The most perfect development of strengthening nerves is to be found in Hydrothyria venosa[373], a rather rare water lichen that occurs in the streams of North America. It consists of fan-like lobes of thin structure, the cortex being only about one cell thick. The fronds are about 3 cm. wide and they are contracted below into a stalk which serves to attach the plant to the substratum. Several fronds may grow together in a dense tuft, the expanded upper portion floating freely in the water. Frequently the plants form a dense growth over the rocky beds of the stream.

At the point where the stalk expands into the free erect frond, there arise a series of stout veins which spread upwards and outwards. They are definitely formed structures and not adaptations of pre-existing tissues: certain hyphae arise from the medulla at the contracted base of the frond, take a radial direction and, by increase, become developed into firm strands. The individual hyphae also increase in size, and the swelling of the nerve gives rise to a ridge prominent on both surfaces. They seldom anastomose at first but towards the tips they become smaller and spread out in delicate ramifications which unite at various points. There is no doubt, as Bitter[372] points out, that the nerves function as strengthening tissues and preserve the frond from the strain of the water currents which would, otherwise, tear apart the delicate texture.

III. RADIATE THALLUS

1. CHARACTERS OF RADIATE THALLUS

In the stratose dorsiventral thallus, there is a widely extended growing area situated round the free margins of the thallus. In the radiate thallus of the fruticose or filamentous lichens, growth is confined to an apical region. Attachment to the substratum is at one point only—the base of the plant—thus securing the exposure of all sides equally to light. The cortex surrounds the fronds, and the gonidia (mostly Protococcaceae) lie in a zone or in groups between the cortex and the medulla. It is the highest type of vegetative development in the lichen kingdom, since it secures the widest room for the gonidial layer, and the largest opportunity for photosynthesis.

Fig. 57. Roccella fuciformis DC.

Shrubby upright lichens consist mostly of strap-shaped fronds, either simple or branched, which may be broadened to thin bands ([Fig. 57]) or may be narrowed and thickened till they are almost cylindrical. The fronds vary in length according to the species from a few millimetres upwards: those of Roccella have been found measuring 30 cm. in length; those of Ramalina reticulata, the largest of all the American lichens, extend to considerably more.

Lichens of filamentous growth are more or less cylindrical ([Fig. 58]). They are in some species upright and of moderate length, but in a few pendulous forms they grow to a great length: specimens of Usnea longissima have been recorded that measured 6 to 8 metres from base to tip.