In all these lichens, it is only the thallus that can be considered as primitive: the fruit is a more or less open apothecium—more rarely a perithecium—with a fully developed hymenium. Frequently it is provided with a protective thalline margin.

b. Exogenous Thallus. In this group, composed almost exclusively of heteromerous lichens, Zukal includes all those in which the fungus takes the lead in thalline development. He counts as such Leptogium, a genus closely allied to Collema but with more membranous lobes, in which the short terminal cells of the hyphae have united to form a continuous cortex. A higher development, therefore, becomes at once apparent, though in some genera, as in Coenogonium, the alga still predominates, while the simplest forms may be merely a scanty weft of filaments associated with groups of algal cells. Such a thallus is characteristic of the Ectolechiaceae, and some Gyalectaceae, etc., which have, indeed, been described by Zahlbruckner[314] as homoiomerous though their gonidia belong to the non-gelatinous Chlorophyceae.

Heteromerous lichens have been arranged by Hue[315] according to their general structure in three great series:

1. Stratosae. Crustaceous, squamulose and foliose lichens with a dorsiventral thallus.

2. Radiatae. Fruticose, shrubby or filamentous lichens with a strap-shaped or cylindrical thallus of radiate structure.

3. Stratosae-Radiatae. Primary dorsiventral thallus, either crustaceous or squamulose, with a secondary upright thallus of radiate structure called the podetium (Cladoniaceae).

II. STRATOSE THALLUS

1. CRUSTACEOUS LICHENS

A. General Structure