1 i THE POWEE OF MOVEMENT IN PLANTS. BY THE SAME AUTHOR. ON THE ORIGIN OP SPECIES BY MEANS OP NATURAL SliLKcriON ; or, The PitusiinVATioN of Favoured Races in thb bTKUGGLii Fou Lu'E. Sixth Jidilion. Twenty-Second Tlioasand. Muhhay. THE DESCENT OF MAN, AND SELECTION IN RELATION ro SkX. With lllustratious. Second Edition, revised and auKmented Tlurteentk Thousand. Muukav. * THE VARIATION OP ANIMALS AND PLANTS UNDER DOMESTICATION. With Illustrations. Second Edition, revised. Fourtk Inousand. 2 vols. Mueray. THE EXPRESSION OP THE EMOTIONS IN MAN AND ANIMALS. With Photographic and other lUustraiions. Mnth Thousand. MUEltAY. THE VARIOUS CONTRIVANCES BY WHICH ORCHIDS ARE FERTILISED BY INSECTS. Second Kdition, revised. With Wood- cuts. iiUEUAT. INSECTIVOROUS PLANTS. With Illustrations. Tlmd Thousand. Mceuat. THE MOVEMENTS AND HABITS OF CLIMBING PLANTS. With Illustrations. Second Edition. Mlekat. THE EFFECTS OF CROSS AND SELF-FERTILISATION IN THE VEGETABLE KINGDOM. Second Thousand. Mderat. THE DIFFERENT FORMS OF FLOWERS ON PLANTS OF THE SAME SPECIES. Second Thousand. Muei^ay. A NATURALIST'S VOYAGE ROUND THE WORLD; or, A JODRNAL OF RESEARCHES INTO THE NaTUEAL HiSTOET AND GeOLOGT OF THE Counteies VISITED duriiig the Voyage of H.M.S. 'Beagle,' uoder the Command of Captain FixzRor, R.N. Fourteenth Thousand. Mdbbat. ON THE STRUCTURE AND DISTRIBUTION OF CORAL KEEFS. Second Ldition. Smith, Eldee & Co. GEOLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS ON VOLCANIC ISLANDS AND ON PARTS OF SOUTH AMERICA, visited during the Voyage of H.M.S. ' Beagle.' Second Jidition. Smith, Eldee & Co. A MONOGRAPH OP THE CIRRIPEDIA. With numerous Illustrations. 2 vols. Ray Society. Habdwicke. A MONOGRAPH OF THE FOSSIL LEPADID^ OR PEDUNCULArEl) CIRRIPEDS OF GREAT BRITAIN. Pal.«:oktogkaphical Society. A MONOGRAPH OF THE FOSSIL BALANIDJE AND VERRUC1D.E OF GREAT BRITAIN. Pal^ontogbaphical SoraEni. FACTS AND ARGUMENTS FOR DARWIN. By Fritz Mullkk. From the Gernmn, with Additions by tlie Author. Translated by W. S. Dallas, K.L.S. With lUusiraiions. Mueeax. ERASMUS DARWIN. By Ehnst Kbause. Translated by W. S. Dallas. With a Preliminary Notice by Cuables Daewin. THE POWEE OF MOVEMENT By CHAKLES DAEWIN, LL.D., F.R.S. FRANCIS DARWIN. LEEDS <5- I - I o CJ3 Oxalis rosea : conjoint circumnutation of the cotyledons and hypocotyl, traced from 8.12 A.M. on June 18th to 7.30 A.M. 19th. The apex of the cotyledon stood only 3f inches from the vertical glass. Figure here given one-half of original scale. Fig. 15. e°40 a.m. Q°3Sa.n,.. Oxalis Vaklivuma : conjoint circumnutation of ^a cotyle- don and the hypocotyl, traced on vertical ghiss, during 24 hours. Figure here given one-half of original scale; seedling illuminated from above. the first day the seedling was placed too far from the vertical glass ; so that the tracing was enormously exaggerated and the movement could not be traced when the cotyledon either rose or sank much; but it was clearly seen that the cotyledons rose thrice and fell twice between 8.15 a.m. and 4.15 p.m. Early on the following morning (June 19th) the apex of a cotyledon was 26 CmCUMNUTATION OP SEEDLINGS. Chap. 1. placed only 1 J inch from the vertical glass. At 6.40 a.m. it stood horizontally; it then fell till 8.35, and then rose. Al- together in the course of 12 h. it rose thrice and fell thrice, as may be seen in Fig. 15. The great nocturnal rise of the coty- ledons usually commences about 4 or 5 p.m., and on the following morning they are expanded or stand horizontally at about 6.30 A.M. In the present instance, however, the great nocturnal rise did not commence till 7 p.m. ; but this was due to the hypocotyl having from some unknown cause temporarily bent to the left side, as is shown in the tracing. To ascertain positively that the hypocotyl circumnutated, a mark was placed at 8.15 p.m. behind the two now closed and vertical cotyledons ; and the movement of a glass filament fixed upright to the top of the hypocotyl was traced until 10.40 p.m. During this time it moved from side to side, as well as backwards and forwards, plainly showing circumnutation ; but the movement was small in extent. Therefore Fig. 15 represents fairly well the move- ments of the cotyledons alone, with the exception of the one great afternoon curvature to the left. Oxalis cornicidata (var. cuprea).