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+The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Effects of Cross & Self-Fertilisation in the Vegetable Kingdom, by Charles Darwin
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
+www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
+will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
+using this eBook.
+
+Title: The Effects of Cross & Self-Fertilisation in the Vegetable Kingdom
+
+Author: Charles Darwin
+
+Release Date: January 12, 2002 [eBook #4346]
+[Most recently updated: January 2, 2022]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+Produced by: Sue Asscher and David Widger
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE EFFECTS OF CROSS & SELF-FERTILISATION IN THE VEGETABLE KINGDOM ***
+
+
+
+
+THE EFFECTS OF CROSS & SELF-FERTILISATION IN THE VEGETABLE KINGDOM.
+
+BY
+
+CHARLES DARWIN, M.A., F.R.S., ETC.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+INTRODUCTORY REMARKS.
+
+Various means which favour or determine the cross-fertilisation of
+plants.--Benefits derived from cross-fertilisation.--Self-fertilisation
+favourable to the propagation of the species.--Brief history of the
+subject.--Object of the experiments, and the manner in which they were
+tried.--Statistical value of the measurements.--The experiments carried
+on during several successive generations.--Nature of the relationship of
+the plants in the later generations.--Uniformity of the conditions to
+which the plants were subjected.--Some apparent and some real causes of
+error.--Amount of pollen employed.--Arrangement of the work.--Importance
+of the conclusions.
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+CONVOLVULACEAE.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea, comparison of the height and fertility of the crossed
+and self-fertilised plants during ten successive generations.--Greater
+constitutional vigour of the crossed plants.--The effects on the
+offspring of crossing different flowers on the same plant, instead of
+crossing distinct individuals.--The effects of a cross with a fresh
+stock.--The descendants of the self-fertilised plant named
+Hero.--Summary on the growth, vigour, and fertility of the successive
+crossed and self-fertilised generations.--Small amount of pollen in the
+anthers of the self-fertilised plants of the later generations, and the
+sterility of their first-produced flowers.--Uniform colour of the
+flowers produced by the self-fertilised plants.--The advantage from a
+cross between two distinct plants depends on their differing in
+constitution.
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+SCROPHULARIACEAE, GESNERIACEAE, LABIATAE, ETC.
+
+Mimulus luteus; height, vigour, and fertility of the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the first four generations.--Appearance of a
+new, tall, and highly self-fertile variety.--Offspring from a cross
+between self-fertilised plants.--Effects of a cross with a fresh
+stock.--Effects of crossing flowers on the same plant.--Summary on
+Mimulus luteus.--Digitalis purpurea, superiority of the crossed
+plants.--Effects of crossing flowers on the same
+plant.--Calceolaria.--Linaria vulgaris.--Verbascum thapsus.--Vandellia
+nummularifolia.--Cleistogene flowers.--Gesneria pendulina.--Salvia
+coccinea.--Origanum vulgare, great increase of the crossed plants by
+stolons.--Thunbergia alata.
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+CRUCIFERAE, PAPAVERACEAE, RESEDACEAE, ETC.
+
+Brassica oleracea, crossed and self-fertilised plants.--Great effect of
+a cross with a fresh stock on the weight of the offspring.--Iberis
+umbellata.--Papaver vagum.--Eschscholtzia californica, seedlings from a
+cross with a fresh stock not more vigorous, but more fertile than the
+self-fertilised seedlings.--Reseda lutea and odorata, many individuals
+sterile with their own pollen.--Viola tricolor, wonderful effects of a
+cross.--Adonis aestivalis.--Delphinium consolida.--Viscaria oculata,
+crossed plants hardly taller, but more fertile than the
+self-fertilised.--Dianthus caryophyllus, crossed and self-fertilised
+plants compared for four generations.--Great effects of a cross with a
+fresh stock.--Uniform colour of the flowers on the self-fertilised
+plants.--Hibiscus africanus.
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+GERANIACEAE, LEGUMINOSAE, ONAGRACEAE, ETC.
+
+Pelargonium zonale, a cross between plants propagated by cuttings does
+no good.--Tropaeolum minus.--Limnanthes douglasii.--Lupinus luteus and
+pilosus.--Phaseolus multiflorus and vulgaris.--Lathyrus odoratus,
+varieties of, never naturally intercross in England.--Pisum sativum,
+varieties of, rarely intercross, but a cross between them highly
+beneficial.--Sarothamnus scoparius, wonderful effects of a
+cross.--Ononis minutissima, cleistogene flowers of.--Summary on the
+Leguminosae.--Clarkia elegans.--Bartonia aurea.--Passiflora
+gracilis.--Apium petroselinum.--Scabiosa atropurpurea.--Lactuca
+sativa.--Specularia speculum.--Lobelia ramosa, advantages of a cross
+during two generations.--Lobelia fulgens.--Nemophila insignis, great
+advantages of a cross.--Borago officinalis.--Nolana prostrata.
