CHAPTER VII. MISCELLANEOUS OBJECTIONS TO THE THEORY OF NATURAL SELECTION.
1. LONGEVITY. (continued)
As twining is the simplest means of ascending a support, and forms the
basis of our series, it may naturally be asked how did plants acquire this
power in an incipient degree, afterwards to be improved and increased
through natural selection. The power of twining depends, firstly, on the
stems while young being extremely flexible (but this is a character common
to many plants which are not climbers); and, secondly, on their continually
bending to all points of the compass, one after the other in succession, in
the same order. By this movement the stems are inclined to all sides, and
are made to move round and round. As soon as the lower part of a stem
strikes against any object and is stopped, the upper part still goes on
bending and revolving, and thus necessarily twines round and up the
support. The revolving movement ceases after the early growth of each
shoot. As in many widely separated families of plants, single species and
single genera possess the power of revolving, and have thus become twiners,
they must have independently acquired it, and cannot have inherited it from
a common progenitor. Hence, I was led to predict that some slight tendency
to a movement of this kind would be found to be far from uncommon with
plants which did not climb; and that this had afforded the basis for
natural selection to work on and improve. When I made this prediction, I
knew of only one imperfect case, namely, of the young flower-peduncles of a
Maurandia which revolved slightly and irregularly, like the stems of
twining plants, but without making any use of this habit. Soon afterwards
Fritz Muller discovered that the young stems of an Alisma and of a Linum--
plants which do not climb and are widely separated in the natural system--
revolved plainly, though irregularly, and he states that he has reason to
suspect that this occurs with some other plants. These slight movements
appear to be of no service to the plants in question; anyhow, they are not
of the least use in the way of climbing, which is the point that concerns
us. Nevertheless we can see that if the stems of these plants had been
flexible, and if under the conditions to which they are exposed it had
profited them to ascend to a height, then the habit of slightly and
irregularly revolving might have been increased and utilised through
natural selection, until they had become converted into well-developed
twining species.
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