—T\xQ cotyledons rise at night to a variable degree above the horizon, generally about 45° : those on some seedlings between 2 and 5 days old were found to be in continued movement all day long ; but the movements were more simple than in the last two species. This may have partly resulted from their not being sufficiently illummated whilst being observed, as was shown by their not beginnmg to rise until very late in the evening. Oxalis (Biophytum) se7isitiva— The cotyledons are highly re- markable from the amplitude and rapidity of their movements during the day. The angles at which they stood above or beneath the horizon were measured at short intervals of time ; and we regret that their course was not traced during the whole day. We will give only a few of the measurements, which were made whilst the seedlings were exposed to a temperature of 22^° to 24^ C. One cotyledon rose 70° in 11 m. ; another, on a distinct seedling, fell 80° in 12 m. Immediately before this latter fall the same cotyledon had risen from a vertically downward to a vertically upward position in 1 h. 48 m., and had therefore passed through 180° in under 2 h. We have met with no other instance of a circumnutating movement of such great amplitude as 180° ; nor of such rapidity of movement as the passage through 80° in 12 m. The cotyledons of this plant sleep at night by rising Chap. I. TKOP^OLUM. 27 vertically and coming into close contact. This upward move- ment differs from one of the great diurnal oscillations above described only by the position being permanent during the night and by its periodicity, as it always commences late in the evening. Tropxolum minus (?) (var. Tom Thumb) (Tropseolese).— The cotyledons are hypogean, or never rise above the ground. By removing the soil a buried epicotyl or plumule was found, with its smnmit arched abruptly down- wards, like the arched hypocotyl of the cabbage previously described. A glass filament with a bead at its end was affixed to the basal half or leg, just above the hypogean cotyledons, which were again almost surrounded by loose earth. The tracing (Fig. 16) shows the course of the bead during 11 h. After the last dot given in the figure, the bead moved to a great distance, and finally off the glass, in the direction indicated by the broken Line. This great movement, due to increased growth along the con- cave surface of the arch, was caused by the basal leg bending back- wards from the upper part, that is in a direction opposite to the depen- dent tip, in the same manner as occurred with the hypocotyl of the cabbage. Another buried and arched epicotyl was observed in the same manner, excepting that the two legs of the arch were tied together with fine silk for the sake of preventing the great movement just mentioned. It moved, however, in the evening in the same direction as before, but the line followed was not so straight. During the morning the tied arch moved in an irregularly circular, strongly zigzag course, and to a greater distance than in the previous case, as was shown in a tracing, magnified 18 times. The move- ments of a young plant bearing a few leaves and of a mature plant, will hereafter be described. T Fig. 16. Tropccohm minus (?) : circum- nutation of buried and arched epicotyl, traced on a horizon- tal glass, from 9.20 a.m. to 8.15 p.m. Movement of bead of filament magnified 27 times. 28 CIRCUMNUTATION OF SEEDLINGS. Chap. I. Citrus auranHum (Orange) (Aurantiaceai).— The cotyledons are hypogean. The circumnutation of an epicotyl, which at the close of our observations was -59 of an inch (15 mm.) in height above the ground, is shown in the annexed figure (Fig. 17), as observed during a period of 44 h. 40 m. Citrus aurantium : circumnutation of epicotyl with a filament fixed trans- versely near its apex, traced on a horizontal glass, from 12.13 p.ji. on Feb. 20th to 8.55 A.M. on 22nd. The movement of the bead of the filament was at first magnified 21 times, or 10.^, in figure here given, and afterwards 36 times, or 18 as here given ; seedling illuminated from above. ^sculus hippocastanum (Hippocastanese). — Germinating seeds were placed in a tin box, kept moist internally, with a sloping bank of damp argillaceous sand, on which four smoked glass- plates rested, inclined at angles of 70° and 65° with the horizon. The tips of the radicles were placed so as just to touch the upper end of the glass-plates, and, as they grew downwards they pressed lightly, owing to geotropism, on the smoked surfaces, and left tracks of their course. In the middle part of each track the glass was swept clean, but the margins were much blurred and irregular. Cojoies of two of these tj-acks (all four being nearly alike) were made on tracing paper placed over the glass-plates after they had been varnished ; and they are as exact as possible, considering the nature of the margins (Fig. 18). They suffice to show that there was some lateral, almost serpentine movement, and that the tips in their down- ward course pressed with unequal force on the plates, as Chap. I. VICIA. 