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+SOLANACEAE, PRIMULACEAE, POLYGONEAE, ETC.
+
+Petunia violacea, crossed and self-fertilised plants compared for four
+generations.--Effects of a cross with a fresh stock.--Uniform colour of
+the flowers on the self-fertilised plants of the fourth
+generation.--Nicotiana tabacum, crossed and self-fertilised plants of
+equal height.--Great effects of a cross with a distinct sub-variety on
+the height, but not on the fertility, of the offspring.--Cyclamen
+persicum, crossed seedlings greatly superior to the
+self-fertilised.--Anagallis collina.--Primula veris.--Equal-styled
+variety of Primula veris, fertility of, greatly increased by a cross
+with a fresh stock.--Fagopyrum esculentum.--Beta vulgaris.--Canna
+warscewiczi, crossed and self-fertilised plants of equal height.--Zea
+mays.--Phalaris canariensis.
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+SUMMARY OF THE HEIGHTS AND WEIGHTS OF THE CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED
+PLANTS.
+
+Number of species and plants measured.--Tables given.--Preliminary
+remarks on the offspring of plants crossed by a fresh stock.--Thirteen
+cases specially considered.--The effects of crossing a self-fertilised
+plant either by another self-fertilised plant or by an intercrossed
+plant of the old stock.--Summary of the results.--Preliminary remarks on
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants of the same stock.--The
+twenty-six exceptional cases considered, in which the crossed plants did
+not exceed greatly in height the self-fertilised.--Most of these cases
+shown not to be real exceptions to the rule that cross-fertilisation is
+beneficial.--Summary of results.--Relative weights of the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants.
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+DIFFERENCE BETWEEN CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS IN CONSTITUTIONAL
+VIGOUR AND IN OTHER RESPECTS.
+
+Greater constitutional vigour of crossed plants.--The effects of great
+crowding.--Competition with other kinds of plants.--Self-fertilised
+plants more liable to premature death.--Crossed plants generally flower
+before the self-fertilised.--Negative effects of intercrossing flowers
+on the same plant.--Cases described.--Transmission of the good effects
+of a cross to later generations.--Effects of crossing plants of closely
+related parentage.--Uniform colour of the flowers on plants
+self-fertilised during several generations and cultivated under similar
+conditions.
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE EFFECTS OF CROSS-FERTILISATION AND SELF-FERTILISATION ON THE
+PRODUCTION OF SEEDS.
+
+Fertility of plants of crossed and self-fertilised parentage, both lots
+being fertilised in the same manner.--Fertility of the parent-plants
+when first crossed and self-fertilised, and of their crossed and
+self-fertilised offspring when again crossed and
+self-fertilised.--Comparison of the fertility of flowers fertilised with
+their own pollen and with that from other flowers on the same
+plant.--Self-sterile plants.--Causes of self-sterility.--The appearance
+of highly self-fertile varieties.--Self-fertilisation apparently in some
+respects beneficial, independently of the assured production of
+seeds.--Relative weights and rates of germination of seeds from crossed
+and self-fertilised flowers.
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+MEANS OF FERTILISATION.
+
+Sterility and fertility of plants when insects are excluded.--The means
+by which flowers are cross-fertilised.--Structures favourable to
+self-fertilisation.--Relation between the structure and conspicuousness
+of flowers, the visits of insects, and the advantages of
+cross-fertilisation.--The means by which flowers are fertilised with
+pollen from a distinct plant.--Greater fertilising power of such
+pollen.--Anemophilous species.--Conversion of anemophilous species into
+entomophilous.--Origin of nectar.--Anemophilous plants generally have
+their sexes separated.--Conversion of diclinous into hermaphrodite
+flowers.--Trees often have their sexes separated.
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE HABITS OF INSECTS IN RELATION TO THE FERTILISATION OF FLOWERS.
