THS HT 31 K ED WAX;) AGN17S F THE MYCETOZOA. THE.MYCETOZOA- AND SOME QUESTIONS WHICH THEY SUGGEST BY THE/ RIGHT HONOURABLE SIR EDWARD FRY, D.C.L., LL.D., F.RS., F.L.S., AND AGNES FRY. IN MINIMIS." Plin. Nat. His. KNOWLEDGE" OFFICE, 326, HIGH HOLBORN, W.C. CONTENTS. PAGE Introduction .., ... ... ... ... ... 1 Life-history 3 Swarm Spores ,..^_- 13 Cell Theory ..." 15 Nuclei ; 18 Powers of Protoplasm 20 Motion 20 Negative Geotropism 26 Capturing Food 28 Rejection of Matter 29 Species 30 Classification 33 Fructification 39 Sporangium Walls ... ... ... ... ... 43 Capillitium 44 Opening of the Sporangia 53 Spores 54 Aberrant Forms 54 Exosporese 55 Acrasiese 58 Unicellular Organisms 62 Isomorphism 65 The Individual and the Generation 67 Death and Eeproduction 68 Relations of the Group ... 72 Their Relations in the Swarm Spore Stage 74 Their Eelations in the Plasmodiiun Stage 76 Their Relations in the Sporangium Stage 77 Their Relations Reconsidered 77 Distribution 78 Suggestions on Study 79 Bibliography ... ... ... ... ... ... 81 vi. WOEDS EXPLAINED. PAGE JEthalium Capillitium 5> ^ Columella Ectoplasm Endosporete Endoplasm 38 Exosporese Elagellum Hypothallus Karyokiuesis Microcvsts 9 21 Microsomata Nucleus Plasmodiocarp Plasmodium Protoplast Sclerotium Sporangium ••• ,_••• Sporophore Swarm Cell Swarm Spore 8> 13 CONTEXTS. UENEEA AND OTHEE GEOUPS EEFEEEED TO. PAGE Acrasietc 30,37,58,62 Amcebce „. — 14 Arcyria ... v 10,36,37,39,46,51,53 Badhamia 3,4,5,9,10,29,39,52,54,76 Calcarinese... .... ... ... ... ... ... 50 Caulerpa 63 Ceratomyxa 36,55,56,57,73 Chara 21 Comatriclm 11,15,34,39,42,49 Cribraria 31,32,34,39,43 Crateriun 34,42,51,53 Cutleria 31,32,43 Dictydiuin 43,71 Diet yostelium 36,41,59,62,73 Didymium 8,28 Enertlienerua 47, 51 Floridese ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 74 Foraminifera ... ... ,.. ... ... ... 65 Fuligo 22,24,40 Uemitrickia ... ... 45,46 Hydnum ... 73 Iridese 66 Jungermannia) ... 47 Labiate 35 Lamproderma 43, 47 Liliacero 66 Lycogala 10,23 Marcliantia 27 Mesenterise ... ... 9 Monads 14 Multinuclcatse ... ;.. 63 Vlll. CONTESTS. PAGE Mycetozoa 1,36 Myxogastres 1 Myxoinycetes 1, 36 Myxothallophyta 1 Peranosporese ... 74 Phfeosporete 74 Phascum 53 Physaracese 50 Physaruin 44 Perichoena ... 28 Polyporus 73 Polysphondylium 59,60,61 Stemonitis 7,28,38,39,41,42,48,50 Trichia 10,44,46,51,53 Ulva ... 74 Volvox 74 ERRATUM. PAGE 21. — For " The granules stream in one direction ; then pause, from sixty to ninety seconds (in the case of healthy plasinodia) " ; read, " The granules stream in one direction from sixty to ninety seconds (in the case of healthy plasniodia), then pause." NOTE. The quotation on the Title Page we have attributed to Pliny in his " Natural History," on the authority of Wordsworth in his heading to the Vernal Ode. We have not succeeded in finding it in Pliny himself, but our search has not been exhaustive. THE "MYCETOZOA, And some Questions which they Suggest. WE are desirous to make known some small friends of ours to those who are hitherto unacquainted with them ; but we are embarrassed as to how to introduce them — by what name to present them. It is true that they bear several names derived from the Greek language, Mycetozoa, Myxomycetes, Myxogastres, Myxothallophyta, but these are not familiar words. In German these organisms bear a name which has been translated into English, but it is so repulsive that we would willingly suppress it if we could, just as one would not like to introduce a charming girl to strangers by some name of a distinctly disagreeable suggestion : — " A name ? if the party had a voice, What mortal would be a Bugg by choice ? As a Hogg, a Grubb, or a Chubb rejoice ? " And so what beautiful little thing would, if it had a * 2 The Mycetozoa,) and voice, be introduced as a "slime fungus"? and yet this is the only English name of the organisms in question. Some intimates of these ill-named beings try to get over the difficulty by inventing pet names, and call them " myxos," or " myxies," and, on the whole, we incline to adopt the latter word. It is short, and it rhymes with pixies. But what are these myxies ? someone will be impatient to say. Are they fungi ? No. Are they mosses ? No. Are they ferns ? No. Are they lichens ? No. At any rate, plants ? That is doubtful. Then surely they are animals ? We do not know. They are living things— and beyond that we will not go for the present. There is another difficulty in the way of presenting these organisms to the novice : that their forms and structure are so far unlike those of plants or animals with which every one is familiar that we cannot use very well- known terms in describing them, and we shall have to ask permission to employ some special terms, when common ones fail. But we shall endeavour to be as clear as we can, and to readers who will give us their attention we believe that we shall overcome these obstacles, and we believe, too, that a little difficulty in following the exposi- tion will be more than repaid by the interest of the subject. It appears to us that many most interesting biological problems are presented in very simple form by this class of organisms, and we shall not hesitate to refer to these from time to time in the following pages. If our reader will turn over the pages and look at the Some Questions which they Suggest. 3 illustrations which follow, he will by his eye get a general notion of the kind of thing about which we are going to talk. LIFE-HISTORY. — We propose in the first place to sketch the life-history of one of these organisms as an example of FIG. 1. — Badhamia utricularis, showing Sporangia. all, and then to retrace our steps and dwell a little more in detail on points of interest which emerge in the con- sideration of the several stages of its existence. If our reader will look at Fig. 1, he will see depicted an organism consisting of a number of bodies somewhat like B 2 4 The Mycetozoa, and grapes in shape ; he will see that each little berry is attached by a tender stalk to a substance which is a piece of dead wood, and he will notice that these berries are so grouped together as to suggest the notion of a common origin. This little organism is known as Badhamia utricu- laris, the generic name being derived from a Dr. Badham, a labourer in the field of cryptogamic botany, and the specific name describing the bladder-like form of the principal part of the structure. This species is not un- common, and is to be found on stumps and logs of decaying wood. The bladder-shaped vessels which we have spoken of are the spore cases of the organism, i.e., they are cases in which the spores are stored, much as seeds are stored in a seed vessel. They are known as sporangia. We have chosen to begin with the organism in this form because it is the most conspicuous, and therefore the most easy for a beginner to get hold of. If now a specimen of this Badhamia be placed under the microscope, it will be seen that the coat of the sporangium is a delicate shell containing minute granules of lime, and that the dark appearance of the body is due to the brown spores which lie beneath the transparent shell. Next if a sporangium be broken and the contents examined under the microscope (as shown in Fig. 2), it will be found that the delicate white shell contains a network of threads, also white from the lime with which they are charged, and that they occupy the interior of the sporangium, and pass from wall to wall much like the cancelli in a long bone. Some Questions which they Suggest. 5 In addition to these threads there are the small round spores. In these threads we have come upon a very characteristic structure in these little organisms ; it is found in the sporangia of most of them but in very varying forms, and very diversely arranged, of which we shall say more hereafter. This system of hairs in the sporangia is known as the capillitium. Fia. 2.— Badhamia utricularis, broken Sporangia showing Capillitium. As the sporangia contain spores it will be at once under- stood that we stand on the threshold of a new genera- tion, and we must now follow the history of the spores. These, when carefully looked at, are seen to be covered with minute spines, and thus present a somewhat rough appearance. If now the spores be placed under favourable circum- 6 The Mycetozoa^ and stances, i.e., with sufficient moisture and warmth, small translucent bits of naked protoplasm will be seen to emerge from them, leaving a mere shell behind them ; these bits of protoplasm have a movement of their own in the water, and can be seen both to shake themselves, and to move forwards ; they push out a part of their protoplasm as a whip or flagellum at one end of the body, swimming with this in front of them, the whip having a sort of lashing movement. Fig. 3 exhibits some of these bits of protoplasm. Their motions are particularly amusing to watch; they swim, they wriggle, they revolve, they shake themselves, they are full of life and motion ; they seem at once wilful and purposeless ; they gambol with one another, and their frolics remind one of young lambs in spring. They are capable not only of motion but of digestion, and of the capture of food in a manner to be hereafter described. These little pieces of protoplasm bear several names, and as the variety of phraseology is apt to puzzle students, we pause to say that they are called sometimes swarm spores, or swarm cells, sometimes zoospores, and as individual pieces of protoplasm they are sometimes called protoplasts. The spore of a moss, or of a fern, is a small structure, endowed with no power of motion ; these swarm spores, as we have seen, have a power of motion ; the spore of the moss, or the fern, is capable by itself of reproducing the plant from which it has come, but these swarm spores are only repro- ductive after fusion with others, as we shall hereafter see. The name swarm cell is likely to mislead, because the Some Questions which they Suggest. X 1200 FIG. 3. 1.— Swarm Spore of Stemonitis fusca of the usual form when 8^ imming. n. Nucleus ; v. Vacuoles. 2. — Swarm Spore with three Bacilli adhering to expanded posterior extremity. 3. — A Swarm Spore with delicate pseudopodia, to one of which a Bacillus is attached. 4. — The same Swarm Spore. The Bacillus in the act of being drawn in and partly invested with a tube-like extension of the body surface. 5.— The same Bacillus contained in a long vacuole, and bulging out the sides of the Swarm Spore. 6. — The same Bacillus bent double after violent jerking move- ment of the Swarm Spore. (From Journ. Linn. Society, Botany, Yol. 25, p. 440, by permission of the Linnean Society and Mr. Lister.) 8 The Mycetozoa, and thing so called is protoplasm without any containing wall, and therefore does not answer to the notion of a cell as it exists in a beehive or in a police station. We shall therefore speak of them as swarm spores, though even that name seems to us to he far from felicitous. The next step in the life of these swarm spores is that FIG. 4. — Streaming plasmodium of Didymivm leucopus. (After Cienkowski.) they rapidly increase by bi-partition, i.e., splitting into two parts. An occasional phenomenon here sometimes inter- venes. At times the swarm spores assume a globular form, and become covered with a hard coating, and in that Some Questions which they Suggest. 