422 



MOVEMENTS. 



tion is always slightly cooler than the rest of the petiole, but 



upon the movement from irritation it rises in temperature ; not 



enough, however, 

 to account for the 

 raising of so con- 

 siderable a weight 

 as that of the leaf. 

 1091. Some 

 physiologists have 

 regarded the sen- 

 sitiveness of the 

 pulvinus of the 

 Sensitive plant 

 and of other motile 

 parts as residing 

 chiefly if not whol- 

 ly in the cell- wall, 

 while others have 



thought that it resided in the contractile protoplasm. It is now 



generally held to be due to some sudden variation in the osmotic 



power of the proto- 

 plasm, particularly in 



its peripheral portion 



in contact with the 



cell- wall, by which the 



turgescence of the cell 



is suddenly changed. 1 

 1092. If a plant 



with motile leaves is 



kept in darkness for 



a da} r or so, even if 



the temperature is fav- 

 orable to motion, its 



power of movement is 



either greatly impaired 



or for a time wholly 193 



lost. A diminished 



amount of light is sufficient to produce the same effect in the 



case of the Sensitive plant. 



1 Compare Hofmeister : Die Lehre von der Pflanzenzelle, 1867, p. 300 ; 



Briicke : Archiv fiir Anatomic, Physiologic, und wiss. Medicin, 1848, p. 434 ; 



linger : Botanische Zeitung, 1862, p. 113 ; 1863, p. 349. 



FIG. 192 Transverse section of the motile organ of a leaflet of Oxalis carnea. (Sachs.) 

 FIG. 193. Vertical section through tlie motile organ of a leaflet of Oxalis carnea. 



(Sachs.) 