29 Fig. 18. the tracks varied in breadth. The more perfectly serpentine tracks made by the radicles of Fhaseolus multiflorus and Vicia faba (presently to be described), render it almost certain that the radicles of the present plant circnmnutated. Fhaseolus multiflorus (Legtiminos£)e). — Four smoked glass-plates were ar- ranged in the same manner as des- cribed under iEscnlus, and the tracks left by the tips of four radicles of the present plant, whilst growing down- wards, were photogTaphed as trans- parent objects. Three of them are here exactly copied (Fig. 19). Their serpentine courses show that the tips moved regularly from side to side; they also pressed alternately with greater or less force on the plates, sometimes rising up and leaving them altogether for a very short distance ; but this was better seen on the original plates than in the copies. These radicles therefore were continually moving in all direc- tions— that is, they circnmnutated. The distance between the extreme right and left positions of the radicle A, in its lateral movement, was 2 mm., as ascer- tained by measurement with an eye-piece micrometer. Vicia faba (Common Bean) (Leguminosse). — Radicle. — Some beans were allowed to germinate on bare sand, and after one had protruded its radicle to a leng-th of "2 of an inch, it was turned upside down, so that the radicle, which was kept in damp air, now stood upright. A filament, nearly an inch in length, was affixed obliquely near its tip; and the movement of the terminal bead was traced from 8.30 a.m. to 10.30 p.m., as shown in Fig. 18. The radicle at first changed its course twice A. j^sculus hippocastanum : out- lines of tracks left on in- clined glass-plates by tips of radicles. In A the plate was inclined at 70° with the horizon, and the radicle was 1 • 9 inch in length, and •23 inch in diameter at base. In B the plate was inclined 65° with the horizon, and the radicle was a trifle larger. Fig. 19. Phaseolus multiflorus : tracks left on inclined smoked glass-plates by tips of radicles in growing downwards. A and C, plates inclined at 60° B inclined at 68° with the horizon. 30 CIROUMNUTATION OF SEEDLINGS. Chap. I. abruptly, then made a small loop and then a larger zigzag curve. During the night and till 11 a.m. on the following Fig. 20. Vicia faba : circumnutation of a radicle, at first pointing vertically up- wards, kept in darkness, traced on a horizontal glass, during 14 hours. Movement of bead of filament magnified 23 times, here reduced to one-half of original scale. morning, the bead moved to a great distance in a nearly straight line, in the direction indicated by the broken line in the figure. This resulted from the tip bending quickly downwards, as it had now become much declined, and had thus gained a position highly favourable for the action of geotropism. Fig. 21. A. B. C. D. E. Vicia faba : tracks left on inclined smoked glass-plates, by tips of radicles in growing downwards. Plate C was inclined at 63°, plates A and 1) at 71°, plate B at 75°, and plate E_at_a few degrees beneath the horizon. Chap. I. VICIA. 31 ■ We next experimented on nearly a score of radicles by allowing them to grow downwards over inclined plates of smoked glass, in exactly the same manner as with iEsculus and Phaseolus. Some of the plates were inclined only a few degrees beneath the horizon, but most of them between 60° and 75°. In the latter cases the radicles in growing downwards were deflected only a little from the direction which they had followed whilst germinating in sawdust, and they pressed lightly on the glass- plates (Fig. 21). Five of the most distinct tracks are here copied, and they are all slightly sinuous, showing circumnuta- tion. Moreover, a close examination of almost every one of the tracks clearly showed that the tips in their downward course had alternately pressed with greater or less force on the plates, and had sometimes risen up so as nearly to leave them for short intervals. The distance between the extreme right and left positions of the radicle A was 0"7 mm., ascertained in the same manner as in the case of Phaseolus. Epicotyl. — At the point where the radicle had protruded from a bean laid on its side, a flattened solid lump projected '1 of an inch, in the same horizontal plane with the bean. This protuber- ance consisted of the convex summit of the arched epicotyl; and as it became developed the two legs of the arch curved themselves laterally upwards, owing to apogeotropism, at such a rate that the arch stood highly inclined after 14 h., and vertically in 48 h. A filament was fixed to the crown of the protuberance before any arch was visible, but the basal half grew so quickly that on the second morning the end of the filament was bowed greatly downwards. It was therefore re- moved and