Carbon dioxide passes out from the plant and in from the air! That seems curious, but you must remember the plant has to use its stomata for both lungs and mouths,—lungs to breathe out impure air, which contains carbon dioxide, and mouths to take in carbon dioxide, which is one of its principal foods.

Besides stomata, plant skin has other kinds of special cells. These other cells form hairs or prickles or scales or glands. The hairs, prickles, and scales form on the outside of the skin, as you can see by the illustration.

On the side of a regular skin cell the protoplasm builds a small cell; this grows long and divides and makes two; these may again divide, and so on until the plant has as long a hair as it needs. Sometimes the hair is made of but one long cell.

Hairs, as we know, protect the plant from too great evaporation and from changes of temperature; they also keep the dew and rain from settling in the stomata and filling them up so they cannot do their work.

Here is a picture of four stomata, growing about a hollow filled with hairs. These hairs prevent the outside water from running in and wetting the stomata.

Prickles and some kinds of hairs and scales protect the outside of the plant from animals. When the animals bite the plant, these things stick into their mouths and they are glad to let it alone.

If you want to be sure that prickles and hairs protect the outside of a plant, go take hold of a nettle!

Madam Nettle does not wish to be taken hold of nor eaten nor touched by cows or sheep or anything else.