Avas then reached, the time required for its attainment being less than half a minute after the spores had been liberated from the gills. The following curves (Fig. ()o) give the results of the observations. Each velocity plotted is the average of about twenty-five velocities recorded in sequence. The curve for the Mushroom spores is re- markiible in that it first of all sinks and then rises again. Possibly this is accounted for on the supposition that the spores buckle up after a certain stage of desiccation has been reached. Such a mode of contraction would decrease the surface exposed in falling, and thus increase the velocity. As a matter of fact, Mushroom spores, when drying on a glass slide, rapidly become indented on one side so that they more or less assume the form of a boat. A general conclusion which may be arrived at from the data contained in this chapter is, that in nature spores fall most rapidly section of a long almost immediately after liberation from the chamber u.sed ior gterigmata whilst they are passing out from measuring the » j i ft rates of fall of the fruit-bodics between gills, down tubes, &c., spores at difforont i • r ^ ■ ^ distances from the and that after they have drifted m the con- a,^ glass :'«, ptece vcction currents of the outer air for about of pileus. At s YiaU a minute, thev reach a steady terminal and t are shown ■ •' _ _ two fields as seen velocity considerably less than the initial, with the horizon- , ^ tal microscope (i We can only suppose' that at tlie moniciit or liberation the spores are fully turgid, and that cms. and 12 cms. below the gills respectively. One- j^y l\^^. yjipiJ logs of water they become dried half actual size. . . up in less than a minute. Tt is certainly a good arrangement that the spores should fall (.lown between the gills or in hymenial tubes, &c., with the greatest velocity, for they thus escape from the fruit-bodies with the least risk of THE EFFECT OF HUMIDITY 183 very small convection currents causing them to touch the hymenium, to which, owing to their adhesiveness, they would become firmly attached. After liberation from the fruit-body It s 6 y 8 f /o // Distance below gills in centimetres. Fig. 63. — Curves showing the rate of fall of spores at various distances below the gills in a long chamber. the spores fall much more slowly. This enables the wind to carry them much further than would be possible if no decrease in velocity were to take place. Note. — The gradual decrease in the rate of fall of spores in a chamber saturated with water-vapour finds its readiest explanation in the supposition that the spores gradually become smaller owing to loss of water. The assumption that the spores lose water in a saturated atmosphere is in harmony with the well-known fact that the vapour pressure of a drop of liquid depends on the amount of curvature of its surface. The greater the curvature, the greater is the vapour pressure. This is illustrated by the following experiment. If a small piece of sulphur is placed in a tube which is then evacuated and sealed, and if the tube is gently heated near the sulphur, the latter condenses on the cool part of the tube in the form of a great number of very small drops of different sizes. In the course of a day or so, one finds that the larger drops have become still larger, and that they have a clear space round them. The clear space gradually grows bigger. The explanation of this phenomenon is that the smaller drops with the greater vapour pressure distil over into the larger drops with the smaller vapour pressure. Similarly we may suppose that the large free drop of water in the compressor cell (Fig. 58, w, p. 167) grows at the expense of water lost by the minute falling spores owing to the great differ- ence in the curvature of the surfaces. CHAPTER XVII THE PATH OF THE SPORES BETWEEN THE GILLS, ETC!.— THE SPORABOLA— APPENDIX ON THE MOTION OF A SPHERE IN A VISCOUS MEDIUM By methods already explained, it has been shown that it is possible to determine by observation (1) the maximum horizontal distance to which a spore travels when it has been shot out horizontally from a basidium lying in the hymenium of a gill,^ and (2) the terminal vertical velocity with which the spore falls toward the earth.2 With a knowledge of those data, and assuming that the resistance of the air is proportional to the velocity, it is possible to calculate the initial velocity with which a spore is shot off its sterigma, and also to map out the trajectory described. The initial velocity with which a spore leaves its sterigma, when projected in a horizontal direction, may be calculated as follows : — Let V = the terminal vei-tical velocity, X = the maximum horizontal distance of projection, H — the initial horizontal velocity, and g = the acceleration due to gravity. It can be shown ^ that H=f. For spores of Amanitopsis vaginata, it has been observed that X = 0'02 cm. and V = 0'5 cm. per second approximately, whence „ 981x0-02 .f. ^= 0-5 =^^' i.e. the spores are projected in the horizontal direction from the sterigmata with an initial velocity of a])])roximately 40 cm. per 1 Method II., Chap. XL * Chap. XV. ^ A note on the motion of a sphere in a viscous medium is given in the Appendix to this chapter for convenience of reference. 184 THE SPORABOLA 185 second. Since the maximum horizontal distance of projection is 0*02 cm,, it is clear that in travelling only this short distance the horizontal velocity of a spore is reduced from 40 cm. per second to zero. This will not seem surprising when the ratio of the surface to the mass of the spore is taken into account. Since the spores are shot outwards horizontally, they describe a curved trajectory in falling toward the earth. The trajectory is a peculiar one. In future it will be referred to as the sporahola. It can be shown that the equation for the sporabola is y ~ 9 I lo2f xy X 0 01 0 ox where V = the terminal vertical velocity, X = the maximum horizontal distance of projection, f/ = the acceleration due to gravity, y = the distance of a point on the sporabola below the highest point, and a, = the distance of a point on the sporabola fi-om the vertical axis. Since V, X, and g are known, by assuming values for x correspond- ing values for y can be calculated ^ and the sporabola plotted out. The accom panying figure represents the sporabolas for AmanitojJsisvagi- nata and Psalliota campestris (Fig. 64). The sporabola is remarkable in that the horizontal part passes very sharply into the vertical part. The horizontal and vertical motions appear to be al- most independent of one another. Direct inspection of the curve Fig. 64. — The sporabolas of two spores shot out horizontally from the hymenium. The spores, drawn to scale, are shown below. The scale is in centimetres. 1 86 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI indicates that the horizontal velocity is reduced to zero by the time the spore has fallen through a distance only about equal to its diameter. It must often happen that spores are not shot outwards in exactly the horizontal direction but at a greater or less angle thereto. The paths of spores projected with equal velocities at various angles can be deduced mathematically, and are indi- cated diagrammatically in the ad- joining tigure (Fig. Go). That the sporabola appears to consist of two parts, one due to violent projection of a spore and the other due to gravitation, again becomes obvious. We may conclude that, if a basidium looks upwards, it will shoot its spores to a height approximately equal to the maximum horizontal distance to which it would have projected them if it had been placed horizontally Fig. 65.— Sporabolas of spores shot instead of vertically. Quite generally, outwards from a point at various ./^ ^ o j angles with the vertical and with the sudden bend in eacli sporabola equal initial velocities. , , . takes place at approximately the same distance from the point of projection at the surface of a limiting sphere (Fig. 65). Before attaining its steady terminal velocity, a spore requires to fall but a very minute distance. This may be shown as follows: — Let X = the maximum horizontal distance of projection, j; = the distance of a point on the sporabola from the vertical axis, V = the terminal vertical velocity, and ?; = the vertical velocity at any time. Then it may be deduced that X V By substituting the value of ^^ in the equation for a sporabola we get THE SPORABOLA 187 Let us assume that the vertical velocity at any time is within 1 per cent, of the terminal velocity, and that y is the distance the spore has fallen before attaining this velocity, then putting log, = 2-3 logio ^"^^ ^ = 0-99, we get V — { - logio (0-01) 2-3 - 0-99 j For A'inanitojjsis vaginata, since V = 0'5 cm. per second, we find that ,j = 0-0009cm. = 9/;x. The diameter of a spore is approximately 10 /*. Hence we can state that the distance fallen by a spore of A. vaginata before reaching its terminal velocity (within 1 per cent.) is less than its diameter. The length of time required for any spore after being set free to attain its terminal vertical velocity within 1 per cent., can be shown to be equal to O-OO-iT x V, where V is the terminal velocity. For Amanitopsis vaginata the terminal velocity may be taken as 0'5 cm. per second. It can be calculated, therefore, that a spore Avould attain its terminal vertical velocity in approximately -:^ second. The terminal velocities of fall of the spores of other species are of the same order as that of Amanitopsis vaginata. We are therefore justified in drawing the general conclusion that the spores of Hymenomycetes attain a uniform velocity of fall practically at the instant of their liberation. We can also calculate the length of time required for a spore to arrive within 1 per cent, of the total horizontal distance to which it is projected. At the end of the time in question, the position of the spore on the sporabola will be x cms. from the vertical axis and y cms. below the highest point. According to our assump- tion '" = 0-99. By substitution in the equation for a sporabola we find that 7/ = 0 -0009 cm. = 9 m. It has been shown, however, that a spore falls through this distance in approximately 4^0^ second. We may conclude, therefore, that the spore will have travelled for only ^i^ second before arriving 1 88 HKSEAIH'TTES ON FUNGI within 1 per cent, of the totiil horizontal distance to which it is projected. An important conclusion which may be drawn from this calculation is that it would be extremely ditlicult, if not impossible, to observe the horizontal flight of the spores. The horizontal move- ment is completed in ^ ij^^ second. It is very questionable if the human eye could observe such a movement of a dark body at all, and particularly under the conditions of observation necessitated by the size of the spores, the position of the basidia, and the uncertainty of the time of spore-discharge. These theoretical considerations fall in line with my observations, for I have never yet succeeded in watching the horizontal flight of a spore from its sterigma. The results of the investigations upon the motion of a spore of Amanitopsis vaginata, 10 /x in diameter, when projected from its sterigma in a horizontal direction, may be summed up as follows : — By observation — Maximum horizontal distance of projection = 0'02 cm. Terminal velocity of fall = 0"5 cm. per second. By calculation — The terminal velocity of fall is reached after a distance of 9 /x (which is less than the diameter of a spore) has been traversed. The terminal velocity of fall is reached in ^^jy second approximately. The spore arrives within 1 per cent, of its total horizontal flight {i.e. it goes 0*0198 cm.) in jjjj second. The initial horizontal velocity is 40 cm. per second. When one compares the movement of a spore with that of a pebble projected in like manner, the differences at first appear to be remarkable. However, it nmst be remembered that a spore has an enormous surface in proportion to its mass as compared with a pebble. The air, therefore, in proportion to their masses, ofters a vastly greater resistance to the movement of a spore than to that of a pebble. in Plate I., Fig. 4, the paths of spores between the gills of a Mushroom are shown, whilst in the text-figures 56 (p. 165) and 66 similar illustrations are given for Amanitopsis vaginata and Poly- poriis squamosum respectively. It is evident that the spores are shot outwards from the hymenium in such a manner that they are projected clear of the hymenium and yet not i'ai- enough to strike the opposite gill. The air is a delicate regulator in this matter. THE SPORABOLA 189 The structure of a Mushroom is such that the spores are shot out into the spaces between the gills, where they fall doAvn freely in response to gravity. They thus escape from the fruit-body without danger of touching, and thereby adhering to, the hymenium. The hymenium on the side of a gill may be likened to a battery. The basidia are the guns and the spores the projectiles. Each gun is capable of shooting olF four projectiles in succession at intervals of a few seconds or minutes. The battery is so splendidly organised that the guns are brought for- ward, mounted, and fired off in succes- sion. Thus a heavy and continuous bombardment is maintained for days or weeks, and only ceases when the am- munition has become exhausted. The object of the miniature gunnery is to drop the spores into the spaces between the gills, so that they may fall out from the fruit-body without touching one another or any part of the hymenium. The success with which a larcje Mush- room or Polyporus is able in the course of a few days to liberate thousands of millions of spores, and entrust them to the scattering winds, may well excite our admiration. In a few rare instances, owing to imperfection in the structure of the pilei, the spores are not all able to escape into the outer air. Thus, for example, in Nolanea pascua the gills often become locally powdered with the red spores. This is due to the fact that the gills are somewhat wavy, and there- fore not properly disposed in vertical planes. The adhesive spores, when falling, catch and stick on the projecting parts. Fig. (U). — Vertical section through two hymenial tubes from the pileus of Polyporus squamosus. The arrows show the sporabolas described by the spores when they are discharged, h, the hyme- nium. About 8 times natural size. 190 RESEARCHES OX FUNGI APPENDIX THE MOTION OF A SPHERE IN A VISCOUS MEDIUM Contributed by Dr. GuY I3arlow. (The notation is the same as that employid in Chapters X V. and X V II.) As shown by Stokes, the resisting force on a sphere of radius a when moving Avith velocity v is given by Y = &irtJ.av (1) Since the force is directly proportional to the velocity, it is evident that the component of this force in any direction is also directly proportional to the component of the velocity in that direction. The motion of the sphere when projected under gravity can therefore be regarded as com2)ounded of tlie inde})endent horizontal and vertical motions, and these may be conveniently investigated separately. 1. Fall f7'om rest under gravity. The equation of motion is — dv m ^ = riuf - btr/mav, where ni is the mass of the sphere and v its velocity downwards at time t. The density o- of the medium is here neglected. This equation may be written dv dt^^-'' (2) Avhere c = — . m When the steady terminal state is reached, -^ — o, v = V, hence from (2), V-^ (3) c for the teniiiniil velocity Substituting value of c and putting m = ^d^p we obtain Stokes' expression Equation (2) may now be written — dv dt = '^''-''^- Integration with initial condition r = o when t = o gives f = V(l-e-") (5) THE MOTION OF A SPHERE 191 Putting w = ^ and integrating again with condition y = o when t = 0 we get y = Y\t-^-{l-c-^t)\ (6) 2. Horizontal motion icitli initial velocity H. If XI is horizontal velocity at time t, the equation of motion is now simply du or Therefore and hence dt -eu, du dx -cu. du— - - cdx, H-M: = cx (7) But X = X for u = 0, therefore H = cX. From the last expression and (3) we obtain H=f (8) Proceeding with the integration, from (7) we have dx -dr'' = B.-cx = c (X-x). Integration with initial condition x — o when t = o leads to a- = X (l-f-<') (9) 3. The equation of the path of a sphere projected horizontally under gravity is obtained at once by the elimination of t from the two equations (6) and (9) ; and replacing c by its value ^ we have finally CHAriER XVIII THE ELECTRIC CHARGES ON THE SPORES Although the matter may bo of but small Itiological interest, it seemed desirable to ascertain whether or not the falling spores carry electric charges, and, if so, of what kind. The apparatus for the investigation of the problem was constructed as follows. A brass chamber, shown at B by two sections in Fig. 07, was supported on a rod, R, and covered in front and behind with glass discs, GG'. At its centre were fixed two brass plates, PP', 1-2 era. Avide and 2 cm. high, so that they were parallel to one another and about 1*5 mm. apart. The plates were attached to wires introduced through lateral holes in the chamber, insulation being secured by means of glass tubing, TT', and sealing-wax, S. Above the plate was suspended a piece of the pileus of a Mushroom, F, Avith the gills looking downwards. This was held in position by means of a pin stuck into a cork, K, covered with tinfoil, N. The brass chamber, and thus also the piece of fungus, was carefully earthed by means of a wire attached to a gas-pipe at E. By means of other wires the two plates were connected with a mercury com- mutator, C. The latter was then connected on one side with the gas-pipe, E, and on the other with the city main, M, of 220 volts. The lamp, L, was placed in the circuit for the purpose of detecting any accidental flow of current. By moving the handle of the commutator to the right, both the piece of fungus and the brass plates were earthed and therefore rendered neutral, whilst by moving it to the left the plates were given charges of opposite signs. A vertical plane, passing l)etween the plates towards their centres, was focussed and observed by means of a horizontal microscope with a magnification of about 2."i and a field of view 5-5 mill, in diameter (c/. Plate IV., Fig. 2'.>). When the ig2 THE ELECTRIC CHARGES ON THE SPORES 193 handle of the commutator was turned to the right so that the plates were uncharged, the spores could be seen falling vertically downwards between them at the rate of about 1 mm. per second. No attraction of the spores to the plates could be detected. When spores were observed to have reached the centre of the space between the plates, the handle of the commutator was suddenly turned to the left so that one of the plates became positively and the other negatively charged. Immediately the paths of most of the spores were altered (Fig. 68, A). Some spores were attracted to one plate and some to the other, the majority going to the one Fig. 67. — Apparatus with electrical attachments for detecting the electrical charges on falling spores. The brass chamber B, natural size. Description in the text. with a positive charge. A few continued their motion vertically downwards. A number of spores appeared to turn at right angles to their former courses and they then moved with great rapidity to the plates. These must have been the spores which were relatively the most highly charged. Others made their way to the plates at a more or less gentle angle to the vertical and with a less accelerated velocity. Doubtless they were less highly charged. A certain number of spores which were not appreciably affected by charging the plates were probably not electrified at all. On reaching one of the plates, each spore became charged with electricity of the same sign as that on the plate, and in consequence N 194 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI tended to be repelled from the latter. Owing to their adhesiveness, however, the spores were unable to leave the plates after having once come in contact with them. When the plates were left charged for some hours, the spores, Avhich fell in large numbers from the piece of pileus, gradually formed simple or branching chains which sometimes stretched almost from one plate to the other, thus indicating the direction of the lines of force between them. The formation of chains not only demonstrated the c B 'fi \ f/i Wi ) ■ f/M M fi, \ wk / w//^ /////// \' "^ w// 1 V/////h W///. ( W//i ' fm/ '///////, / //////// ////// \ ^/////// /////// \ '//////, wk B 1 / m + w\ I'i /////// f/m. \ 1 1 ) f/M i III \i ■ / f/i m \ 8 m^ WA Fig. 68. — The paths of spores falling between two brass plates. A, shows how the spores deviate from the vertical when the plates are suddenly electrified with charges of opposite signs. B, zigzag path of a spore produced by alternately reversing the charges on the plates. C, path of a spore pro- duced by charging the plates, making them neutral, giving them reversed charges, &c., in succession. tendency of the spores to be repelled from the plates and from one another, but also the fact that the spores strongly adhere to surfaces with which they may come in contact. When the plates were suddenly charged, it was found that proximity of a spore to one plate rather than the other was not a factor deciding to which of the two plates the spore should move (Fig. 68, A). There seems to be no escape from the conclusion that, either at the moment of discharge from the sterigmata or within a very few seconds afterwards whilst falling through the air, the majority of spores receive positive or negative electric THE ELECTRIC CHARGES ON THE SPORES 195 charges of different strengths, whilst a certain number do not become charged at all. By another arrangement of the commutator, it was possible to reverse alternately the charges on the plates or to remove them. By reversing the charges alternately a spore can be made to take a zigzag path across the field like that shown in Fig. 68, B. By successively charging the plates H — , 00, — f-, 00, H — , &c., one can make the path of a spore still more irregular (Fig, 68, C). Several other species beside Psalliota campestris were tested, among them being Polyporus squamosus. In all cases the spores behaved like those of the Mushroom, the majority appearing to be charged, either positively or negatively. That the spores bear electric charges during their passage through the air may be regarded as a physical fact of no apparent biological importance. There seems to be no reason to suppose that in nature the spores, in consequence of being electrified, settle on one surface rather than another. It therefore appears improbable that the charges are of use to the spores in enabling them to obtain advantageous locations for germination. A further investigation as to the manner in which the spores originally become charged and into the conditions which determine the gain or loss of charges by them was thought unnecessary for my present purpose. CHArTER XIX THE COPRINUS TYPE OF FRUIT-BODY " And agarics and fungi with mildew and mould Started like mist from the wet ground cold ; Pale, fleshy, as if the decaying dead With a spirit of growth had been animated I Their moss rotted off them, flake by flake, Till the thick stalk stuck like a murderer's stake, Where rags of loose flesh yet tremble on high, Infecting the winds that wander by." — Shelley.