Page:Life Movements in Plants.djvu/195

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HIGH MAGNIFICATION CRESCOGRAPH
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(Fig. 60) with a magnification of two thousand times shows that there is an expansion during
Fig. 60.—Horizontal record shows absence of growth in a dead branch; physical expansion on application of warmth at arrow followed by horizontal record on attainment of steady temperature. (Magnification 2,000 times.)
the rise of temperature, and that the variable period lasted for a minute, after which there was a cessation of physical movement, the record becoming once more horizontal. The obvious precautions to be taken in such a case, is to wait for several minutes for the attainment of steady temperature. The movement caused by physical change abates in a short time whereas the change of rate of growth brought about by physiological reaction is persistent.

DETERMINATION OF LATENT PERIOD AND TIME-RELATIONS OF RESPONSE.

Experiment 55.—In the determination of time-relations of responsive change in growth under external stimulus, I shall take the typical case of the effect of electric shock from a secondary coil of one second's duration. Two electrodes were applied, one above and the other below the growing region of a bud of Crinum. The record was taken on a moving plate, the magnification employed being two thousand times, and successive dots made at intervals of two seconds. It was a matter of surprise to me to find that the growth of the plant was affected by an intensity of stimulus far below the limit of our own perception. As regards the relative sensitiveness of plant and animal, some of my experiments show that the leaf of Mimosa pudica in a favourable condition responds to an electric stimulus which is one-tenth the minimum intensity