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Darwin Correspondence Project

From C. H. Blackley   18 June 1877

Arnside House, | Stretford Road, | Manchester.

June 18th. 1877

Dear Sir,

Nine days ago a friend sent me for experiment a few plants of the Drosera rotund.1 The specimens were freshly gathered and were placed in a match box from which the matches had been emptied recently. I received them by post some fifteen or sixteen hours after they had been gathered and at once placed them in moist sand. The leaves looked healthy but were evidently not secreting and when small particles of lean beef were placed on them there was no inflection   In spite of being kept moist the leaves have gradually withered and seem now quite dead; some of the glands however have retained their color. The leaves that were inflected when I got the plants have not any of them opened again   Has the small quantity of phosphorous acid with which the box may have become impregnated killed the plants?2

I do not know whether you will care to be troubled with this small fragment of an experiment but as I do not see, in your “Insectiv. Plants” any experiments with Phosphorus or its acids it might, I thought, not be amiss to drop you a line.

I Remain Dear Sir | Yours Very Sincerely | Chas H Blackley

Chas Darwin Esq M.A F.R.S.

CD annotations

Top of letter: ‘Keep Drosera’ red crayon

Footnotes

Drosera rotundifolia (the common or round-leaved sundew) had been the main subject of CD’s book Insectivorous plants. Blackley had been experimenting with the plant (see letter from C. H. Blackley, 9 March 1877 and n. 4).
For CD’s experiments with phosphoric acid, see Insectivorous plants, pp. 189 and 191.

Bibliography

Insectivorous plants. By Charles Darwin. London: John Murray. 1875.

Summary

Asks if phosphoric acid could have killed Drosera he received in a matchbox.

Letter details

Letter no.
DCP-LETT-11007
From
Charles Harrison Blackley
To
Charles Robert Darwin
Sent from
Manchester
Source of text
DAR 86: B12–13
Physical description
ALS 3pp †

Please cite as

Darwin Correspondence Project, “Letter no. 11007,” accessed on 18 April 2024, https://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/?docId=letters/DCP-LETT-11007.xml

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