^ The Coprini are especially cliaractensed by the fact that the gills " deliquesce " on maturity, and that drops of an inky-looking fluid are often formed on the pilei. So far as I am aAvare, however, although many figures and photographs- of members of the Coprinus genus have been published, no one hitherto has ex- plained the real significance of the fact of "deliquescence" or the general structural arrangement of Coprinus fruit-bodies. In what follows, I hope to be able to show how admirably a Coprinus fruit-body is constructed when regarded as a highly efficient spore-producing and spore-liberating organ. One of the best known and largest of the Coprini is Coprinus comatus. It often comes up in great abundance in fields (Plate IV., Fig. 21). It "deliquesces" in a typical manner. Fruit-bodies of this species afforded me admirable material for a study of the structure of a Coprinus in relation to spore-fall. ^ The second of these two verses evidently refers to a species of Coprinus. The poet had probably noticed the remarkable changes which take place in the conspicuous fruit-bodies of Coprinus comatus. ^ A series of excellent photographs of this species has been published by G. F. Atkinson, " Studies and Illustrations of Mushrooms : II.," Bull. 168, Cornell Univers. Agric. Experiment Station, 1899; also. Mushrooms — Edible, Poisonous, dr., Ithaca, 1901, pp. 33-41. 196 THE COPEINUS TYPE OF FRUIT-BODY 197 An unripe pileus which has attained its full length is more or less barrel-shaped (Plate II., Fig. 7 ; Plate IV., Figs. 21 and 22, to the right). The gills are white in colour, closely packed together, and with very few exceptions equal in length. Upon beginning to open out, the pileus alters its form from that of a barrel to that of a bell (Plate IV., Figs. 21 and 22; Plate I., Fig. 1). It breaks away from the stipe below and leaves the latter encircled with an annulus. Whilst the gills are moving radially outwards from the stipe, they become slightly separated from one another. The rim of the bell-shaped pileus now turns slightly outwards (Plate I., Fig. 1). This results in a further separation of the lower ends of the gills, so that the spaces which have thus arisen between them are similar to those between the gills throughout their whole length in the case of a Mushroom {cf. Plate IV., Figs. 23 and 25). Except at their lower ends, adjacent gills at this stage in development are united by inter- locking cystidia along their margin, and are just as closely packed as they were when the fruit-body was barrel-shaped. The separa- tion of the lower ends of the gills is accompanied by the beginning of the process of " deliquescence." Whilst the pileus is changing from the barrel to the bell form and is separating the lower ends of its gills, the basidia are rapidly developing their spores. As these ripen they turn pinkish and finally black. Just before " deliquescence " begins, it can clearly be made out that the spores ripen on the gills from below up- wards. The lower parts of the gills blacken first (Plate I., Fig. 1). The black zone passes into a pink zone higher up, and this in its turn, toward the top of the pileus, gradually shades into white. Whenever a gill has become black, a small piece of its surface, when seen in face view with the microscope, has the appearance shown in Plate III., Fig. 15, The pattern presented to the eye is very regular and pleasing. Each basidium bears four black spores, and is separated from adjacent basidia by paraphyses. The four spores of a basidium are so attached to the sterigmata that they are separated from one another as much as possible. They are thus prevented from touching, and consequently from adhering to, one another both during development and discharge. 198 RESEARCHES OX FUXGI The paraphyses are present in just the right proportion to prevent the spores of adjacent basidia from coming in contact. A ghxnce at Plate III., Fig. 15, shows that the spacing of the adhesive spores is brought about so economically that it would be difficult to imagine how more of them could be developed simultaneously on any given area of a gill surface. A cross-section through a gill (Plate III., Fig. 16) shows that the basidia project considerably beyond the paraphyses and are all directed perpendicularly out- wards from the gill surface. When the pileus is still barrel-shaped and until spore-fall Fig. 69. — Coprinus romatus. Fruit-bodies in an early .stage of development. In the tallest the fall of spores and autodigestion have just begun. The four others are a few hours jounger : the pilei are separating from the stipe below and the gills are still intact. Photographed at Sutton Park, Warwickshire, by J. E. Titley. About J natural size. begins, the inner edges of the gills towards the stipe, throughout their entire length and for a width of about O'lio mm., appear to the naked eye as white bands (Plate I., Fig. 1, m; Plate II., Figs. 8 and 9, tn). These are especially inflated portions of the gills, entirely devoid of basidia and covered over by large, colour- less, unicellular cystidia (Plate III., Figs. 13 and 14), The THE COPRINUS TYPE OF FRUIT-BODY 199 thickened marginal bands of adjacent gills are in contact with one another, so that a solid white cylinder is formed which en- sheaths the stipe. It is important to notice that the gills, except where they join at the membranous flesh of the pileus and are in contact by means of the inner inflated marginal bands. FiGr. 70. — t'oprinus comatus. Same fruit-bodies as shown in Fig. (jU, twenty-two hours older. All are shedding spores and undergoing autodigestion. The pileus of the tallest has become reduced to one-half its original size and a few drops of inky fluid have fallen from its recurved rim on to the pilei below. The stipes have lengthened considerably. Photographed at Sutton Park, Warwickshire, by J. E. Titley. About ^ natural size. are separated throughout their entire length (Plate L, Fig. 5). In the spaces thus provided between the gills, the projecting basidia can freely develop to maturity (Plate III., Fig. 14). It thus happens that the spores of basidia, which belong to adjacent gills, are never in danger of coming into actual contact and con- 200 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI sequently of adhering to one another. The significance of the marginal bands with their cystidia seems to be, therefore, that they secure that the faces of adjacent gills, i.e. the hymenial surfaces, shall be suitably spaced during development.^ The so-called " deliquescence " of a Coprinus fruit-body has nothing in common with the phenomenon of deliquescence of crystals known to the chemist. The phenomenon with which we have to deal is really a ])rocess of autodigestio7i. The solid parts of the gills become fluid, in all probability through the agency of digestive enzymes. There is not the slightest reason to suppose that the fluid is derived from the water-vapour of the air. Autodigestion of a gill always begins at its base, along the free edge where the gill is separating or has just separated from its neighbours (Plate II., Fig. 8, .s). The marginal cystidia are first involved. They simply break down, become fluid and indis- tinguishable. After the destruction of the cystidia, the auto- digestion proceeds obliquely upwards and gradually destroys the whole gill (Plate II., Figs. 8, 9, 10, and 11). The entire destruction of the gills from below upwards in large fruit-bodies was observed to take about two days, whilst in smaller ones the process was carried out in little more than twenty-four hours (hire, by J. E. Titley. Reduced to about i'. room. Coprinus atramentarius (Fig. 73) and C. micaceus (Fig. 74) were found to shed their spores in essentially the same manner as C. comatus. C. plicatilis, and other very small species, behave ' 15. M. Duggar, "The Principles of Miislnoom Growing and Mushroom Spawn Making," U.S. l)ep. of A(jnc., Bureau of Plant Industry, BulletinNo. 85, 1905, p. 22. THE COPEINUS TYPE OF FRUIT-BODY 209 somewhat differently. The gills ripen and shed then' spores from below upwards. As the pileus opens out, the necessary inter- lamellar spaces widen from below upwards. However, the entire opening of the pileus, which eventually becomes disc-shaped, is accomplished without " deliquescence." Each gill splits vertically from above and the two halves become pulled out laterally. The expansion of the pileus and the necessary spacing of the gills is thus satisfactorily brought about without autodigestion, which process in these tiny fruit-bodies would be superfluous. Massee^ has recently stated that "Many species included in Coprinus as C. plicatilis and others having dry, non-deli- quescent gills, have no real affinity with this genus." Now that the function of autodigestion has been discovered, this view can no longer be regarded as tenable. Autodigestion alone is not a decisive test for placing a species in the genus Coprinus. In its absence in the smaller species, such as C. plicatilis, Coprinus characters, e.g. thinness of the flesh, general structure and splitting of the gills, protuberant basidia separated by para- physes of a special type, and particularly the ripening and dis- charge of the spores in succession in a direction proceeding from the pileus margin to the pileus centre, are still sufficiently obvious. Even in C. plicatiloides (Fig. 26, p. 70), one of the smallest of all Coprini, where the expanded parasol-like pileus is often only 5 mm. or even less in diameter, the process of spore-discharge proceeds centripetally. It always begins first, and is completed first, around the periphery of the pileus, and the last spores to be set free are those in the neighbourhood of the stipe. The gradual progress of spore-discharge is therefore essentially similar in the diminutive C. j)^'^catiloides and in the relatively gigantic C. comatus. This seems to me to be strong evidence that both species have been rightly placed within the same genus. There can be little doubt that some of the smaller and more delicate species of Coprinus are largely dependent on the weather for success in liberating their spores into the air. In very dry weather, especially Avhen it is windy, I have noticed that fruit- bodies of C. plicatilis, growing on a lawn, and those of ^ G. Massee, Text-Book of Fungi, London, 1906, p. 364. 210 RESEARCHES OX FUNGI Coprinus nnioaceus, shrivel up before spore-discharge h;is been completed, and sometimes, indeed, without its beginning at all. Doubtless this is due to too rapid transpiration from the gills and upper surface of the pileus. In moist weather the gills of C. ■ micaceus undergo the typical process of autodigestion, which has the same relation to the zones of spore-discharge as in C. coniatus. Stages in the opening out of the pileus and in Fig. 74. — Cuprinus micaaus. A gruup ol' fruit-bodies in a late stage of development. The gills have almost disappeared owing to autodigestion. The rim of the pileus in the foreground is markedly recurved. Photo- graphed at Sutton Park, Warwickshire, by J. E. Titley. About ^ natural size. the disappearance of the gills of C. micaceus are shown in Plate III., Figs. 18, 10, and 20. As a result of my investigations, I have come to recognise two distinct types of spore-producing and spore-liberating fruit-bodies in the Agaricinea?. One is represented by the Mushroom and the other by C. comatus. The former is by far the more common and includes all ordinary Agaricineai, whilst the latter is restricted to the "deliquescing" Coprini. The significant THE COPRINUS TYPE OF FRUIT-BODY 211 points of difference between the two types may be tabulated as follows : — No. Psalliota camiiestris. Coprimxs comatus. 1 Flesh thick. Flesh very thin or mem- branous. 2 Gills more or less hori- zontally outstretched at maturity. Gills more or less vertically placed at maturity. 3 Spores not at all ripe or all discharged simultane- ously on any part of a gill. Spores all ripen and are all discharged simultane- ously in a narrow zone which progresses slowly from the base to the top of each gill. 4 Gills do not undergo a pro- cess of autodigestion. Gills become destroyed by autodigestion from below upwards. 5 The stipe has attained its full ength before the spores are liberated. The stipe elongates con- siderably during libera- tion of the spores. For each fruit-body the five facts are correlated and only find their full significance in reference to each other. Doubtless, within certain limits, there has been a tendency for the survival of those fruit-bodies which produce and successfully liberate the maximum number of spores with the least expendi- ture of fruit-body substance and energy. In both our types this desideratum has been met in part by the production of central tubular stipes, symmetrical radiate pilei, closely packed basidia, tiny spores, and a much folded hymenium situated on the plate- like gills. Further arrangements, however, in the two types present marked differences. In the Mushroom, adjacent basidia on any part of a gill mature successively and shed their spores as soon as these are ripe (c/. Plate I., Fig. 3). Every square millimetre of hymenial surface on each gill, therefore, sheds a certain number of spores each minute throughout the entire Spore-liberating period of the fruit-body. This necessitates that sufficient space shall be provided between adjacent gills throughout their whole length by the time 212 RESEARCHES OX FUNGI spore-dischari^c bot^nns. These spaces arc provided for a iiiaxiuiuiii number of gills by the long axes of the latter becoming horizontally outstretched at maturity (Plate 1., Fig. 2; Plate IV., Fig. 25). In order to fix the gills in this position (with their planes vertical), the whole fruit-body must have the necessary rigidity. This is given by the thick flesh. In a fruit-body of Coprinus coinatus there is much more gill- FlG. 75. — Amanita muacaria. Two fruit-bodies having the P.villiota cainpcstris type of spore-discharge. The gills are horizontally outstretched. The space provided by the stipe beneath the pileus allows air-currents to readily bear away the falling spores. In nature the tops of the pilei. which bear white squamuh\i, are coloured a brilliant red. Photograplied at Sutton Park, Warwickshire, by J. E. Titley. About i natural size. surface in |)roporLiou to the whole mass than in a Mushroom. The former, therefore, has solved the problem of developing the maxiuium amount of spore-bearing hymenium with the least possible expenditure of fruit-body substance and energy, much more successfully than the hitler (cf. Plate I., Figs. 1 and 2). The Coprinus has such extremely thin flesh to its pileus that it would be mechanically impossible for it to sup})ort its gills at maturity with their long axes in the horizontal position. Associated THE COPRINUS TYPE OF FRUIT-BODY 213 with the extremely reduced flesh, we find that the long axes of the gills are almost vertical when spore-liberation begins. This arrangement reduces the strain on the flesh to a minimum. The pileus simply presses downwards on the stipe. When the gills have become vertical at maturity they are then closely packed together throughout their entire length except for their extreme lower ends, where the change of shape of the pileus from the barrel form to the bell form has caused them to separate. It would be quite impossible for spores to be liberated from the long vertical gills throughout every part of their whole length simultaneously as in the Mushroom, for the gills are too close together. If wide spaces were provided between them, not only would this necessitate a laro'e reduction in the number of the gills, but a large number of spores would require to fall vertically downwards between the gill-plates a distance of several centi- metres. In that case, unless the gill-planes were quite vertical, a considerable proportion of the spores would strike the hymenium on falling, adhere there, and be wasted. Granted, therefore, that the gills are closely packed and vertically extended at maturity, it is obvious that a different arrangement for spore-liberation has to be adopted to that found in the Mushroom. As a matter of fact, as we have already seen, the Coprinus sheds its spores from a narrow zone of spore-discharge which passes on each gill from below upwards. At the zones of spore-discharge, the gills are always sufficiently far apart (about 0*2 mm.) to permit of the spores, when violently projected from their sterigmata, describing the usual sporabolic paths unhindered. To enable the gills to move apart from one another higher and higher up as the zones of spore-discharge ascend upon them, the process of autodigestion comes into play. This causes the removal of the spore-freed portions of the gills and thus allows the fruit-body to gradually open out and thereby separate the gills higher and higher up. Without autodisjestion it would bo difficult to imajjine how the necessary interlamellar spaces could be provided at the moving zones of spore-discharge. Toward the end of the period of spore- discharge, the much shortened gills become horizontally out- stretched like those of a Mushroom. At this stage, the pileus 2 14 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI requires to be disc-shaped in order to permit the parts of the gills nearest the stipe to obtain the requisite spaces for spore- discharge between them. The very thin flesh is also now quite sufficient to support the much reduced burden of the gills in the horizontal position. During the process of spore-discharge, the stipe of Coprimes comatus elongates considerably. It adds a number of centimetres to its length and often becomes a foot long (Plate IV., Fig. 22). As the fluid produced during autodigestion is gradually lost by evaporation and dripping, the weight of the pileus, i.e. the load which the stipe has to support, undergoes progressive reduction. The higher the pileus can be raised with mechanical safety, the better will be the chance of the spores escaping obstacles and being carried off by the wind. It seems clear that the gradual raising of the pileus by the elongation of the stipe is correlated with the progressive diminution of the pileus weight. In the Mushroom, on the other hand, the burden to be borne by the stipe does not alter during spore-liberation. In keeping with this we find that in this type of fruit-body the stipe attains its maximum length before spore-discharge begins. If the Coprinus and the Mushroom types be compared, I think it must be admitted that the former is superior to the latter in producing the maximum number of spores with the minimum of fruit-body substance and energy. A Coprinus fruit- body with its extreme reduction of flesh, vertical position of the gills, successive ripening of the spores from below upwards, and its beautifully regulated autodigestion, may be thought of as having been evolved from a more generalised fruit-body of the jMushroom type, Avith thick flesh, horizontal gills, irregular ripening of the basidia, and absence of autodigestion. The special features of a typical Coprinus fruit-body are bound up with its umbrella shape. It seems to me that only after this had been attained could the special Coprinus arrangements have been developed and become effective. For this reason I regard the genus Coprinus as having been derived entirely from a fungus having fruit-bodies of the Mushroom type with central stipe and a symmetrically-placed, gill-bearing pileus. At the present day there are no Coprini with THE COPRINUS TYPE OF FRUIT-BODY 215 dimidiate form corresponding to Lenzites, &c. In my opinion the explanation of this fact is not that such fruit-bodies have become extinct but that they never existed. Massee in his " Revision of the Genus Coprinus " states that " the species of Coprinus differ from the remainder of the Agari- cineie in one important biological feature — the deliquescence of the gills at maturity into a liquid which drops to the ground, carrying the mature spores along with it." This mode of spore- dissemination he describes as " primitive and relatively imperfect," " as compared with the minute wind-borne spores of the remainder of the Agaricincie." ^ Massee takes this mode of spore-dissemina- tion as important evidence that " in the genus Coprinus we have in reality the remnant of a primitive group from which have descended the entire group of Agaricinete having wind-borne spores." Since my own investigations have now shown that the spores of the Coprini are wind-borne, it must be concluded that Massee's argument for the ancestral position of the Coprini is based on an unfortunate misconception of the ecology of Coprinus fruit-bodies. The arrangement for liberating spores into the air by means of " deliquescence," instead of being primitive, appears to be the most highly specialised in the Avhole group of Agaricinese. The relative antiquity of the genus Coprinus seems to me to be no easy matter to decide. However, at present I fail to find any satisfactory evidence that the genus is to be regarded as closely related to the one from Avhich the other groups of gilled Agarics have arisen. It seems more reasonable to regard it as a specialised offshoot from a more generalised fungus of the Mushroom type. ^ G. Massee, "A Revision of the Genus Coprinus," Ann. of Bot., vol. x. p. 129 ; also Text-IJook of Fuivji, London, 190G, p. 364. CHAPTER XX THE DISPERSION OF THE SPORES AFTER LIBERATION FROM THE FRUIT-BODIES— FALCK'S THEORY We have now gained some insight into the arrangements whereby spores are enabled to escape from hymenomycetous fruit-bodies. It still remains, however, to discuss the dispersion of the spores in the outer air. Doubtless, in the narrow, blindly-ending tubes of the Polyporeii', and between the closely-packed gills of the Agaricinese, the air is extremely still, so that the spores fall approximately vertically downwards in it, in the manner already discussed in Chapter XVII. If the air between the pilei and the ground were also quite still, the spores would continue falling in their vertical paths after emerging from the fruit-bodies, and would strike the ground immediately below the basidia from which they had been liberated. It is of interest to calculate the length of time that would be required for the spores to reach the ground in still air. The results of a few such calculations, together with the data on which they are based, are given in the following Table :— Species. Length of Stipe l)etw(H'ii till' lUse of the (Jills and the tirouiiil. Approximate Average Velocity of Fall of the Spores. 