. Algæ. Vol. I. Myxophyceæ, Peridinieæ, Bacillarieæ, Chlorophyceæ, together with a brief summary of the occurrence and distribution of freshwat4er Algæ . es. These are found scattered among the meshworkof the incipient nucleus (the so-called central body), and they stain well Inclusions in the protoplast 13 with methylene blue or with an aqueous solution of Bismarck brown, andvery deeply with hgematoxylin. They are identical with the a granules ofGardner (06) and appear to be equivalent to A. Mayers red granulesof volutin. They are of an albuminous nature and are insoluble in hydro-chloric, ni
. Algæ. Vol. I. Myxophyceæ, Peridinieæ, Bacillarieæ, Chlorophyceæ, together with a brief summary of the occurrence and distribution of freshwat4er Algæ . es. These are found scattered among the meshworkof the incipient nucleus (the so-called central body), and they stain well Inclusions in the protoplast 13 with methylene blue or with an aqueous solution of Bismarck brown, andvery deeply with hgematoxylin. They are identical with the a granules ofGardner (06) and appear to be equivalent to A. Mayers red granulesof volutin. They are of an albuminous nature and are insoluble in hydro-chloric, nitric, or sulphuric acid; they are digested in about twenty-fourhours with artificial gastric juice. They give a phosphorus reaction andcontain masked iron. They are larger and more conspicuous than thenucleo-protein granules (presumed chromatin granules) in the threads ofthe meshwork of the primitive nucleus, and it is not unlikely that they alsoconsist largely of some nucleo-protein. Fischer (05) has described the occurrence of what he terms anabtenin in the centralbody of various filamentous forms of the Myxophycete. This substance he apparently.
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