. Elementary botany. Botany. DIFFUSION, OSMOSE. 17 33. Let us no«- remove some of the slii es of the beet from the sugar and salt solutions, wash them with water and then immerse them in fresh water. In the course of thirty minutes to one hour, if we examine them again, we find that they have regained, partly or completely, their rigidity. Here again we inter from the tormer experiment with spirogyra that the sub- stances in the cell-sap now draw water inward; that is, the diffusion current is inward through the cell walls and the proto- plasmic membrane, and the tissue becomes tu


. Elementary botany. Botany. DIFFUSION, OSMOSE. 17 33. Let us no«- remove some of the slii es of the beet from the sugar and salt solutions, wash them with water and then immerse them in fresh water. In the course of thirty minutes to one hour, if we examine them again, we find that they have regained, partly or completely, their rigidity. Here again we inter from the tormer experiment with spirogyra that the sub- stances in the cell-sap now draw water inward; that is, the diffusion current is inward through the cell walls and the proto- plasmic membrane, and the tissue becomes turgid again. 34. Osmose in the cells of the beet.—We should now make a section of the fresh tissue of a red colored beet for examination with the microscope, and treat this section with the salt solution. Here we can see that the effect of the salt solution is to draw water out of the cell, so that the protoplasmic mem-. Fig. 23. Fig. 24- Fig- 25. Before treatment \\-ith salt .\fter treatment with salt Later stage ol the same, solution. solution. Figs. 23-25.—Cells from beet treated ^ith salt solution to show osmosis and movement of the protoplasmic membrane. brane can be seen to move inward from the cell wall just as was obser^'ed in the case of spirog^';^ Now treating the section with water and removing the salt solution, the diftusion current is in the opposite direction, that is in- * We should note that the coloring matter of the beet resides in the cell- sap. It is in these colored cells that we can best see the movement take place, since the red color serves to difterentiate well the moving mass from the cell wall. The protoplasmic membrane at several points usually clings tena- ciously so that at several places the membrane is arched strongly away from the cell wall as shown in fig. 24. While water is removed from the cell-sap, we note that the coloring matter does not escape through the protoplasmic Please note that these images are extracted fro


Size: 2377px × 1051px
Photo credit: © The Book Worm / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookpublisher, booksubjectbotany