A colorimetric procedure for confirming the presence of arginine-derived opines (nopaline and octopine) in plant tissue extracts is described. Those materials are widely used as markers of plant cell transformation and tumorigenesis mediated by the tumor-inducing plasmids of Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Nopaline and octopine are generally detected, following resolution by paper electrophoresis, by observation of the uv-fluorescent products formed upon reaction with phenanthrenequinone. We found that a further heat treatment step, compatible with paper electrophoresis, results in rapid production of a red-purple pigment. Our colorimetric assay is sensitive to 1.25-micrograms quantities of opine and eliminates problems of background fluorescence encountered with crude plant extract in the usual assay.