+
+Insects visit the flowers of the same species as long as they
+can.--Cause of this habit.--Means by which bees recognise the flowers of
+the same species.--Sudden secretion of nectar.--Nectar of certain
+flowers unattractive to certain insects.--Industry of bees, and the
+number of flowers visited within a short time.--Perforation of the
+corolla by bees.--Skill shown in the operation.--Hive-bees profit by the
+holes made by humble-bees.--Effects of habit.--The motive for
+perforating flowers to save time.--Flowers growing in crowded masses
+chiefly perforated.
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+GENERAL RESULTS.
+
+Cross-fertilisation proved to be beneficial, and self-fertilisation
+injurious.--Allied species differ greatly in the means by which
+cross-fertilisation is favoured and self-fertilisation avoided.--The
+benefits and evils of the two processes depend on the degree of
+differentiation in the sexual elements.--The evil effects not due to the
+combination of morbid tendencies in the parents.--Nature of the
+conditions to which plants are subjected when growing near together in a
+state of nature or under culture, and the effects of such
+conditions.--Theoretical considerations with respect to the interaction
+of differentiated sexual elements.--Practical lessons.--Genesis of the
+two sexes.--Close correspondence between the effects of
+cross-fertilisation and self-fertilisation, and of the legitimate and
+illegitimate unions of heterostyled plants, in comparison with hybrid
+unions.
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+
+...
+
+
+THE EFFECTS OF CROSS AND SELF-FERTILISATION IN THE VEGETABLE KINGDOM.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+INTRODUCTORY REMARKS.
+
+Various means which favour or determine the cross-fertilisation of plants.
+Benefits derived from cross-fertilisation.
+Self-fertilisation favourable to the propagation of the species.
+Brief history of the subject.
+Object of the experiments, and the manner in which they were tried.
+Statistical value of the measurements.
+The experiments carried on during several successive generations.
+Nature of the relationship of the plants in the later generations.
+Uniformity of the conditions to which the plants were subjected.
+Some apparent and some real causes of error.
+Amount of pollen employed.
+Arrangement of the work.
+Importance of the conclusions.
+
+There is weighty and abundant evidence that the flowers of most kinds of
+plants are constructed so as to be occasionally or habitually
+cross-fertilised by pollen from another flower, produced either by the
+same plant, or generally, as we shall hereafter see reason to believe,
+by a distinct plant. Cross-fertilisation is sometimes ensured by the
+sexes being separated, and in a large number of cases by the pollen and
+stigma of the same flower being matured at different times. Such plants
+are called dichogamous, and have been divided into two sub-classes:
+proterandrous species, in which the pollen is mature before the stigma,
+and proterogynous species, in which the reverse occurs; this latter form
+of dichogamy not being nearly so common as the other.
+Cross-fertilisation is also ensured, in many cases, by mechanical
+contrivances of wonderful beauty, preventing the impregnation of the
+flowers by their own pollen. There is a small class of plants, which I
+have called dimorphic and trimorphic, but to which Hildebrand has given
+the more appropriate name of heterostyled; this class consists of plants
+presenting two or three distinct forms, adapted for reciprocal
+fertilisation, so that, like plants with separate sexes, they can hardly
+fail to be intercrossed in each generation. The male and female organs
+of some flowers are irritable, and the insects which touch them get
+dusted with pollen, which is thus transported to other flowers. Again,
+there is a class, in which the ovules absolutely refuse to be fertilised
+by pollen from the same plant, but can be fertilised by pollen from any
+other individual of the same species. There are also very many species
+which are partially sterile with their own pollen. Lastly, there is a
+large class in which the flowers present no apparent obstacle of any
+kind to self-fertilisation, nevertheless these plants are frequently
+intercrossed, owing to the prepotency of pollen from another individual
+or variety over the plant’s own pollen.
+
+As plants are adapted by such diversified and effective means for
+cross-fertilisation, it might have been inferred from this fact alone
+that they derived some great advantage from the process; and it is the
+object of the present work to show the nature and importance of the
+benefits thus derived. There are, however, some exceptions to the rule
+of plants being constructed so as to allow of or to favour
+cross-fertilisation, for some few plants seem to be invariably
+self-fertilised; yet even these retain traces of having been formerly
+adapted for cross-fertilisation. These exceptions need not make us doubt
+the truth of the above rule, any more than the existence of some few
+plants which produce flowers, and yet never set seed, should make us
+doubt that flowers are adapted for the production of seed and the
+propagation of the species.
