a dozen plants, bearing fifty-six fully expanded leaves, and on thirty-one of these dead insects or remnants of them adhered; and, no doubt, many more would have been caught afterwards by these same leaves, and still more by those as yet not expanded. On one plant all six leaves had caught their prey; and on several plants very many leaves had caught more than a gingle insect. On one large leaf I found the remains of thirteen distinct insects. Flies (Diptera) are captured much oftener than other insects. The largest kind which I have seen caught was a small butterfly (Cœnonympha pamphilus) ; but the Rev. H. M. Wilkinson informs me that he found a large living dragon-fly with its body firmly held by two leaves. As this plant is extremely common in some districts, the number of insects thus annually slaughtered must be prodigious. Many plants cause the death of insects, for instance the sticky buds of the horse-chestnut (Æsculus hippocastanum), without thereby receiving, as far as we can perceive, any advantage ; but it was soon evident that Drosera was excellently adapted for the special purpose of catching insects, so that the subject seemed well worthy of investigation.
The results have proved highly remarkable; the more important ones being firstly, the extraordinary sensitiveness of the glands to slight pressure and to minute doses of certain nitrogenous fluids, as shown by the movements of the socalled hairs or tentacles; secondly, the power possessed by the leaves of rendering soluble or digesting nitrogenous substances, and of afterwards absorbing them; thirdly, the changes which take place within the cells of the tentacles, when the glands are excited in various ways.
It is necessary, in the first place, to describe briefly the plant. It bears from two or three to five or six leaves, generally extended more or less horizontally, but sometimes stand-
occasion hereafter to refer to a paper by Mrs. Trent, of New Jersey, on some American species of Drosera. Dr. Burdon Sanderson delivered a lecture on Dionæa, befor the Royal Institution (published in ‘Nature,’ June 14, 1874), In which a short account of my observations on the power of true digestion possessed by Drosera and Dionæa first appeared. Professor Asa Gray has done good service by calling attention to Drosera, and to other plants having similar habits, In ‘The Nation’ (1874, pp. 261 and 232), and in other publications. Dr. Hooker also, in his important addresss on Carnivorous Plants (Brit. Assoc., Belfast, 1874), has given a history of the subject. [A paper on the comparative anatomy of the Droseraceæ was published in 1879 by W. Oels as a Dissertation at Brestau.]