Page:Popular Science Monthly Volume 8.djvu/57

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INSECTIVOROUS PLANTS.
47

hairs in the centre of each lobe of the leaf. He was also unable to bring himself to believe that Nature intended the plant "to receive some nourishment from the animals it seizes," and he accordingly declared that, as soon as the insects ceased to struggle, the leaf opened and let them go. He only saw in these wonderful actions an extreme case of sensitiveness in the leaves; and he consequently regarded the capture of the disturbing insects as merely accidental, and of no importance to the plant.

Linnæus's authority caused his statements to be faithfully copied from book to book.

Sixty years after Linnæus wrote, an able botanist, the Rev. Dr. M. A, Curtis (who died in 1872), lived at Wilmington, North Carolina, the headquarters of this very local plant. In 1834 he published an account of it in the Boston Journal of Natural History, which is a model of accurate scientific observation. He said: "Each half of the leaf is a little concave on the inner side, where there are placed three delicate, hair-like organs, in such order that an insect can hardly traverse it without interfering with one of them, when the two sides suddenly collapse, and inclose the prey, with a force surpassing an insect's efforts to escape. The fringes of hairs on the opposite sides of a leaf interlace like the fingers of two hands clasped together. The sensitiveness resides only in these hair-like processes on the inside, as the leaf may be touched or pressed in another part without sensible effects. The little prisoner is not crushed and suddenly destroyed, for I have often liberated captive flies and spiders which sped away as fast as fear or joy could carry them. At other times, I have found them enveloped in a fluid of mucilaginous consistence which seems to act as a solvent, the insects being more or less consumed in it. This circumstance has suggested the possibility of their being made subservient to the nourishment of the plant through an apparatus of absorbent vessels in the leaves."

To Ellis belongs the credit of divining the purpose of the capture of insects by the Dionæa. But Curtis made out the details of mechanism by ascertaining the seat of the sensitiveness of the leaves; and he also pointed out that the secretion was not a lure exuded before the capture, but a true digestive fluid poured out like our own gastric juice after the ingestion of food. (Prof. Gray quotes Dr. Curtis's observations on the Dionæa in his "Genera of the Plants of the United States," vol. i., p. 196, 1849, without comment; and his plate of the plant does not show any of the important sensitive spines.)

The investigation of this curious question again rested until 1868, when it was taken up by Mr. Canby, who was then staying in the Dionæa district. He found that the leaf had the power of dissolving animal matter, and that small pieces of beef that were fed to it were completely dissolved and absorbed; the leaf opening again with a dry surface and ready for another meal, though with an appetite somewhat