owing to its careful notices of the literature, and the author's
original researches in phytotomy. Reichel was not satisfied with
the arguments of Malpighi, Nieuwentyt, Wolff, Thümmig and
Hales for the view 'that the vessels of the wood contain air.
He observed quite correctly, that if branches are cut off from
woody and herbaceous plants and the cut surfaces are placed
in red decoction of brazil-wood, the red colouring matter spreads
through all the vascular bundles, even those of the flowers and
fruit; but on examination with the microscope he found the
red fluid to some extent in the cavities of the vessels, and
hastily concluded that they too in the natural condition convey
sap and not air. His description and his drawing show
however, that only some vessels had received any of the
red fluid and that none of these were filled with it. Reichel
and the many who repeated his statements forgot to ask
whether the vessels had contained air or fluid before the
experiment, or whether the result would have been the same, if plants with uninjured and living roots had absorbed the
coloured fluid, and no divided vessels had therefore come
in contact with it. There was no reason why observers of
that day should not have been alive to the simple consider-
ation, that the vessels of a branch parted from the stem and
placed in a fluid must necessarily show the capillary action of
narrow glass tubes if they are filled with air in their natural
condition, and that in the experiment the transpiration of the
leaves must favour the ascent of the red juice in the cavities of
the vessels, as was to be gathered from other and better experiments made by Hales. But these obvious reflections were
not made; the supposed results of the experiment were heedlessly accepted, and the unfounded notion, that vessels are
natural sap-conducting organs, was set up in opposition to the
trustworthy decision of Malpighi and Grew, that they convey air. Thus on the strength of badly interpreted experiments one of the most important of physiological discoveries was called in question, and a hundred years later there were persons,
Page:History of botany (Sachs; Garnsey).djvu/505
Appearance
Chap. ii.]
of Plants. Reichel.
485