9 condition are known as Microcysts. But from the wall of thia cyst the contents afterwards escape, and renew their movements. The swarm spores (whether after encystment or not) now enter upon a new stage. They gather together and fuse into masses of naked protoplasm, the swarm spores losing their individuality in a common mass. This mass is called a plasmodium. This plasmodium grows in bulk by the digestion of food, such as bits of fungus or dead wood, and attracts to, and unites with itself, other smaller plasmodia of the same species. In the Badhamia utricularis this plasmodium is yellow ; it is white in many species ; green or orange, or red or grey in other kinds. This plasmodium moves, sometimes through the substances of dead wood, in other cases on the surface, expanding in an irregular fan shape, and marked irregularly by streaks or veins, as may be seen in Fig. 4. It appears to move in search of its requisite food. The Badhamia is much devoted to fungi, and will extend itself over the surface of a fungus till it has devoured all its more delicate parts. In the substance of this plasmodium there arises a strong alternate movement of the more fluid protoplasm, a rush of circulation through the channels of the plasmodium. The granules move for a short time in the one direction, then pause, and then move in the opposite way. The strongest currents are indicated in Fig. 4 by the letters st. The plasmodia of different species differ much as regards size. In some genera they are very visible, and were known to some of the older botanists as Mesenterias, and io The Mycetozoa, and were believed to be a species of fungus. In some cases they can only be discovered by the microscope ; and, haunting the interstices of dead wood, they are rarely visible. Such are the plasmodia of Lycogala, Arcyria, and of some species of Trichia. Here, again, a phenomenon of encystment sometimes occurs. During drought the plasmodium may become quite dry and hard without losing vitality. In this stage the hard plasmodium bears the name of sclerotium. That of the Badhamia is quite horny, and orange-red in colour. On being wetted it will resume its old plasmodium form, and move as before. This conversion from an active into a passive condition of the plasmodium seems to be brought about by two con- ditions— the want of moisture and the want of food. This last fact is illustrated by a case in which a plasmodium placed on wet cotton wool, but without food, was found to turn into a sclerotium. The capacity for rest and awaken- ing is thus a protective one, and enables the organism to tide over a time of famine or drought. It is certainly a better plan even than the Lydian practice of playing games to forget hunger. From the plasmodium stage, whether broken into by a sclerotium condition or not, the organism, after a time, prepares for its next effort. It seeks some spot, on the surface of dead wood or leaves, sometimes a rather exposed and elevated position, at other times a sheltered one, and there forms sporangia, so that what before was a mass of more or less amorphous protoplasm has differentiated itself Some Questions which they Suggest. n into several parts, into delicate pedicels, the coating mem- brane of the sporangia, the hairs of the capillitium, and the spores — which in due time are to begin again the circuit of the life-history of the Badhamia, which is in all essen- tial features that of the whole group of myxies. The sporangia in the course of their development sometimes undergo a great change in colour ; for instance, the young sporangia of Comatricha are an ivory white, and they gradually change into a glossy black ; and the groups of little tree-like growths with their developing forms and varying colours, all gathered together within a few square inches, is a sight of great beauty. In the maturity of this sporangium stage of the organism it has lost all its powers of locomotion, it has lost its powers for digestion, and in its stationary condition devotes its energies to the reproduction of the species. The motion of the granules of the protoplasm continues to some extent until the forma- tion of the spores. Now, pausing here for a moment, and taking merely the outline of the facts as we have drawn it, we have surely abundance of matter for thought and surprise. Some seventy years ago, Fries, one of the first naturalists who grasped the series of changes through which these organisms pass, compared these changes to the metamorphoses of insects. We get, too, an inkling of the difficulty which naturalists have felt in assigning the myxies either to the animal or the vegetable kingdom : their locomotion and rapacious youth seem to shut them out from the plants ; their stationary condition and their production of sporangia from the animal world. 12 The Mycetozoa, and The life-history of our organism may be briefly summarized in the following diagram, hi which the circle shows the essential stages of life, and the outliers show occasional and non-essential stages. We wish to dwell a little more on some of the points of interest which arise from the brief narrative we have given, and from other facts which may be brought in relation to it, and in doing so, we shall find it best to consider the life-history of the organism in a different order from that previously used. We started with the sporangium, as the most easily grasped and the best known stage of life ; but we shall now ask you to consider the life-history bypassing from the simpler to the more complex Some Questions which they Suggest. 13 SWAKM SPORES.— And first let us revert to the swarm spores, those little bits of mere translucent protoplasm which escape from the spores of the myxie (Fig. 3) , leaving the shells of the spores, from which they have emerged, behind, as in like manner the spores leave behind them the membrane of the sporangium. We have seen that in some cases the myxies form a membrane or coat — as in the sporangium, the spores, the microcysts, and the sclerotium ; and it is probable that this membrane is in some, though comparatively few, cases of the same or a similar nature to the material of cell walls in the higher plants, i.e., is formed of cellulose. But what is to be noted is this, that these membranes are used only as protections ; they are allowed no part or lot in the vital actions of the organism, and, so soon as their protection is no longer wanted, they are cast off and allowed to perish. It is evident that the contained protoplast and not the containing membrane is the dominant partner in the concern. A swarm spore has been defined as " a mobile, ciliated, asexual, reproductive cell, destitute of all membrane," or, in other words, it is a piece of protoplasm without any covering membrane, which is produced without any sexual action, and which of itself possesses the powers of motion, of putting out cilia or hairs, and of joining in the repro- duction of the species to which it belongs. That all this should be true of a little bit of jelly is marvellous enough, and presents some of the mysteries of life in a very simple and condensed form. Swarm spores, in the sense of the preceding definition, 14 The Mycetozoa, and are common in both the great kingdoms of organized life. There is a whole group of protoplasts which, under the name of Monads, are reckoned to belong to the animal kingdom ; there is the group of somewhat larger organisms known as " AmoeboB " — a group of which a suspicion has sometimes been entertained that they are an immature form of other organisms ; there are the white particles of the blood which are almost, if not quite undistinguishable from Amcebce ; there are the swarm spores, whether belonging to the Algae, the Fungi, or the Myxomycetes; in all these cases the protoplasts are of the same kind, endowed with nuclei and vacuoles, capable of putting out cilia, and endowed with the power of motion and assimila- tion. To all appearances there is no essential difference between them, and yet, in point of fact, they are organisms as distinct as possible from one another hi their nature and their future careers. One thing marks off the swarm spores of the myxies from all other swarm spores which reproduce the organism ; they are reproductive only in conjunction. The swarm spore of an alga is capable by itself of reproducing an alga ; in the myxies, on the other hand, the swarm spores only reproduce when they have merged with their fellows and formed a plasmodium. This phenomenon of the union of a large number of individual swarm spores into a new and larger individual which carries forward the course of life is unique in the myxies, and distinguishes them broadly from all other known organisms. In all cases in which reproduction depends on swarm Some Questions which they Suggest. 15 spores it seems essential that there should be water enough for the swarm spores to live and move about in ; and, in the case of myxies, to enable them also by their movements to join together into a plasmodium. Nothing is known of their reproduction except in water. It would at first sight appear that this condition of their reproductive activity cannot be otherwise than in- convenient and restrictive, especially in the case of such myxies as, e.g., the Comatrichas, which often produce their sporangia on the upper sides of wood, or on the tops or sides of wooden posts. .But it is probable that a very little moisture is enough, and that in a shower of rain, or in a morning's dew, they find sufficient water for the swarm spores to live and unite. But we confess that the point seems to us to require further attention. Water being the medium in which most of the lowest organisms exist, it is generally thought that the doctrine of evolution involves this — that the earth has been peopled by migrations from the water : and the migrations ol amphibious animals from the one element to the other, have been dwelt on as assisting us to understand such migration. In this connection the cases of the myxies and of the mosses, and no doubt of other mainly terrestrial organisms which need water as a necessary condition to fertilization, are worthy of note. One of the most important functions of life still depends on the presence of the original medium of their lives. CELL THEOBY. — The swarm spore is, as we have said, a bit of naked protoplasm ; so is the plasmodium. Let us 1 6 The Mycetozoa, and consider briefly what is meant by the expression naked protoplasm. When in the seventeenth century the microscope was applied to vegetable tissues, especially by our countrymen Hooke and Grew, and by the Italian Malphigi, they were struck with the presence of small walled cavities in the fleshy parts of plants. These Hooke called cells, and Grew and Malphigi utricles or bladders. Hooke' s name has stuck to them, and plays a great part in botanical writings from his day to the present. We are accustomed to regard the cell division as the determining factor in growth, the mode of division providing, as it were, the form which the plant is to assume : and especially since the days of Schleiden and Schwann — when the cell came to be regarded as the structural unit in the growth of plants — the tracing of cell development, and the structure of the parts of the cell (especially the cell walls), and the behaviour of the cell, have been studied with the utmost care. Presently it came to be seen that the cell walls were inert and by no means the most important part of the structure, but that the slimy contents of the little box, which had been treated with scant atten- tion in the earlier stages of study, were, after all, the most remarkable part of the cell, and were to all appearance the basis of both animal and vegetable life. When attention was first called definitely to it in the vegetable kingdom it was termed protoplasm, by Mohl ; when first accurately observed in animals it was named sarcode by Dujardin ; and by-and-by it was found that protoplasm and sarcode were one and the same thing. Then instances were Some Questions which they Suggest. 