13 



oxidation and removal of intermediate products which 

 would be toxic if allowed to accumulate. ■*• In anaerc 

 respiration these products do accumulate as witnei 

 production of alcohol during the (temporary) anaerobic 



1. The first suggestion toward this theory 

 was by Pfeffer,- Abh. Kgl. Sa " a Ges. i/iss., Mat' ys, 

 kl. 15 ; 449 (1889). Later development has 3 largely 

 by .Jalladin and by Bach. oee especially: Palladin,- 

 Ber. deut. bot. Ges. 23: 240-247 (1905), £6: 378, 389 (1908) 

 £7: 444 (1910), Bioehem. Zeits. 18.- 151-E06 (1909), 27: 

 441 (1910), 35: 1-18 (1912), Izv. Akad. ..auk (St. eters- 



burg) : 937 (1912), Zeits. fur Garungsphysiol. 1: 91 



(1912), Ziziologia Rastenakh (Plant Physiologie) 7th 

 Russian ed. pp. 210, 215, 224-225, 241-245 (1914 



_ ite,- The German edition of this work is fro:: the. 

 six' H ;sian edition and does not contain the new de- 

 opments of the respiration theories. The forthcomi 

 E glish edition edited by B. E. Livingston will be cor- 

 rected to the eighth Russian edition and will contain the 

 material here cited); Pal la din and Sabinin,- Bioehem* 

 Joixr. 10: 183-195 (1916); Bach,- 3. ... 124: y51-954 (1897), 

 3iochem. Zeits. 31: 443-449 (1911), Arch. sci. phys. et 

 nat. 32: 27-41 (1911), Oppenheimer ' s Handbuch der Bio- 

 chemie, Erganzungsb. , pp. 155-182 (1913 J, Bioehem, Zeits. 



52: 412-417 (1913); Bach and Battelli,- 3. ... : 



(June 2, 1903), Chodat and Bach,- Arc . sci. phys. et 



nat. 17; 477 (1904), For a recent review ;ee Appleman,- 

 Ma ylanc\Agr. Exp. 3ta., Bull. 191, 16 pp. (1915). 