+
+We should always keep in mind the obvious fact that the production of
+seed is the chief end of the act of fertilisation; and that this end can
+be gained by hermaphrodite plants with incomparably greater certainty by
+self-fertilisation, than by the union of the sexual elements belonging
+to two distinct flowers or plants. Yet it is as unmistakably plain that
+innumerable flowers are adapted for cross-fertilisation, as that the
+teeth and talons of a carnivorous animal are adapted for catching prey;
+or that the plumes, wings, and hooks of a seed are adapted for its
+dissemination. Flowers, therefore, are constructed so as to gain two
+objects which are, to a certain extent, antagonistic, and this explains
+many apparent anomalies in their structure. The close proximity of the
+anthers to the stigma in a multitude of species favours, and often
+leads, to self-fertilisation; but this end could have been gained far
+more safely if the flowers had been completely closed, for then the
+pollen would not have been injured by the rain or devoured by insects,
+as often happens. Moreover, in this case, a very small quantity of
+pollen would have been sufficient for fertilisation, instead of millions
+of grains being produced. But the openness of the flower and the
+production of a great and apparently wasteful amount of pollen are
+necessary for cross-fertilisation. These remarks are well illustrated by
+the plants called cleistogene, which bear on the same stock two kinds of
+flowers. The flowers of the one kind are minute and completely closed,
+so that they cannot possibly be crossed; but they are abundantly
+fertile, although producing an extremely small quantity of pollen. The
+flowers of the other kind produce much pollen and are open; and these
+can be, and often are, cross-fertilised. Hermann Muller has also made
+the remarkable discovery that there are some plants which exist under
+two forms; that is, produce on distinct stocks two kinds of
+hermaphrodite flowers. The one form bears small flowers constructed for
+self-fertilisation; whilst the other bears larger and much more
+conspicuous flowers plainly constructed for cross-fertilisation by the
+aid of insects; and without their aid these produce no seed.
+
+The adaptation of flowers for cross-fertilisation is a subject which has
+interested me for the last thirty-seven years, and I have collected a
+large mass of observations, but these are now rendered superfluous by
+the many excellent works which have been lately published. In the year
+1857 I wrote a short paper on the fertilisation of the kidney bean (1/1.
+‘Gardeners’ Chronicle’ 1857 page 725 and 1858 pages 824 and 844. ‘Annals
+and Magazine of Natural History’ 3rd series volume 2 1858 page 462.);
+and in 1862 my work ‘On the Contrivances by which British and Foreign
+Orchids are Fertilised by Insects’ appeared. It seemed to me a better
+plan to work out one group of plants as carefully as I could, rather
+than to publish many miscellaneous and imperfect observations. My
+present work is the complement of that on Orchids, in which it was shown
+how admirably these plants are constructed so as to permit of, or to
+favour, or to necessitate cross-fertilisation. The adaptations for
+cross-fertilisation are perhaps more obvious in the Orchideae than in
+any other group of plants, but it is an error to speak of them, as some
+authors have done, as an exceptional case. The lever-like action of the
+stamens of Salvia (described by Hildebrand, Dr. W. Ogle, and others), by
+which the anthers are depressed and rubbed on the backs of bees, shows
+as perfect a structure as can be found in any orchid. Papilionaceous
+flowers, as described by various authors--for instance, by Mr. T.H.
+Farrer--offer innumerable curious adaptations for cross-fertilisation.
+The case of Posoqueria fragrans (one of the Rubiaceae), is as wonderful
+as that of the most wonderful orchid. The stamens, according to Fritz
+Muller, are irritable, so that as soon as a moth visits a flower, the
+anthers explode and cover the insect with pollen; one of the filaments
+which is broader than the others then moves and closes the flower for
+about twelve hours, after which time it resumes its original position.
+(1/2. ‘Botanische Zeitung’ 1866 page 129.) Thus the stigma cannot be
+fertilised by pollen from the same flower, but only by that brought by a
+moth from some other flower. Endless other beautiful contrivances for
+this same purpose could be specified.
+
+Long before I had attended to the fertilisation of flowers, a remarkable
+book appeared in 1793 in Germany, ‘Das Entdeckte Geheimniss der Natur,’
+by C.K. Sprengel, in which he clearly proved by innumerable
+observations, how essential a part insects play in the fertilisation of
+many plants. But he was in advance of his age, and his discoveries were
+for a long time neglected. Since the appearance of my book on Orchids,
+many excellent works on the fertilisation of flowers, such as those by
+Hildebrand, Delpino, Axell and Hermann Muller, and numerous shorter
+papers, have been published. (1/3. Sir John Lubbock has given an
+interesting summary of the whole subject in his ‘British Wild Flowers
+considered in relation to Insects’ 1875. Hermann Muller’s work ‘Die
+Befruchtung der Blumen durch Insekten’ 1873, contains an immense number
+of original observations and generalisations. It is, moreover,
+invaluable as a repertory with references to almost everything which has
+been published on the subject. His work differs from that of all others
+in specifying what kinds of insects, as far as known, visit the flowers
+of each species. He likewise enters on new ground, by showing not only
+that flowers are adapted for their own good to the visits of certain
+insects; but that the insects themselves are excellently adapted for
+procuring nectar or pollen from certain flowers. The value of H.