17 found in which small masses of protoplasm lived and moved without any cell walls at all, but so firmly was the notion of the cell rooted in the minds of many physiologists, that these naked pieces of protoplasm have often been called naked cells, a most confusing term as it seems to us, for it is like calling a man with nothing on " a naked great coat." Another name, and a much more convenient one, is protoplast. The accepted cell theory received something like a shock when the life-history of the myxies came to be carefully studied. " All the phenomena," said Cienkowski, in the year 1863, " which are observed in plasmodia are calculated to force the observer from the accustomed path of safety to those of doubt. The fundamental conception of morpho- logical investigation of the cell leaves us wholly in the lurch in the case of plasmodia. Neither cell membrane, nor nucleus, nor other histological elements can be established in this case by the most benevolent interpretation of the facts, and, twist the cell theory as we may, it certainly cannot be fitted to the naked flowing protoplasm of the Myxomycetes." Nuclei, however, have since been found in plasmodia. The cell walls of ordinary plants are composed of a peculiar substance known as cellulose, and within these the protoplasm of the cell is contained, with all that may be contained in the protoplasm — the nuclei, the chlorophyll, the colouring, and the oily matter, &c. The cell is thus a highly organized unit, and it is, moreover, capable of carrying on most marvellous operations, physical and chemical. 1 8 The Mycetozoa, and An organism which commences life in the simple form of a piece of protoplasm, in many cases produces cell walls and rests in these, and thus builds a home for itself in which it lives and labours. But in the case of the Myxomycetes this does not occur, or occurs only very exceptionally, and all the actions which these organisms perform, and all the beautiful forms which they assume, are reached without ever forming a cell wall or constituting a true cell, except in the spore itself. In these actions and in these forms we see the capacities of simple and naked protoplasm. The extreme simplicity of the mechanism seems to bring to the mind more powerfully the inherent powers of the worker. NUCLEI. — In the history of the theory of cells it was early discovered that there is in each cell a smaller structure called the nucleus, which was originally supposed to be a vesicle in the cell, but has been now ascertained to be a portion of a special substance distinct from protoplasm. The nucleus has been found to exercise something like a dominant influence on the destiny of the cell — " all the formative and nutritive processes seem to be dependent upon it," and, moreover, it plays an important part in each process of cell division — i.e., in some or all cases of the division of the cell the nucleus undergoes a like division. This division occurs in three ways, of which two only need now be noticed. One of these modes of division is very simple. The nucleus gets constricted in the middle, the connecting link grows slighter and slighter, and breaks, and we have two nuclei where before we had one. Some Questions which they Suggest. 19 The other method by which nuclei divide is a highly complicated and remarkable process, known often by the long name of Karyokinesis — i.e., the movement of the kernel. In this process certain polar bodies appear, round which the constituents of the cell gather, and the nucleus assumes a curious spindle-like shape before the division actually occurs. Now, in the myxies, we have, as we know, no true cells with cell walls, except, perhaps, in the spores themselves, but we have protoplasts, in the form of swarm spores, pro- vided with nuclei, as shown in Fig. 3. In the plasmodium, too, we have nuclei, and it has been supposed that the original number of nuclei in the plasmodium corresponded with the number of the constituent protoplasts, but it has been shown that the nuclei increase vastly in number, and that this division and multiplication of nuclei takes place in all the stages of the swarm cells, of the plasmodium and of the sporangium. The question whether this multiplica- tion of nuclei in the myxies at the various stages takes place by simple division or by the complicated process of Karyokinesis is one which has been carefully investigated, although the results can hardly as yet be considered as conclusive. They appear to be, first, that Karyokinesis is the method pursued in the swarm spores when they divide, and again at a later stage in the sporangium shortly before the formation of spores; and, secondly, that the multiplication of nuclei in the plasmodium is sometimes accomplished by Karyokinesis, but probably, also, by direct division. 20 The Mycetozoa, and POWEKS OF PROTOPLASM. — What are the powers with which the simple naked protoplasm of the Myxomycetes is found to be endowed ? It is endowed with — (a) The power of motion ; (6) The power of seizing and digesting food ; (c) A capacity for excreting what is not suited for retention by the organism ; (d) A capacity to perform chemical work ; ( e) A capacity to assume and change colour ; (/) The power of attracting and being attracted by and uniting with other protoplasm of the same species ; (g) A converse power of avoiding the protoplasm of other species ; (/(.) A power to assume a definite external shape, and to divide into spores and non-spores ; (i) A capacity to enter into a state of suspended vitality. " Life never can arise out of or depend on organization," wrote John Hunter; and unless naked protoplasm be regarded as organized, his remark seems to be verified and proved past dispute. Let us consider some of these faculties more in detail. MOTION. — The motions exhibited by the protoplasm of myxies are of the most varied kind. We have already mentioned the jumping motion of the swarm spores and the crawling action of the plasmodium : now we will ask our readers to turn again to Fig. 4, and to allow us to describe what is seen in a crawling plasmodium under a microscope. Some Questions which they Suggest. 21 The plasmodium is differentiated into two parts: the larger and interior part contains minute oil granules, or microsomata ; the external layer is free from granules, and is perfectly transparent like glass or water. The darker and granular interior protoplasm is known as the endoplasm; the hyaline superficial layer is known as the ectoplasm. Fig. 4 is on too small a scale to exhibit this difference distinctly. There are two motions here to be observed, though they are not disconnected with one another : first, the pulsating motion of currents of protoplasm ; and, secondly, the advance of the entire mass of protoplasm. Under a microscope currents are seen to be established in the endoplasm, generally up or down the lines of advance of the plasmodium ; the letters st in Fig. 4 indicate some of these currents. The granules stream in one direction ; then pause, from sixty to ninety seconds (in the case of healthy plasmodia) ; then the current turns and streams in the opposite direction. These streams sometimes unite and sometimes divide. It is familiar that protoplasm when enclosed in cells often exhibits movements, as in the well- known case of the Chara, but then the movements are naturally constrained by the cell walls ; in the free protoplasm of the myxies no such restraint exists. If the peripheral edge of an advancing plasmodium be examined, there will be found in advance of the granular endoplasm a strip of the colourless and perfectly transparent ectoplasm, of which we have already spoken ; it runs like the foreshore along the coast of the body. Into this from 22 The Mycetozoa, and time to time a granule will be seen to advance, and then another granule, and so on till the line of the land has been pushed out into the foreshore, and the foreshore itself is moved forward into the sea. In this way the front line of the whole plasmodium advances, and as the rear of the plasmodium is drawn back in the line of advance as the front line is pushed forward, the whole body of the plas- modium gradually changes its place and moves forward. It is a very striking thing to watch these forward move- ments of the granules. You seem to see in a minute and most intimate form the locomotion of living things ; and, moreover, you perceive an internal movement of part, resulting in a movement in space of the whole organism. Mr. Spencer has said that " we have as yet no clue to the mode in which molecular movement is transformed into the movement of masses in animals." Does not the motion which we have described offer, if not a clue, yet a visible example of such transformation ? Be this as it may, the mystery of motion remains just the same ; there is the same antinomy between sense and reason — the one says that there is motion, the other that it is impossible. " Io dird cosa incredibile e yera." It must not be supposed that it is only on the surface of dead wood or leaves that the plasmodia of myxies move. Sometimes, and especially under the influence of cold, they retreat downwards, and the Fuligo, a species which lives on tan and is known as the flowers of tan, will, under this influence, disappear from the surface of a heap and retire to the bottom of it. Cold or other unsuitable Some Questions which they Suggest. 23 conditions seem to cause them sometimes to retreat into the wood to appear again under more favourable circum- stances. Some plasmodia inhabit the interior of dead wood, and only appear on the surface for the purpose of fruiting : in the search for a suitable home for reproduction it has been thought that they move away from damper to drier spots, and they certainly often produce their sporangia inthe dry air and in high positions. It has been thought also that light has a tendency to make the plasmodia ascend and darkness to descend. Sometimes a plasmodium will ascend a tree or a post for a foot or more, and a species known as Lycogala epidendron is said always to affect the highest point of the substance on which it rests. It is by no means infrequent for plasmodia to leave the dead wood on which they have been living and to ascend the stalks of flowering plants, or to spread over mosses, and often we have been surprised at the distances travelled by plasmodia in a few hours. The appearance, we may remark in passing, presented by the sporangia of delicate myxies on the leaves of mosses or blades of grass is sometimes very beautiful. Plasmodia, as we have said, sometimes move in an upward, sometimes in a downward direction ; in a seed, as we know, these two tendencies are separated, and the radicle tends to grow in the direction of gravity, and the plumule against it ; in the myxies it would seem as if the same protoplasm at one time had the one tendency, and at another time the other. Perhaps, in passing, we may observe that the fact that plants and trees for the most 24 The Mycetozoa, and part grow upward — i.e., against the force of gravity — is one worth a good deal of thinking about, and when we look at the mass of fluid and solid matter raised every year, especially in the springtime, against the constant operation of the force of gravity, we get a notion of the magnitude of a force exerted by plants, to which we can assign no other origin than life, and give no other name than that of a living force. It has been found with regard to the plasmodium of the flowers of tan that it has a curious tendency to move against the flow of water ; thus, if one end of a piece of filter paper be placed in a vessel filled with water and the other on the table, so that the water flows downward, the Fuligo will move up the paper, and if the paper be so arranged that the water shall move up the paper, the Fuligo will move down. Some observers believe that the myxie takes only such food as comes in its way ; Mr. Lister believes that it uses its vibrating cilia to detect food ; whilst others think they have observed that food exercises an attraction on plasmodia and influences their movements ; thus, to return to the flowers of tan, a piece of tan or of wood steeped in tan has been seen, according to some observations, to induce the plasmodium to draw itself towards it, and that without reference to its position as regards the force of gravity. There seems no reason to doubt the accuracy of these observations. Here, then, we see in the primitive form of naked protoplasm that search after food which exercises so enormous an influence on the whole animal and vegetable Some Questions which they Suggest. 