. Comparative morphology of Fungi. Fungi. Fig. 323.—Clathrella chrysomycelina. 1. Section of young fundament of fructification. 2. Beginnings of columella branches. 3. Later stage showing fundament of hyphal pali- sade. 4. Part of section of an almost mature egg. (1 to 3 X 15; 4 X 30; after Moller, 1895.) tramal plate is formed in these angles and (in the intermediate tissue) the receptacle chambers; in contrast to C. cancellatus (Fig. 319), however, the tramal plates are not irregularly arranged but grow up on the inmost, oldest receptacle chambers and surround them on three sides, (Fig. 323,


. Comparative morphology of Fungi. Fungi. Fig. 323.—Clathrella chrysomycelina. 1. Section of young fundament of fructification. 2. Beginnings of columella branches. 3. Later stage showing fundament of hyphal pali- sade. 4. Part of section of an almost mature egg. (1 to 3 X 15; 4 X 30; after Moller, 1895.) tramal plate is formed in these angles and (in the intermediate tissue) the receptacle chambers; in contrast to C. cancellatus (Fig. 319), however, the tramal plates are not irregularly arranged but grow up on the inmost, oldest receptacle chambers and surround them on three sides, (Fig. 323, 4, Rpi) whereby they inter- twine closely with the pseudoparenchyma of the chamber wall. The receptacle chambers Rp2, which later are formed further out, do not come into contact with the first receptacle chamber Rpi. They do not come into close contact with the tramal plates, however, but remain separated from them by a layer of gelatinous hyphae. Therefore, the gleba in the mature expanded receptacle does not hang as a whole (as in C. cancellatus) from the interior of the receptacle branches but only in small portions, surrounded by the torn Rd in the corners of the nets in small knobs, the original receptacle chambers Rpi (Fig. 324). It is further characteristic of Clathrella, that at its base the latticed branches fuse to a tube. The receptacle, thus, no longer rises in these lower parts, corresponding to the splits in the branches of the columella, in the form of single columns but as a hollow cylinder around the Fig. 324.—Clathrella chry- somycelina. Unfolded recep- tacle. ( X %; after Moller, 1895.). Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Gäumann, Ernst Albert, 1893-1963; Dodge, Carroll William, 1895-. New York [etc. ] McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc.


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