+Muller’s work can hardly be over-estimated, and it is much to be desired
+that it should be translated into English. Severin Axell’s work is
+written in Swedish, so that I have not been able to read it.) A list
+would occupy several pages, and this is not the proper place to give
+their titles, as we are not here concerned with the means, but with the
+results of cross-fertilisation. No one who feels interest in the
+mechanism by which nature effects her ends, can read these books and
+memoirs without the most lively interest.
+
+From my own observations on plants, guided to a certain extent by the
+experience of the breeders of animals, I became convinced many years ago
+that it is a general law of nature that flowers are adapted to be
+crossed, at least occasionally, by pollen from a distinct plant.
+Sprengel at times foresaw this law, but only partially, for it does not
+appear that he was aware that there was any difference in power between
+pollen from the same plant and from a distinct plant. In the
+introduction to his book (page 4) he says, as the sexes are separated in
+so many flowers, and as so many other flowers are dichogamous, “it
+appears that nature has not willed that any one flower should be
+fertilised by its own pollen.” Nevertheless, he was far from keeping
+this conclusion always before his mind, or he did not see its full
+importance, as may be perceived by anyone who will read his observations
+carefully; and he consequently mistook the meaning of various
+structures. But his discoveries are so numerous and his work so
+excellent, that he can well afford to bear a small amount of blame. A
+most capable judge, H. Muller, likewise says: “It is remarkable in how
+very many cases Sprengel rightly perceived that pollen is necessarily
+transported to the stigmas of other flowers of the same species by the
+insects which visit them, and yet did not imagine that this
+transportation was of any service to the plants themselves.” (1/4. ‘Die
+Befruchtung der Blumen’ 1873 page 4. His words are: “Es ist merkwurdig,
+in wie zahlreichen Fallen Sprengel richtig erkannte, dass durch die
+Besuchenden Insekten der Bluthenstaub mit Nothwendigkeit auf die Narben
+anderer Bluthen derselben Art ubertragen wird, ohne auf die Vermuthung
+zu kommen, dass in dieser Wirkung der Nutzen des Insektenbesuches fur
+die Pflanzen selbst gesucht werden musse.”)
+
+Andrew Knight saw the truth much more clearly, for he remarks, “Nature
+intended that a sexual intercourse should take place between
+neighbouring plants of the same species.” (1/5. ‘Philosophical
+Transactions’ 1799 page 202.) After alluding to the various means by
+which pollen is transported from flower to flower, as far as was then
+imperfectly known, he adds, “Nature has something more in view than that
+its own proper males would fecundate each blossom.” In 1811 Kolreuter
+plainly hinted at the same law, as did afterwards another famous
+hybridiser of plants, Herbert. (1/6. Kolreuter ‘Mem. de l’Acad. de St.
+Petersbourg’ tome 3 1809 published 1811 page 197. After showing how well
+the Malvaceae are adapted for cross-fertilisation, he asks, “An id
+aliquid in recessu habeat, quod hujuscemodi flores nunquam proprio suo
+pulvere, sed semper eo aliarum suae speciei impregnentur, merito
+quaeritur? Certe natura nil facit frustra.” Herbert ‘Amaryllidaceae,
+with a Treatise on Cross-bred Vegetables’ 1837.) But none of these
+distinguished observers appear to have been sufficiently impressed with
+the truth and generality of the law, so as to insist on it and impress
+their beliefs on others.
+
+In 1862 I summed up my observations on Orchids by saying that nature
+“abhors perpetual self-fertilisation.” If the word perpetual had been
+omitted, the aphorism would have been false. As it stands, I believe
+that it is true, though perhaps rather too strongly expressed; and I
+should have added the self-evident proposition that the propagation of
+the species, whether by self-fertilisation or by cross-fertilisation, or
+asexually by buds, stolons, etc. is of paramount importance. Hermann
+Muller has done excellent service by insisting repeatedly on this latter
+point.