25 world as well as in the social affairs of man. How, one cannot help asking, is the plasmodium made aware .of the proximity of its appropriate food ? Has it some rudimen- tary perception — some common sense, of which sight, and smell, and taste are only more specialized forms ? What the plasmodium does in the equally near presence of two equally attractive morsels we do not know ; but we do not believe that it would starve. • Sunshine is, again, a condition which seems to exert an influence on the movements of plasmodia. If a glass, on which the network of a plasmodium ia spread, be partly exposed to the sunlight, it hag been observed to withdraw to the shaded parts, and yet when the time comes for the sporangia to be produced it would seem in some species as if there was a movement towards surfaces exposed to light. But, according to the observations of Mr. Lister, light apart from direct sunshine does not affect the movements of plasmodia. The plasmodium has been found to be sensitive not only to sunlight, to dampness and dryness, to heat and cold, but to the influence of chemical substances : the weak solutions of some chemicals having been observed to render it more fluid, whilst stronger solutions of the same substances have made it contract or perish in parts. This sensitiveness on the part of the plasmodia to so many influences must, it would appear, render very delicate the conditions under which alone myxies can succeed in the struggle for existence. Furthermore, it would appear that in the selection of places for the production of the sporangia 26 The Mycetozoa, and they have to select situations affording enough atmospheric exposure to ripen the spores, and enough moisture to enable the swarm spores to swim and move about, and it is no doubt due to the width of the dispersal of the spores that they find these situations, which are, one would suppose, comparatively few. It is probably from this delicacy of the requisite conditions for success that plasmodia are not unfrequently seen to fail in the struggle of life. They will sometimes reach the surface, and commence the formation of the sporangium walls and spores, and then fog off and decay, without ever reaching maturity or producing sound spores. The observations with regard to the influence of heat, drought, light, and darkness, on plasmodia may be correct, but it does not follow from them that the needs of the organism dependent on the stage it has reached, or on other circumstances unknown to us, may not also operate on their motions. We know that the sporangia are pro- duced on the surface, but we hardly know whether the organism seeks the surface when it is time to develop sporangia, or develops sporangia when it reaches the surface. NEGATIVE GEOTROPISM. —It is not only in the motion of the plasmodium as a whole, but in the motion of its parts when it develops sporangia, that we observe an upward movement. Sometimes, no doubt, the sporangia are developed on the under surface or the side of the wood on which they grow. We are inclined to think that different species prefer different situations for the production of Some Questions which they Suggest. 27 their sporangia, and that no one law is applicable to them all ; but in all cases the sporangia appear to stand vertically to the plane on which they grow. If we examine the trunk of an oak, we find an elaborate structure of hard parts which maintains the tree in its upward growth, and by the force of cohesion resists and overcomes the force of gravity drawing it downwards. If we examine the stalk of even a delicate flowering plant, we find that it is constituted of cells, and that the cell walls, as well as the fibres, afford to the stem a certain amount of support ; but in the naked protoplasm of the myxie we have no woody tissue, no cell wall, and yet this, too, lifts itself away from the earth and towards the sun and the air. We then see that the upward motion of plants does not depend on cell walls, but is an inherent, an original capacity of some protoplasm. We can easily appreciate the advantage which this upward tendency gains for the organism, for it lifts it into the air and exposes it to the influence of light. We know the great results on the surface of the earth of this so- called negative geotropism. If all plants had crawled along the ground like the thallus of Marchantia or the hyphoa of some fungi, we should have had a keener com- petition for surface space even than now exists, and we should have lost the beauty with which the earth's surface is clothed. In the myxie lifting up its sporangia, we can see in the small and in its simplest and most primitive form, the existence of the same power which enables the sequoia or the eucalyptus to lift themselves to such enormous 28 The Mycefozoa, and heights above the ground. But of this power, this im- pulse, this faculty, this gift of resisting the force of gravity, and the attraction of the earth — what shall we say ? what account can we give ? We can only keep silence. CAPTURING FOOD. — The habits of swarm spores in the pursuit or capture of their food have been very successfully observed by Mr. Lister. In the case of Perichcena corticalis he observed a swarm spore with four vacuoles, each stuffed with from six to eight bacilli ; and in the course of twelve minutes he saw four bacilli drawn in by the projecting parts, or pseudopodia of the swarm spore. In the case of Didymium (or Chondrioderma) di forme, he observed that the capture of a bacillus is sometimes effected by pseudopodia. More often, a funnel-shaped aperture was formed in the posterior part of the swarm spore, and when a bacillus was unwary enough to enter, it was enclosed by a folding over of the lips of the funnel. The bacilli thus captured were seen to dissolve in the vacuoles, but no refuse matter was observed to be rejected ; probably the whole bacillus was of absolutely digestible matter. On another occasion, Mr. Lister observed a swarm spore come upon a group of motionless bacilli. It spread itself out so as to cover four of them, and in about two minutes resumed its former shape, and crept away, carrying two bacilli in its vacuole. In the case of Stemonitis fusca, he observed the capture by pseudopodia of a bacillus so large that when drawn up into the body of the swarm spore it forced the swarm spore to bulge out on either side. On this followed a violent jerking motion of the swarm spore, which Some Questions which they Suggest. 29 frequently occurs after the ingestion of food, and in a few minutes the bacillus was bent double, and the vacuole decreased in size. These observations of Mr. Lister seem to prove that the view of De Bary that the swarm spores take in nutriment only in a fluid state cannot be upheld. These processes are depicted in Fig. 3, which is repro- duced by the permission of the Council of the Linnean Society and of Mr. Lister. It is a curious fact that where a plasmodium on its march meets with a microcyst of its own kind, it has been observed to commit an act of cannibalism — to treat it as if a foreign body, and to enclose it in a vacuole, and then absorb it. Probably the presence of the mem- brane prevented fusion until it was removed by an act of digestion. REJECTION OF MATTER. — Mr. Lister has been equally successful in observing the method pursued by the plas- modium in the rejection of undigested matter. He fed, and I am afraid overfed, the plasmodia of Badhamla utricularis on thin slices of fungus, and when a plasmodium had become loaded with food material, many of the large vacuoles became charged with undigested matter, which assumed the appearance of a dark ball, and he " repeatedly saw these vacuoles push out as bubbles to the surface of the plasmodium and burst, discharging a cloud of refuse, consisting of fragments of starch and broken fungus hyphoe, into the water." But when the plasmodium creeps over glass, he observed the rejected matter, with a certain amount of plasmodium substance, to be left " on each side 30 The Mycetozoa, and of the retreating veins, leaving a mass of the network after the plasmodium has withdrawn." In other cases rejected matter, particles of starch or spores of algse, or other things which have been taken up by the plasmodium, are found thrown aside in the hollow cavity of the foot of the sporangium, or even amongst the contents of the sporangium itself. SPECIES. — That true species exist in the myxies is doubted by no one who has studied them, and the constancy of many forms from distant places strongly supports this view. But it may be permitted to doubt whether the range of variation possible to one and the same species is yet sufficiently known to enable us to rely with security upon the whole of the present classification. In the progeny of a common parent when under cultivation, great diversities have been observed in the character of the calcareous walls of the sporangium, in the thickness of the capillitium, and even in its presence or absence, in the colour of the sporangium walls, the capillitium, and even of the plasmodium. Until, therefore, more species have been subjected to observations under culture, or more life-histories have been exactly traced, we must be prepared to regard the specific distinc- tions as open to revision. Mr. Massie considers that he has found cases of hybridism in myxies ; but this, perhaps, requires confirmation. Whatever be the limits of variation within a species, the great fact of specific distinction seems to admit of no doubt, and one of the most interesting faculties of these pieces of naked protoplasm is the power of knowing Some Questions which they Suggest. 