158 DROSERA ROTUNDIFOLIA. Cuap. VIL 
after the 8 hrs. it was impossible to compare the two lots, and 
doubt for an instant the power of the solution. 
Two of the above leaves in the solution had all their tentacles, 
except three and four, inflected within an hour. I counted their 
glands, and, on the same principle as before, each gland on one 
leaf could have absorbed only z;ghg5q, and on the other leaf 
only yz7i500: Of a grain of the phosphate. 
Twenty leaves were immersed in the usual manner, each in 
thirty minims of a solution of one part to 218,750 of water (1 gr. 
to 500 oz.). So many leaves were tried because I was then 
under the false impression that it was incredible that any 
weaker solution could produce an effect. Each leaf received 
xeon Of a grain, or ‘0081 mg. The first eight leaves which I 
tried both in the solution and in water were either young and 
pale or too old; and the weather was not hot. They were hardly 
at all affected; nevertheless, it would be unfair to exclude them. 
I then waited until I got eight pairs of fine leaves, and the 
weather was favourable; the temperature of the room where the 
leaves were immersed varying from 75° to 81° (23°8 to 27°-2 
Cent.). In another trial with four pairs (included in the above 
twenty pairs), the temperature in my room was rather low, 
about 60° (15°°5 Cent.); but the plants had been kept for several 
days in a very warm greenhouse and thus rendered extremely 
sensitive. Special precautions were taken for this set of experi- 
ments; a chemist weighed for me a grain in an excellent 
‘balance; and fresh water, given me by Professor Frankland, was 
carefully measured. The leaves were selected from a large 
number of plants in the following manner: the four finest wero 
immersed in water, and the next four finest in the solution, and 
so on till the twenty pairs were complete. The water specimens 
were thus a little favoured, but they did not undergo more in- 
flection than in the previous cases, comparatively with those 
in the solution. 
Of the twenty leaves in the solution, eleven became inflected 
within 40 m.; eight of them plainly and three rather doubt- 
fully; but the latter had at least twenty of their outer tentacles 
inflected. Owing to the weakness of the solution, inflection 
occurred, except in No. 1, much more slowly than in the pre- 
vious trials. The condition of the eleven leaves which were 
considerably inflected will now be given at stated intervals, 
always reckoning from the time of immersion :— 
(1) After only 8 m. a large number of tentacles inflected, 
and after 17 m. all but fifteen; after 2 hrs. all but eight in- 
