186 BOTANT. 



plants the lower temperature limit is apparently somewliat 

 higher than in aerial ones ; thus in Hottonia palustris it is. 

 2.7° Cent. (37° Fahr.) ; in Vallisneria, 6° Gent., or more (43° 

 Fahr.) ; in Potamogeton from 10° to 15° Cent. (50° to 59° 

 Fahr.). 



Neither the maximum nor the optimum temperature has 

 been determined for ordinary land plants ; in Hottonia 

 palustris, an aquatic plant, the maximum temperature for 

 assimilation is, according to Sachs, between 50° and 56° 

 Cent. (123° and 132° Fahr.). 



245.— Metastasis. But little is accurately known as to. 

 the efl'ect of an increase or decrease of temperature, within 

 moderate ranges, upon those metastatic changes which take 

 place in the ordinary growth of plants or the storing of reserve 

 material. It is well known, however, that some plants live 

 wholly in low temperatures, performing all their functions 

 in air or water little, if any, above the freezing point. 

 Thus in the " Eed-snow Plant," above cited, the metas- 

 tatic changes must take place very near 0° Cent. 



In the polar waters, where the temperature is from 3° to 

 5° Cent. (37° to 41° Fahr.), or even less, myriads of diatoms, 

 flourish, and in seas but little warmer many of the higher 

 sea-weeds (Fucacese and Floridese) abound. In all these 

 cases the metastatic changes (as well as all others) must take 

 place at these low temperatures. In ordinary land-plants it 

 is to be observed that whereas assimilation takes place only 

 during the light part of the day, when it is warmer, metasta- 

 sis takes place not only in daylight, but even more rapidly in 

 darkness, when the temperature is considerably lower.* 



Sachs measu^red the length of plumule developed upon 

 different plants of the same species subjected to different, 

 temperatures, and in this way found the approximate optima 

 for several species, as follows :f 



* It must not be forgotten, however, that assimilation is dependent 

 upon light, while metastasis is somewhat checked by it, and this is 

 doubtless by far the most important relation ; and still it is a significant 

 fact that in ordinary land-plants metastasis continues when assimi- 

 lation has stopped. 



fin " Physiologisclie TJntersuchuugen Tiber die AbhSngigkeit der 