fixed lower down. The line traced during these two days extended in the same general direction, and was in parts nearly straight, and in others plainly zigzag, thus giving some evidence of circumnutation. As the arched epicotyl, in whatever position it may be placed, bends quickly upwards thi-ough apogeotropism, and as the two legs tend at a very early age to separate from one another, as soon as they are relieved from the pressure of the surrounding earth, it was difficult to ascertain positively whether the epicotyf, whilst remaining arched, circumnutated. Therefore some rather deeply buried beans were uncovered, and the two legs of the arches were tied together, as had been done with the epicotyl of Tropjeolum and the hypocotyl of the Cabbage. The move- ments of the tied arches were traced in the usual manner on 32 CIECUMNUTATION OF SEEDLINGS. Chap. I. two occasions during three days. But the tracings made under such unnatural conditions are not worth giving ; and it need only be said that the lines were decidedly zigzag, and that small loops were occasionally formed. We may therefore con- clude that the epicotyl circumnutates whilst still arched and before it has grown tall enough to break through the surface of the ground. In order to observe the movements of the epicotyl at a some- what more advanced age, a filament was fixed near the base of one which was no longer arched, for its upper half now formed a right angle with the lower half. This bean had germinated on bare damp sand, and the epicotyl began to straighten itself much sooner than would have occurred if it had been properly planted. The course pursued during 50 h. (from 9 a.m. Dec. 26th, to 11 A.M. 28th) is here shown (Fig. 22) ; and we see Fig. 22. Vicia faba : circumnutation of young epicotyl, traced in darkness during 50 hours on a horizontal glass. Movement of bead of filament mag- nified 20 times, here reduced to one-half of original scale. that the epicotyl circumnutated during the whole time. Its basal part grew so much during the 50 h. that the filament at the end of our observations was attached at the height of •4 inch above the upper surface of the bean, instead of close to it. If the bean had been properly planted, this part of the epicotyl would still have been beneath the soil. Late in the evening of the 28th, some hours after the above observations were completed, the epicotyl had grown much straighter, for the upper part now formed a widely open angle with the lower part. A filament was fixed to the upright basal part higher up than before, close beneath the lowest scale-like process or homologue of a leaf; and its movement was ti-aced Chap. I. LATHYEUS. 33 during 38 h. (Fig. 23). We here again have plain evidence of continued circumnutation. Had the bean been properly planted, the part of the epicotyl to which the filament was attached, the Fig. 23. Vicia faba : circumnutation of the same epicotyl as in Fig. 22, a little more advanced in age, traced under similar conditions as before, from 8.40 A.M. Dec. 28th, to 10.50 A.M. 30th. Movement of bead here magnified 20 times. movement of which is here shown, would probably have just risen above the surface of the ground. Lathyrus nissoUa (Leguminosse). — This plant was selected for observation from being an abnormal form with grass-like leaves. Fig. 24. Lathyrus nissolia: circumnutation of stem of young seedling, traced in darkness on a horizontal glass, from 6.45 A.M. Nov. 22nd, to 7 a.m. 23rd. Movement of end of leaf magnified about 12 times, here re- duced to one-half of original scale. The cotyledons are hypogean, and the epicotyl breaks through the ground in an arched form. The movements of a stem, 1-2 inch in height, consisting of three internodes, the lower one almost wholly subterranean, and the upper one bearing a short, D 34 CIRCUMNUTATION OP SEEDLINGS. Chap. I. narrow leaf, is shown during 24 h., in Fig. 24. No glass filament was employed, but a mark was placed beneath the apex of the leaf. The actual length of the longer of the two ellipses de- scribed by the stem was about "14 of an inch. On the previous day the chief line of movement was nearly at right angles to that shown in the present figure, and it was more simple. Cassia tora* (Leguminosfe). — A seedling was placed before a Fig. 25. Cassia tora • conjoint circumnutation of cotyledons and hypocotyl, traced on vertical glass, from 7.10 a.m. Sept. 25th to 7.30 A.M. 26th. Figure here given reduced to one-half of original scale. * Seeds of tills plant, whicli flourish or flower -well with us ; irrew near the sea-side, were sent they were sent to Kew, and were to us by Fritz Miiller from S. pronounced not to be distinguish- Brazil Tlie seedlings did not able from C.