From Horatio Piggot 13 September 1877
50 Norfolk Square | Brighton
13 Sept 77
Dear Sir
Allow me to make two or three suggestions that have occured to me in reading your very interesting work on Insectivorous plants at the Library here.
The first is that the experiments in feeding the Drosera with Fly food &c require something more to be done to make them satisfactory: If the plant appropriates or assimilates the fly, it ought to shew it by increase of growth or weight & for this purpose the weight of the plant & the food before & after experiment should be carefully ascertained, & where mineral food has been taken, the residue of the plant should disclose it.1 I do not see except at a footnote p 301 where Mr Knight says a plant &c was much more luxuriant” that any external appearance of the plant would indicate growth from the Fly food:2
I do not know of what compound a fly is composed I think I have read somewhere that the larva of a fly is a bag of starch. I have often made inquiries among eminent practical Gardeners having the charge of these plants & I have never found one, who agrees with the opinion that the plants derives nourishment from the victim— Saprophytes feed on other plants that have chlorophyll in their leaves— Miseltoe however has Chlorophyll:3 The behaviour of the Droseræ &c is so interesting & their natural history so little really understood that if I might suggest I would erase from the next Edition the passage p. 357 (2nd thousand Copy) beginning “Of the 6 Genera, Drosera has been necessarily the most successful in life &c & a large part of its success may be attributed to its manner of catching Insects”4
It is better not said at present:
I should rather say that it grows in spots the last, from their poverty, that man cares to cultivate & therefore they have survived &c
Again the passage “As it cannot be doubted that this process would be of high service to plants growing on poor soils it would tend to be perfected through natural selection, therefore any ordinary plant having a viscid gland which occasionally caught insects might thus be converted under favorable circumstances into a species capable of true digestion It ceases therefore to be a mystery how several genera of plants in no way closely related have independently acquired this same power”5
This passage might well find a place in Origin of Species, if you thought it worth while to preserve it but if I might say so, keep the Book on Insectivorous plants closely to its subject, the habits of the plants accurately observed will exhaust a lifetime without theorising.
At present the behaviour of the Droseræ is consistent with the ordinary pursuit of plants, obtaining their food externally from Carbon Dioxide in the air & while enjoying this occupation, keeping themselves, free from Insects by making Examples of such of them as intrude near the Laboratory:
Personally I should like it amazingly to find out that they can feed on Animal food:
The experiment with Carbonates was hardly the thing for vegetables as they never take their food in that form.6
The Secretion of a viscid fluid is as difficult to explain as that of a poison in serpent, & at present no theory of Natural Selection fits their case, & yet they may both be examples of (the residium) of a former state of things when it was necessary to arm plants & animals differently from more usual methods. A few plates & the Experiments thrown into Appendices would make it a very charming readable Book.
I hope you will not think me taking a liberty in writing so fully, I am a Darwinist in part only.
Believe me yr’s faithfully | Horatio Piggot
Footnotes
Bibliography
[Duppa, Richard.] 1809. Elements of the science of botany, as established by Linnæus: with examples to illustrate the classes and orders of his system. 2 vols. London: J. Murray.
Insectivorous plants. By Charles Darwin. London: John Murray. 1875.
Summary
Criticises passages of Insectivorous plants. Suggests plants be weighed before and after feeding to prove they have gained nourishment.
Letter details
- Letter no.
- DCP-LETT-11138
- From
- Horatio Piggot
- To
- Charles Robert Darwin
- Sent from
- Brighton
- Source of text
- DAR 174: 44
- Physical description
- ALS 4pp
Please cite as
Darwin Correspondence Project, “Letter no. 11138,” accessed on 24 April 2024, https://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/?docId=letters/DCP-LETT-11138.xml