Abstract: | Cell division in Scenedesmus is fairly typical of other chlorococcalean genera. The closed spindle has centrioles at polar fenestrae and apparently a series of nuclear divisions precedes cytokinesis. The phycoplast system of cytokinetic microtubules predicts the path of cleavage furrows whose mode of formation is obscure. Before and during cell division, the endoplasmic reticulum invariably accumulates granular material which later, during cytokinesis, appears to he secreted via the golgi bodies. Similar dense granular material then at accumulates outside the forming daughter cells but inside the parental wall, as the latter begins eroding away. By the end of colony formation, the cellulosic parental wall has disappeared, leaving its outer sheath and attached ornamentative features (spines, combs, reticulate or warty layer, etc.) intact as a “ghost.” The spines and combs of new colonies appear to condense out of the extracellular aggregate; their precise mode of formation is obscure. As they form, the daughter cells, having become rearranged within the parental wall, stick to one another apparently at specific sites on their outer surface. A trilaminar (sporopollenin-containing) layer arises first in each cell at these adhesive sites and immediately afterwards, dense material aggregates between the adjacent layers to give rise to the coenobial adhesive. Plaques of the trilaminar layer later appear over the rest of the cell's surface; they grow and fuse so that eventually each cell is enclosed by one continuous Trilaminar Sheath (TLS). While the plaques are forming, another dense layer materializes around the whole coenobium. Depending on the species, this layer turns into either the warty layer, in which instance it is applied directly on to the surface of the TLS except near the coenobial adhesive, or else it becomes the reticulate layer, in which instance it remains entirely separate from the TLS, soon acquiring the complex system of propping spikelets which suspend it from the coenobial surface. When fully farmed, the daughter coenobium is tightly compressed within the parental TLS, with its spines folded lengthwise along the daughter cells. Release of the colony follows a quite explosive rupturing of the parental TLS, and immediately upon release, the daughter colony flattens out and erects its spines. |