1 Approximate Length of Time recniiriMl for the Spoils to Fall from till- IVise of the ' Gills to the (Jroiiml in Still Air. Collybia dryophila . . 4 cm. 0"4 mm. per sec. 1 min. 40 sees. Psalliota caiiipestris . 6 cm. 1-2 mm. per sec. 50 seconds Amanitopsis vaginata 7-5 cm. .3 mm. per sec. 25 seconds Coprinus comatus . . ^ 6-20 cm. Pilens ^'rowing" from a tree 3 mm. per sec. ( 20 secs.-l min. 6 ( sees. Polyporus squamosus - trunk 4 metres above tlie 1 mm. per sec. 1 Imur Ci niins. 1 I ground J ^ Estimated from the data given in ChapS. X\'. and XVI. 2l6 THE DISPERSION OF THE SPORES 217 It is clear, from the results just given and from our knowledge of the size of spores in Hymenomycetes generally,^ that for the fruit-bodies of many species about a minute would be required for the spores to fall from the gills to the ground. Even in the case of Anianitopsis vaginata, where the spores are unusually large in addition to being spherical, about half a minute would be necessary. For fruit-bodies of Polyporus, Polystictus, Fomes, Stereum, Corticium, &c., growing on tree-trunks or dead branches some metres high, the ground would only be reached after the spores had been falling through the air for a period of time of the order of an hour. It seems certain that, owing to the alternation of day and night and other meteorological causes, the air above the surface of the earth is never quite still. The average speed of the air iii exposed situations is very considerable, amounting to miles an hour. In woods and meadows, &c., where ground-fungi grow, the air- movements are probably never less than some feet per minute, and, as every one knows by experience, they are very frequently much greater. Even when the air seems extremely still, so that one cannot feel its motion and scarcely a leaf trembles on the tallest trees, it is astonishing how complex and active are the small convection currents and air-drifts that one may discover near the ground, in gardens and woods, by the cautious liberation of smoke or puff-ball dust. From what we know by experience of air-movements, and from the calculations of the time that would be required for spores to fall from their pilei to the ground in perfectly still air, it seems to me to be an obvious conclusion that the external air-currents, as a rule, are fully sufficient to carry off the falling spores from beneath the pilei and to scatter them broadcast. As a matter of fact in nature, unless a fruit-body is confined by dense grass, loose leaves, or other natural obstacles, one never finds any noticeable spore-deposit on the ground beneath a pileus. For fruit-bodies of Stropharia semiglobata, Anellaria separata, Coprinus comatus, or any other species growing in open pastures, &c., it seems theoretically impossible that, if the wind is blowing appreciably, any of the spores should settle on the ground immediately beneath the pilei. 1 Chap. XIV. 2l8 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI One of the chief functions of the stipe is undoubtedly to provide a space usually one or more inches high between the under surface of the pilous and the substratum on which the fruit-body may grow. Owing to the very small rate of fall of the spores and the relatively very much greater average horizontal speed of air-currents near the ground, the space is amply sufficient, under normal conditions, to permit of the falling spores being carried away from the fruit-body and deposited at a distance from it. Richard Falck^ has put forward the theory that the fruit-bodies Fig. 7<>. — Semidiagrammatic sketch of a section in a field illustrating the manner in which the spores of the Horse Mushroom {Psalliota arirnsis) are liberated and dispersed. A slight lateral movement of the air is supposed to be carrying the spore-cloud away from the underside of the pileus. Reduced to ^. ; are themselves specially adapted to produce air-currents for the purpose of scattering the spores. His theory is founded on the fact that fruit- bodies, when insulated, become distinctly Avarmer than the surrounding atmosphere. In one of his experiments, he found that the hymenial tubes of Polyponis sqiutmosus, placed thickly together in a carefully insulated chamber for ten hours, became 9-(J° C. warmer than similarly situated hymenial till -es which had previously ' " Die Sporeiiverbreitung bei den Basidioniyceten uud der biologische Wert der Basidie," Bcitrikje zur Biologie der Pflanzen, Bd. IX., 11)04, p. 1. FALCK'S THEORY 219 been killed by heating. Falck believes that " the fruit-bodies pro- duce heat not to raise their own temperature but to warm the layers of air beneath the pilei." ^ He considers that the heat thus given ofH creates convection currents in which the spores are borne away from the pilei. In support of this, Falck has described experiments in which spore-deposits were obtained from pilei which had been suspended in closed glass vessels. He found that the spores were carried up and down in the glass vessels so that they settled upon ledges placed both above and below the pilei. Falck has followed out his idea still further. After showing that the presence of maggots leads to an appreciable increase in the temperature of insulated pilei,. he came to the following theoretical conclusions. The pileus flesh of large Agarics has become specially thickened and laden with food substances for the purpose of feeding maggots. The maggots respire actively and thus produce heat, which is added to that resulting from the respiration of the pileus, and is made use of for increasing the convection currents which bear away the spores in the neighbourhood of the gills. We thus have a symbiotic relationship between hymenomycetous fruit-bodies and flies. It must be admitted that Falck's theory is a very ingenious one. However, I am not sure to what extent we are justified in drawing conclusions from the laboratory experiments as to what actually happens in fields and woods. Proof has yet to be brought forward that in nature the pilei become sufficiently warmed to produce effective convection currents. If the ordinary air-currents in fields and Avoods are never less than a few feet per minute, and are usually much greater, it seems to me that they must be so active in carrying away the spores from the fruit-bodies that the convection currents arising from the very slightly warmed condition of the pilei can be only quite insignificant, and therefore ineffective, in comparison. From this consideration it seems that in nature the heat produced by a pileus must be generally useless and unnecessary for the purpose assigned to it by Falck. When the wind is blowing, transpiration becomes active. Pos- sibly the loss of heat from a fruit-body thereby occasioned, counter- balances the gain by respiration. Falck's theory would be placed on 1 Loc. cit, p. 32. 220 KKSK ARCHES ON FUNGI u much firmer basis if it could l>e shown that out in the open the temperature of fruit-bodies becomes appreciably higher than that of the surrounding atmosphere, but this has not yet been done. For Folyporun squamosus (Fig. 1) and other fruit-bodies growing on trees, Avhere air-currents are never absent and the free space below the pilei is usually great, for small or thin fruit-bodies such as those of Mycena, Galera, Schizophyllum, Corticium, Stereum, and Poly- stictus, and also quite generally for all fruit-bodies during weather Avhich is at all windy, the unimportance of any very slight warming of the pilei seems to me to be obvious. As a rule, in nature, it is irnpossil)le to see what happens to spores on leaving the pileus. Otherwise a direct test might quickly be applied to Falck's theory. However, in the case of Polyporxis squamosus, as described in Chapter VI., I have been able to see the spore-clouds leaving a large fruit-body growing on a log. The log was placed in a closed greenhouse, where the air was so quiet that one could not feel that it was moving. As the spores emerged from the hymenial tubes, they were carried along the underside of the pileus in one direction by a very slow air-current moving at the rate of a few feet per minute. The spore-clouds could be seen to drift laterally to a distance of 2 metres from the fruit-body. Whilst doing so, they Avere gradually broken up by small but very complex convection currents, the presence of which was only revealed by the spore-movements. As the spore-cloud moved outwards from the edge of the pileus, it showed no tendency to pass upwards. In the course of several hours, nothing happened to suggest that the fruit- body was giving off so much heat that it produced convection currents of importance in scattering the spores. It seems to me that these observations are distinctly adverse to Falck's theory, for they not only show that, even when the air seems very still, quite slow air-currents due to external causes are of the greatest importance in carrying the spores from beneath a pileus, but also that the con- vection currents produced by a large pileus may be practically inap]ireciable when this is not insulated. However, it might be argued that the fruit-body was a solitary one; that Poly porus squamosus frequently produces from four to ten sporophorcs in a densely imbricated cluster : that the space between FALCK'S THEORY 221 any two would become slightly warmed, and that, in consequence, useful convection currents would be formed. However, since the fruit-bodies are developed at some height on trees (c/. Fig. 1), any such convection currents would most probably always be swamped by more pronounced air-movements. If it be granted that there is no special adaptation for producing heat in the fruit-bodies of Polyi')orus squamosus, then the adaptation part of Falck's theory becomes much weakened, for it was with this species that one of the highest rises in temperature was obtained in the insulation experiments. The maggots which so frequently are to be found in fruit-bodies, in most instances at least, seem to me to be in no way beneficent to the latter, and, in general, I am strongly inclined to look upon them simply as harmful parasites. It would need a special investi- gation to decide the matter, but it seems probable that of two fruit-bodies equal in size, but one of them free from maggots and the other badly infected, the former would produce and liberate the greater number of spores. Even if they both liberated the same number, we could still regard the maggots in the same light as some gall-insects, i.e. as parasites which, as a rule, do no very appreciable amount of harm, and for getting rid of which the plants concerned possess no mechanism. Sometimes the harm done is quite obvious. In a number of instances in the field, I have noticed fruit-bodies of Amanita ruhescens, &c., with the gills perforated and otherwise damaged by maggots long before the spores had all been shed. Occasionally, at an equally early period, the flesh of a pileus becomes so weakened by the inroads of these animals that it can no longer support the gills in the requisite vertical planes. Doubtless, the heat which an expanding, maggot-free pileus produces, like that arising in the rapidly opening capitula of Com- positai, is due to respiration accompanying other active metabolic changes. The gills in particular, whilst developing and setting free their millions of spores, have a large amount of work to do. There seems no reason to suppose that the fruit-bodies give rise to any more heat than is necessitated by the processes concerned in rapid growth. Probably putf-balls, which certainly do not use any heat which they develop for scattering their spores, would become warmed on insula- 222 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI tion in the same manner as the hymenomycetous fruit-bodies in Falck's experiments. The metabolism which leads to the production of a billion or more spores in a Giant Puff-ball in the course of a few days, must be very considerable. For the present, at least, 1 am not inclined to look upon the heat arising in the pilei as in any way surprising in amount or as being more than incidental in character. Although Falck's theory seems to me to require some modifica- tion, and in any case to be of limited application, its promulgation has certainly raised an important question. The fruit-bodies of certain species of Boletus, Amanita, Paxillus, &c., have broad pilei and comparatively short stipes ; and they often come up, half concealed in grass or loose leaves, in hollows, dense woods, or other protected places. Here the air, immediately beneath the gills, on quiet daj^s must be at its stillest. We require to know whether under such circumstances, owing to physical or metabolic changes going on in the fruit-bodies, convection currents arise from the latter capable of carrying the spores between the surrounding obstacles and lifting them to such height that they pass into more active air-currents in motion above the herbage or forest Hoor. This ought to be determined by direct observation in nature. Should such convection currents be discovered, it would then be necessary to find out to what extent they were brought about by radiation, transpiration, or the giving off of heat due to respiration. If the air surrounding a fruit-body Avere ever quite still, any con- vection currents arising from the pileus, in order to raise the spores above the pileus, would require to have an average upward velocity of 1-G mm. per second according to the size of the spores. Beam-of-light and other observations of my own have served to corroborate Falck's discovery, that exceedingly faint convection currents, such as one can never feel, are capable of transporting the spores of Hymenomycetes witli astonishing ease. Even in large closed beakers it is exceedingly difficult to reduce the air to anything like real stillness. Small convection currents can certainly bo produced with a very small expenditure of energy. Whether sufficient can be given off:" by a large fruit-body to be of use under special circumstances remains lo be determined. If this should prove to be the case, we could draw the conclusion FALCK'S THEORY 223 that millions and millions of spores, which otherwise might never be dispersed, are as a matter of fact spread far and wide over fields and woods. If effective convection currents were given off by fruit-bodies, then, doubtless, they might be increased by the presence of maggots in the pileus and stipe. From this point of view the presence of these animals in the sporophores of Atnanita ruhescens, &c., might be of occasional advantage; but it seems to me that, from the data at our disposal, we are not yet justified in assuming a symbiotic relationship between flies and Agarics. We have now seen how easily the spores may be conveyed away from the fruit-bodies by air-currents. The Avind, when travelling several miles an hour, must frequently carry the spores from a fruit-body for very long distances. Owing, however, to their steady fall at the rate of 0*5-5 mm. per second, sooner or later all spores must reach the earth. The larger the spores, the sooner will they settle. The big spores of many species of Coprinus will not be carried on the average so far as the smaller spores of the Mush- room or of CoUybia dryophila. With the ultimate fate of the spores after they have once settled we are not here concerned. CHAPTER XXI THE DISPERSION OF SPORES BY ANIMALS— COPROPHILOUS HYMENOMYCETES— SLUGS AND HYMENOMYCETES The fruit-bodies of the Hymenomycetes, as we have seen, exhibit many beautiful arrangements both in structure and function, which enable the spores to be liberated into the air beneath the hymenium in such a manner that they may be carried away by the Avind. A comparative study of fruit-body organography in the numerous and diverse species existing at the present day, permits us to conclude with soine certainty that the fruit-bodies of the Hymeno- mycetes, at the beginning of their phylogenetic development, were anemophilous, and that they remained so ever since. However, for certain of the coprophilous fungi, or possibly for most of them, animal agency is made of secondary use in bringing the spores into a suitable situation for germination and further development. Coprophilous Hymenomycetes.— Certain species belonging to the genera Copriuus, Pan;eolus, Anellaria, and Galera are to be seen with remarkable frequency upon the dung of horses and cattle, and one may look for them in vain upon any other substrata. It seems clear that they have become specialised for a coprophilous habit of life.^ The infection of the fiieces may take place in two Avays : (1) By spores carried to them directly by the wind, and (2) by spores which are first dispersed by the wind, which then settle, and which are subsequently swallowed with herbage by the animals concerned. That the first mode of infection is possible may be ^ Saccardo gives T.'iT species included in 187 genera as being coprophilous. To this large number the Hymenomycetes contribute but few species as compared with the Ascomycetes and Phycomycetes. Many coprophilous fungi, so far as is known, are only found on dung. Species to the number of 708 are recorded as living on the dung of Herbivora, 45 on that of Carnivora, and 4 on that of Reptilia. Saccardo, Sylloge Fungorum, XII., Pars. I., 3, 873-902. Cited from Massee and Sahnon, Ann. of Bot., vol. xv., 1901, pp. .317, 322. 