31 other pieces of protoplasm of their own species from the apparently similar protoplasm of other species. According to the concurrent testimony of three of the chief observers of these organisms, Cienkowski, De Bary, and Lister, " union never takes place between plasmodia of different species." "Branches of different plasmodia," says Cienkowski, " crawl near one another, and mutually embrace one another, without showing the least trace of any fusion." The merging of two protoplasms has been seen under the microscope. " There appeared to be no mutual attraction until the two plasmodia were only separated by a distance of 40 p.. When a lobe from one was pushed out towards its companion, the intervening swarm cells were thrust aside, and they came into contact; the hyaloplasm (ectoplasm) of each blended at a single point, and then a stream of granular matter was seen to pass, then with a return flow of the streaming in the layer of the two, the channel was widened, and a gush of its contents poured into the smaller one, when union was com- plete and the system of circulation became common to both." It may be permissible to adduce another instance of organisms of a very simple character to illustrate at once the attractive force of members of one species on their fellows, and of the capacity for selection which makes them reject the members of other, though very similar species. The case we are about to mention relates to two species of the genus Cutleria, algae of a low type. 32 TJie Mycetozoa, and To the receptive ova of Cutleria adspersa, Falkenburg added actively mobile spermatozoids of the nearly allied species Cutleria multifida ; so like the other species adspersa that they can only be distinguished by small external differences. " In this case the spermatozoids, as seen by the microscope, wandered aimlessly about, and finally died •without having fertilized the ova of the allied species of algas. ... A very different result was obtained as soon as a single fertilizable ovum of the same species was intro- duced into the vessel containing the spermatozoids. After a few moments, all the spermatozoids from all sides gathered around this ovum, even when the latter was several centimetres distant from the place at which the latter were chiefly collected." These instances impress the mind with the fundamental character of the fact of species ; whether it has arisen from variation and selection or not, it is a fact that goes down to the very foundations and rudiments of organic life, and even there influences the life and habits of the organism. As we see it in the myxies, it precedes the origination of the sexual distinction, it precedes any differentiation of parts or organs, it precedes the development of the cellular tissue. It may, perhaps, be said to precede the division into the animal and vegetable kingdoms. The distinction can exist in small naked bits of protoplasm, and each of these, indistinguishable in structure as the protoplasts of some of the species are to any organs or instruments which we possess, has the power of distinguishing between these indistinguishable masses, of attracting and being attracted Some Questions ivhich they Suggest. 33 by those of its own kind, and of remaining indifferent and neutral towards those of other kinds. That the pollen of an oak should not act on a daisy seems to us natural ; that the naked protoplasm of these minute organisms should be endowed with this selective capacity does seem very remarkable, and may well make one pause and think. Is it possible, one inclines to ask, to feel sure that all the various species of myxies have been produced from one original form by the force of a natural selection ? How can the doctrine of the fittest be applied as between two naked protoplasts, and if applied only to the later stages of growth, how has it reacted on the earlier stages ? CLASSIFICATION. — We now propose to deal with the classi- fication of these organisms, and this will afford us an opportunity of describing more in detail some parts of their structure. The value of characters for the purposes of generic and specific distinctions is a subject well worth consideration, for it often reveals unexpected facts in the correlation of parts, startling one by dividing organisms which, at first sight, seem nearly akin. Colour is for the most part of little value as a distinction in flowering plants, for we know how widely colour will vary in the same species. " Color," says Linnaeus, " in eadem specie mire ludit : hinc in differentia nil valet;" and yet in the pimpernel, the blue and red forms differing in scarcely any other character are true and not interchangeable species ; in the algae the presence of colours other than green is found a funda- 34 The Afycetozoa, and mental character in their classification, and in like manner we shall find in the myxies that the colour of the spores has been found a character of real value. What is the meaning, some one may ask, of the value of a character for classificatory purposes ? It means that the presence of that character affords a safe line of cleavage ; 1 FIG-. 5. — Cribraria aurantiaca x about sixty diameters. that those plants or animals which are on one side of the line will be found to agree in other characters — will have a likeness in many points of that kind which creates what we call in human beings a family likeness ; whilst those organisms which stand on the other side of the line will be found dissimilar from the first family group. For instance, if we gather the common white dead nettle Some Questions which they Suggest. 35 and observe its stalk, we shall find that it is four-sided, so that a section across it is a square. Now this characteristic might easily be supposed to be one of little consequence, and yet, in fact, it will be found to be a true and valuable one, and that all plants with a square stalk and lipped flowers will be found to have a four-lobed ovary and four nuts on the bottom of the calyx, and these belong to the family of the Labiatse. If now, on the other hand, we count the number of the stamens in plants, and use this character as the foundation of our classes, we shall break up this natural family with its square stems, and shall relegate some genera, such as Salvia, to one class, while the great mass of the family go to another, and, what is perhaps worse, these exiled genera find themselves put into a class together with plants with which they have no real connection or sympathy— with the Enchanter's Nightshade and the Duck- weed. This form of the stem then has a high value as co-existent with a general likeness of structure ; the number of the stamens may vary in plants closely akin, and agree in plants widely different, and therefore has a low systematic value. The variations of form of our domesticated dogs are generally held to be of no value even as specific distinctions ; but the difference of the markings in the spores of myxies is held by those who have most studied their classification to be often a safe difference as between two species. It is only by experience that we can tell the systematic value of a difference — i.e., by observing how far it is correlated with other differences of structure or life-history, and D2 36 The Mycetozoa, and whether the difference does, or does not, lose itself in a series of easy gradations between the two extreme forms. And yet there are some minds whose thoughts so run along the lines of creative thought that, as if by a happy intuition, they are able to seize these crucial points which are of real value, and to reject those that are useless. Such is the mind of the true naturalist. Some slight difference exists amongst naturalists as to the extent to which the group of the Myxomycetes is to be carried — viz., whether they shall include or exclude a small group of organisms about to be mentioned, and as to the way in which the two terms Mycetozoa and Myxomycetes shall be used in classification. The following table may be useful as indicating the primary and secondary divisions of the group, which we shall accept in its widest significa- tion :— Example. 'Withagegateplasmodium, Acrasiece 3 uiciyosieuum. 'Exosporese, "\ (a) spores borne ex- j Ceratomyxa. Mycetozoa With a fused plasmo-. ternally. J dium, Myxomycetes Endosporese ^ spores borne in- j Arcyna. | ^ ternally. J (a) NOTE. — To avoid confusion, it maybe well to state that in the fore- going table we have followed the classification of De Bary — that Van Tieghem would write " Myxomycetes " as the name of the whole class where we have written "Mycetozoa," and would write "Myxomycetes proprement dits" where we simply write " Myxomycetes " ; and that Mr. Lister uses ' ' Mycetozoa " for what we have called "Myxomycetes," and so excludes the Acrasiece from the Mycetozoa. Some Questions which they Suggest. 37 Of these classes, it may at once be observed that the endosporous Myxomycetes are by far the largest, and that the species at present known of the other groups are very few in number, and, accordingly, in the sketch which we have given of the life-history of a myxie we have dealt only with the changes in an endosporous myxie. It now becomes needful to call attention to the points in which the smaller classes differ from the dominant one. In the ordinary myxie, as we have seen, the swarm spores effect a true fusion and build up one mass of proto- plasm. In the Acrasiese, on the contrary, the swarm spores do not fuse or coalesce together, but only aggregate together, retaining a power of separating from and moving on one another. This is the first and broadest division of the group of organisms. - ^,.^ The next character- istic which has been used for the classifica- tion of the group is the position of the spores in the organism. Hitherto we have only mentioned spores as contained within the sporangium ; but there are one or perhaps two species very different in many Fi' their greatest length, the ^ ,;--. j _ ^...^ one lying on the other ; $A i then each of the two parts T, ' ' ; : \\ £ divides into two other parts and again each Of _Fl»- W.— Ceratomyza mucida. Development of Spores x 160. the four divides into two (After Famintzin and Woronin.) parts, so that the original swarm spore is now represented by eight protoplasts all lying together ; these then separate, develop cilia, and act as free swarm spores. Fig. 18 represents the eight protoplasts lying crosswise together, before their final separation. We are bound to add that this peculiar process has not been noticed by Mr. and Miss Lister in their numerous observations on Ceratomyxa, nor by our- 5 8 The Mycetozoa, and selves in our more limited ones, and the matter appears therefore to require further enquiry. ACBASIE*:.— We have already indicated the existence of a small group of organisms differing from the ordinary myxies in the fact that the swarm-spores, though they gather together and act together, never fuse into a single mass or constitute a true plasmodium. Three species have been studied and described with some care, and their history is so curious that we hope our readers will not weary if we dwell upon it a little. The swarm spores are like those of true myxies, and have the same amoeboid movements, but without the dancing move- ment with flagellffi. These swarm-spores meet and, as if by common consent, set up a centre (After Famintziu and they tend, the long arms or Woronin.) straggling parts of the original gathering coming more and more to the central point. The course of growth in Acrasis granulata (one of the organisms in question) has been described by Van Tieghem. When the swarm cells have gathered together, they touch one another, and form a cellular mass. This mass grows upwards in a conical shape. The cells of the axis, somewhat longer than they are broad, assume a cellular membrane, and constitute a foot, buttressed up by other cells. The exterior cells move upwards on this foot, Some Questions which they Suggest. 59 clothe themselves with a cellu- lar membrane, heap themselves together at the summit of the structure, and thus form a chaplet of spores. In Dictyostelium mucoroides a very similar course of growth has been observed. The mass which collects at the central point differentiates itself into a column, a membraneous veil to the column, and a residual mass surrounding the column. As the column grows upward this residual mass does the same, and thus withdrawing its lower part from the ground it wanders up the stalk and forms a cap or crown which turns into spores without a trace of capillitium. Fig. 19 shows in section the nearly adult form of this or- ganism. A still more singular history is presented by a third species, the Poli/spliondulium violaceum. c> "Remains of Membrane broken by growth of the Here the early stages corre- Sporangium. (After ,J3re- spond with those already de- feld>) scribed, the plasmodium, or more accurately the pseudo- 19.