+
+It often occurred to me that it would be advisable to try whether
+seedlings from cross-fertilised flowers were in any way superior to
+those from self-fertilised flowers. But as no instance was known with
+animals of any evil appearing in a single generation from the closest
+possible interbreeding, that is between brothers and sisters, I thought
+that the same rule would hold good with plants; and that it would be
+necessary at the sacrifice of too much time to self-fertilise and
+intercross plants during several successive generations, in order to
+arrive at any result. I ought to have reflected that such elaborate
+provisions favouring cross-fertilisation, as we see in innumerable
+plants, would not have been acquired for the sake of gaining a distant
+and slight advantage, or of avoiding a distant and slight evil.
+Moreover, the fertilisation of a flower by its own pollen corresponds to
+a closer form of interbreeding than is possible with ordinary bi-sexual
+animals; so that an earlier result might have been expected.
+
+I was at last led to make the experiments recorded in the present volume
+from the following circumstance. For the sake of determining certain
+points with respect to inheritance, and without any thought of the
+effects of close interbreeding, I raised close together two large beds
+of self-fertilised and crossed seedlings from the same plant of Linaria
+vulgaris. To my surprise, the crossed plants when fully grown were
+plainly taller and more vigorous than the self-fertilised ones. Bees
+incessantly visit the flowers of this Linaria and carry pollen from one
+to the other; and if insects are excluded, the flowers produce extremely
+few seeds; so that the wild plants from which my seedlings were raised
+must have been intercrossed during all previous generations. It seemed
+therefore quite incredible that the difference between the two beds of
+seedlings could have been due to a single act of self-fertilisation; and
+I attributed the result to the self-fertilised seeds not having been
+well ripened, improbable as it was that all should have been in this
+state, or to some other accidental and inexplicable cause. During the
+next year, I raised for the same purpose as before two large beds close
+together of self-fertilised and crossed seedlings from the carnation,
+Dianthus caryophyllus. This plant, like the Linaria, is almost sterile
+if insects are excluded; and we may draw the same inference as before,
+namely, that the parent-plants must have been intercrossed during every
+or almost every previous generation. Nevertheless, the self-fertilised
+seedlings were plainly inferior in height and vigour to the crossed.
+
+My attention was now thoroughly aroused, for I could hardly doubt that
+the difference between the two beds was due to the one set being the
+offspring of crossed, and the other of self-fertilised flowers.
+Accordingly I selected almost by hazard two other plants, which happened
+to be in flower in the greenhouse, namely, Mimulus luteus and Ipomoea
+purpurea, both of which, unlike the Linaria and Dianthus, are highly
+self-fertile if insects are excluded. Some flowers on a single plant of
+both species were fertilised with their own pollen, and others were
+crossed with pollen from a distinct individual; both plants being
+protected by a net from insects. The crossed and self-fertilised seeds
+thus produced were sown on opposite sides of the same pots, and treated
+in all respects alike; and the plants when fully grown were measured and
+compared. With both species, as in the cases of the Linaria and
+Dianthus, the crossed seedlings were conspicuously superior in height
+and in other ways to the self-fertilised. I therefore determined to
+begin a long series of experiments with various plants, and these were
+continued for the following eleven years; and we shall see that in a
+large majority of cases the crossed beat the self-fertilised plants.
+Several of the exceptional cases, moreover, in which the crossed plants
+were not victorious, can be explained.
+
+It should be observed that I have spoken for the sake of brevity, and
+shall continue to do so, of crossed and self-fertilised seeds,
+seedlings, or plants; these terms implying that they are the product of
+crossed or self-fertilised flowers. Cross-fertilisation always means a
+cross between distinct plants which were raised from seeds and not from
+cuttings or buds. Self-fertilisation always implies that the flowers in
+question were impregnated with their own pollen.