224 COPROPHILOUS HYMENOMYCETES 225 deduced from the fact that in the laboratory sterilised horse dung can readily be infected with spores of various species of Coprinus : the mycelium produced gives rise to fruit-bodies in the course of a few weeks. In many cases at least, it is not necessary for the spores to have passed through the alimentary canal of one of the Herbivora in order to become capable of development. The second mode of infection, in which the agency of the wind is supplemented by that of animals, has been carefully investigated by several observers. Thus Massee and Salmon, using antiseptic methods, extracted the fsecal matter from the intestines of dead rabbits and found that, when it was protected from aerial infection, there developed upon it a considerable number of species of fungi, a long list of which are recorded in their " Researches on Copro- philous Fungi." ^ However, these authors were not successful in obtaining any species of Hymenomycetes in this way; but from their observations it seems probable that the more frequent mode of infection of the dung of horses and cattle in nature is indirect. The spores are scattered broadcast over pastures by the wind : they are then swallowed with grass by animals; they pass uninjured through the alimentary canal, find their way into the fsecal matter as soon as it is formed, and germinate in it immediately after it has been deposited. By this means the spores come to be intimately mixed throughout a fsecal mass, so that its infection is much more thorough and takes place sooner than could be the case with spores merely settling upon its outer surface. No doubt, of the two modes of infection the more highly specialised leads to a more rapid development of new fruit-bodies. Coprophilous Hymenomycetes, such as many Coprini, are adapted to their environment in three special ways : firstly, in the capacity of the mycelium to use the materials contained in dung as food and to flourish when developing in faeces ; secondly, in the spores being able to pass through the alimentary canal of herbivorous animals uninjured ; and, thirdly, in the nature of the fruit-bodies. The food specialisation has advanced so far that a number of species of Coprinus, &c., judging from their distribution 1 Massee and Salmon, An7i. of Bot., vol. xv., 1901 ; vol. xvi., 1902. P 226 EESEAKCHES ON FUNGI in nature, are dependent on the existence of particular herbivorous vertebrates. It seems likely that the extinction of large Herbivora in past geological ages has often brought about the extinction of some of their associated fungi. With regard to the fruit-bodies it may be pointed out that, as in Coprinus niveus, Fan^olus phali&narum, Anellaria separata, and Galera tenera {cf. Figs. 25, p. 68, and 32, ]>. SO), they usually have more or less campanulate pilei situated on long and slender stipes. The latter, at least in many Coprini and probal)ly in the other coprophilous genera, are at first holiotropic. This enables the compact young pilei to be pushed out into the open from beneath or between balls of horse dung, &c., so that afterwards, when the stipes change their physiological properties and become negatively geotropic instead of heliotropic, the pilei are placed in such a position that they can expand and shed their spores into the air free from all obstacles. The length and relative slenderness of a stipe are well suited to enable that structure to thread its way outwards to the light by a process of growth, and afterwards to make a geotropic curvature by which the pileus can be brought into an advantageous position for shedding its spores. Slugs and Hymenomycetes. — Many slugs find certain fruit- bodies exceedingly palatable and often devastate them in a wood to a surprising extent. One sometimes has difficulty in obtaining a single intact specimen of Bussula evietica, R. citrina, Amanita muscaria, &c., even where they occur in considerable numbers. The gills are particularly relished, but large pieces of the pilous flesh are also frequently devoured. Voglino^ has made an investigation upon the relations exist- ing between slugs and Hymenomycetes, and has arrived at a very interesting conclusion. His chief observations were as follows. The digestive tracts of slugs collected in some pinewoods were found to contain germinating spores of the following species : Trickoloma humile, Mycena alkalina, Inocybe fastigiata, Lactariiis deliciosus, and species of Russula. Slugs were fed with fruit-bodies of Russulfc and Lactarii, and subsequently numerous germinatiog ^ P. Voglino, " Riclierclie intonin all' a/.ione delle lumache e dci rospi nello sviluppo di Agaricini," Nuovo Uiornala Botaniro^ vol. 27, 189."), pp. 181-185. SLUGS AND HYMENOMYCETES 227 spores of the species used were found in the digestive tracts of the shigs and also in their fteces. When the faeces were placed in hanging drops, the germ-tubes developed into a branched mycelium. The spores of certain Hymenomycetes refused to germinate in ordinary culture media, but germinated readily in the fluid obtained from the digestive tract of a slug. An enclosure was made around some ten specimens of Hebeloima fastibile which were growing in the open, and four starved slugs were introduced into it. In a few days the lamellie of all the fruit-bodies were completely devoured. One of the slugs when dissected was found to contain germinating spores of the fungus in its digestive tract. The enclosure was kept moist with sterilised water and maintained for about a year. At the end of this period it was observed that the specimens of Hebeloma fastibile were much more numerous in the enclosure than elsewhere in the neighbourhood. Toads which were collected in some pinewoods were found to contain germinating spores of species of Russula and Lactarius within their alimentary canals. Some toads which were fed with slue^s were subsequently found to contain spores of Russula in an advanced state of germination. Voglino came to the conclusion that the propagation of fleshy Agarics, especially of Russulfe and Lactarii, is in a large measure due to slugs and toads which provide con- ditions in their digestive tracts for spore germination. Although it may be true that slugs help in the local dispersal of spores in a wood or field and provide conditions for their germination, these animals, owing to their slow rate of movement, could scarcely act as agents in spreading fungus species from wood to wood when these are separated by considerable distances. That slugs find a fruit-body palatable is no proof that they are the agents for distributing the species to which it belongs. In this connection we may consider the case of Polyporus squamosun. Its fruit-bodies are much relished by slugs. I have known them, when young, so persistently visited and so voraciously eaten that they have been utterly ruined and have ceased development. Now in nature the trees on which the fungus occurs are usually a considerable distance apart, rarely less than several hundred yards and frequently much further. Moreover, the fruit-bodies, 2 28 RESEARCHES OX Fl XGI as a rule, are produced at some heiglit from the ground. For a slug, the infected trees are often several days' journey apart, and, even if a slug were to travel directly from one to another, spores swallowed on one tree would all be lost iu the fVeces before the next had been reached. From a consideration of the distribution of the fungus and of the movements of slugs it seems impossible that these animals should materially help in spreading the species from tree to tree. A similar argument might be applied to Pleurotiis uhnarius and many other species growing on trees, as well as to such fungi as groAv on the ground and are characterised by the fruit-bodies developing sporadically at considerable distances from one another. The Russuke, AmanitiK, &c., exhibit all the usual arrangements in their fruit-bodies for liberating the spores into the air in such a manner that they may be carried off by the wind. In the absence of slugs, hundreds of milHons of spores fall from the gills. We can scarcely suppose that spores thus carried off by the wind have no chance of reproducing the species. It seems probable, therefore, that the Avind, even in the case of the RussuLe, is still by far the chief agent in spreading the fungi from place to place. The conditions necessary for the germination of the spores of many of the higher fungi in nature are unknown. Voglino's observations suggest that small herbivorous animals provide these conditions much more often than has hitherto been supposed. It was recorded in Chapter V. that a single Mushroom {Fsalliota rampestris), with a diameter of 8 cm., produced 1,800,000,000 spores. We are justified in supposing that a very large Agaric might produce 4,000,000,000. If these were scattered uniformly in nature there would be sufficient of them to provide one for every square inch in a square mile. This calculation may perhaps serve to indicate how Avidely dispersed the spores of one of the Hymeno- mycetes may become, and how frequently they must be present on grass, leaves, fruits, iS:c. Herbivorous birds, toads, slugs, insects, worms, &c., must very frequently devour spores with their food. Perhaps then, whilst in general the wind is the chief agent in dispersing the spores of Hymenomycetes, in some species small herbi- vorous animals provide the conditions for their germination and the SLUGS AND HYMEXOMYCETES 229 production of a mycelium. It seems not at all impossible, for instance, that the spores of a species of Russula or Lactarius might be carried several miles from one wood to another, and that after settling they might be eaten with other vegetation by slugs : the spores might then germinate in the fieces of these animals, and the mycelium thus produced might make its way into the vegetable mould of the forest floor. The fruit-bodies of certain species of Hymenomycetes appear to be protected from destruction by slugs owing to the presence in their cells of nauseous or distasteful substances. In the summer of 1904 I began to investigate the relations of slugs to fungi, but unfortunately, owing to my removal to Winnipeg, the work was interrupted, and I have not found opportunity up to the present to resume it. Such results as were obtained five years ago are embodied in the accompanying Table. The obser- vations on Omphalia, Hypholoma, and Cantharellus were kindly made for me by Miss J. S. Bayliss. Before each test the slugs were starved for about two days. Slwj^ and Hymenomycetes - Species of Sluos. 1 Fungus Fruit-bodies. Llmax Arlon Agriolimax maximus. subfuscus. agrestis. Armillaria mellea i Russula emetica . Amanita muscaria ' Amanita rubescens Omphalia vimbellifera . Lactarius rufus . Lactarius glyciosmus . Hygrophorus pratensis Hygrophorus virgineus Hypholoma fasciculare Laccaria laccata . ' Cantharellus lobatus . E E E E E S S s E E E E E E E N — E — S — N N N N N — N N — — ' N E = fruit-bodies readily eaten ; S = fruit-bodies slightly eaten and evidently disliked ; N = fruit-bodies not eaten at all, so far as could be seen, the slugs preferring starvation to feeding ; — = no experiment. 230 RESEARCHES OX FUNGI The results just given indicate that, whilst species of Armillaria, Russula, Amanita, and Oniphalia are relished by the slugs tested, species of Lactarius, Hygrophorus, Laccaria, Hypholoma, and Cantharellus are disliked to a greater or less extent. Lactarius rufus to our taste is exceedingly acrid, and its peculiar latex may well be the cause of its being but very slightly eaten by hungry slugs. In nature, among thousands of fruit - bodies of this species, I have very rarely found one slug-eaten, and then very slightly. Once a specimen was noticed which, from the slime left all over the gills, had evidently been visited by a slug, but which had not been attacked ; whereas fruit- bodies of Riissida citrina close by had been seriously damaged. This seems to afford distinct evidence that the one species is chemically protected from slugs and that the other is not. Lactarius glyciosmus contains a peculiar aromatic substance, and it may be this which causes the fruit-bodies to be left uneaten by Agriolimax agrestis. The fruit-bodies of most species of Hygrophorus are glutinous or viscid and their gills are waxy. Possibly it is their physical nature which renders them distasteful to slusfs. The exact causes which render these and other fruit-bodies, such as those of Hypholoma fasciculare and Laccaria laccata, inedible, require farther investio^ation. Mere acridity of itself is not sufficient to cause a fungus to be rejected by slugs. Every one is agreed that the fruit-bodies of Russula emetica are very acrid ; yet all three species of slugs tested eat them with avidity. Slugs can feed upon a number of fruit-bodies which are poisonous to man. Thus Amanita mtiscaria was eaten vora- ciously by all three of the slugs tested and without any ill efiects to them. Aonanita phalloides is one of the most poisonous of fungi, and yet in nature one may often find .slug-eaten fruit- bodies of this species. It is evident that nniscarine, ])halline, and other toxines present in species of Amanita have no protective significance so far as slugs are concerned. PART II SOME OBSERVATIONS UPON THE DISCHARGE AND DIS- PERSION OF THE SPORES OF ASCOMYCETES AND OF PILOBOLUS CHAPTER I THE DISPERSION OF SPORES BY THE ^YIND IN ASCOMYCETES— PUFFING— THE PHYSICS OF THE ASCUS JET IN PEZIZA— THE FIXATION OF THE SPORES IN THE ASCUS OF PEZIZA REPANDA —COMPARISON OF THE SIZES OF WIND-BORNE SPORES IN ASCOMYCETES AND HYMENOMYCETES— THE HELVELLACE.E. Not only in the Hymenomycetes, but also in many other fungi, beautiful adaptations are to be found by which the spores are suitably dispersed, but in most instances the mechanism involved still awaits a careful analysis from the point of view of physics. In the majority of the Ascomycetes, the ascus is an explosive mechanism of considerable power, and it often shoots out its spores to a distance of one or several centimetres, thus causing them to become effectively separated from the sporocarp. It was pointed out in the first chapter of Part I. that the profound differences betAveen Hymenomycetes and Ascomj'cetes in the position occupied by the hymenial surfaces, and in the structure of the fruit-bodies, are correlated with the equally profound differences between basidia and asci as spore-discharging mechanisms. The dispersal of ascospores after ejection from the ascus appears in many cases to be brought about either by the wind or by her- bivorous animals. I regard it as a distinct matter of importance which of these two means of dispersal is employed, for each of them is associated with a particular type of ascus. As examples of Ascomycetes with wind-dispersal may be mentioned Gyromitra esculenta, MorcheUa gigas, Bulgaria polyriiiorpha, and Peziza aurantia, whilst Ascobolus ionmersus and Saccobolus may be regarded as representing those forms which are spread by her- bivorous animals. It is probable that there are some species of Ascomycetes which have an intermediate type of spore-dispersal, corresponding to that associated with coprophilous Hymenomycetes, in which the spores are first scattered by the wind and subsequently 233 234 RESEAK'CIIEH OX FLXCif become redispcrscd by hcrbivora. In these species it is to be expected that the structure of the ascus would be correlated with wind-dispersal. The Dispersal of Spores by the Wind in some Ascomycetes. — According to Falck,i in Gyromitra esculenta — one of the Helvel- lacea3 — the spores, after being shot out of the ascus, become separated from one another and settle singly ; and I have noticed a similar phenomenon in Bulgaria 'polymorpha (Wettst.). Doubt- less, in both these species, the spores, which are no larger than those of many Hymenomycetes, are carried away from the fruit- bodies by the wind. Plowright- watched the discharge of the spores of MorcJtella (JKJOK one evening with the aid of an oblique beam of sunlight. He observed that the head of each Morel was surrounded by a cloud of spores extending 3 or -4 inches around it. He states that " This cloud could only be seen in the oblique light against a dark background. When acted upon by a gentle current of air, such as would be produced by gently waving the hand, it swayed to and fro without manifesting any tendency to become dispersed. The component sporidia were in constant motion, rising and falling and circling about, as if the law of gravity were a myth, existing only in the imagination of philosophers. When the cloud was quite blown away by a more powerful air- current, it in the course of a few seconds reformed. The contents of each ascus could be seen to be separately ejected in a minute jet consisting of a limited number of sporidia, which speedily became lost with the others forming the cloud." From this description it seems evident that the cloud of spores which forms above a fruit-body of a Morchella is very similar to that which forms under the pileus of a Hymenomycete, such as a ^lushroom or a Polyporus. In both clouds the spores are separated from one another and fall so slowly through the air that they can readily be carried off by very slight air-currents. ^ R. Falck, "Die Sporenverbreitung bei den Basidioinyceten," Beitriige zur Biol. ihr Ppmzen, IJd. IX., 1!J04, p. f)]. "^ C. B. Plowrif^dit, " On Spore Diffusion in the larger Elvellacei," Grevillea, vol. ix., 1880-81, p. 47. ASCOMYCETES AND WIND DISPERSAL 235 w///mmmM/m/mmmm/m. We shall now consider the phenomenon of the separation of the spores from one another, just after discharge from the ascus. That this actually occurs in some and probably in very many species seems to me to be conclusively proved by — (1) The definite observation by Falck ^ that the spores of Gyromitra esculenta settle singly, and a similar observation by myself upon Bulgaria liolynnorpha ; (2) the just quoted description by Plowright of spore-discharge in Morcliella gigas ; and (3) some observations upon ' •: ' the discharge of individual asci of Peziza which have been made by ' my laboratory attendant, Mr. C. W. Lowe, and myself. Mr. Lowe has informed me that he watched the discharge of spores from a fruit-body of Peziza aurantia be- neath an electric lamp with a lens. He states that each indi- vidual ascus jet appeared to break up at a distance of from 2 to 2'5 cm. from the top of the fruit-body, and that in one instance on the breaking up of a jet, he Avas able to count six separated spores. With the help of my beam-of-light method I have fortunately been able to repeat and extend these observations. A fruit-body of Peziza repanda (Fig. 77) came up upon horse dung in the laboratory. When ripe, it was placed upright in the middle of a covered glass jar, G inches high and 4 inches in diameter ; and a strong beam of light was directed through the air immediately above the hymenium.- I then observed that the asci discharged their contents into the air successively, at intervals of a few seconds. Although in the course of two or three hours I watched the discharge of several hundred asci, in no case was I able to detect an ascus jet taking its upward flight Fig. 77. — The discharge of spores from Peziza repanda. f, section of a fruit- body covered above with the hymenium h and supported by a stipe with a root- ing base ; d, horse dung ; g, glass base of the culture dish. Above the hyme- nium are shown several groups of eight spores as seen in a concentrated l>eam of light immediately after their dis- charge from the asci. Natural size. ^ R. Falck, loc. cit. Cf. Part I., Chap. VII. 2^6 RESEAKCHE8 OX FUNGI into the air. The dischai-<,fcd contents of each ascus always made their first appearance as eight spores which had ah'cady separated from one another, and which Avere falHng very slowly downwards at a distance above the hymeniuni of about 2-3 cm. (Fig. 77). The sudden bursting into view of the eight glistening and falling particles against a black background forcil)ly reminded me of the sudden illumination of the sky at night by a shower of brilliant points of light produced by an explosive rocket. The eight spores of each ascus, at the moment of their appearance in the beam of light, usually formed a more or less regular vertical series in which Fig. 78. — Semi diagrammatic sketch of a section through a fruit-body of Peziza rcpanda whilst discharging its spores. The spores are shot up to a height of l-'2*5 cm. above the hymenium and are then carried off by the wind. Natural size. the highest spore was several millimetres from the lowest. It was observed that very slight air-currents were sufficient to carry the separated spores round and round in the air contained within the glass jar. It can scarcely be doubted, therefore, that the spores of the Peziza are dispersed in nature by the Avind in the same manner as those of Hymcnomycetes. It is interesting that the cloud of spores produced by the Peziza comes into being, not immediately above the hymenium, but at a distance of 2-'.\ cm. above it. This enables horizontal air-currents which are almost universally found above the surface of the ground to carry away the spores before they have time to fall back nn to th«^ fruit-body from Avhich they have been discharged (Fig. 78). PUFFIXG 237 Puffing. — The normal method of spore-discharge from Feziza re- panda under natural conditions is probably a more or less successive discharge of ripe asci, the spore-discharge period lasting for some days. A similar gradual emptying of the asci has been observed in other Pezizse, in Helvella, Morchella, Bulgaria, Exoascus, &c.^ When a fruit-body of Peziza repanda was left undisturbed for some hours in a damp-chamber it ceased to liberate its spores. The beam of light showed that none of the asci were discharging their contents. However, when the glass plate covering the culture vessel was raised and the hymenium was rubbed with a match-stick or other rod, a considerable number of asci burst almost simultaneously and spore-discharge continued for at least an hour. According to De Bary, the simultaneous discharge of a large number of asci — the phenomenon known as " puffing " — may be caused in Feziza acetabulum, F. sderotiorum, and Helvella crispa by shaking a fruit body, or by suddenly allowing a fruit-body which has previously been kept in a damp-chamber to come into contact with dry air."- He further found that the bursting of isolated ripe asci when lying in water can be brought about " by exposing them to the operation of agents like alcohol and glycerine, which withdraw their water." ^ He came to the conclusion that loss of water causes puffing "by altering the state of tension in each ascus either by lessening the expansion of the lateral walls and so increasing the pressure of the fluid contents on the place of dehiscence, or by lessening the power of the place of dehiscence to resist the pressure Avhich remains unaltered."