52 



TRANSPIRATION IN A DESERT PERENNIAL. 



and so if sufficient quantity 1)C obtained at the beginning of the experiment 

 to last for a set of readings the specific heat need be determined l)ut once. 

 Loss or gain of heat from the surrounding air by the vessels may be pre- 

 vented by two methods : (1) By surrounding the vessel with a non-conducting 

 material; (2) by cooling the liquid to a temperature the same number of 

 degrees below room temperature that the final temperature will reach above 

 room temperature, thus eliminating the error on the theory that the heat 

 lost to the air is equal to the heat gained from the air in the same length of 



Fig. 24 .\pparatus for determination of leaf-temperature. 



time. The latter requires a previous knowledge of the temperatures and 

 amounts, and this is wasteful of leaf material. The former method is 

 difficult to carrj^ out in its ideal form, but by keeping the temperatures near 

 air temperature, and the use of a predetermined "curve of cooling," very 

 accurate results may be obtained with well insulated vessels. 



The apparatus used was made for the purpose and is merely an adaptation 

 of the ordinary calorimeter with a jacket. From fig. 24 it will be seen that 

 the apparatus consists of a calorimeter suspended nearlj^ to the bottom of a 



