Fig. 88.—Polyphagus euglenæ. A with smooth, B with thorny oospores; m and f the two conjugating cells.
Fig. 89.—Peronospora alsinearum. Mycelium with egg-cell and antheridium.
Fig. 90.—Phytophthora infestans (strongly magnified). Cross section through a small portion of a Potato-leaf (the under side turned upwards): a the mycelium; b b two conidiophores projecting through a stoma; c conidia; e the spongy tissue of the leaf; g the epidermis.
The Potato-fungus (Phytophthora infestans) is of great interest. Its thallus winters in the Potato-tuber; other organs for passing the winter, such as oospores, are not known. When the tuber germinates, the Fungus-hyphæ penetrate the young shoot and keep pace with the aerial growth and development of the plant. The conidiophores emerge through the stomata, especially on the under side of the leaves; they branch like a tree (Fig. [90]), and appear to the naked eye as a fine mould on the surface of the plant. The disease soon makes itself known by the brown colouring of those parts of the plant which are attacked, and by their withering. An ovoid conidium arises at first by the formation of a dividing wall at the apex of each branch of the conidiophore (Fig. [90] c c), and immediately underneath it another is formed, which pushes the first to one side, and so on. These conidia sometimes germinate directly, and form a mycelium, but most frequently their protoplasm divides into many small masses, each of which becomes a pear-shaped zoospore provided with two cilia (Fig. [91]). Water is required for their germination, and when the ripe conidia are placed in a drop of water the swarm-cells are formed in the course of about five hours. They swarm about in rain and dewdrops in the Potato-fields, and are carried with the water to the Potato-plants and to the tubers in the soil. The wind also very easily conveys the conidia to healthy Potato-fields and infects them. The enormous quantity of conidia and swarm-cells that may be formed in the course of a summer explains the rapid spreading of the disease; and the preceding makes it clear why wet summers are favourable to its existence. When the swarm-cells germinate, they round off, and then surround themselves with a cell-wall which grows out into the germ-tube, and pierces through the epidermis of the host-plant (Fig. [92]). Having entered the host, a new mycelium is formed. The potato disease, since 1845, has been rampant in Europe; it has, no doubt, been introduced from America, which, it must be remembered, is the home of the Potato-plant.
Fig. 91.—Phytophthora infestans: a-c conidia detached; in c the swarm-cells are leaving the mother-cell; d two free-swimming swarm-cells.
Fig. 92.—Phytophthora infestans. Cross section through a portion of a Potato-stalk. Two germinating conidia (a, b) piercing the epidermis, and the mycelium penetrating the cells.