* Massee^has pointed out that this explanation is not entirely satisfactory, " as fungi will often puff, after lying in a room for some hours, if moved." In Peziza repanda I have found that mere rubbing without change of atmospheric conditions was suffi- cient to cause some of the asci to burst. The simplest explanation of these two observations seems to be a mechanical one. One may suppose that at any one time the hymenium of a mature sporocarp contains a number of asci which have almost reached the critical ^ De Bary, Comparative Morphology and Biology of the Fungi, Mycetozoa, and Bacteria, English translation, 1887, p. 89. 2 IhvL, p. 90. » Ibid. * Ibid. 5 G. Massee, British Fungus Flora, 1895, vol. iv. p. 4. 238 RESEARCHES OX FlXGl bursting stage of development, and that the rubbing or shaking simply causes the premature bursting of a few such asci owing to their equilibrium having been mechanically disturbed. According to this theory, the discharge of the asci may be likened to the premature bursting of the capsules of Impatiens, which one may bring about by slight alternate compression and relaxation with the fingers. However, it seems to me not unthinkable that the rubbing, shaking, or moving of a fruit-body may serve to stimulate the proto- plasm in the asci in some way so that it reacts in such a manner as to cause the asci to explode. I have tried the effect of various chemical substances upon the discharge of ripe asci lying in water, and I have been unable to confirm De Bary's statement that bursting of the asci can be brought about by agents Avhich withdraw water from them. Sections through the ripe hymenium of Peziza repanda were cut and mounted in water on microscope slides in the usual manner. In order to test its effect upon the asci, a solution of a salt or other substance was then run under the cover-glass gradually. It was found that strong solutions of glycerine, sodium chloride, potassium nitrate, and grape sugar did not cause explosions to occur. The sodium chloride, potassium nitrate, and grape sugar led to considerable contraction in the volume of the asci, so that it is evident that mere withdrawal of water from asci is not sufiicient to cause them to explode. On the other hand, solutions of iodine, mercuric chloride, silver nitrate, copper sulphate, sulphuric acid, acetic acid, and alcohol gave rise to very marked pufiing. A very active discharge of spores took place as soon as the asci came well into contact with these substances, in a number of instances practically all the living asci discharged their spores, and a heavy spore-deposit collected a short distance in front of the ascus mouths. The seven substances last named are all poisonous, whereas the four which do not cause pufiing are non- poisonous. I was therefore tempted to draw the conclusion that poisonous substances cause ])ufiing, whereas non-poisonous ones do not. However, further experiment showed that this rule docs not hold universally. Strong sodium hydrate poisons the asci without causing them to explode. When a solution of this substance was PUFFING 239 brought into contact with the preparation, after a time the asci one by one contracted suddenly without discharge. Evidently their turgidity became lost owing to the death of the protoplasm lining the ascus wall. Sodium carbonate also did not cause ascus discharge, although the asci died from its effects. Up to the present, therefore, it seems that non-poisonous substances and alkalies do not cause puffing, whereas poisonous substances, excluding alkalies, do. Why alkalies should behave differently to other poisonous substances seems for the present inexplicable. In one experiment an ascus was caused to contract considerably with potassium nitrate. It did not explode. It was then restored to its former size by placing it in water. When brought into contact with iodine dissolved in water, it immediately exploded without undergoing any preliminary measurable decrease in volume. This observation will serve to emphasise the difference in action between a neutral salt which merely withdraws water from an ascus, and a non-alkaline poisonous substance which affects the protoplasm. Asci which have contracted in volume owing to loss of Avater on treatment with a strong solution of a neutral salt, may be caused to explode when brought into contact with iodine. The explosions under these conditions are naturally comparatively weak, and the spores shot out from the asci travel but a very short distance from the ascus mouth. The experiments just recorded seem to me to suggest that the bursting of ripe and expanded asci is not brought about by an increase in the pressure of the cell-sap upon the ascus lid, but rather] by an alteration in the strength of attachment of the ascus lid to the ' rest of the ascus wall. We may regard the protoplasm at the end of the ascus as specially entrusted with the work of loosening the attachment of the ascus lid, as its final duty. By suitable stimula- tion of this guardian protoplasm, the attachment may be indirectly loosened and thus an ascus explosion brought about. Possibly the necessary stimulus can be given mechanically, as when a sporocarp is caused to puff by mere moving or shaking; possibly it may be given by a sudden withdrawal of water from the end of the ascus, as when a sporocarp is caused to puff by suddenly allowing it to come 240 RESEAKCHES ON FUXGI in contiict with dry :iir ; but it seems certain that it can be given by chemical means, as when an asciis is caused to explode when treated with silver nitrate, mercuric chloride, alcohol, and certain other poisonous substances. Where there is a gradual emptying of ripe asci, as, according to De Bary, occurs in Bulgaria, Exoascus, &c., probably the activity of the guardian protoplasm is controlled by stimuli arising from internal developmental changes taking place in the ascus as a whole. At present there does not seem to be any evidence that puffing takes place under natural conditions, and it would therefore be fruitless to discuss Avhether or not the phenomenon has any useful biological significance. It may be added that puffing, when observed in still air with the aid of a beam of light, is a beautiful exhibition of sporocarp activity. It may be likened to the grand finale of sky-rockets in a pyrotechnic display. The Physics of the Ascus Jet in Peziza. — From my obser- vations upon the discharge of individual asci, it is clear that the spores contained within an ascus jet become separated from one another within a fraction of a second, between the time that they leave the ascus mouth and the time that they suddenly appear as eight separated particles in the beam of light. We shall now inquire into the nature of the forces which serve to detach the spores from one another during their ascent into the air. The ascus wall contracts during the ejection of the ascus jet, so that the ascus volume becomes reduced to about one-half (Fig. 79, E and F). The nature of the contraction affords a strong argument for the belief that the pressure exerted upon the ascus contents is greatest at the beginning of the discharge, and that it diminishes continuously and rapidly during the dis- charge, so that it finally becomes zero when the discharge has been completed. The ascus jet on leaving the ascus mouth may be regarded as a more or less cylindrical column of fluid containing eight spores situated in a row. Owing to the nature of the ascus contraction, it seems almost certain that the front end of the ascus jet must be shot outwards with the greatest velocity and the rear end with the least. The whole jet after its emission THE PHYSICS OF THE ASCUS JET 241 will tend to become elongated. The first spore will have a Fig. 79. — Peziza rcpanda. A, a young unripe fruit-body. Natural size. B, an older expanded fruit-body which was discharging spores. Natural size. C, a vertical section through the disc of B showing the hymenium h, the subhymenium s, and the excipulum e with an external brown layer h. Magnification, 40. D, two septate paraphyses with clavate terminal cells. E, a ripe ascus containing eight spores which are loosely attached to one another and are suspended in a subterminal position by a filament probably composed of protoplasm. F, a contracted ascus just after the spores have been discharged. G-, the end of an ascus in which only partial spore-discharge had taken place. A spore was making its exit endwise through the ascus mouth. H, eight separated spores as seen near the mouth of an ascus just after discharge into a fluid medium. The unilateral gelatinous invest- ments, shown within the ascus at E, have now become very much swollen. I, a spore which after discharge had fallen back on to the hymenium and had then germinated. The germ-tube gave rise to two clavate conidiophoi'es bearing minute conidia. D-I magnification, 317. higher velocity than the second, the second a higher one than Q 242 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI the third, and so on. It seems to me very probaljle that it is the considerable differences in the initial velocities given to the different spores upon their discharge which is the chief factor in separating the spores from one another during their upward flight mto the air. There is, however, another factor which must be concerned with the breaking up of the ascus jet, namely, surface tension. It has been found both by mathematics and experiment that the equilibrium of a free cylinder of any liquid, under the in- fluence of surface tension only, becomes unstable as soon as the length exceeds tt times the diameter ; and it is regarded as a necessary consequence of this that such a cylinder, if once realised, will spontaneously split into as many equal and equidistant spheres as TT times the diameter is contained in the length.^ Thus if 11 be the number of drops, I the length, and d the diameter of the cylinder, the law of segmentation is expressed by the formula I n= — . Tvd From this formula we can calculate that, if the length of a cylindrical column of fluid is twenty-five times the diameter, the column will break up under the influence of surface tension into eight separate drops. It seems to be a simple inference from this that, if in a mmute cylinder of this kind there Avere placed eight equidistant solid spheres Avith diameters equal to the diameter of the cylinder, then the cylinder would break up in such a manner that each spherical body would become separated from its neighbours and enclosed Avithin a film of fluid. The ascus jet must be at first essentially a cylindrical liquid column con- taining solid oval nuclei at intervals. Probably the spores are ejected end-Avise through the contractile ascus mouth so that they come to have their long axes in the same direction as the long axis of the jet. As the jet becomes elongated, owing to its ^ A. M. Worthington, " On tlio Spontaneous Segmentation of a Liquid An- nulus," Proc. of the Roy. Soc, vol. xxx., 1879-80, p. 49. THE PHYSICS OF THE ASCUS JET 243 parts, beginning with the front end, having been ejected from the ascus mouth with successively diminishing velocities, it will reach a stage when the relationship of its length to its diameter becomes such that surface tension must cause it to break up into eight separate parts. Each tiny column of fluid, which at first must connect adjacent spores, will become unstable when its length exceeds three times its diameter, and upon slight further elongation it will snap into two in the middle. Since the eight spores ejected from an ascus, on their first appearance in the beam of light, usually form a more or less vertical series in which the highest spore is several millimetres above the lowest, it seems to me probable that the segmentation of the ascus jet takes place almost immediately after it has left the ascus mouth. If the ascus is regarded as a mechanism for discharging a jet in such a manner that the jet elongates and becomes segmented by surface tension into eight separate parts, each part containing a spore, then the structure of the ascus becomes more intelligible. The long cylindrical form of the ascus and the size of the spores are such that the spores must lie in a single row one behind the other. This arrangement favours the production of a long jet in which the spores are situated in a row. The oval shape of the spores, and the fact that their long diameters are wider than the ascus mouth, must necessitate their being ejected through the ascus mouth end-wise (Fig. 79, G). Whilst the first half of a spore is passing through the contractile ascus mouth, the velocity of movement of the spore is probably slightly diminished ; and whilst the last half is passing, the velocity is probably slightly increased. This would lead to a separation of the spores in the jet at the very beginning of its formation. The advantage in an ascus containing a number of spores instead of one is probably to be found in the fact that less energy would be required to shoot up several spores from one ascus at one time than would be required to shoot up the same number of spores if each were contained in a separate ascus. The production of exactly eight spores in each ascus rather than a few more or less may have been determined in the first place by convenience in nuclear 244 RESEARCHES OX FUNGI division. The advantages accruing to a fungus from the separation of the spores of an ascus after they have been cast up into the air arc: (1) The increase in the number of separate infecting particles which the fungus can produce, and (2) the spHtting up of the mass of the ascus jet. The separate parts of the ascus jet must each fall considerably more slowly than the ascus jet would do if it remained undivided and contracted into a ball, for, according to Stokes' Law, the terminal velocity of fall of a microscopic sphere varies directly as the square of the radius. The smaller the rate of fall of a particle, the further can it be transported by the wind before settling. The separation of the ascus spores from one another is therefore favourable to their dispersal by air-currents. It has been shown that the spores of Hymenomycetes, when falling in air unsaturated with water vapour, dry up within a few seconds after leaving the hymenium, and that, in conse- quence, their rate of fall often becomes considerably reduced.^ In some instances it was found that the initial terminal velocity becomes reduced to one-half or one-third according to the degree of humidity of the air. Doubtless, in Ascomycetes, the small film of liquid on the exterior of each separate spore, and also the spore itself, dry up in unsaturated air within a few seconds after the spore has been discharged. Evaporation, by decreasing the size of the falling particles, must indirectly decrease their rate of fall, and therefore in the end be advantageous for the dissemination of the spores by the wind. The Fixation of the Spores in the Ascus of Peziza Repanda. — In order to permit of the etticient ejection of the ascospores, it is necessary that they should be situated at the distal end of the ascus ; for the ascus is an apparatus which squirts out only about one-half of its contents — the lialf nearest the ascus mouth. Zopf has shown that in many cases the spores are retained in the expanded end of the ascus by a special apparatus of attachment: the uppermost spore in some Sordaricie is attached to an inwardly directed process produced from the membrane at the ascus 1 Part I., Chiip. XVI. FIXATION OF SPORES IN THE ASCUS 245 apex.^ De Bary - in this connection said, " Similar apparatus may perhaps frequently be in use especially in the Pyrenomycetes. ... In many cases, especially in the Discomycetes, there is no such apparatus present, the spores being suspended in the fluid of the ascus. The spores must have nearly the same specific gravity as the fluid; if not, they would change their position as the ascus changes its inclination, which they do not do. Most, if not all, spores produced in asci sink in pure water ; the fluid contents of the ascus must therefore be of greater specific gravity than pure water, since it holds in suspension bodies of greater specific gravity than water. If increase in the amount of the fluid contents causes the apical portion of the ascus to stretch more than the other parts, currents must be set up in the fluid in the direction of the apex and continue as long as the expansion continues, and push the spores therefore permanently towards the apex. The arrangements of the spores may then be affected by special directions in the currents which we cannot at present determine, as well as by the conditions of space noticed above." This hypothesis of currents does not seem to me to be at all adequate to explain the position of the ascospores at the end of the ascus. There are various objections of a physical character which may be made to it, but it does not appear necessary to discuss them. On the other hand, I shall show that in Peziza repanda the position of the spores is attained by other than hydro- static means. In Peziza repanda the eight spores occupy a subterminal position, so that there is a short space between the first spore and the ascus lid (Fig. 79, C and E). Schroter^ has figured an ascus of P. rep>anda with the first spore in contact with the lid. This arrangement may often be seen in dead asci but never in living ones. Each spore possesses a firm cell-wall, and in addition is coated on one side Avith a thin oval gelatinous investment (Fig. 79, E). These investments appear to serve the purpose of attaching the spores to one another so that they cannot slip ^ Zopf, Sitzsber. d. Berliner naturf. Freimde, Feb. 17, 1880. Cited from de Bary's CovijMratire Morjiholoyy and Biology of the Fungi, d-c., English translation, 1887, p. 88. ^ De Bary, loc. cit. ^ J. Schroter, " Pezizinese," in Die natiaiichen Pflanzenfamilitn, by Engler and Prantl, Teil I., Abteil. 1, p. 183, printed 1894. 246 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI apart. The group of eight spores is attached to the ascus lid by means of a fine, somewhat granidar fihimcnt which has the appearance of a protoplasmic bridle. A row of granules can be seen passing down the middle of the gelatinous cap of each spore, so that it seems probable that the filament is continued downwards from the topmost to the bottom-most spore (Fig. 70, E). It seems not unlikely that the row of spores is fixed to the sides of the ascus by other protoplasmic bridles, but I have not been able to discover them. The fine terminal filament is very transparent, and it may be on this account that it has hitherto been overlooked. It can be made more prominent by treatment with 1 per cent, corrosive sublimate. From the foregoing, it is clear that in Peziza repanda the spores are not freely floating in the ascus sap as de Bary supposed Avas the case in Discomycetes generally, but are carefully anchored in position by one or more special proto- plasmic filaments. This being so, one can easily understand how it is that the spores keep near the end of the ascus during the stretching period, and there is no need of the current hypothesis to explain the phenomenon. Lack of material has prevented me from investigating the extent to which protoplasmic bridles are used for anchoring the spores in the asci of Discomycetes generally, lint it seems probable that this method of spore fixation will be found to be of very common occurrence. There can be no doubt that in Peziza repanda the eight spores in each ascus are attached together. They always appear to be in intimate contact with one another, but that they are really attached to one another may be shown in the following manner. A section through the hymenium (Fig. 70, C) is mounted in water. A strong solution of grape sugar or sodium chloride is then run under the cover-glass of the preparation, with the result that the turgor of the asci becomes reduced. When this has ha})pened a solution of iodine is run under the cover-glass. The iodine on coming in contact Avith the asci causes them to explode, but since the pressure of the ascus sap has been reduced, the explosions are comparatively Aveak. Sometimes the spores are not all shot out of the ascus (Fig. 79, G), and in some cases they are only just ejected from the ascus mouth. When the latter has ha])pened, one sometimes sees FIXATION OF SPORES IN THE ASCUS 247 the ejected spores placed end to end, one behind the other, so as to form a continuous chain. It is highly improbable that a group of ejected spores should form such a chain if they were not really attached together. When a section through the hymenium of Peziza repanda is mounted in water, the asci are fully turgid. If such asci are caused to explode by bringing a solution of iodine into contact with them, the spores are discharged to a distance from the ascus mouths about equal to the length of the asci. When vigorously discharged in this manner, the eight spores are shot out so quickly that one can see nothing of them as they pass through the fluid medium. The eight spores suddenly come into sight in front of the ascus which has discharged them. They are then not travelling horizontally but merely sinking in the fluid. On their first appear- ance they are all separated from one another in the manner represented in Fig. 79, H. The very transparent, unilateral, gelatinous cap on each spore then swells up considerably, doubtless owing to the absorption of water. Running down the middle of each cap is a row of granules, which are doubtless the same as those shown in Fig. 79, E, and therefore the remains of the suggested extension of the protoplasmic bridle over the spores. The attachment of the eight spores of an ascus to one another in Peziza repanda is not a firm one like that in Ascoholus imr/iersus (cf. Figs. 81 and 82), but only a very loose one — just strong enough to hold the spores together before discharge, and therefore of use in aiding them to take up a favourable position in the ascus, but weak enough to be easily broken down at the moment when the ascus ejects its contents. In all probability, the snapping of the spore chain into eight parts is due to the different spores receiving different velocities during their ejection, and takes place as the ascus jet is elongating whilst leaving the ascus mouth. One further point concerning the spores of Peziza repanda may here be mentioned. When a fruit-body is confined in a small closed chamber, many of the spores, after being cast up into the air, fall back again on to the hymenium. Under moist conditions such spores often germinate and produce conidia, as shown in Fig. 79, I. 248 RESEAKCHES ON FUNGI Comparison of the Sizes of Wind-borne Spores in Asco- mycetes and Hymenomycetes. — The size of wind-borne spores, which is so important a factor in determinin^f their rate of fall, is doubtless adapted to the spread of the spores by such air- cuiTents as ordinarily occur above the surface of the ground. In this connection it is a distinctly interesting fact that although Ascomycetes produce and then liberate their spores into the air in a very different manner to that of Hymenomycetes, yet in both groups of fiingi the order of magnitude of the wind-borne spores is the same. Evidence supporting this statement is given in the following Table, where the sizes of the spores of a few Ascomycetes which make use of the wind for dissemination are compared with the sizes of the spores of a few well-known Hymenomycetes. In each series the spores are arranged accord- ing to the magnitude of their short diameters. This arrange- ment has been adopted because the rate of fall of spores, and therefore the ease with which they can be transported by air- currents, is chiefly determined by the size of their short diameters and not by that of their long diameters, since spores tend to fall with their long axes in a horizontal position.