— Dictyostelium 6o The Mycetozoa, and plasmodinm, gathers itself towards a central mass as shown in Fig. 20 ; the central mass again differentiates itself into a column and a surrounding mass of protoplasm which clings round the attenuated central column, as shown Fia. 20. — Pseudo-plasmodium of Polysphondylium violaceum. (After Brefeld.) x about 25. in Fig. 21 ; it then begins to narrow in at intervals along this column, and breaks up into discontinuous lengths with intervening nodes, as shown in Fig. 22 (a). Some Questions which they Suggest. 61 From these discontinuous pieces of protoplasm there are subsequently developed in the top of the column a terminal head, and on the successive lower stages of FIG. 21.— Immature FIG. 22. — Polysphondylium Sporangium of Poly violaceum. a and * successive sphondy Hum violaceum. stages in ripening of Sporan- (After Brefeld.) gium. (After Brefeld.) 62 The Mycetozoa, and the column, successive whorls of stalka, each carrying a lateral and smaller head, as shown in Fig. 22 (6) ; each of these heads finally ripens and breaks up into spores. The life-history of all these Acrasiece presents many very curious points ; it seems to bring before us the fact that separate protoplasts, without ever uniting into a plas- modium or ever becoming part of a single organism, may nevertheless acquire as it were the social instinct and live for the good not of themselves but of the whole organism, and for that purpose may submit to a divi- sion of labour ; for whilst some of the protoplasts assume the function of only supporting their fellows, the others avail themselves of the support, raise themselves from the level of their original surface, and devote themselves to the fucction of reproduction. And, moreover, certain aberrant and sessile forms of the Dictyostelium seem to show that this elevation of a portion of the protoplasm is not necessary to reproduction, though it may well be that the greater exposure to the ripening influences of the atmosphere and the sun may render it beneficial to the organism, and so more than compensate for the withdrawing from the function of reproduction of a certain part of the protoplasm, and applying it to the purposes of support alone. UNICELLUIAB OBGANISMS. — Leaving now the subject of classification, and of the aberrant forms of myxies, we return to the principal group. We have already dwelt upon the fact that the myxies show all their vital powers and all their capacity for development without the forma- tion of a true cell-wall, or undergoing division by septa Some Questions which they Suggest. 63 formed in cells. It seems scarcely possible for organisms living in the air to attain any considerable size or com- plexity of form without the support of cell- walls, and without the formation of vessels which assist the transfer of nourishment from one part to the other. But with plants inhabiting the water — a medium of nearly the same specific gravity as the plant — and drawing their nourishment directly from this medium, the case is different, and the possibility of such organisms attaining con- siderable proportions and complexity of outward form is shown by a considerable group of Alga, for which there has recently been formed a class called Multinueleatce, which includes four orders with considerable differences amongst themselves, but which all agree in possessing no cell-walls, and, under ordinary conditions, no septum dividing one part from the other. Each organism is thus a single protoplast. These unicellular organisms, as they are often called, show a capacity for developing a vast diversity of forms, many of them very beautiful, and many of them strangely mimetic of the forms of higher plants — of the mosses, the lycopods, the conifers, the cactus tribe, and the hymenomycetous fungi. Some of these organisms reproduce sexually, others asexually ; some attain very considerable size — as in the genus Caulerpa, a beautiful form of marine alga. "Nature," says Mr. Geo. Murray, speaking of Caulerpa, " appears to have executed in the form of this genus a tour de force in exhibiting the pos- sibilities of the siphoneous thallus— in showing that it ia possible for a unicellular organism to display the varied 64 The Mycetozoa, and beauties of outward form characteristic of highly organised types, to attain by means of a lattice- work of cross beams within the cell body that mechanical support effected by transverse septa and separate differentiated cellular structures for other alga and for the higher plants." A consideration of these structures impresses the mind very forcibly with the vast inherent capacities of proto- plasm. Nature had two courses open to her, if we may so speak, as to the mode of dealing with protoplasm- endowed as it is with its varied capacities — each of which she has pursued to a certain extent. In the one course of development the single protoplast has remained a unit, and has hi this undivided condition performed all the needful work of the plant. In the other course, the protoplasm has been broken up into detached parts by the cell- walls, and thus a division of labour has been brought about or promoted which has led to the highest results, and left the unicellular organisms far in the rear. The former course of development is seen in the myxies, and, as we have shown, reached a great development both as regards size, form, and function, in such algae as Caulerpa. The other course of development is seen of course in nearly all the other members of the vegetable kingdom, and reaches its highest results in such vast and complex organisms as our forest trees. One other observation naturally arises from the con- sideration of these unicellular forms. We are wont to trace the origin of the differentiation of parts — of the branches and leaves and so forth — to the divisions of the Some Questions which they Suggest. 65 cell of the growing points in plants. We now see a differentiation of parts arising without any such cell to divide, and without any septa to mark off the future organ. The protoplasm is the master: the cell-walls are its humble servants, and we have another illustration of how the contents are apt to rule the containing structure, and the soft to rule and mould the hard. The divisions of the cell-walls are a secondary and subordinate phenomenon. ISOMORPHISM. — We crave our readers' leave to return to the fact already mentioned, that unicellular organisms have a tendency to imitate the forms of cellular organisms, and that whereas we have in the series and chain of cellular plants such marked outward forms as those of the moss, the lycopod, the conifer, the cactus, &c., we have in the chain of unicellular plants very similar outward forms, so that we seem to have two chains branching off from one another, with links here and there which closely corre- spond with one another. This phenomenon is one found frequently to present itself to the attention of the philo- sophical systematist, and like all the phenomena of Nature is well worth pondering. It has been stated very forcibly by Mr. Brady, in respect to the Foraminifera, a group of organisms deeply studied by him : — " A purely artificial classification is ill-adapted to the conditions presented by a class of organisms like the Foraminifera, largely made up of groups of which the modifications run in parallel lines. This ' isomorphism ' exists not merely between a single series in one of the larger divisions, and a single series in 66 The Mycetozoa, and another, but often amongst several series, even of the same family. It not unfrequently happens that a member of one group presents a greater similarity to its isomorph in another group with which it has no relationship than it does to any other member of its own group. Take a familiar illustration : suppose the fingers of the two hands to represent the modifications (species) of two such parallel types of Foraminifera : the thumb of one hand resembles more closely the thumb of the other hand than it does any other of the fingers of its own." A comparison of the marsupial quadrupeds of Australia and South America with the placental mammals of the rest of the world presents another series of these isomorphs. There are certain Marsupials which seem set over against the Garni vora, others against the Eodents, and so forth. Mr. Murray, in his "Geographical Distribution of Mam- mals," has figured on the same page two animals, one a small placental mouse, and the other a small marsupial mouse, and their outward forms are almost indistinguishable ; and yet the common parent of the two forms must be sought, according to our present notions of phylogeny, before the separation of the two great groups of Quadrupeds. Another instance of isomorphs occurs in the two parallel groups of the Iridece and the Liliacece. Every one knows how closely similar in outward appearance are the purple crocus of the spring and the purple colchicum of the autumn ; and yet the crocus is more nearly related to the yellow iris than to the colchicum ; and the colchicum is more Some Questions which they Suggest. 67 akin to the garlic or the Butchers' broom than to the crocus. It seems as if when two lines of development started from a common point, they sometimes carried in gremio the necessity of development along the same lines, and the production of like form at corresponding points in the divergent courses. THE INDIVIDUAL AND THE GENERATION. — But it is time to return from the long digression into which we have been led by the unicellular plants. If we consider our- selves or any other higher organism, whether animal or vegetable, and ask what is the individual and what is the generation, we feel at first quite able to reply. We know that the answers to these questions, when we seek to pursue the enquiry to the bottom, involve other profound questions, perhaps, insoluble difficulties, but on the surface the answers are easy. If now we turn to the myxies and ask what is the individual, the answer seems attended with no small difficulty. In the swarm spore stage each separate proto- plast is the individual ; each is capable of separate motion, of digestion, and of multiplication. If we turn to the plasmodium stage, the individual appears to be the entire plasmodium, built up as it has been by the union of a great number of protoplasts, and not always the descendants of the same parents ; if we take the sporangium stage, and consider especially those cases in which each sporangium stands on its own hypothallus, separated from the hypothallus of its neighbours, the sporangium seems to F2 68 The Mycetozoa, and represent the individual. The life-circle of the myxie thus exhibits a curious alternation of individualism and col- lectivism— an harmonious solution of the problem raised by the claims of the two principles which are found in conflict hi other organisms and states of society. DEATH AND EEPRODUOTION. — We know that of late years, many interesting theories and questions have been pro- pounded in relation to the great fact of Death, and that the entrance of Death into the great chain of organic life has been watched and studied. One view, to which Professor Weismann has given great prominence, is that unicellular organisms possess an unending duration, or, in other words, that though susceptible of death by external force — as, e.g., by fire — there is no natural death, but on the contrary a potential immortality. He considers death, therefore, to have come in with the rnulticellular organisms, and to take place, as he says, " because a worn-out tissue cannot for ever renew itself, and because a capacity for increase by means of cell division is not everlasting but finite." Another view put forward (not by Weismann but by Gotte) holds that death is always connected with re- production, and is a consequence of the latter in the lower animals. Lastly may be noticed another view, also propounded by Gotte, that the first form of death is to be found in the phenomenon known as encystment, which occurs when an organism which has been alive and exhibiting the phenomena of motion becomes stationary, develops a cyst Some Questions which they Suggest. 