+
+My experiments were tried in the following manner. A single plant, if it
+produced a sufficiency of flowers, or two or three plants were placed
+under a net stretched on a frame, and large enough to cover the plant
+(together with the pot, when one was used) without touching it. This
+latter point is important, for if the flowers touch the net they may be
+cross-fertilised by bees, as I have known to happen; and when the net is
+wet the pollen may be injured. I used at first “white cotton net,” with
+very fine meshes, but afterwards a kind of net with meshes one-tenth of
+an inch in diameter; and this I found by experience effectually excluded
+all insects excepting Thrips, which no net will exclude. On the plants
+thus protected several flowers were marked, and were fertilised with
+their own pollen; and an equal number on the same plants, marked in a
+different manner, were at the same time crossed with pollen from a
+distinct plant. The crossed flowers were never castrated, in order to
+make the experiments as like as possible to what occurs under nature
+with plants fertilised by the aid of insects. Therefore, some of the
+flowers which were crossed may have failed to be thus fertilised, and
+afterwards have been self-fertilised. But this and some other sources of
+error will presently be discussed. In some few cases of spontaneously
+self-fertile species, the flowers were allowed to fertilise themselves
+under the net; and in still fewer cases uncovered plants were allowed to
+be freely crossed by the insects which incessantly visited them. There
+are some great advantages and some disadvantages in my having
+occasionally varied my method of proceeding; but when there was any
+difference in the treatment, it is always so stated under the head of
+each species.
+
+Care was taken that the seeds were thoroughly ripened before being
+gathered. Afterwards the crossed and self-fertilised seeds were in most
+cases placed on damp sand on opposite sides of a glass tumbler covered
+by a glass plate, with a partition between the two lots; and the glass
+was placed on the chimney-piece in a warm room. I could thus observe the
+germination of the seeds. Sometimes a few would germinate on one side
+before any on the other, and these were thrown away. But as often as a
+pair germinated at the same time, they were planted on opposite sides of
+a pot, with a superficial partition between the two; and I thus
+proceeded until from half-a-dozen to a score or more seedlings of
+exactly the same age were planted on the opposite sides of several pots.
+If one of the young seedlings became sickly or was in any way injured,
+it was pulled up and thrown away, as well as its antagonist on the
+opposite side of the same pot.
+
+As a large number of seeds were placed on the sand to germinate, many
+remained after the pairs had been selected, some of which were in a
+state of germination and others not so; and these were sown crowded
+together on the opposite sides of one or two rather larger pots, or
+sometimes in two long rows out of doors. In these cases there was the
+most severe struggle for life among the crossed seedlings on one side of
+the pot, and the self-fertilised seedlings on the other side, and
+between the two lots which grew in competition in the same pot. A vast
+number soon perished, and the tallest of the survivors on both sides
+when fully grown were measured. Plants treated in this manner, were
+subjected to nearly the same conditions as those growing in a state of
+nature, which have to struggle to maturity in the midst of a host of
+competitors.
+
+On other occasions, from the want of time, the seeds, instead of being
+allowed to germinate on damp sand, were sown on the opposite sides of
+pots, and the fully grown plants measured. But this plan is less
+accurate, as the seeds sometimes germinated more quickly on one side
+than on the other. It was however necessary to act in this manner with
+some few species, as certain kinds of seeds would not germinate well
+when exposed to the light; though the glasses containing them were kept
+on the chimney-piece on one side of a room, and some way from the two
+windows which faced the north-east. (1/7. This occurred in the plainest
+manner with the seeds of Papaver vagum and Delphinium consolida, and
+less plainly with those of Adonis aestivalis and Ononis minutissima.
+Rarely more than one or two of the seeds of these four species
+germinated on the bare sand, though left there for some weeks; but when
+these same seeds were placed on earth in pots, and covered with a thin
+layer of sand, they germinated immediately in large numbers.)
+
+The soil in the pots in which the seedlings were planted, or the seeds
+sown, was well mixed, so as to be uniform in composition. The plants on
+the two sides were always watered at the same time and as equally as
+possible; and even if this had not been done, the water would have
+spread almost equally to both sides, as the pots were not large. The
+crossed and self-fertilised plants were separated by a superficial
+partition, which was always kept directed towards the chief source of
+the light, so that the plants on both sides were equally illuminated. I
+do not believe it possible that two sets of plants could have been
+subjected to more closely similar conditions, than were my crossed and
+self-fertilised seedlings, as grown in the above described manner.
+
+In comparing the two sets, the eye alone was never trusted. Generally
+the height of every plant on both sides was carefully measured, often
+more than once, namely, whilst young, sometimes again when older, and
+finally when fully or almost fully grown. But in some cases, which are
+always specified, owing to the want of time, only one or two of the
+tallest plants on each side were measured. This plan, which is not a
+good one, was never followed (except with the crowded plants raised from
+the seeds remaining after the pairs had been planted) unless the tallest
+plants on each side seemed fairly to represent the average difference
+between those on both sides. It has, however, some great advantages, as
+sickly or accidentally injured plants, or the offspring of ill-ripened
+seeds, are thus eliminated. When the tallest plants alone on each side
+were measured, their average height of course exceeds that of all the
+plants on the same side taken together. But in the case of the much
+crowded plants raised from the remaining seeds, the average height of
+the tallest plants was less than that of the plants in pairs, owing to
+the unfavourable conditions to which they were subjected from being
+greatly crowded. For our purpose, however, of the comparison of the
+crossed and self-fertilised plants, their absolute height signifies
+little.