^ The unit of measure- ment is 1 /x. The sizes of the spores of the Ascomycetes are those given by Massee.- The sizes of the spores of the Hymenomycetes were measured by myself and are taken from the Table in Part I., Chapter XIV. Compariaon of the Sizes of Sjiores. Ascomycetes. Species. Bulgaria polymorpha Peziza aurantia Gyromitra esculenta Morchella gigas Sliort Axis. 5-6 7-8 9-11 Long Axis. Hymeuoiriy cotes. Species. i ( Polypoius scjuamosus . 10-14 . Psallinta canipestris . I Marasinius oreades 1 '■-ic 5 Coprinus comatus { Russnla enietica . \1~-17) Ainaiiitopsis vagiiiata, fniit-bixlv I. 11-14 21-24 Amaiiitopsis vaginata, fruit-body III. Slicllt Axis. 5-1 5-5 .0-6 7-5 7-5 lU-2 IM I.ony Axis. 14-(i 7-2 9-5 12-6 8-8 l()-2 11 ^ Of. the end of Chap. XV., Part I. G. Massee, British Fungua Flora, vol. iv. THE HELYELLACE.^ 249 The Helvellaceae. — The Helvellaceae are characterised by pos- sessing long stipes which have exactly the same significance as in the Hymenomycetes, The hymenium becomes raised up above surrounding leaves and herbage, so that the spores, after being discharged from the asci, can readily be carried off by air-currents. A specimen of one of the largest species — Morchella crassipes — is illustrated in Fig. 80. It was 9 inches high and therefore rivalled in stature some of the largest of the Agaricinese. The pileus of a Morchella is provided with anastomosing ribs or plates which enclose irregular polygonal pits. The hymenium covers the whole of the exterior of the pileus, so that it is evident that the plates have the same function as the gills of a Mushroom : they serve to increase the amount of the spore-bearing surface. How- ever, if one compares the pileus of a Morchella with that of a Mush- room, one notices that the folding of the hymenium is vastly more compact in the latter than in the former. The reason for this is to be found in the fundamental differ- ence between basidia and asci as spore-liberating mechanisms. The spores of a basidium are only shot outwards to a distance of about 0*1 mm., whereas those of an ascus are often propelled several centimetres. Hence adjacent gill surfaces can be placed very near together without interfering with the escape of the spores. On the other hand, the plates on a Morchella pileus nmst be a considerable distance apart or the asci would not have sufficient room for discharging their contents. Fig. 80. — Fruit-body of Morchella cras- sipes. an Ascomycete which resembles many Hymenomycetes in having its pileus supported on a long stipe. Photographed at Winnipeg by C. W. Lowe. I natural size. 250 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI It seems that, owing to their possessing basidia, the Hymeno- mycetes are better adapted to ])roducc large fruit-bodies which liberate their spores into the air, than Ascomycetes. In large fruit-bodies the hymcnium of llymenomycetes can be much more folded than that of Ascomycetes, and therefore can produce a much larger number of spores. It may be on this account that the Hymenomycetes have become the dominant fungi upon the veofetable mould of fields and forests. CHAPTER II THE DISPERSAL OF THE SPORES OF ASCOMYCETES BY HERBIVOR- OUS ANIMALS ILLUSTRATED BY AN ACCOUNT OF ASCOBOLUS niME liSUS—FlhOBO-LVa, EMPUSA MTOG'.^— LYCOPERDON— THE SOUND PRODUCED BY THE DISCHARGE OF SPORES, WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO PILOBOLUS. The Dispersal of the Spores of Ascomycetes by Herbivorous Animals, illustrated by an Account of Ascoholus immersus. Pilobolus, Empusa musc/&. — Ascomycetes in which the spores after ejection from the asci are dispersed by herbivorous animals develop on fcGces and have a coprophilous mode of existence. Of these the most striking examples are afforded by species of Ascobolus, e.g. A. immersus, and by Saccobolus, Their spores are arranged m the ascus more or less in two rows, and are held firmly together — in Ascobolus by their gelatinous coats (Fig. 81), and in Saccobolus by a special investing membrane. The object, so to speak, of spore- discharge in these fungi is to eject the spores from the ascus to as great a distance as possible, so that they may fall at once on to the surrounding grass. In feeding, herbivorous animals swallow the grass and spores together. The latter pass out in the excrement uninjured and ready to germinate. In their mode of spore-dispersal these Ascomycetes exactly resemble Pilobolus. The attachment of the eight spores to one another, so as to form an oval mass, prevents the ascus jet being broken up by surface tension and thus keeps the mass of the projectile constant. This enables the spores to be thrown to a greater distance from the fsecal substratum than would otherwise be possible. For the sake of comparison with the Hymenomycetes, a special investigation was made upon the spore-discharge of Ascobolus imviersus, the asci and spores of which are of large size even for an Ascobolus. The fungus made its appearance on a horse-dung culture 251 2 C 2 RE8KAKC11KS ON FU.\(iI in the laboratory. The asci were found to ho heliotropic,^ and they were caused to ])oint directly u))\vard.s l)y enclosing the culture in a dark-chamber and reflecting light downwards upon it through a small top window. The spores, attached together in groups of eight, Fig. 81. — Agcobolus iriimersus. a, five fruit-boilie^i, shown natural size, on a section of horse dung, b, fruit-body with five asci projecting from the hynienium just before bursting. Two asci belonging to the next younger series are to be seen almost hidden among the paraphyses in the foreground, c. a young ascus and i)araphyses. d and c, two fully swollen asci isolated from the hymcnium. /and .7, burst asci which have contracted to half their original length. In / the lid of the ascus has opened as if attached by a hinge. 7 shows the result of an ascus explosion watched under water with the microscope. The lid i has been shot away along with the ascospore mass h. The eight ascospores are attached by their gelatinous envelopes, d-i magnifi- cation, 70. were then discharged in a vertical direction, so that they struck and adhered to the underside of a horizontal glass plate placed 2."i cm. above the fruit-bodies. Further experiment showed that the maxi- mum height of projection was about 35 cm. The culture was then set in a large glass case Avhich was exposed to the light at a labora- ^ For the significance of heliotropism in asci, ru/t Chaj). IV., pp. 74, 7d. DISPERSION BY ANIMALS 253 tory window. The floor of the case was covered with a sheet of white paper. After falling upon the latter, the ejected groups of spores could be distinguished with the naked eye as tiny dark specks. The maximum horizontal distance to which any of them was shot was found to be about 30 cm. In violence of spore- discharge possibly Ascobolus imniersus is not exceeded by any other Ascomycete, although it is easily beaten by Pilobolus, which can squirt its sporangia to a distance of more than a metre. These performances seem truly titanic when compared Avith those of the Hymenomycetes, for the maximum horizontal distance of discharge of basidiospores was observed to be only 0-01-0"02 cm.^ A group of eight Ascobolus spores clinging together was estimated to have a volume about 2000 times greater than that of a single spore of Amanitopsis vaginata. It is the large mass of the united asco- spores which permits of the projectile receiving sufficient initial velocity to carry it a distance of many centimetres. In order to shoot out a tiny Amanitopsis spore to an equal distance, a relatively enormous initial velocity would require to be given to it. A parallel case may be cited from everyday life. A good thrower can throw a cricket ball one hundred yards. With his strongest effort, however,, he can throw a small shot only a few feet. If he were determined to make the shot travel as far as the cricket ball he could succeed in doing so by putting it into a gun and driving it out with gunpowder. The very high initial velocity which it would then receive would be vastly greater than that imparted to the cricket ball, although the distance traversed by both objects would be the same. It is just as impossible for a man to throw a small shot a hundred yards as it would be for a Mushroom to shoot out a basidiospore to a distance of a single centimetre. In order to accomplish the latter feat, it would be necessary for the spore to be projected Avith an initial velocity of the order of 65 metres per second ;- On the other hand, the united eight spores from an ascus of the Ascobolus could be shot a centimetre Avith an initial velocity of only 0"2-0-3 metres per second. 1 Chap. XI., ^klethod II. ^ Calculated by using the first equation in Chapter XVII. and taking the terminal velocity of a Mushroom spore as 0'15 cm. per second {vi(fe Chapter XVI.). The spore was assumed to be spherical. 254 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI « » d The initial velocity which an ascospore group would need to have imparted to it in order to fall 30 cm. from a fruit-body would be less than 10 metres per second.^ From the above discussion it seems that a chief factor in securing a sufficiently large trajectory for the ascus contents of Ascoholus immersus is the large mass of the projectile. The projectile owes its ^ size to four factors: (1) The unusually large size of the spores, (2) the thick gelatinous envelope round each spore, (3) the clinging of the ^ spores together, and (4) the large mass of the discharged ascus sap. The spores, excluding their gela- tinous investments, measure 35-45 X 55-65/i, and therefore are 50-100 times greater in volume than the wind -borne spores of Peziza aur- antia. The gigantic size of the spores as compared with those of the Hymenomycetes will at once be realised by a glance at Fig. 82. In Pilobolus, Avhere the unopened sporangium is squirted off the spor- angiophore, the projectile is rela- tively of great size. That it should be shot out farther than the contents of any ascus is, for the mechanical reasons already discussed, not in the least surprising. Empusa musae, as is well known, can send its unicellular conidia to a distance of some centimetres. Here, however, the spores are not only very large but become coated Avith a thick and sticky fluid discharged from the conidiophore. The large size of the projectile may be at once recognised from the accompanying photo- graph (Fig. 83). ^ Here the terminal velocity was taken to be 30-50 cm. per second (vide infra). The spore-j^roup was assumed to be spherical. The calculations are only very rough approximations to actual values. 0 0 Fig. 82. — Comparative sizes of fungus projectiles, a, spore mass of Ascobolus immersus ; b, spores of Amanitopsis vaginata ; c, spores of Colli/hia dryo- phila ; d, spores of Pmlliota cam- pestris ; (, spores of Coprinu)i comatus. All drawn to the scale given. THE FALL OF ASCOSPORES 255 The large mass of a group of eight ascospores, of the sporangium of Pilobolus, or of the conidium of Empusa tnusc^, is unfavourable to the dispersion of these structures by the wind owing to the fact that it causes them to fall with comparative rapidity. Let us compare the terminal vertical velocity of an Ascobolus immersus ascospore group with that of a basidiospore of Amatiitopsis Fig. 83. — Empusa muscn: The house-fly has been killed by the fungus and is now fixed by its proboscis to a window-pane. The halo around the fly's body consists of discharged conidia, many of which have been shot to a distance of 2 cm. and some to about 3 cm. Photographed by C. W. Lowe. I natural size. vaginata. Assuming Stokes' Law and equal densities for the falling particles, it may be shown that where V =the terminal vertical velocity of the basidiospore, Vj = the terminal vertical velocity of the ascospore group, a =the radius of the basidiospore, «! = the radius of a sphere with a volume equal to that of the ascospore group. Since, from measurements made, we may take V = 0'5 cm. per second, a = 0'0005 cm., and ai = 0*005 cm., we may calculate that 2 56 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI V^^ = 50 cm. per second. Since V is only 0*5 cm. per second, the conclusion may be drawn that the ascospore group falls about one hundred times more rapidly than the basidiospore. Since for high velocities Stokes' Law breaks down and the resistance of the air becomes proportional to a higher power of the velocity, the rate of fall of the ascospore group is in reality somewhat less than 50 cm. per second. Its actual value, however, must still be enormous compared with that for the velocity of fall of a basidiospore. The latter was observed to be only about 0*5 cm. per second. Since the terminal vertical velocity of an ascospore group of the Ascobolus has been calculated to be of the order of 50 cm. per second, we can easily understand why it is that a thick spore-deposit often collects within a short radius of the fruit-bodies. Ordinary convection currents, such as occur in dwelling-rooms, or slight movements of the air in the open, can be of little use in scattering the ejected ascus contents, although dispersion may be effected by Avinds of moderate strength. On the other hand, basidiospores, owing to their tiny size, fall very much more slowly than the ascospore groups, and in consequence are splendidly adapted for transport through the air. Even very slight convection currents, such as occur almost universally near the earth's siu'face, are able to carry them about and render the position where they come to settle a matter of the greatest uncertainty. The fruit-bodies of Ascobolus imraersus exhibit a number of special adaptations to a coprophilous mode of existence which enable them to liberate their spores from the sides of horse-dung balls, &c., with success. These adaptations may be summarised as follows: (1) The protrusion of the ripe asci, just before discharge, to some distance beyond the surface of the hymenium ; (2) the diurnal periodicity in the ripening and discharge of successive series of asci ; (3) the heliotropic reaction of the asci whilst becoming protuberant ; and (4) the great violence of spore-discharge. The protrusion of the ripe asci far beyond the hymenial surface permits of the asci making positive heliotropic curvatures. Such reactions to light would be impossible if the asci were entirely embedded in the hymenium like those of Pezizjc. The periodicity in the ADAPTATIONS IN ASCOBOLUS 257 ripening of the asci is of such a kind that each morning a few asci go through their final phases of stretching and discharge their spores almost simultaneously about midday or in the early after- noon. After one series of asci has exploded, another immediately begins to develop Avhich will discharge its spores on the following day. Owing to this periodic development of successive series of asci, the asci always come to maturity in daylight, i.e. they always go through their final stretching at a time when their direction of growth can be controlled by heliotropic stimuli. The positive heliotropism of the asci causes these structures — the fungus guns — to become directed toward well-lighted positions and therefore in general toward open spaces. When the spore-masses are shot outwards, they thus come to have a good chance of avoiding obstacles in their flight through the air. The orientation of the asci must prevent a very large number of spores from being wasted by being shot against adjacent dung balls, &c. We thus see that the protrusion of the ripe asci, their periodic development, and their heliotropism are intimately correlated with one another. The great violence of spore-discharge is associated with the unusually large size of the asci and of the spores. The clinging of the spores together during discharge and the large mass of the projectile, as we have already seen, are significant in that they enable the spores to be shot to a greater distance from the horse-dung balls than would otherwise be possible. The ascospores are thrown to such a distance that they fall on the surrounding herbage, where they can be devoured by herbivorous animals and thus find their way into faeces. Lycoperdon. — In Gastromycetes the modes of spore-dispersion are of various kinds. Sphieroholus stellatus has a wonderful catapult mechanism for casting a sac containing spores a dis- tance of several inches. In the Phalloidei,^ the fruit-bodies are specialised for attracting flies by means of form, colour, scent, and sweet juices. In the Tuberacese, the hypogean Truftles, &c., are eagerly sought for by certain quadrupeds and other animals. The main facts in these instances are now well known and recognised. However, a few remarks may be 1 T. W. Fulton, loc. cit. B 258 RESEARCHES ON FUNGI added on Puff-balls. In the genus Lycoperdon,^ the fruit-bodies develop an enormous number of spores, and at maturity con- stitute sacs full of a dry powder mixed with capillitium threads. The pcridium breaks away above so that each Puff- ball comes to have a more or less circular opening at the top. The arrangement is such that the spores leave a fruit-bod}' only Avhen the wind is blowing at a favourable speed for their dispersion. When the air is quiet, the spores lie safe and motion- less within the protecting pcridium. As soon, however, as the wind becomes violent, it sweeps in gusts into the Puff-ball from above, gradually disengages the spores from the capillitium threads, and bears them forth to long distances. A more effective mode of spore -dispersion can scarcely be imagined. In connection with Puff"-ball spores an interesting physical prob- lem awaits solution. We are still ignorant wdiy it is that the spores of Hymenomj^cetes never form a mass of loose dust, whereas this regularly occurs Avith those of a Lycoperdon. The adhesiveness or non-adhesiveness of spore cell-walls must be recognised as a matter of importance in connection with spore- dispersion. The Sound produced by the Discharge of Spores, w^ith Special Reference to Pilobolus. — Although many Agarics which have come under my notice shed spores at the rate of about a million a minute, I have never been able to detect the least sound caused by spore-discharge. So far as unaided human ears are concerned, it seems likely that spore-emission by Hymenomy- cetes must for ever be a quite silent process. On the other hand, the discharge of spores by certain Ascomycetes appears to be distinctly audible. Thus de Bary was able to hear " a very per- ceptible hissing sound produced by strong specimens of Peziza acetabulum and Hdvella crispa." ^ Pilobolus, as is well known, exceeds all Ascomycetes in the violence with which it ejects its projectiles. Coemans records that the sporangia can bo projected to a height of over 1 Vide Chap. V. p. 8G. - De Bary, Comparative Morphology and Physiolof/y of the Fu7igi, d:c., English translation, 1887, p. 92. SOUNDS PRODUCED BY PILOBOLUS 259 3 feet,i and Grove found that on one occasion the maximum hori- zontal distance of discharge was 4 feet 10 inches.