xvn] TURIONS 223 



hand, luxuriant specimens growing in water in warm situations 



may vegetate throughout the winter without forming turions. 



It is most likely that, in normal life, it is 



the lowering of the temperature in the 



autumn which induces the formation of 



winter-buds. 



That it is unfavourable conditions 

 which bring about the development of 

 turions, seems to be true not only of the 

 Water Milfoil but of aquatics in general. 

 Some remarkable experiments on the effect 

 of starvation upon Utricularia have been 

 quoted on pp. 102103. Similar results 

 have been obtained in the case of Sagittaria 

 sagittifolia 1 in which, however, the vege- 

 tative multiplication is effected by tubers 

 and not by turions. Tuber formation in 

 the Arrowhead normally occurs when the 

 plant has exhausted itself by the forma- 



r n j i- i FlG. 146. Myriophvllum 



tion of inflorescences, and when cooler vert iciuatum, L; Land 

 weather sets in. The land form, like that form ^^ five subter - 



ranean tunons, two of 



of Myriophyllum, produces tubers several which are marked K. 



weeks earlier than the form growing under 



the optimum aquatic conditions. Gliick 1 , stm attached to the base 



i r v A of the plant and has 



one autumn, planted a tuber or the Arrow- f orme d a number of 

 head in a pot of earth and left it there, adventitious roots. The 



' two lowest tunons have 



almost without water, until towards the grown out of the axis 

 end of the following July. The plant, which %$* 

 had failed to appear above the soil, was H. (1906), Wasser- und 

 then examined, and it was found that the ' ""^^^ "' 

 tuber had put out a few wretched-looking 

 little ribbon-leaves, which had not possessed strength to pene- 

 trate the earth. It had also formed four tiny stolons, 1-5 to 

 2 cms. long, each terminating in a small tuber, 8 to 10 mm. in 

 length. This tuber formation had apparently occurred as a 

 i Gluck, H. (1905). 