69 or coat around it, and after a period of rest and suspended animation again revives when the favouring circumstances occur. We thus state some of the views with regard to death because we think that it will be found that the life-history of the myxies throws some light upon them. Let us, however, first make these remarks : that in the higher organisms we know of death in two forms, the death of a part cast-off, as when we shed a hair or lose a tooth, or as when a tree casts off its dead leaves ; and, secondly, the death which affects the whole organism; and further that reproduction is in a great majority of the higher organisms accompanied by the casting off of some parts of the organism which have been devoted to the nutrition and protection of the young offspring. In plants we know how the floral envelopes drop off, and how the seed vessels are allowed to fall and decay when their duty is done ; and corresponding phenomena exist in the animal world. When the plasmodium of the myxie has differentiated itself into the hypothallus and the sporangia, and these have sent forth the spores, how are we to regard the events which have happened ? Is the true view that a parent organism has died ; that the empty sporangium and the stalk, and the capillitium and the hypothallus which are left behind to decay are the dead body of the parent, and that the spores represent the new generation ? If this be the true view, and there seems much probability in it, then we have clearly before us an unicellular 70 The Mycetozoa, and organism of the simplest kind, which exhibits the phenomenon of death, and we cannot say with Weismann that it is with the multicellular organisms that death for the first time occurs. On this assumption it further follows that we have in the myxies an instance of the close association of death with reproduction ; and we are reminded of the analogous cases of the mayfly and the butterfly, which die after laying their eggs, and of the death of the male bee after pairing. The other view of the facts to which we have referred is that the throwing off of the sporangium and the capillitium, and the shells of the spores, is not the death of the whole parent organism, but the partial death only which occurs when the parts which have become useless are cast off and allowed to die, and in this view there is in the cycle of the myxie's life neither death nor generation, but an everlasting life ; the same protoplasm would be thought of as going on in an eternal round of life, subject only to accretions and to losses. True it would be that the shell of the spore, the coats and foot of the sporangium, and the capillitium which it contains, have been thrown aside and perish ; but the residue of the protoplasm seems to pass- from swarm spores into plasmodium, from plas- modium to swarm spores, and so on in a perpetual round. The swarm spores thus appear not as emanations from the parent but as the parent itself, and the new generation and the old are but one person (if personality may here be spoken of). If we think of death we search without Some Questions which they Suggest. 71 success for the moment of its occurrence, and we look in vain for the dead body. Whether of these two views be the more reasonable it may be hard to decide. However that may be, it is certain that there are unicellular bodies, such as the Diatoms, in respect of which Weismann has so forcibly shown that death cannot be thought of as a normal event. Thus out of the depths and first rudiments of organic life there crops up a suggestion of that immortality which is the hope and aspiration of its very highest members. Then with regard to encystment. We have seen that this occurs in two forms in the life-history of the myxies. We have found that the single swarm spore may be encysted and is then known as a microcyst, and that from this condition it may be awakened and recalled to its activity as a swarm spore, and we have found also that, in the form of sclerotium, the whole plasmodium may become quite dry and hard as an aggregation of cysts, and thus be reduced to a condition of suspended vitality, but from this also it may be aroused to its former powers of movement and life as a plasmodium. In neither of these cases do we find encystment to be associated with death, nor with reproduction. " The essential characteristic of encystment," says Weismann, " is a simple process of rejuvenescence without multiplication." The length of time during which animation can be sus- pended in the case of plasmodia is very remarkable. De Bary found a plasmodium of Didymlwn serpula to move after seven months' desiccation ; and a case is cited by 72 The Mycetozoct) and him of- a plasmodium which after twenty-five years' residence in an herbarium began, after four or five days' immersion in water, to develop as a beautiful network. KELATIONS OF THE GKOUP. — The proper position of the myxies in the world of organized beings is a subject on which there has been and still is a great difference of opinion. So profound is the difficulty of the question whether they are animals or vegetables that one of the most careful students of their nature has declared that its solution "depends rather on the general philosophic position of the observer than on facts." Those authors who place the myxies in the animal kingdom have generally attached most importance to the swarm spore and plasmodium stages of their existence, and have insisted on their likeness to the protozoa ; the advocates of their vegetable character have mainly dwelt on their method of reproduction — on their sporangia and their spores. But even assuming them to be vegetables, there remains the question where they are to take their place in that realm of Nature. They were placed among the fungi by Fries, but with a lively consciousness of how entirely they differed from all the other members of the class. ' ' Vegetatio maxime singularis et a reliquorum fungorum prorsus diversa," he says of this group. The fungi seem as a natural group to be well characterized by a prothallus constituted of hyphae — generally multicellular — whereas the myxies are represented in that stage by the strange plasmodium of which we have said so much. Some Questions which they Suggest. 73 Attempts have been made to show that different sections of the myxies correspond with different sections of fungi : the common myxies being treated as of the G-asteromycetie type ; the Dictyostelium as of the Mucorine type ; and, according to some writers, the Cer atomy xa mucida as of the Hydnum type and the Ceratomyxa porioides of the Polyporus type ; and from this supposed correspondence of type it has been suggested as probable that other types of fungi will be found to be represented amongst myxies, and that so we shall have two parallel series of fungi ; the difference in each case being that the one is characterized by a mycelium of hyphse, and the other by a plasmodium. This view appears to us to be fanciful, and to slur the really broad line of distinction between fungi and myxies. More rational would seem to be the view put forward by one of the latest writers on classification, who has formed of these little organisms one of the four primary divisions of the vegetable kingdom, and made for them a place of equal rank with the whole of the phanerogamous plants ; so distinct a position scarcely seems excessive to mark the singularity of their structure and life-history. In fact, one of the many interesting points about this group of organisms is the extent to which they stand alone ; the difficulty of finding any other creatures to which they stand in the relation either of descendants or ancestors. "The mycetozoa," says De Bary, "show only a slight agreement, either in the general course of their develop- ment, or in the characteristic features of its separate stages, with organisms which are of undoubted vegetable origin, 74 The Mycetozoa, and whether they be fungi or plants other than fungi; the agreement, with the exception of the few cases in which cellulose makes its appearance, is common to phenomena which are common to all organised bodies." We are much impressed with the notion that the position of the myxie will be found to vary according as the one or the other stage of their existence is held to have the highest classificatory value. We therefore propose to consider what relations they exhibit in these various stages of their life-history. THEIR BELATIONS IN THE SWARM SPORE STAGE. — Bepro- duction by swarm spores is by no means confined to the myxies. It plays a conspicuous part in the cycle of life in many of the Algas and Fungi : or rather we should say conspicuous parts, for the functions of these simple pieces of motile protoplasm are most various. Sometimes the swarm spore is asexual and is of itself capable of repro- ducing a new organism — as in some of the Algae and in the PeronosporecB , for instance, amongst the Fungi. In some of the Algse (Floridea and Phaosporea) the swarm cells are sexual, and a conjugation between two of these moving bodies occurs before the production of a new organism. Sometimes the same organism (as in Ulva) produces two kinds of swarm cells— the megaspores with four cilia which germinate asexually, and the microspores with two cilia which germinate only upon conjugation. But more remarkable still is perhaps the case of the well known and beautiful Yolvox — which appears to emit no less than four distinct kinds of swarm spores, (1) sterile swarm spores ; Some Questions which they Suggest. 75 (2) asexual spores, or as they are called parthenospores ; (3) male spores ; and (4) female spores. So marvellously complicated are the modes in which Nature is capable of differentiating and using to attain the same end by different roads that which seems the simplest thing in life — a minute piece of naked protoplasm. In the swarm-spore state the myxies may thus seem to claim relationship with the Algas and Fungi, but it ia doubtful whether much stress can be laid on this sugges- tion, for (1) the existence of these cells as reproductive spores is a wide-spread fact, and occurring in remote groups of organisms, has perhaps but little value in classification ; and (2) the mode in which myxies reproduce through swarm spores is entirely different from that pursued by any Alga or Fungus. It is, as we have already shown, neither by parthenogenesis of the ordinary kind, nor by conjugation, but by the fusion of a great number of swarm spores, whether from the same or different sporangia, into a single mass of plasmodium. But if we turn towards the animal kingdom, we shall find that its claim to include the myxies in the swarm spore stage is very strong. A mass of naked protoplasm, furnished with a nucleus and vacuoles, capable of pushing forward pseudopodia, and moving by these means, capable of including and digesting food, and also of encystment — this is a descrip- tion which will fit indifferently the swarm-spore of a myxie and the well-known Amseba, and we are thus brought to see that close relationship, to which we have already referred, 76 The Mycetozoa, and between the swarm spores and the large group of protozoa which naturalists generally place in the animal kingdom, and all of which may be said to consist of undifferentiated and naked protoplasm. THEIR KELATIONS IN THE PLASMODIUM STAGE. — The motor power of the plasmodium seems to recall animal life, but we recollect that there are kindred organisms, like the Diatoms, which are generally regarded as vegetable, and retain a power of movement through life. As regards food, it is a familiar fact that, generally speaking, plants feed on inorganic and animals on organic substances. So far as observations have hitherto gone, the food of myxies consists of bacteria, or minute particles of wood or fungi (and, in the case of Badhamia utricularis, of living fungi). No evidence seems to exist to show that they have any power of deriving nutriment from inorganic substances. The mode in which the myxies eject the undigested matter recalls animal rather than vegetable life. In the methods of digestion, therefore, they seem to lean distinctly towards an animal character. The movement of the granules of protoplasm in the plasmodium is a phenomenon at least analogous to that found in plants, and even in plants with highly developed cells, but it is not unknown amongst the lower forms which are considered to be animals, for it appears to have been observed in some protista, and especially in the tentacular-like pseudopodia. In the plasmodium condition, the relationship of the Some Questions which they Suggest. 