- Tlie largest of all the Piloboli is P. longipes, the stipe of which is usually 2-3 cm. long, whilst the diameters of the sporangium and subsporangial swelling are 0-5 mm. and 1 mm. respectively. When I placed the sporangiophores of this species so that they inclined obliquely upwards at an angle of about -4:5°, several sporangia were shot more than 5 feet in a horizontal direction, and one to a distance of 6 feet 2 inches. Grove noticed that, when a sporangium strikes one in the face, one can distinctly feel the blow, like that of a small drop of rain,^ and he called attention to the fact that each discharge is accompanied " by a faint but distinctly audible ' puftV like the sound of a minute pop-gun." * From personal experience with a number of Pilobolus cultures, I am able to confirm Grove's statements both as to feeling the blows of the sporangia and also as to hearing the sound of the explosions. Some horse-dung cultures of Pilobolus Kleinii were carefully watched during the mid-day hours on several successive days. At first I mistook very slight sounds produced involuntarily from my collar and mouth for sounds proceeding from the fungus. However, when these sources of error had been eliminated, I found that it was still possible to detect some, although perhaps not all, of the discharges. On listening very intently in a quiet room, two sounds were to be heard : firstly, a little click as a sporangium left its sporangio- phore, and secondly, a more metallic sound, whenever a sporangium struck the glass side of the crystallising dish which contained the culture. So far as I am aware, the sound of the projectiles, made on striking obstacles, has not hitherto been noticed. Its audibility can be very much increased by a method devised by Mr. F. Wakefield, who was assisting me in the laboratory. One makes use of a drum consisting of a glass funnel, 3 or -i inches in diameter, across the mouth of which a sheet of thin tissue ^ Coemans, Alonographie du Genre Pilobolus, 1860, p. 39; quoted from Grove's monograph, p. 15. ^ W. B. Grove, Monograph of the Plloholidse, Birmingham ; reprinted from the Midland Naturalist, 1884, vol. vii. p. 219. ^ Loc. cit., p. 16. ^ Loc. cit., p. 15. 26o RESEARCHES ON FUNGI paper has been jiasted. If one holds such a drum a little way above the Pilobohis culture, one can readily hear the bang each time a sporangium hits the tissue paper. I found that Mr. Waketield could detect the sound made on the drum at a distance of 21 feet. GENERAL SUMMARY The followimj is a summary of the more important results obtained during the investigations PART I Chapter I. — The spoi^es of the Hymenomycetes are very adhesive when freshly liberated. In consequence of this, special arrangements are neces- sary for their liberation from the surfaces of gills and hymenial tubes, &c. Successful liberation can take place only when the hymenium is so situated that it occupies a vertical position or looks downwards at a greater or less angle. Paraphyses are useful as spacial agents. They prevent the adhesive spores of adjacent basidia from coming into contact during development and discharge. The functions of cystidia are for the most part still quite unknown. Occasionally certain species of Coprinus give rise to fruit-bodies which are normal in size and form, but are either partially or completely sterile. The basidia fail to produce spores. Fruit-body sterility of this kind was observed in Coprinus Jimetarius, var. cinereus, and also in an ephemeral, coprophilous species, which has been called C. plicatiloides. Fruit-bodies are frequently visited by Springtails (Collembola), Mites (Arachnida), and Fungus Gnats (Mycetophilidae). Their relations with these animals stand in need of a detailed investigation. Direct sunlight injuriously affects the vitality of the dry spores of Schi?:ophyllum cormnune and of Dmlalea unicolor. Possibly the colouring matters deposited in the walls of the spores of Coprini and of other Hymenomycetes may serve a useful purpose by screening off certain of the sun's rays from the living protoplasm. Chapter II. — The disposal of the hymenium beneath a fruit-body on gills, on spines, or in tubes, kc, instead of on a fiat surface, is an economi- cal arrangement which permits of a great increase in the number of spores which a fruit-body of a given size may produce. Species of the genus Fomes appear to be the most highly specialised in this respect. The specific increase in the extent of the hymenium due to the presence of gills and tubes was measured in a few cases. In the Mushroom it was 261 262 RESEAKCHES ON FUNGI found to be 20; in Fowes vogetus 148 for one year, and 500 for three; whilst in a large and old specimen of Fomes irjniarius it proved to be nearly lOOO. The crowding of the gills and the reduction in diameter of the tubes in certain fruit-bodies ('.//. those of the Musliroom and of Fomes igniarius), after allowing for a small margin of safety, appear to have reached their limits consistent with the violent horizontal discharge of the spores from the basidia. CHArTER III. — The fruit-bodies of most species of Hymenomycetes are very rigid. This rigidity is of considerable importance in keeping the axes of the tubes of Polyporese, the planes of the gills of Agaricineie, &c., in vertical positions. Slight swaying movements cause loss of spores. 1 n a Mushroom it was calculated that, when two adjacent gills are tilted from their vertical planes to an angle greater than the critical angle of about 2° 30', some of the spores are unable to escape from the interlamellar spaces. With a tilt of about 5°, half the spores are lost; and with a tilt of about 9° 30', four-fifths of them. The rigidity of stipes in many .species is secured by hollow cylindrical form and by unequal tensions in the layei'S of cells. Chapter IV. — The growth movements of a fruit-body can be regarded as so many adjustments of a delicate machine made Avith the object of placing the hymenium in the best possible position for liberating the spores. A Mushroom and the ephemeral, coprophilous Coprini exhibit four such adjustments, and Polyporus squamosus five. The nature of the adjustments is correlated with the general structure of the fruit-bodies and with the orientation of the substratum. The amount of eccentricity of the pileus of Pohjporus sguamoms is con- trolled by a morphogenic stimulus of gravity. The stipes of certain ephemeral Coprini, just before the pilei expand, are extremely sensitive to the stimulus of gravity. When a stipe had been changed from the vertical to the horizontal position, a distinct upward curvature was noticed after a stimulation of r5 minutes. Another stipe, similarly displaced, gave a distinct macroscopic reaction to the stimulus of gravity after 3 minutes' stimulation, and turned through a complete right angle, so as to regain a vertical position, in 17-5 minutes. The last 80° were turned through with a greater angular velocity than that of the minute-hand of a clock. This angular velocity is far greater than that known for any Phanerogam, or indeed any other plant organ when stimu- lated by gravity. Chapter V. — In perfectly still air, the .spores liberated from a pileus placed above a horizontal sheet of paper fall vertically downwards and GENERAL SUMMARY 263 produce a spore print consisting of radiating lines corresponding to the interlamellar spaces. Extremely minute convection currents give a hori- zontal drift to the falling spores and cause the spore-deposit to become cloudy. The number of spores liberated by large fruit-bodies amounts to thou- sands of millions. A specimen of Psalliota campestris with a diameter of 8 cm. was found to produce 1,800,000,000 spores, one of Coprmus comatus 5,000,000,000, and one of Pohjporm squamosus 11,000,000,000. The rate of elimination of the spores or young plants by death can be shown to be enormous. The most prolific kind of fish is not so prolific as a Mushroom plant. It was estimated that a large fruit-body (40 x 28 x 20 cm.) of Lyco- perdon hovista, Linn., the Giant Puff-ball, contained 7,000,000,000,000 spores, or as many as would be liberated by 4000 Mushrooms, each having a diameter of 8 cm. Chapter VI. — With the unaided eyes by daylight, clouds of spores were observed to be given off continuously for thirteen days from the underside of a large fruit-body of Folyporus sqitamosus. It was found that each hymenial tube was liberating spores from every part of its hynienium. The visible discharge of spores appeared to be unaffected by light conditions or by changes in the hygroscopic state of the atmosphere. The formation of ii-regular clouds, wreaths, and curls of spores is not due to intermittent spore-emission, but is brought about by air-currents sweeping beneath the fruit-body. Chapter VII. — Spores falling from any fruit-body suspended in a suit- able glass chamber, e.g. a closed beaker, can be seen in clouds or individually without magnification by using a concentrated beam of light. Much use was made of this discovery in the research. The beam-of-light method can be used to make a very simple and effective laboratory demonstration of the discharge of spores from Mush- rooms, ifec. It may be carried out with great convenience at any time by using as material the mature xerophytic fruit-bodies of Lenzites betulina, SchizopTiyllum commune, Poly^tidus versicolor, &c. These can be kept dry in bottles for months or years. After wet cotton-wool has been placed above them they quickly revive, and they begin to shed their spores within six hours. The emission of the spores continues for days. Chapter VIII. — Spore-discharge from any fruit-body under normal conditions is continuous. The period of spore-discharge in some species lasts for a few hours, in others days, and in yet others for weeks. With the beam-of-light method a fruit-body of Schizophyllum commune and also one of Polystictus verdcolor were both observed to shed a continuous stream of spores for sixteen days. A specimen of Lenzites betulina shed spores for 264 RESEARCHES OX FUNGI ten days. These fruit-bodies, doubtless, had ah-eady shed spores for some time before they were gathered. After the number of spores produced had been estimated and the length of the spore-fall period had been observed, it was calculated that large fruit-bodies of PsaJIiota camjyeKtris, Coprimts comatus, Fohjporus Sf/uamosus, etc., shed about a million spores a minute for two or more days. Chapter IX. — The fiuit-bodies of corky or leathery consistency growing on sticks and logs are xerophytic. They can be dried up without any loss of vitality. On access to moisture they revive in a few hours and resume the function of discharging spores. The retention of vitality after desicca- tion in some species is continued for years. The spores liberated from revived fruit-bodies are capable of germination. Typical genera consti- tuting a xerophytic hymenomycetous log-flora are : Lenzites, Polystictus, Stereum, &c. The fruit-bodies of Scliiwjjliyllum comnmne possess special adaptations for a xerophytic mode of existence. The gills are partially or completely divided down their median planes into two vertical plates. Whilst desicca- tion is proceeding, the two plates of each of the longer and deeper gills bend apart and spread themselves over the shorter and shallower gills. When desiccation is complete, the whole of the hymenium is hidden from external view and the fruit-body is covered both above and below with a layer of hairs. The closing up of the fruit-bodies at the beginning of a period of drought serves to protect the hymenium from external enemies. A fruit-body can retain its vitality in the dried and closed-up condition for two or more years. When allowed to absorb free water through the top of the pileus, it revives in a few hour's. The two plates of each pair return to their original vertical positions, and again become closely apposed. The liberation of spores is then recommenced, and may last for some days. Chapter X. — The fruit-body in some species can only be developed so as to produce a pileus when subjected to the morphogenic stimulus of light. When a hymenium has once been produced it sheds its spores indepen- dently of light conditions and of the direction of gravitational attraction. So long as a fruit-body itself contains sufficient water, spore-discharge appears to continue without being affected by the hygroscopic state of the atmosphere. Some of the xerophytic fruit-bodies growing on logs, Arc, continue to shed their spores at the freezing-point of water. The range of temperature permitting spore-discharge in the case of Lenzites hetulina was found to be approximately 0°-30° C. When a fruit-body is placed in hydrogen or carbon dioxide, the libera- tion of spores quickly ceases. The presence of oxygen in the surrounding atmosphere appears to be e.ssential for the continuance of spore-discharge. GEXERAL SUMMARY 265 In pure oxygen fruit-bodies shed their spores for several hours at the same rate as in air. When a fruit-body is subjected to the vapour of ether or chloroform, spore-discharge ceases almost instantaneously, but can be resumed when the ana?sthetic has been removed. A fruit-body of Lenzites hetulina re- covered its spore-liberating function after this had been inhibited by ether vapour for a week. Chapter XI. — The four spores on each basidium are discharged suc- cessively. They leave the sterigmata within a few seconds or minutes of one another. Each spore is shot out violently from its sterigma to a distance of about yV mm. Chapter XII. — The propelling force during spore-discharge seems to be provided by the pressure of the cell-sap of the basidium upon the cell- wall, and possibly by a similar pressure in the spore. On the discharge of a spore, the sterigma breaks across but does not open. Spore-discharge in the Hymenomycetes appears to resemble that in Emjmsa Grijlli, and may be said to be brought about by a jerking process, which may be con- trasted with the squirting process of Empusa muscx and the Ascomycetes. Chapter XIII. — The specific gravity of spores can be determined approximately by using heavy fluids contained in a counting apparatus, the chamber of which is O'l mm. deep. The specific gravity of spores of Amanifopsis vaginata was found to be nearly that of water, namely, 1"02, whilst that of the much heavier Coprinus xMcatilis spores proved to be approximately 1*21. Chapter XIV. — The size of spores can be measured with accuracy and rapidity by using a Poynting Plate Micrometer. The apparatus has been described. The average size of the spores of a fruit-body may differ considerably in difterent fruit-bodies of the same species. This fact may well account for the want of agreement of spore measurements as given by different mycologists. Chapter XV. — The rate of fall of spores in still air was determined for the first time. A small piece of a fruit-body was placed in a vertically- disposed compressor cell. The falling spores were observed with a hori- zontal microscope and their rate of fall accurately recorded upon a revolving drum. The first direct test of the applicability of Stokes' Law to the fall of microscopic spheres in air has been carried out by determining the size, 266 RESEARCHES OX FrXGT specific gravity, and terminal velocity of the spherical spores of Arnan/fopsis vaginafa. The rate of fall of the spores was found to be about 46 per cent, greater than was expected. While, therefore, the observed speed has proved to be of the same order of magnitmle as the calculated, 8tokes' Law has not been confirmed in detail. No fully satisfactory reason for the discrepancy between theory and observation has so far been found. Chapters XV. and XVI. — The rate of fall of hymenomycetous spores ranges from 0"3 to 6'0 mm. per second. It varies with the size of the spores, their specific gravity, and the progress of desiccation. The rela- tively very small spores of Collybia dryopliila in very dry air was found to fall at an average rate of 0:37 mm. per second, whilst the relatively very- large spores of Amanitopsis vagtnata in a saturated chamber attained a speed of 6'08 mm. per second. The spores of the Mushroom {PsalUota campesfris), shortly after they have left the pileus, fall at a speed of approximately 1 mm. per second. Chapter XVI. — The spores fall most rapidly between gills, down tubes, &c., immediately after liberation from the sterigmata. After emerging from the fruit-bodies, they dry up within about one minute. The diminu- tion of volume causes a considerable reduction in the rate of fall. Chapter XVII. — The importance of violent spore-discharge lies in the fact that thereby the very adhesive spores are prevented from touching one another or any part of the hymenium whilst escaping from the fruit-body. Each spore is shot out more or less horizontally into the spaces between the gills, in hymenial tubes, &c. The horizontal motion is very rapidly brought to an end owing to the resistance of the air. In consequence of this, and also of the attraction of gravitation, the spore describes a sharp curve and then falls vertically downwards. The path of the spore between the gills, in tubes, &c., has been called the sporahola, and is remarkable in that it appears to make a sudden bend approximately through a right angle. When for any spore the terminal vertical velocity and the maximum horizontal distance of discharge have been determined, its sporabola becomes amenable to a satisfactory mathe- matical treatment. It was observed that the spores of Amanitopsis va^ mi f i c ^ -■■■ t Y ▼ A A-H.RB del. 17. pini. K 19. 18 13 1^ 20 d HutHscet mp. i .■J 4-. 38 PIV. g f ^ -^2. HutK.coU. London.. GENERAL INDEX ACARINE.E, 46 Acetic acid, causes discharge of asci, 238 Adhesiveness of spores, 6, 79, 133, 258 Adjustments of fruit-bodies, 47-78 Agaricinese, declination of gill surfaces, 134 „ fall of spores between gills, 216 fixed position of gills, 39 geotropism, 77 eccentricity, 50 position of hymenium, 21, 27 „ arrangement of gills, 34-36 ,, specificincreaseof hymenial ,, surfaces, 30-33 „ stipes, 42 „ xerophytic species, 111 Agaricus nebularis, eflect of chloroform, 129 Ayaricus radicatns, cystidia, 18 Air movements, speed, 217 „ ,, and spore dispersal, 222 Alcohol, causes discharge of asci, 237- 238 Alkalies, effect on asci, 239 Allen, Grant, 13 Amanita, dispersion of spores, 222 gill-chamber, 45 and desiccation, 106 violent discharge of spores, 137 Amanita muscaria, and slugs, 226, 229- 230 „ „ spore-discharge, 134, 212 ,, „ velum partiale, 46 Amanita phalloides, and slugs, 230 „ „ stipe, 41, 43 Amanita ruhescens, hymenium, 30, 31 ,, ,. and maggots, 221, 223 „ „ rate of fall of spores, 175 and slugs, 229 size of spores, 162 Amanitopsis, violent projection of spores, 137 Amanitopsis vaginata, distance of spore- projection, 142 ,, „ effect of humidity on spore - dis- charge, 122 ,, ,, fall of spores to ground, 216 „ „ improbability of observing spore- projection, 140 „ „ rate of fall of spores, 166-175, 255 ,, ,, size of spores, 162, 163, 248, 253 „ „ specific gravity of spores, 154-157 „ ,, sporabola of, 185 „ ,, and Stokes' Law, 166-173, 178 ,, „ structure of gills, 165 ,, „ variation in size of spores, 158 ,, „ violent projection of spores, 141- 142 Anassthetics, ett'ect on spore-discharge, 129-132 Anellaria, habitat, 224 „ violent projection of spores, 137 Anellaria separata, adaptations, 226 fruit-body, 80 geotropism, 76 spore-deposits, 81 spore-dispersion, 217 Anthracophyllum, systematic position, 13 Arachnida, 20 Armillaria, violent discharge of spores, 137 Armillaria mellea, colour of rhizomor- pha subterranea^ 14 J) 27s 2 76 GENERAL INDEX J) 5) >1 AriaUlaria nidhn, crowdiiii,' of fniit- Ixxlies, 77-78 „ h}-niuniurn, 30, ;}] „ and sluf,'s, :i2!J Ascobolus, discharge of spores, 150-151 „ heliotropisin, 75 ARcoholiix immeri>us, adai^tations, 256- 257 „ „ dispersal of spores, 21):), -25 1-257 Ascomvcetes and Hymenomycetes, 12, 24, l'21, 233, 234, 236, 248, 250, 253, 258 Ascospores, distance of ejection, 235, 230 drying, 244 fall, 236 number in an ascus, 243 ,, seen in a beam of light, 236 Ascus, contraction of wall, 240 discharge under water, 247 of Discomycetes, 22-24 fixation of spores, 244-247 heliotropism, 74-75, 252, 257 „ jet of, 2.35, 240-244 „ lid of, 239 „ puffing, 237-240 „ structure, 241, 252 Aspergillus glaucits, sunlight and spores, 26 Atkinson, G. F., on Coprinus comatus, 196 ,, ,, ontwo-spoi'edbasidia, 15 Autodigestion, in Copi'ini, 200 ,, signilicance of, 205 Bahldw, G., on the motion of a sphere, 190-191 Basidia, and asci, 22-24. 249-250 non -development of, 15-17 position of, 134 relations with stipe, 42 structure and development, 6-11 ,, successive discharge of spores, 144-146 „ two-spored, 15 Basidiuhohis ?