2 68 



PHYSIOLOGY OF GROWTH AND CONFIGURATION 



Kind 



of 



Cuticle 



Anatomical Characters 



Epidermis 



Collenchyma 



Thin 



Thick 



Thin 

 Thick 



Cells tangentially 

 elongated, thin 

 outer walls 



Cells radially elon- 

 gated, thick outer 

 walls 



Cells almost cubical 



Cells very much elon- 

 gated radially 



None 



Two adjacent layers 

 well developed 



Poorly developed 

 Less developed than 

 in 2 



The leaves formed by Tropaeolum plants growing in moist air and moist 

 soil were thus five times as large as those formed in the driest cultures. In 

 Fig. i2o, D, is shown a cross-section through the 

 epidermis of a leaf of Lupinus mutabilis from a culture 

 in dry air, a corresponding section of a leaf grown 

 in moist air, being shown in Fig. 120, M. The dif- 

 ferences in the thickness of cell wall and of cuticle 

 are very great. A leaf of the dandelion {Taraxacum 

 officinale) grown in a nearly saturated atmosphere is 

 shown in Fig. 1 2 1 , A , similar ones grown under usual 

 conditions being shown in Fig. 121, В and B' . 



Plants growing in dry regions often possess 



o)00000C> 

 ЖЮОС 



ЛОТШЬ 



Fig. 120. — Sections of leaf 

 epidermis of Lupinus mutabilis thorns, and if such plants are grown in a very moist 



ai ^ gn s atmosphere the thorns are generally replaced by 



short, leafy branches. Two branches of broom 



{Genista anglica) are shown in Fig. 122, one (C) grown under normal conditions, 



the other {B) grown in moist air. The difference is so great that they might 



be taken to be distinct species. 



Wiesner 1 has demonstrated that there may be a descending as well as an 

 ascending water stream in plants. The presence of the former may be clear- 

 ly demonstrated in the following way. A cut branch of grapevine or similar 

 leafy shoot is placed with the youngest, terminal portion of the stem in water, 

 while the rest projects into the air. After some time the part of the stem 

 under water wilts, which is explained by the fact that the actively trans- 

 piring leaves remove more water from the terminal portion than it can absorb, 

 in spite of the fact that it is surrounded by water. 



Many structural peculiarities of plants may be explained as due to the 

 descending water current. For instance, in many plants a withering of the 

 terminal bud occurs, with the consequent formation of a sympodium. The 



1 Wiesner, J., Der absteigende Wasserstrom und dessen physiologische Bedeutung. Bot. Zeitg. 47 : 

 1-9. 24-29. 1889. 