77 myxies seems on the whole rather with animals than plants. THEIR RELATIONS IN THE SPORANGIUM STAGE. — On the other hand, when we reach the sporangium stage, the absence of motion, the erect form, the stalk, the foot, the spores, all recall some of the Fungi ; the elaters remind us of the Jungermannise. • The methods of opening the sporangia, sometimes by an indefinite rupture, sometimes by a distinct operculum, recall the distinction between the methods of opening which prevail in the mosses. On the whole, the facies of the sporangium stage is vegetable. One other observation which relates to all the stages of development must be made. The two most characteristic of vegetable compounds are probably cellulose and chlorophyll : though neither is found in all plants, nor is absent from some animals. Of chlorophyll we have no trace in the myxies, and of cellulose very little. Nowhere do we find it as the wall of a true and living cell as we do in the most characteristic form of vegetable growth. THEIR RELATIONS RECONSIDERED. — On the whole it seems impossible to assign these minute organisms with any certainty to the one realm or the other. If, with Haeckel, we were, for purposes of classification, to speak of a new kingdom —a buffer state between the animal and vegetable realms, the Regnum protisticum — we should no doubt place the myxies there. But, if we retain the two ancient kingdoms only, then it almost seems as if the myxies were 78 The Mycetozoa^ and a vagrant tribe that wander sometimes on the one side, and sometimes on the other side of the border line — like nomada wandering across the frontier of two settled and adjoining States, to neither of which they belong. They would seem to begin life as animals and end it as vegetables — a life-history not without some sad analogies in human experience. The absence of a satisfactory position for the myxies in the great network of organized beings leads one to think of them as a group which probably from very remote antiquity has stood aside from the great currents of evolution, whether in the animal or the vegetable world. DISTRIBUTION. — The species at present known of myxies are not very numerous. Mr. Lister figures less than two hundred in his monograph ; De Bary speaks of them as numbering nearly three hundred. No doubt many species remain to be discovered. Of the distribution of the myxies in time, nothing is known. The protoplasm is too delicate to leave its memorial in the rocks, and its lime particles are so small and so indistinguishable that it is no wonder that they have never been traced. In space, the group, and many individual members of it, are "cosmopolitan. A large number of the species are, says Mr. Lister, " found with identically the same characters in Europe, India, the Cape of Good Hope, Australia, and North and South America." What is implied in the identity of a species in Australia and England ? Does it mean that the species have passed the great intervening Some Questions which they Suggest. 79 oceans ? or does it mean that the species were defined before the separation of the continents, and have continued in both seats unchanged ever since ? SUGGESTIONS FOE STUDY. — In the hope that some of our readers may be induced by what we have written to take up the study of these little organisms, we will say a few words as to how to begin the study of them. They may be found often in great abundance, and more or less in all times of the year, except in extreme cold or prolonged drought, on moist dead wood and dead leaves (hazel, holly, and beech leaves are very good) ; a wood yard near a country house, rotting stumps of trees, the dead stalks of last year's nettles, the wooden pillars and parts of gates and rails, the straw heaps in a farmyard — all these are likely places for the chase. Sometimes, too, as we have said, they leave the dead substances, which are their chief habitat, and climb over growing plants, as nettles, peri- winkles, or moss. The eye wants some training to see them quickly, and there is no doubt but that young eyes are better than old ones. We know a case in which a young lady detected a Trichia growing on the roadside from her pony's back. If it be desired to keep specimens for use, they should be preserved in dry boxes (the common lucifer match boxes, lined with white paper, make very good receptacles), into which they can be securely fixed by glue or pins attached to the wood or leaves on which they rest. For more minute observations recourse must, of course, be 80 The Mycetozoa, and had to the pocket lens and the microscope. There are few more beautiful objects than some of the sporangia under a low power, or than the capillitium and spores of some kinds under a higher power : the Trichia with lemon-coloured hairs and spores are especially lovely to look upon. The spores should be examined under water to prevent shrinkage, and a little spirit is often useful in the examination of the capillitium, as it helps to expel the air. The beginner will very likely at first sight mistake some of the small fungi for myxies, but a very little experience will enable him to distinguish the sporangium walls, the hairs, and the spores of a myxie from anything which he will meet with in the structure of a fungus. A visit to the botanical department of the British Museum at South Kensington, and an examination of the microscopic slides and drawings prepared by Mr. Arthur Lister and his daughter, Miss Gulielma Lister, and pre- sented by them to the British Museum, will be of great utility to the student. To Mr. and Miss Lister all students of myxies are under the deepest obligations, and we are especially so by reason of their constant help, and not least for their kindness in reading this essay in manuscript. Mr. Lister has published two books which are indispensable to the English student. The "Guide to the British Mycetozoa exhibited in the Department of Botany, British Museum," is a little pamphlet, price threepence, written by Mr. Lister for the Trustees of the British Museum, and published by them. It can be obtained at the South Kensington Museum ; but Some Questions ivhich they Suggest. 81 booksellers are often stupid about getting it, as we believe that they get no profit on it, and therefore if ordered through a bookseller particular instructions should be given to get it from the South Kensington Museum. This little book is very admirable, and by itself will enable a student to identify most or all of his specimens. Mr. Lister's other book, " A Monograph of the Mycetozoa," which is not confined to British species, was also published by the Trustees of the British Museum, but is sold by Longmans and other booksellers. The price of this book, which is beautifully illustrated, is sixteen shillings. Mr. Massee has also published a " Monograph of the Myxo- gastres," 1892, illustrated with coloured plates. De Bary's " Comparative Morphology and Fungi, Mycetozoa, and Bacteria," of which an English translation has been published by the Clarendon Press, should be consulted by the student who desires further knowledge. The text- books on general botany and on general cryptogamic botany, such as Sach's Text Book, Kerner's " Natural History of Plants," Bennett and Murray's "Cryptogamic Botany," and Dr. Scott's " Structural Botany, Part II.," may all usefully be consulted. For the student who desires to go further into the literature of the subject, the following bibliography may prove useful : — CIENKOWSKI. — Zur Entwicklungs-geschichte der Myxomy- ceten. (Prings. Jahr., 1863, 325) ; Das Plasmodium, id., 400. LISTEE. — " Notes of the Plasmodium of Badhamia utricularis and Brefeldia maxima " (Annals of Botany, Vol. G 82 The Mycetozoa. II., 1888, pp. 1-24) ; " Notes on Chondrioderma difforme and other Mycetozoa" (ibid., Vol. IV., 1890, pp. 281-298); " Notes on the Ingestion of Food-material by the Swarm- cells of Mycetozoa " (Journ. Linn. Soc., Vol. XXV., Bot., 1890, pp. 435-441) ; " Notes on Mycetozoa " (Journ. of Bot., Vol. XXIX., 1891, pp. 257-268); "On the Division of the Nuclei in the Mycetozoa" (Journ. Linn. Soc., Vol. XXIX., Bot., 1893, pp. 529-542) ; " Notes on British Mycetozoa " (Journ. Bot., Vol. XXXIII., 1895, pp. 323- 825) ; " A New Variety of Enteridium olivaceum " (ibid., Vol. XXXIV., 1896, pp. 210-212); "On Some Bare Species of Mycetozoa" (ibid., Vol. XXXV., 1897, pp. 209-218) ; " Notes on Mycetozoa " (ibid., Vol. XXXVII., 1899, pp. 145-152). BBEFELD. — Dictyostelium mucoroides Abhand. der Senckb., Ges. VII., 1869 ; Untersuchungen aus den Gesammtgebiete der Mykologie, VI. Heft Myxomyceten (Leip., 1884). DE BABY. — Die Mycetozoen. Zeitsch., fur Wissench ZooL (Vol. X., 1860, p. 88). FAMINTZIN and WORONIN. — Uber Ceratium Hydnoides. (Mem. Acad. Peter., Vol. XX., No. 3, 1873). VAN TIEGHEM. — Sur quelques Myxomycetes (Bull. Soc. Bot.Fr., Vol. XXVII., 1880, p. 317). WIGAND. — Zur Morphologic und Systematik der Gattungen Trichia und Arcyria (Pring. Jahrb. Bot., 1863, p. 1). PLAINLY WORDED — EXACTLY DESCRIBED. KNOWLEDGE: In fUristrateti ^Hagajine at ^rienre literature antt Jtrt. Founded by RICHARD A. PROCTOR. MONTHLY SIXPENCE. Its columns are contributed to by world-famous scientific men, and many well-known Educators of the day. It gives, in popular style, the most recent papers in all the principal departments of Science and Arts, embracing MICROSCOPY, BOTANY, SOCIOLOGY, BIOLOGY, ETHNOLOGY, GEOLOGY, GEOGRAPHY, NATURAL HISTORY, ASTRONOMY, CHEMISTRY, PHYSICS, MINERALOGY, ELECTRICITY, ARCHAEOLOGY, PHOTOGRAPHY, HYGIENE, etc., etc. The Magazine is PROFUSELY ILLUSTRATED with Full -page Photographic Plates of Objects as seen with the Telescope, Microscope, OP Ordinary Camera, and numbers of Woodcuts and Blocks. Correspondence ', Book Reviews, and Chess Columns. Athenaum says : " This excellent and well-known periodical The articles are all from the pens of authors eminent in their own lines." ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION (throughout the World), post free, 7s. 6d. PUBLISHING OFFICE— LONDON 1326, HIGH HOLBORN, AND ALL BOOKSELLERS. DATE DUE QK635 F9^6m 1899 Fry, Edward. Jfy-cetozoa. . . Fry, Edward Mycetozoa QK635 F9U6m 1899 MEDICAL SCIENCES LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, IRVINE IRVINE, CALIFORNIA 92664