SENSITIVENESS AND IRRITABILITY OF PLANT ORGANS. 161 



inedite, qu'il designe sous le nom d'Ypomaia seneitiva. lie 

 tiHsn membratieux de la coroUe campannlee, de cetfce plante 

 est Boutenu par des filets ou par des nervures qui, au moindre 

 attouchement, se plissent ou (Cincv/rvent sinueusement, de 

 maniere a entrainer le tiasu membraneux de la corollo, 

 laquelle, de cette maniere, Be ferme completement ; elle 

 ne tarde point a s'oavrir de nonveau lorsque la cause qui 

 avait determine sa plicature a cesse d'agir." * M. Dntrochet 

 then observes that this phenomenon is in no- way essentially 

 different from the closing of the corolla of Convolvulus, to 

 which YpomcBa is nearly allied, when it passes into the sleep- 

 ing state, as does the calyx or perianth of the Nyctaginem. 

 Lojpezia coronata exhibits a curious and rapid movement 



a i c 



Fig. ia.—Lopetia (after Hlldebrsnd). (Foi*<le«crlptlon, Bee text.) 



in a staminode. Miiller thus describes it : f " In each flower 

 there is present one perfect stamen ; a second, standing 

 immediately below, is reduced to a spathulate leaf, whose 

 two halves fold upwards, and, in the first stage, projecting 

 horizontally from the flower, inclose the anther of the perfect 

 stamen (Fig. 48, a). The stalk of the spathulate leaf has an 

 elastic tension downwards (6) ; the filament of the stamen 

 an elastic tension upwards (6), so when an insect alights on 

 the projecting spoon-shaped blade, as the only convenient 



* Recherchee Anatomiques et Fhyaiolngiquea eur la Structure Intime 

 dea Amimcmx et dea Tigitanix et aw leu/r MoiiUti, 1824, p. 64. 



t Fertiliaation, etc., p. 265. 



