Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER I THE CIRCUMNUTATING MOVEMENTS OF SEEDLING PLANTS
- CHAPTER II GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS ON THE MOVEMENTS AND GROWTH OF SEEDLING PLANTS
- CHAPTER III SENSITIVENESS OF THE APEX OF THE RADICLE TO CONTACT AND TO OTHER IRRITANTS
- CHAPTER IV THE CIRCUMNUTATING MOVEMENTS OF THE SEVERAL PARTS OF MATURE PLANTS
- CHAPTER V MODIFIED CIRCUMNUTATION: CLIMBING PLANTS; EPINASTIC AND HYPONASTIC MOVEMENTS
- CHAPTER VI MODIFIED CIRCUMNUTATION: SLEEP OR NYCTITROPIC MOVEMENTS, THEIR USE: SLEEP OF COTYLEDONS
- CHAPTER VII MODIFIED CIRCUMNUTATION: NYCTITROPIC OR SLEEP MOVEMENTS OF LEAVES
- CHAPTER VIII MODIFIED CIRCUMNUTATION: MOVEMENTS EXCITED BY LIGHT
- CHAPTER IX SENSITIVENESS OF PLANTS TO LIGHT: ITS TRANSMITTED EFFECTS
- CHAPTER X MODIFIED CIRCUMNUTATION: MOVEMENTS EXCITED BY GRAVITATION
- CHAPTER XI LOCALISED SENSITIVENESS TO GRAVITATION, AND ITS TRANSMITTED EFFECTS
- CHAPTER XII SUMMARY AND CONCLUDING REMARKS
- INDEX
CHAPTER X - MODIFIED CIRCUMNUTATION: MOVEMENTS EXCITED BY GRAVITATION
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER I THE CIRCUMNUTATING MOVEMENTS OF SEEDLING PLANTS
- CHAPTER II GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS ON THE MOVEMENTS AND GROWTH OF SEEDLING PLANTS
- CHAPTER III SENSITIVENESS OF THE APEX OF THE RADICLE TO CONTACT AND TO OTHER IRRITANTS
- CHAPTER IV THE CIRCUMNUTATING MOVEMENTS OF THE SEVERAL PARTS OF MATURE PLANTS
- CHAPTER V MODIFIED CIRCUMNUTATION: CLIMBING PLANTS; EPINASTIC AND HYPONASTIC MOVEMENTS
- CHAPTER VI MODIFIED CIRCUMNUTATION: SLEEP OR NYCTITROPIC MOVEMENTS, THEIR USE: SLEEP OF COTYLEDONS
- CHAPTER VII MODIFIED CIRCUMNUTATION: NYCTITROPIC OR SLEEP MOVEMENTS OF LEAVES
- CHAPTER VIII MODIFIED CIRCUMNUTATION: MOVEMENTS EXCITED BY LIGHT
- CHAPTER IX SENSITIVENESS OF PLANTS TO LIGHT: ITS TRANSMITTED EFFECTS
- CHAPTER X MODIFIED CIRCUMNUTATION: MOVEMENTS EXCITED BY GRAVITATION
- CHAPTER XI LOCALISED SENSITIVENESS TO GRAVITATION, AND ITS TRANSMITTED EFFECTS
- CHAPTER XII SUMMARY AND CONCLUDING REMARKS
- INDEX
Summary
Our object in the present chapter is to show that geotropism, apogeotropism, and diageotropism are modified forms of circumnutation. Extremely fine filaments of glass, bearing two minute triangles of paper, were fixed to the summits of young stems, frequently to the hypocotyls of seedlings, to flower-peduncles, radicles, &c., and the movements of the parts were then traced in the manner already described on vertical and horizontal glass-plates. It should be remembered that as the stems or other parts become more and more oblique with respect to the glasses, the figures traced on them necessarily become more and more magnified. The plants were protected from light, excepting whilst each observation was being made, and then the light, which was always a dim one, was allowed to enter so as to interfere as little as possible with the movement in progress; and we did not detect any evidence of such interference.
When observing the gradations between circumnutation and heliotropism, we had the great advantage of being able to lessen the light; but with geotropism analogous experiments were of course impossible. We could, however, observe the movements of stems placed at first only a little from the perpendicular, in which case geotropism did not act with nearly so much power, as when the stems were horizontal and at right angles to the force. Plants, also, were selected which were but feebly geotropic or apogeotropic, or had become so from having grown rather old.
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- Information
- The Power of Movement in Plants , pp. 493 - 522Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1880