LECTURE VI
PROTECTIVE ADAPTATIONS IN PLANTS
Protection against large animals—Poisons—Ethereal oils—Spines and thorns—Sharp and stinging-hairs—Felt-hairs—Position of the thorns: buckthorn—Tragacanth shrub—Prigana scrub—Alpine shrubs—Protection against small enemies—Chemical substances—Mechanical protective arrangements—Raphides—Conclusion.
We have seen in how many different ways animals are able to adapt themselves to the conditions of life, both protectively and aggressively; how they approximate in their colour to that of their surroundings so that they harmonize with it; how they copy lifeless objects, or parts of plants, leaves, or twigs, or even mimic, in form and colour, other animals which are in some way protected. When we consider that by far the greater number of species find protection in some degree through their colouring, and often through their form, and when, at the same time, we remember how different this colouring is in nearly related species, and even within the same species (dimorphism), we can scarcely avoid the impression that the forms of life are made of a plastic material, which, like the sculptor's clay, can be kneaded at will into almost any desired form.
This impression is corroborated when we turn our attention to plants, and consider the different ways in which they are able to protect themselves from the attacks of animals.
That plants stand in need of some protection is obvious enough, since their leaves and other green parts contain much nourishment, and an endless army of animals, large and small, depends upon these alone for sustenance. Indeed, the existence of animals depends altogether on the occurrence of plants, for carnivorous and saprophytic animals could only arise after vegetarian forms had been already in existence. But if the green parts of the plants were left defenceless at the mercy of the multitude of herbivorous animals, it would not be long before they were exterminated from the face of the earth, for the animals would devour unsparingly whatever was within their reach, and, as their increase does not depend on their ratio of elimination alone, but also on their fertility, and on their rapidity of multiplication, they would go on increasing in numbers at the expense of the superabundant nourishment until the plants on which they depended were themselves consumed.
When we inquire into the means whereby plants evade such a fate we are astonished at the endless diversity of the devices employed.
Let us consider first of all the menace to plants from the larger herbivores, from elephants and cattle down to the hare and the roe-deer; we find that many plants are protected by poisons, which develop in the sap of their stems, leaves, roots, and fruits. The juicy and beautifully leaved Belladonna (Atropa belladonna) is never touched by roe-deer, stags, or other herbivores, and the same is true of the thorn-apple (Datura stramonium), the henbane (Hyoscyamus niger), the spotted hemlock (Conium maculatum), the danewort of our woods (Sambucus ebulus), and many others; they all contain a poison. Like the unpalatable butterflies, these unpalatable plants are also furnished with a warning sign of their undesirability, namely, a disagreeable odour, perceptible even by man, which scares off animals from touching them. The development of this through natural selection presents no very serious difficulty.