88 



THE INFLUiTNCE OF INANIMATE S0KROUNUINGS. 



ento-parasites are quite, or almost quite, Vhite, appears a 

 striking proof of the accuracy of this statement. Even as 

 lately as 1870 it was asserted by the celebrated French depute 

 and physiologist, Paul Bert, that the larvse of the well-known 

 Axolotl (fig. 24) were incapable of forming pigment when they 

 were brought up under the influence of yellow light, and he 

 unhappily designated this absence of the epidermal pigment 

 as ' etiolation.' This term, as is well known, has a £xed signi- 

 fication in the physiology of plants ; it is exclusively used to 



Fig. 2i.—Siredon pitd/orme, the Mexican Axolotl. 



designate those cases of the absence of the green hue in plants 

 wmch, having grown in the dark, have been checked -in the 

 formation of the chlorophyll-bodies, which ai^e the organs by 

 which they assimilate and elaborate their nutrition Tat the 

 same time, as the light is no longer able to act as a check on 

 their excessive growth, the leaves and stems become much 

 elongated and acquire a yellowish-white hue, all of which phe- 

 nomena can be easily observed in the shoots and leav^ of 

 potato tubers which have begun to sprout in a cellar. In the 

 cases of so-called ' etiolation ' described by Bert as occurring in 



