336 HOW CROPS GKOW. 



sucked in through the spile ; as the trunk becomes heated 

 again, the gaseous and liquid contents of the ducts ex 

 pand, the flow of sap is renewed, and proceeds with in 

 creased rapidity until the internal pressure passes its max 

 imum. 



As the season advances and the soil becomes heated, the 

 root-power undoubtedly acts with increased vigor and 

 larger quantities of water are forced into the trunk, but 

 at a certain time the escape of sap from a wound suddenly 

 ceases. At this period a new phenomenon supervenes. 

 The buds which were formed the previous summer begin 

 to expand as the vessels are distended with sap, and final 

 ly, when the temperature attains the proper range, they 

 unfold into leaves. At this point we have a proper mo 

 tion of sap in the tree, whereas before there was little mo 

 tion at all in the sound trunk, and in the tapped stem the 

 motion was towards the orifice and thence out of the tree. 



The cessation of flow from a cut results from two cir 

 cumstances : first, the vigorous cambial growth, whereby 

 incisions in the bark and wood rapidly heal up; and sec 

 ond, the extensive evaporatioi that goes on from foliage. 



That evaporation of water from the leaves often pro 

 ceeds more rapidly than it can be supplied by the roots 

 is shown by the facts that the delicate leaves of many 

 plants wilt when the soil about their roots becomes dry, 

 that water is often rapidly sucked into wounds on the 

 stems of trees which are covered with foliage, and that 

 the proportion of water in the wood of the trees of tem 

 perate latitudes is least in the months of May, Juno, and 

 July. 



Evergreens do not bleed in the spring-time. The oak 

 loses little or no sap, and among other trees great diversity 

 is noticed as -to the amount of water that escapes at a 

 wound on the stem. In case of evergreens we have a 

 stem destitute of all proper vascular tissue, and admitting 

 a flow of liquid only through the perforations of the wood- 



