How Plant Feeds From Soil
Explaining by experiment as to How Plant Feeds From
Soil
Plants receive their nourishment from two sources—from the air
and from the soil. The soil food, or mineral food, dissolved in water, must reach the plant through the
root-hairs with which all plants are provided in great numbers. Each of these hairs may be compared to a
finger reaching among the particles of earth for food and water. If we examine the root-hairs ever so
closely, we find no holes, or openings, in them. It is evident, then, that no solid particles can enter the
root-hairs, but that all food must pass into the root in solution.
An experiment will help us to understand how a root feeds.
EXPERIMENT

Fig. 22. Experiment
to show how Roots
take up Food
Secure a narrow glass tube like the one in Fig. 22. If you cannot get a tube, a
narrow, straight lamp-chimney will, with a little care, do nearly as well. From a bladder made soft by
soaking, cut a piece large enough to cover the end of the tube or chimney and to hang over a little all
around. Make the piece of bladder secure to the end of the tube by wrapping tightly with a waxed thread,
as at B. Partly fill the tube with molasses (or it may be easier in case you use a narrow tube to fill it
before attaching the bladder). Put the tube into a jar or bottle of water so placed that the level of the
molasses inside and the water outside will be the same. Fasten the tube in this position and observe it
frequently for three or four hours. At the end of the time you should find that the molasses in the tube
has risen above the level of the liquid outside. It may even overflow at the top. If you use the
lamp-chimney the rise will not be so clearly seen, since a greater volume is required to fill the space
in the chimney. This increase in[Pg 30] the contents of the tube is due to the entrance of water from the outside. The
water has passed through the thin bladder, or membrane, and has come to occupy space in the tube. There
is also a passage the other way, but the molasses can pass through the bladder membrane so slowly that
the passage is scarcely noticeable. There are no holes, or openings, in the membrane, but still there is
a free passage of liquids in both directions, although the more heavily laden solution must move more
slowly.
A root-hair acts in much the same way as the tube in our experiment, with the
exception that it is so made as to allow certain substances to pass in only one direction, that is, toward
the inside. The outside of the root-hair is bathed in solutions rich in nourishment. The nourishment passes
from the outside to the inside through the delicate membrane of the root-hair. Thus does food enter the
plant-root. From the root-hairs, foods are carried to the inside of the root.
From this you can see how important it is for a plant to have fine, loose soil for its
root-hairs; also how necessary is the water in the soil, since the food can be used only when it is dissolved
in water.
This passage of liquids from one side of a membrane to another is called
osmosis. It has many uses in the plant kingdom. We say a root takes nourishment by osmosis.
Root Tubercles
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