Scientific American Supplement, No. 623, December 10, 1887 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 122 pages of information about Scientific American Supplement, No. 623, December 10, 1887.

Scientific American Supplement, No. 623, December 10, 1887 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 122 pages of information about Scientific American Supplement, No. 623, December 10, 1887.

Two new resins were extracted from the yellow and green parts of the leaf.  It was proposed to name them yuccal and pyrophaeal An examination of the contents of each extract showed a different quantitative and qualitative result.

Saponin was found in all parts of the plant.

Many of the above facts have been collected from the investigations of others.  I have introduced these statements, selected from a mass of material, as evidences in favor of the view stated at the beginning of this paper.[41] My own study has been directed toward the discovery of saponin in those plants where it was presumably to be found.  The practical use of this theory in plant analysis will lead the chemists at once to a search for those compounds which morphology shows are probably present.

I have discovered saponin in all parts of the Yucca angustifolia, in the Y. filimentosa and Y. gloriosa, in several species of agavae, and in plants belonging to the leguminosae family.

The list[42] of plants in which saponin has been discovered is given in the note.  All these plants are contained in the middle plane of Heckel’s scheme.  No plants containing saponin have been found among apetalous groups.  No plants have been found containing saponin among the lower monocotyledons.

The plane of saponin passes from the liliaceae and allied groups to the rosales and higher dicotyledons.

Saponin belongs to a class of substances called glucosides.  Under the action of dilute acids, it is split up into two substances, glucose and sopogenin.  The chemical nature of this substance is not thoroughly understood.  The commercial[43] product is probably a mixture of several substances.

This complexity of chemical composition of saponin is admirably adapted for the nutrition of the plant, and it is associated with the corresponding complexity of the morphological elements of the plant’s organs.  According to M. Perrey,[44] it seems that the power of a plant to direct the distribution of its carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen to form complex glucosides is indicative of its higher functions and developments.

The solvent action of saponin on resins has been already discussed.  Saponin likewise acts as a solvent upon barium[45] sulphate and calcium[46] oxalate, and as a solvent of insoluble or slightly soluble salts would assist the plant in obtaining food, otherwise difficult of access.

The botanical classifications based upon morphology are so frequently Saponin is found in endogens and exogens.  The line dividing these two groups is not always clearly defined.  Statements pointing to this are found in the works of Haeckel, Bentham, and others.

Smilax belongs to a transition class, partaking somewhat of the nature of endogen and of exogen.  It is worthy of note that this intermediate group of the sarsaparillas should contain saponin.

It is a significant fact that all the groups above named containing saponin belong to Heckel’s middle division.

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Scientific American Supplement, No. 623, December 10, 1887 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.