The Power of Movement in Plants eBook

Francis Darwin
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 654 pages of information about The Power of Movement in Plants.

The Power of Movement in Plants eBook

Francis Darwin
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 654 pages of information about The Power of Movement in Plants.
night the leaves are crowded together, as if for mutual protection, by the rising of the petioles.  The petioles of the younger leaves near the summits of the shoots rise up at night, so as to stand vertical and parallel to the stem; whilst those on the sides were found in four cases to have risen respectively 46 1/2o, 36o, 20o, and 19.5o above the inclined positions which they had occupied during the day.  For instance, in the first of these four cases the petiole stood in the day at 23o, and at night at 69 1/2o above the horizon.  In the evening the rising of the petioles is almost completed before the leaflets sink perpendicularly downwards. [page 358]

Circumnutation.—­The circumnutating movements of four young shoots were observed during 5 h. 15 m.; and in this time each completed an oval figure of small size.  The main petiole also circumnutates rapidly, for in the course of 31 m. (temp. 91o F.) it changed its course by as much as a rectangle six times, describing a figure which apparently represented two ellipses.

Fig. 149.  Desmodium gyrans:  A, stem during the day; B, stem with leaves asleep.  Figures reduced.

The movement of the terminal leaflet by means of its sub-petiole or pulvinus is quite as rapid, or even more so, than that of the main petiole, and has much greater amplitude.  Pfeffer has seen* these leaflets move through an angle of 8o in the course of from 10 to 30 seconds.

A fine, nearly full-grown leaf on a young plant, 8 inches in height, with the stem secured to a stick at the base of the leaf, was observed from 8.30 A.M.  June 22nd to 8 A.M.  June 24th.

* ‘Die Period.  Beweg.,’ p. 35. [page 359]

In the diagram given on the next page (Fig. 150), the two curved broken lines at the base, which represent the nocturnal courses, ought to be prolonged far downwards.  On the first day the leaflet moved thrice down and thrice up, and to a considerable distance laterally; the course was also remarkably crooked.  The dots were generally made every hour; if they had been made every few minutes all the lines would have been zigzag to an extraordinary degree, with here and there a loop formed.  We may infer that this would have been the case, because five dots were made in the course of 31 m. (between 12.34 and 1.5 P.M.), and we see in the upper part of the diagram how crooked the course here is; if only the first and last dots had been joined we should have had a straight line.  Exactly the same fact may be seen in the lines representing the course between 2.24 P.M. and 3 P.M., when six intermediate dots were made; and again at 4.46 and 4.50.  But the result was widely different after 6 P.M.,—­that is, after the great nocturnal descent had commenced; for though nine dots were then made in the course of 32 m., when these were joined (see Figure) the line thus formed was almost straight.  The leaflets, therefore, begin to descend in the afternoon by zigzag lines, but as soon as the descent becomes rapid their whole energy is expended in thus moving, and their course becomes rectilinear.  After the leaflets are completely asleep they move very little or not at all.

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The Power of Movement in Plants from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.