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.

vertically dependent glass filament was now fixed to one of the terminal and inner leaflets; and part of the tracing in Fig. 167, after 6 P.M., shows that it continued to sink, making one zigzag, until 10.40 P.M.  At 6.45 A.M. on the following morning, the leaf was awaking, and the filament pointed above the vertical glass,

Fig. 167.  Marsilea quadrifoliata:  circumnutation and nyctitropic movement of leaflet traced on vertical glass, during nearly 24 h.  Figure reduced to two-thirds of original scale.  Plant kept at rather too low a temperature.

but by 8.25 A.M. it occupied the position shown in the figure.  The diagram differs greatly in appearance from most of those previously given; and this is due to the leaflet twisting and moving laterally as it approaches and comes into contact with [page 394] its fellow.  The movement of another leaflet, when asleep, was traced between 6 P.M. and 10.35 P.M., and it clearly circumnutated, for it continued for two hours to sink, then rose, and then sank still lower than it was at 6 P.M.  It may be seen in the preceding figure (167) that the leaflet, when the plant was subjected to a rather low temperature in the house, descended and ascended during the middle of the day in a somewhat zigzag line; but when kept in the hot-house from 9 A.M. to 3 P.M. at a high but varying temperature (viz., between 72o and 83o F.) a leaflet (with the petiole secured) circumnutated rapidly, for it made three large vertical ellipses in the course of the six hours.  According to Brongniart, Marsilea pubescens sleeps like the present species.  These plants are the sole cryptogamic ones known to sleep.]

Summary and Concluding Remarks on the Nyctitropic or Sleep-movements of Leaves.—­That these movements are in some manner of high importance to the plants which exhibit them, few will dispute who have observed how complex they sometimes are.  Thus with Cassia, the leaflets which are horizontal during the day not only bend at night vertically downwards with the terminal pair directed considerably backwards, but they also rotate on their own axes, so that their lower surfaces are turned outwards.  The terminal leaflet of Melilotus likewise rotates, by which movement one of its lateral edges is directed upwards, and at the same time it moves either to the left or to the right, until its upper surface comes into contact with that of the lateral leaflet on the same side, which has likewise rotated on its own axis.  With Arachis, all four leaflets form together during the night a single vertical packet; and to the effect this the two anterior leaflets have to move upwards and the two posterior ones forwards, besides all twisting on their own axes.  In the genus Sida the leaves of some species move at night through an angle of 90o upwards, and of others [page 395] through the same angle downwards.  We have seen a similar difference in the nyctitropic movements of the cotyledons in the genus Oxalis.  In Lupinus, again, the leaflets

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