210 VEGETABLE PHYSIOLOGY 
portion of the chlorophyll apparatus, has thus not only to 
provide for its own nutrition, but to prepare a part of the 
nutritive material required by other protoplasts which are 
set apart for the discharge of other work. 
But this is not all. We find, from a study of plants, 
that in almost all cases, so long as life lasts, growth is 
proceeding. This may result in a continuous increase in 
the dimensions of the plant-body, or may lead only to the 
replacement of parts which have a brief existence, and 
need to be renewed. This is the case, for instance, in 
forest trees that have attained their full dimensions. 
Growth in the vegetable organism is very definitely 
localised. Growth in length takes place at or near the 
apices of stems and roots; it has a definite though vari- 
able localisation in leaves of different kinds. Growth in 
thickness is confined to sheaths or bands of cells in different 
regions of the axis, such as the cambium, and the different 
phellogens met with in the cortex. 
Growth and nutrition differ in another respect: the 
former is intermittent, the latter needs to be constant, 
though the intensity of the requirements may vary. 
These considerations show us that there must exist in 
the plant avery complete mechanism by which the differ- 
ent food-stuffs can be circulated about its body. Each 
protoplast must be in receipt of a continuous, though per- 
haps small, supply of nutritive material; the demands 
of growth must be satisfied by the transport of considerable 
quantities of formative material to the growing regions. 
The intermittence of growth makes a further demand. 
Consider one among many places at which a large con- 
sumption of such formative material is proceeding: a stream 
is travelling there to supply the need. Suppose that some 
temporary check to the growth at that spot takes place. 
The stream will be diverted elsewhere by the demands of 
the other growing parts, and when the hindrance is 
removed and growth should again proceed, there will be no 
stream of constructive material, and much time will be lost 
