Fig. 80. Soredia. a, of Physcia pulverulenta Nyl.; b, of Ramalina farinacea Ach. × 600.
Acharius[477] gave the name “soredia” to the powdery bodies with reference to their propagating function; he also interpreted the soredium as an “apothecium of the second order.” But long before his time they had been observed and commented on by succeeding botanists: first by Malpighi[478] who judged them to be seeds, he having seen them develop new plants; by Micheli[479] who however distinguished between the true fruit and those seeds; and by Linnaeus[480] who considered them to be the female organs of the plant, the apothecia being, as he then thought, the male organs. Hedwig[481], on the other hand, regarded the apothecia as the seed receptacles and the soredia as male bodies. Sprengel’s[482] statement that they were “a subtile germinating powder mixed with delicate hair-like threads which take the place of seeds” established finally their true function. Wallroth[483], who was the first really to investigate their structure and their relation to the parent plant, recognized them as of the same type as the “brood-cells” or gonidia; and as the latter, he found, could become free from the thallus and form a green layer on trees, walls, etc., in shady situations, so the soredia also could become free, though for a time they remained attached to the lichen and were covered by a veil, i.e. by the surrounding hyphal filaments. Koerber[484] also gave much careful study to soredia, their nature and function. As propagating organs he found they were of more importance than spores, especially in the larger lichens.
Fig. 81. Vertical section of young soralium of Evernia furfuracea var. soralifera Bitter × 60 (after Bitter).
According to Schwendener[485], the formation of soredia is due to increased and almost abnormal activity of division in the gonidial cell; the hyphal filament attached to it also becomes active and sends out branches from the cell immediately below the point of contact which force their way between the newly divided gonidia and finally surround them. A soredial “head” of smaller or larger size is thus gradually built up on the stalk filament or filaments, and is ultimately detached by the breaking down of the slender support.
a. Scattered Soredia. The simplest example of soredial formation may be seen on the bark of trees or on palings when the green coating of algal cells is gradually assuming a greyish hue caused by the invasion of hyphal lichenoid growth. This condition is generally referred to as “leprose” and has even been classified as a distinct genus, Lepra or Lepraria. Somewhat similar soredial growth is also associated with many species of Cladonia, the turfy soil in the neighbourhood of the upright podetia being often powdered with white granules. Such soredia are especially abundant in that genus, so much so, that Meyer[486], Krabbe[487] and others have maintained that the spores take little part in the propagation of species. The under side of the primary thallus, but more frequently the upright podetia, are often covered with a coating of soredia, either finely furfuraceous, or of larger growth and coarsely granular, the size of the soredia depending on the number of gonidia enclosed in each “head.”
Soredia are only occasionally present on the apothecial margins: the rather swollen rims in Lobaria scrobiculata are sometimes powdery-grey, and Bitter[488] has observed soredia, or rather soralia, on the apothecial margins of Parmelia vittata; they are very rare, however, and are probably to be explained by excess of moisture in the surroundings.
b. Isidial Soredia. In a few lichens soredia arise by the breaking down of the cortex at the tips of the thalline outgrowths termed “isidia.” In Parmelia verruculifera, for instance, where the coralloid isidia grow in closely packed groups or warts, the upper part of the isidium frequently becomes soredial. In that lichen the younger parts of the upper cortex bear hairs or trichomes, and the individual soredia are also adorned with hairs. The somewhat short warted isidia of P. subaurifera may become entirely sorediose, and in P. farinacea the whole thallus is covered with isidia transformed into soralia. The transformation is constant and is a distinct specific character. Bitter[488] considers that it proves that no sharp distinction exists between isidia and soralia, at least in their initial stages.