-rt?;«r'r//i, discharge of spores, 151 Bayliss, Miss J. S., on I'ohisf ictus versi- color, 112, 113 „ ,, on slugs and Hyme- nomycetes, 229 Beam-of -light method, 3, 4, 94-101 „ ,, applied to Cupri- xns comatus, 203 5) J) )) Beam-of-light method api)lied to Mor- cliilld t/iqas, 234 „ „ ap])liedtoiVv!'2rt repnnfhi, 235 Becfjuerel, P., on dry seeds, 105, 110 Bernard, N., on nuclear fusions, 12 Bifl'en, R. H., on origin of cystidia, 18 Blackman, V. H., on nuclei in Uredi- neie, 11 Boletus, dispersion of spores, 222 and desiccation, 106 radial form, 1 13 stipe, 41 violent projection of spores, 136 Boletus hadius, size of spores, 162 „ ,, rate of fall of spores, 175 „ „ violent projection of spores, 136 Boletus clirysenteron, violent jirojection of spores, 136 Boletus felleus, rate of fall of spores, 175- 176 ,, „' violent jirojection of spores, 130 Boletus flavus,vio\ent projection of spores, 136 Boletus scaher, violent projection of spores, 136 Boletus suhtomentosus, violent jirojection of spores, 136 Bower, F. O., on spores of a fern, 88 Brefeld, O., on C3'stidia, 18 „ on ejaculation of spores, 4, 134, 148 „ on sexuality, 10 Bulgaria, gradual emptying of asci, 237, 240 Bulgaria polymorpha, dispersion of s])ores, 233- 235 „ ,, size of spores, 248 Buller, A. 11. K., on Lcutinus Icpideus, 34, 47 ,, „ on Folyporus squa- mosiis, 56, 202 Cantharellus, violent jjrojection of spores, 137 Carbon dioxide, eti'ect on fruit-bodies, 128 Cattle, disjiersion of sjiores by, 224-226 Chloroform and spore-discharge, 129, 131-132 Christman, A. H.,on nuclei in Rusts, 11 Clavarieie, position of hj'menium, 24,27 Coemans, on Pilobolus, 258-259 GENERAL INDEX 2/7 Collembola, 20 Collybia, desiccation, 105 „ violent projection of spores, 137 Collybia dryopliila, and convection cur- rents, 97-98 ,, „ desiccation, 107, 108, 111 ,, ,, fall of spores in a compressor cell, 168 „ ,, fall of spores to ground, 216 „ ,, rate of fall of spores, 175, 180-181 „ ., settling of spores, 223 „ „ size of spores, 161, 162 Collybia velutipes, crowding of fruit- bodies, 77 ,, „ origin of cystidia, 18 Colour of spores, 12-15 Com])ressor cell, use of, 167 Conidioholas utricidosus, discharge of spores, 151 Convection currents, and spores, 98- 100, 256 „ „ and sjiore-depo- sits, 80-82 Cooke, M. C, on cystidia, 17 Copper sulphate, causes discharge of asci, 238 Coprinus, adaptations, 226 ,, adjustments of gills, 67 ,, characters of genus, 209 ,, colour of spores, 14, 15, 97 ,, a coprophilous genus, 224 evolution, 214-215 geotropism, 53 heliotropism, 75, 70 hymenium, 7 desiccation, 106 and gravity, 50 not cross-fertilised, 1 1 ,, nuclei, 11 ,, occasional sterility, 15-17 ,, settling of sjiores, 223 ,, spores of a basidium succes- sively projected, 145 ,, spore-deposit, 99-100 ,, stijie, 41 „ systematic position, 13 ,, type of fruit-body, 196-215 ,, violent spore-projection, 142- 143, 145 Coprinus atramentarius, colour of spore- deposit, 14 „ „ cystidia, 18 If )) )) Coprinus atramentarius, liberation of spores, 208- 209 Cop-inus comatus, biology, 196-208 cystidia, 17 development of colour in spores, 14 equilibrium of pileus, 43 fallof spores toground, 216 gill edges, 7 heliotropism absent, 76 lengthening of stipe, 45 number of spores, 82 rate of emission of spores, 83, 86 rate of fall of spox"es, 175 size of spores, 162, 248 spore-dispersion, 206 spore-fall period, 104 stipe, 41 successive projection of spores from a basidium, 150 survival of spores, 87 swaying of fruit- bodies, 41 tensions in stipe, 42 turgidity of basidia, 10 „ „ velxin partiale, A& ,, „ violent projection of spores, 142-143, 145 Coprinus fimetarius, spore-deposit, 208 „ ,, occasional sterility, 16 Coprinus (jigasporns, large spores of, 161 Coprinus micaceus, crowding of fruit- bodies, 77 „ „ cystidia, 17 ,, „ effect of dry weather, 209-210 „ ,, liberation of spores, 208-210 spore-deposit, 208 successive projection of spores from a basidium, 146 „ „ violent spore-projec- tion, 142-143 Coprimes 7iiveus, adaptations, 226 „ „ adjustments of fruit- bodies, 67-69 Coprinus plicatilis, adjustments of fruit- bodies, 65-67 278 GENERAL INDEX Coprinus plicatilix and convection cur- rents, 97-98 „ „ effect of dry weather, 209-210 ,, ,, not delicjnescent, 209 „ ,, placed in riglit genus, 215 „ „ rate of fall of spores, 175 „ „ rhythm in develop- ment, 75 „ ,, size of spores, 161, 162 „ ,, specific gi-avity of spores, 154—157 „ ,, spore-fall period, 104 „ ,, successive projection of spores from a basidium, 146 ,, ,, violent spore-projec- tion, 142-143, 145 Coprinus plicatiloides, adjustments of fruit-bodies, 69- 75 „ ,, occasional sterility, 16 Coprinus radiatus, rhythm in develop- ment, 75 Coprinus stercorarius, spore-projection, 4, 134, 136, 148 Coprinus sterquilinus, vitality of my- celium, 112 Coprophilous Ascomycetes, 233, 251, 256-257 Coprophilous Hymenomycetes, 224-226 Corda, on cystidia, 17, 18 Corticium, dispersion of spores, 220 ,, fall of spores to ground, 217 „ a xerophytic genus, 109 Corticium Iseve, vitality. 111 Craterellus, position of hymenium, 24 Cratcrellus cornucopioides, stipe, 44, 45 Crepidotus, vitality, 111 Cyphella, position of hymenium, 24 Cystidia, of Coprinus cornatus, 198, 199, 200 „ significance, 7, 17-20 ,, and spore-emission, 19 Daedalea confrayosa, number of spores, 84-85 „ „ desiccation and vi- tality, 111 Daedalea quercina, desiccation and vital- ity, 111 Daedalea unicolor, germination of spores, 106 „ „ recovery after desic- cation, 110, 111 11 Daedalea unicolor, spore - discharge at 0° C, 124-125 spore-fall period, 103 violent projection of spores, 136 Dangeard, on nuclei, 10 De Baiy, on cystidia, 18, 19 „ on fixation of spores in asci, 245 on puffing, 237-238, 240 on sound produced by spore- discharge, 258 Deliquescence, nature of, 200 „ significance, 205 Desiccation of fruit-bodies, 38, 105-119 Dew and spore-fall, 102 Discomycetes and Hymenomycetes, 22- 24 Dispersion of spores, by herbivorous animals, 224- 226 „ by slugs, 226- 228 „ „ hy wind, 216- 223 Drought, mav interrupt spore discharge, 102 ,, and xerophytic fruit-bodies, 110-111 Dry air, efi'ect on small Coprini, 69, 209- 210 Duggar, B. M., on Coprinus comafu><, 208 Dust particles, 95 Eccentricity, of Lentinus lepideus, 49, 50 „ of Polifporus squamosus, 60-62 „ use of, 49 Electric charges on spores, 192-195 Elving, on sunlight and spores, 26 Empusa Grylli, discharge of spoi'es, 151 ■ Empusa Muscce, discharge of spores, 150-151 Entoloma, violent projection of spores, 137 Entomophthorineie, spore - discharge. 151 Ether, eflect on spore-discharge, 129- 131 Evolution, of Coprini, 215 of fruit-bodies, 27 of Hymencmiycetes, 224 of spore colour, 13-14 Exoascus, emptying of asci, 237, 240 ExobasidiinL'iL-, liymeniuni. 27 External conditions and spore-dis- charge, 90-91, 120-132 11 11 GENERAL INDEX 279 Falck, R., his theory of spore-disper- sion, 218-223 „ on abnormal fruit-bodies, 21 ,, on anassthetics and spore- discharge, 129 „ on Copriniis sterqiiili7uis, 112 „ on dispersion of spores in Basidiomycetes, 4 „ on movement of spores by convection currents, 222 ,, on spore-deposits, 98-100 „ on spore-dispersal in Gyro- iiiitra cAculcnta, 234 Ferguson, Miss M. C, on sunlight and spores, 25 Ferns, pseudapogamous, 12 „ spores, 88 Fish, number of eggs, 87-88 Flesh of the pileus, function of, 42-45 Flies, and Hymenomycetes, 19-20, 219 Fomes, fall of spores to ground, 217 „ specialised fruit-bodies, 37-38 Fomes igniarius, eftects of frost and desiccation, 38 „ „ specific increase of liymenial surface, 33 „ „ violent projection of spores, 136 „ ,, width of hymenial tubes, 38 Fomes vegetus, specific increase of hy- menial surface, 32-33 „ „ violent projection of spores, 136 „ ,, width of hymenial tubes, 38 Fraser, Miss H. C. I., on nuclear fusions, 12 Freeman, E. M., on insects and Coprini, 206 Frost, efiect of, 38, 112, 113, 126 Fruit-bodies, abnormal, 48, 54, 63, 64 „ acridity of some, 230 „ annual and perennial, 37 „ coprophilous, 224 - 226, 250-257 „ desiccation, 105-119 „ development in I'olijporuii squamosus, 57-65 „ development in Lentinus lepideus, 48, 49 „ efiect of tilting, 38 „ evolution, 211 „ individual variability, 163 „ poisonous, eaten by slugs, 230 Fruit-bodies, rhythm in development, 74,75 „ rigidity, 39 ,, rudimentary, 77-78 „ some protected from slugs, 229-230 ,, tests for vitality, 105-106 Fulton, F. W., on the eggs of fish, 87 Fulton, T. W., on dispersion of spores by insects, 206, 257 Galeha, dispersion of spores, 220 „ habitat, 225 ,, stipe, 41, 42 ,, violent discharge of spores, 137 Galera tenera, adaptations, 226 „ rate of fall of spores, 175 „ size of spores, 162 Gases and spore-discharge, 127 Geotropic swinging, 65-66, 72-74 Geotropism, of Anellaria separata, 76 „ of Copirimis niveas, 68-69 „ of Coprinus plicatilis, 65-66 ,, of Coprinus plicatUoides, 70- 74 „ of Lentinus lepideus, 48-49 ,, of Polyporus squamosus, 59- 65 „ of Psalliota campestris, 50- 55 Germination of spores, 11, 25, 26, 106, 227-228 Gill-chamber, significance of, 45-46 Gills, autodigestion in Coprinus comatus 200 „ not geotropic in Coprinus, 67-68 „ reactions to gravity, 49-53 ,, separation of, 7, 34-35, 199 „ and slugs, 226 ,, splitting in Coprinus, 67 Glceoporus conchoides, growth after desic- cation, 106 ,, desiccation. 111 Glycerine, effect on asci, 237, 238 Gomphidius, colour of spores, 14 „ systematic position, 13 Gomphidius viscosus, cystidia, 18 Grape sugar, efiect on asci, 238 Gravity, and spore-discharge, 122 „ morphogenic stimulus of, 49- 50, 62 ,, responses in Agaricineaj, 77 Grove, W. B., on Pilobolus, 259 „ on sterility of Stropliaria semiglobafa, 26 Gyromitra esculenta, dispersal of spores, 233-235 „ size of spores, 248 280 GENERAL INDEX Hammer, or PJciirotux o.sV/vy/^/.s, 89 Heat, effect on spoie-dischaige, 123- 127 ,, produced bv fungi, Falck's thet)ry, 219-223 Heheloma fadibile, and slugs, 2-27 Heliotropism, absent in the Mushroom, 55 „ absent in Polyporus squa- mosns, 59 of asci, 252, 256-257 of Coprini, 75 of t'opriniis niveus, 07-69 of Coprinus p)licatiloideH, 69-70 ,, of Lentinus lepidens, 48 Helvella, gradual emptying of asci, 237 Helvetia rrisjya, cause of putting, 237 „ sound of spore-discharge, 258 Helvellacea?, fruit-bodies, 249 „ spore-discharge, 234 Hennings, P., on Hymenomvcetes, 12- 13 ,, on H^'pochnacete, 14 Herbivorous animals, dispersion of spores by, 224-226, 233, 251-257 Hirneola auricula-judai, spore - dis- charge, 5 Hoffman, H., on Polyporus destructor, 89 „ on cj'stidia, 17 Horses, dispersion of spores by, 224- 226, 233, 251-257 Horse Mushroom, fall of spores, 94 ,, spore-cloud, 218 Humaria rutilans, nuclei, 12 Humidity, effect on Coprini, 203 ,, efl'ect on falling spoi-es, 179- 183 „ effect on spore-liberation, 91 , 122-132 Hybrids, possibility of, 12 Hydneie, position of hymeniuni, 27 ,, xerophy tic species. Ill Hydnum repandnm, abnormal fruit- bodies, 64 Hj-drogen, effect on fruit-bodies, 127- 128 Hygrophorus, systematic position, 13 „ violent projection of spores, 137 Hyiinipliorus virgincKS and slugs, 229 Hygrophorus pratvusis and slugs, 229 Hygroscf)pic condition of air and spore- discharge, 122-123 Hymenial tubes, geotro))ism, 59 „ „ gradual development, 91 Hymenial tubes, width, 37, 38 Hymenium, nature of, 0-7 ,, displacement of, 21 „ extent, 27-33 „ of Helvellaceje, 249 „ likened to a battery, 189 „ position, 21, 24, 134 „ nuclei, 9-10 HymenochfHte, cystidia, 18 Hymenomjx-etes, compared with As- comycetes, 233, 234, 236, 248, 250, 253, 258 Hypholoma, violent projection of spores, 137 Hypholoma fascicidare 'AW A slugs, 229-230 Hyphuloma perpdexum, nuclei, 11 Hiipholovia suhlateritium, hymenium, 30, 31 Hypochnacepe, colour of spares, 14 Karyogamv, 10-12 Laccaria, violent projection of spores, 137 Laaaria lacrata and slugs, 229-230 Lactarius, and slugs, 220-229 „ cystidia, 18 ,, violent projection of spores, 137 Lactarius deliciosus, and slugs, 226 ,, „ origin of cystidia, 18 Lactarius glyciosmus and slugs, 229-230 Lactarius rufus and slugs, 229-230 Laurent on sunlight and spores, 26 Lentinus, systematic position, 13 Lentinus lepndeus, adjustments of fruit- bodies, 47-50, 53, 55, 59 ,, „ eflect of light on spore-discharge, 120 Lenzites, continuity of sjiore-fall. 120 „ demonstration of spore-fall, 101 „ effect of invei'ting fruit- bodies, 21 „ spore-fall period, 102-103 ,, spore stream, 96 „ a xeropliytic genus, lo!) Leuz'tcs hetulina, dead fruit-bodies, 105 „ „ effect of loss of water, 123 ,, ,, effect of ether on spore-discharge, 131 „ ,, desiccation, 109-110, 111 „ „ and frost, 126-127 „ „ spore-discharge and temperature, 124- 126 GENERAL INDEX 281 Lenzites betulina, spore-fall period, 103, 104 Lenzites sxpiaria, desiccation, 111 Lepiota procera, fruit-body mechanics, 43, 44 Lepiota rachodes, fruit-body mechanics, 43, 44 Leucosporpe, descent of, 12 Light, and rhythmic development, 74 „ effect on Lentinus lepideiis, 48 „ effect on Folyporus squamosus, 59, 62, 63, 65 effect on spores, 24-26 ., effect on spore-discharge, 120- 122 „ non-effect on Mushroom, 55 Lowe, C. W., on I'ezi::a anrantia, 235 „ ,, and Polyporus squamosus, 90 Lycoperdon, spore-dispersion, 257-258 Lxicoperdon hovista, number of spores, '85, 86 Lycopodium powder and Stokes' Law, 177-178 Maggots, harm done by, 221 ,, heat produced by, 219 Magnus, W., on the Mushroom, 54 Marasmius, desiccation, 105-106 ,, systematic position, 13 „ violent projection of spores, 137 Marasmius oreades, desiccation, 106-108, 111 „ ,, distance of spore- projection, 142 „ „ effect of gases on spore - discharge, 127-129 „ ,, rate of fall of spores, 175 „ „ size of spores, 162, 248 „ ,, successive discharge of spores from a basidium, 150 „ „ violent projection of spores, 142 Marasmius peronatus, effect of desicca- tion, 107, 111 Margin of safety, 34, 35, 38, 51 Masses, G., on C'oprintis plicatilis, 209 ,, „ on cystidia, 18-19 „ ,, on mechanical sheaths, 43 „ ,, on the mechanism of spore- discharge, 149 ,, ,, on the position of the hymenium, 24 Massee, G., on pufHng, 238 „ ,, on size of spores of As- comycetes, 248 „ „ on spores of C'oprinns (jifja- sporus, 161 ,, ,, on the systematic position of Coprinus, 13, 215 Massee and Salmon on coprophilous fungi, 224, 225 Melanosporee, descent, 12 „ colour of spores, 15 Mercuric chloride, causes discharge of asci, 238 Merulius, contains xerophytic species, 109 Merulius corium, desiccation, 109, 111 ,, „ spore-fall period, 103 Merulius lacrimans, abnormal fruit- bodies, 21 Micrometer, Poynting's Plate, 158-160 Mites, 20 M'Keehan and Zeleny on Stokes' for- mula, 177 Morchella, gradual emptjang of asci, 237 Mordiella crassipes, fruit-body, 249 Morchella (jigas, dispersal of spores, 233- 235 „ „ size of spores, 248 Morphogenic stimulus of gravity, 49, 50, 62 Mucor, heliotropism, 75 Muscarine, 230 Mushroom, arrangement of gills, 34-36 „ basidia, 7-9 ,, colour of spores in beam of light, 97 „ contrasted with Coprinus comatus, 210-215 ,, displaced gill, 21 „ effect of tilting gills, 39-40 „ electric charges on spores, 192-195 gill-chamber, 46 and low temperatures, 127 not heliotropic, 76 mass of a spore, 253 optical illusion in spore- discharge, 140 radial form, 113 rate of emission of sporas, 82, 86 rudimentary f rnit - bodies, 77 series of gills, 35 settling of spores, 223 spores carried by convection currents, 98 stipe, 41 282 GENERAL INDEX Mushroom, sii<,'txested experiment witli, 12 „ type of fruit-body, 210-215 ,, violent projection of spores, 142-145 (For further references ride Pmlliota caiiijjesfris) Mutations, 14, 15 Mycelium, desiccation, 111-112 nuclei, 10-12 „ possibilitj' of cross-fertilisa- tion in, 11-12 Mj'cena, dispersion of spores, 220 „ geotropism, 53 „ stipe, 41, 42 ,, violent projection of spores, 137 Mycena alkalina and slugs, 226 Mycena epipterygia, stipe, 42 Mycetophilidfe, 19-20 Xc2)hrodiumFilix-mas,i\umhev of spores, 88 Kichols, Miss S. P., on nuclei, 11 Nolanea, violent projection of spores; 137 Nolanea pascua, imperfection of gills, 189 Nowakowski on Empusa Grijlli, 151 Nuclei, in asci, 243 „ of Hymenomycetes, 9-12 OcHROSPOR.E, descent of, 12 Olive, E. W., on nuclear fusions in Rusts, 11 Omphalia Jibula, gills not geotropic, 76 Omphalia umhellifera and slugs, 229 Optical illusion in spore-discharge, 138- 140 Oxygen, effect on fruit-bodies, 128-129 Pan.eolus, habitat, 224 ,, violent projection of spores, 137 Paneeolus p/ialaenarum, adaptations, 226 ,, fruit-body, 76 gills, 9 Paraphyses, of Coprinus comatus, 198 function, 7 nuclei, 10 Parasol Fungi, mechanics, 43-44 Paxillus, dispersion of spores, 222 PaxilluH involutns, and small animals, 20 „ ,, rate of fall of spores, 175 ,, „ size of spores, 162 Peniophora, cystidia, 18 Peziza, gradual emptying of asci, 237 ,, position of hymenium, 22-24 )5 5) )) Peziza, separation of spores, 235 l'c:d:M ucdaiixdum, catise of putting in, 237 „ „ sound of spore-dis- charge, 258 Peziza aurantia, dispersal of spores, 233 „ „ size of spores, 248 Peziza repanda, fixation of spores, 244- 247 „ „ production of conidia, 247 putting, 237-240 separation of spores, 235 size of spores, 254 spores dispersed by wind, 236 „ „ spore - discharge ob- served with a beam of light, 235 „ „ structure of fruit-body, 241 Peziza H€lero(io7->im, cause of puffing. 237 Pfeffer, W., on effect of oxygen, 129 Phalline and slugs, 230 Phallinese, spore-dispersion, 206-207, 257 Phallus impiidicus, spore-dispersion, 207 Phlebia, a xerophytic genus, 109 Phlehia fileata, desiccation, 111 Phlebia z•) number of spores, 85-86 GENERAL INDEX 285 Puff-balls, spore-dispersion, 258 Puffing of Discomycetes, 237-240 Rain, absorption of, 113 ,, and spore-fall, 102 Rate of fall of spores, 164-178 Respiration, 222 Rhodosporge, descent of, 12 Rhythmic development, of Ascoboli, 257 „ „ of Ooprini, 74- 75 Ruhland, W., on nuclei, 9 Russula, cystidia, 18 stipe, 41, 42 and slugs, 226-229 ,, violent projection of spores, 137 Buss^da ritrina, and slugs, 226, 230 ,, ,, specific increase in hy- menial surface, 30,31 Eussida emetica, acridity, 230 ,, ,, rate of fall of spores, 175 ,, ,, size of spores, 162, 248 and slugs, 226, 229 stipe, 42 Saccardo, p. a., on coprophilous fungi, 224 Saccobolus, mode of spore-disposal, 233, 251 Schizophyllum, continuity of spore-fall, 120 ,, dispersion of spores, 220 ,, spore stream, 96 ,, a unique genus, 113 ,, a xerophytic genus, 109 Scliizoiohyllum commune, biology, 113- 129 ,, ,, effect of sun- light on spores, 25- 26 ,, ,, germination of spores, 106 ,. ,. desiccation, 109-110, 111 ,, recovery after freezing, 126-127 ,, ,, spore - fall period, 103 ,, ,, spore - dis- charge at low temper- atures, 124- 125 Schroter on asci of Peziza repanda, 245 Sexuality of Hymenomycetes, 10-12 Silver nitrate discharges asci, 238 Size of spores, 158-163, 254 Slugs, and cystidia, 18 dispersal of spores by, 226-229 ,, and xerophytes, 112 Smith, Worthington, on Goprinus radiatu^, 75 ,, ,, on cystidia, 17, 18, 19 Smut-ball, number of spores, 85 Sodium carbonate, effect on asci, 239 Sodium chloride, effect on asci, 238 Sodium hydrate, effect on asci, 238 Sordarise, heliotropism, 75 Sordarieie, fixation of spores, 244 Sound produced by spore-discharge, 258-260 Specific gravity of spores, 153-157 Specific increase in hymenial surfaces, 28-33 Sporabola, nature of, 184-191 ,, correction of, 5 Sporangiophores, heliotropism, 75 Spore-dissemination in Coprini, Massee's view, 215 Spores, action of convection currents on, 98-100, 256 ,, adhesiveness, 6, 79, 133, 258 ,, adjustments of fruit-bodies for liberation of, 47-78 „ attachment in asci, 245-247 ,, colour, 12-15 „ comparative sizes, 254 ,, diminution of velocity of fall, 180-183 ,, dispersion by herbivorous animals, 224-226, 233, 251- 257 „ dispersion by slugs, 226-228 ,, dispersion by toads, 227 „ dispersion by wind, 216-223, 233 „ distance of projection, 142, 252-253, 255, 259 „ drying of, 182-183, 244 „ and eccentric pilei, 49 ,, efiect of curvature, 183 „ effect of humidity on rate of fall, 179-183 „ ejected endwise from asci, 242, 243 ,, electric charges on, 192-195 „ fall in a beam of light, 94- 101 ,, fixation in asci, 244-247 ,, germination of, 11, 25, 26, 106, 227-228 286 GENERAL INDEX )} J) » j> )> » 5J >9 Spores, mass, 251, 253, 254 nuclei, 11 number, 82-89 path between gills. Sec, 184- 189 „ position in falling, 176-177 „ position on basidium, 6 „ rate of emission of, 82, 83, 85, 86, 206 rate of fall, 255-256 separation after leaving ascus, 235, 243, 244 settling of, 223 size, 158-163 sound produced by discharge of. 258-200 specific gravit}', 153-157 streams of, 96 successive projection from a basidimn, 144-146 time of fall from hymenium'to ground, 216 walls of, 14 wind-borne, comparisons of, 248 Spore-deposits, 79-84, 98-100 jj „ oi Coprinus comatHS, 203, 206, 208 Spore-discharge, in Hirneola auricula- judee, 0 „ „ mechanism of, 148- 152 Spore-fall, continuity of, 120 „ period, 92, 102-104, 206 Springtails visit fruit-bodies, 20 Stereum, dispersion of spores, 220 „ effect of inverting fruit- bodies, 21 ,, fall of spores to ground, 217 „ spore-fall period, 102 spore-stream, 96 a xerophytic genus, 109 Stereum bicolor, desiccation, 111 Stereum hirsutum, desiccatitm, 111 „ „ spore-fall period, 103 Stereum 'pur'pxireum, desiccation. 111 J „ recover}' of frozen fruit-bodies, 126- 127 jj „ spore - fall period, 103 Sterigma, neck of, 6, 9 Sterilitv, occasional, of fruit-bodies, 15- 17, 26 „ of PoUj'porus squamosus, 57- 59 of Lentinus lepideus, 48 of Strop](aria semiglobuta, 26 Stipe, abnormal, in Mushroom, 54 „ barren, 48 „ elongation in Coprinus comatus, 214 „ functions, 39-45, 218 ,, tensions, 42, 43 Stokes' Law. first direct test of, 3, 164- 174, 177-178 Stropharia, stipe, 41 „ violent projection of spores, 137 Stropharia semifjlohata, spore-dispersion, 217 ,, „ sterility, 26 ,, ,, visits of Collem- bola, 20 Substratum, effect on fruit-bodies, 55 Sulphuric acid discharges asci, 238 Surface tension, effect on ascus jet, 242 Thelephoke^, hymenium, 27 ,, xerophytic species. 111 Theobald on Fungus Gnats, 20 Thomson, J. J., on the electronic charge, 164, 165 Tilletia caries, number of spores, 85 Toads and Hymenomycetes, 227 Transpiration, effect of, 24, 210, 219, 222 Tremellinete, hymenium, 27 ,, spore-discharge, 5 Trirholoina humile and slugs, 226 Tricholoma personatum, hymenium, 30, '31 „ „ system of gills, 35 Trogia, a xerophytic genus, 109 Trofjia rrispa, desiccation, 111 Truffles, spore-dispersion, 257 Tuberace;e, spore-dispersion, 257 Types, different, in Agaricinete, 210-214 Umbrella Fungi, mechanics of, 43, 44 Uredinese, nuclei, 11-12 Ustikujo carbo, sunlight and spores, 26 Velum partial/', use of, 46 Yoglino, P., on dispersal of spores by slugs and toads, 226-227 Von Schrenk, H., on Fohjporus Sclmein- itzii, 89 Wakkfield, F. W., on spore-discharge in Pilobolus, 259 GENERAL INDEX 1S7 Weather, effect on small Coprini, 209 Wilson, C. T. E., cloud method of, 165 Wind and spore-dispersal, of Asco- mycetes, 233-236 „ „ of Coprini, 206 „ „ „ „ of Hymeno- mycetes, 216-223 Worthington, A. M., on surface tension, 242 Xekophytic fruit-bodies, spore-fall period, 102-103 Xerophytic fungus flora, 109-113 Xerotus, systematic position of, 13 Zeleny, J., and M'Keehan, on Stokes' formula, 177 Zopf, on fixation of ascospores, 244 THE END Printed by Ballantyne, Hanson 6^ Co. Edinburgh &^ London New York Botanical Garden Library QK601 .B849V.1 Buller Arthur Henry/Researches on fungi gen 3 5185 00124 2096 V » *.»«# \ 4" x<)l^* * > «• ' • • ♦ ♦ V • ♦ ' .1 * * \> 'J'*