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Fig. 232.—Lycopodium clavatum. A
tetrahedral spore seen from above, where the
three borders join; and a tetrad of bilateral
spores, still lying in the mother-cell.
The fertile leaves are collected upon definite regions of the stem.
They are either similar to the barren ones, and then the fertile
portions of the stem pass gradually, without any break, into the
barren portion (L. selago); or they differ from the barren leaves, and
are then collected into special apical cones (Fig. 230 a). The spores
are tetrahedral or bilateral (Fig. 232).
About 100 species, chiefly tropical.
Five species of Lycopodium are found in Great Britain. L. clavatum and L.
selago are common in mountainous districts. L. annotinum is common in the
Highlands of Scotland. The other genus of the order is Phylloglossum, with one
species, P. drummondi (Australia, Tasmania, and New Zealand), a small plant only
a few centimetres high, with two tubers, and about eleven linear leaves at the base
of the stem which is terminated by a cone of sporophylls.—Fossil Lycopodiaceæ
in the Carboniferous period.
Officinal: “Lycopodium,” the spores of L. clavatum.
Family 2. Psilotaceæ. The sporangia are placed on the apex of short, two-
leaved stems, as 2–3, seldom four, small capsules. Small herbs, with angular
stems; leaves small, simple, and one nerved. Only four species.—Psilotum
(Madagascar, Moluccas, Sandwich Islands, etc.) is destitute of roots, their place
being supplied by special underground stems which bear a few modified leaves,
very much reduced, especially when buried deeply in the soil. Three species.—
Tmesipteris (Australia), one species.