+
+As the plants were measured by an ordinary English standard divided into
+inches and eighths of an inch, I have not thought it worth while to
+change the fractions into decimals. The average or mean heights were
+calculated in the ordinary rough method by adding up the measurements of
+all, and dividing the product by the number of plants measured; the
+result being here given in inches and decimals. As the different species
+grow to various heights, I have always for the sake of easy comparison
+given in addition the average height of the crossed plants of each
+species taken as 100, and have calculated the average height of the
+self-fertilised plant in relation to this standard. With respect to the
+crowded plants raised from the seeds remaining after the pairs had been
+planted, and of which only some of the tallest on each side were
+measured, I have not thought it worth while to complicate the results by
+giving separate averages for them and for the pairs, but have added up
+all their heights, and thus obtained a single average.
+
+I long doubted whether it was worth while to give the measurements of
+each separate plant, but have decided to do so, in order that it may be
+seen that the superiority of the crossed plants over the
+self-fertilised, does not commonly depend on the presence of two or
+three extra fine plants on the one side, or of a few very poor plants on
+the other side. Although several observers have insisted in general
+terms on the offspring from intercrossed varieties being superior to
+either parent-form, no precise measurements have been given (1/8. A
+summary of these statements, with references, may be found in my
+‘Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication’ chapter 17 2nd
+edition 1875 volume 2 page 109.); and I have met with no observations on
+the effects of crossing and self-fertilising the individuals of the same
+variety. Moreover, experiments of this kind require so much time--mine
+having been continued during eleven years--that they are not likely soon
+to be repeated.
+
+As only a moderate number of crossed and self-fertilised plants were
+measured, it was of great importance to me to learn how far the averages
+were trustworthy. I therefore asked Mr. Galton, who has had much
+experience in statistical researches, to examine some of my tables of
+measurements, seven in number, namely, those of Ipomoea, Digitalis,
+Reseda lutea, Viola, Limnanthes, Petunia, and Zea. I may premise that if
+we took by chance a dozen or score of men belonging to two nations and
+measured them, it would I presume be very rash to form any judgment from
+such small numbers on their average heights. But the case is somewhat
+different with my crossed and self-fertilised plants, as they were of
+exactly the same age, were subjected from first to last to the same
+conditions, and were descended from the same parents. When only from two
+to six pairs of plants were measured, the results are manifestly of
+little or no value, except in so far as they confirm and are confirmed
+by experiments made on a larger scale with other species. I will now
+give the report on the seven tables of measurements, which Mr. Galton
+has had the great kindness to draw up for me.
+
+[“I have examined the measurements of the plants with care, and by many
+statistical methods, to find out how far the means of the several sets
+represent constant realities, such as would come out the same so long as
+the general conditions of growth remained unaltered. The principal
+methods that were adopted are easily explained by selecting one of the
+shorter series of plants, say of Zea mays, for an example.”
+
+TABLE 1/1. Zea mays (young plants). (Mr. Galton.)
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed, as recorded by Mr. Darwin.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised, as recorded by Mr. Darwin.
+
+Column 4: Crossed, in Separate Pots, arranged in order of magnitude.
+
+Column 5: Self-fertilised, in Separate Pots, arranged in order of magnitude.
+
+Column 6: Crossed, in a Single Series, arranged in order of magnitude.
+
+Column 7: Self-fertilised, in a Single Series, arranged in order of
+magnitude.
+
+Column 8: Difference, in a Single Series, arranged in order of magnitude.
+
+Pot 1 : 23 4/8 : 17 3/8 :: 23 4/8 : 20 3/8 :: 23 4/8 : 20 3/8 : -3 1/8.
+Pot 1 : 12 : 20 3/8 :: 21 : 20 :: 23 2/8 : 20 : -3 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 21 : 20 :: 12 : 17 3/8 :: 23 : 20 : -3.
+Pot 1 : - : - :: - : - :: 22 1/8 : 18 5/8 : -3 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 22 : 20 :: 22 : 20 :: 22 1/8 : 18 5/8 : -3 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 19 1/8 : 18 3/8 :: 21 4/8 : 18 5/8 :: 22 : 18 3/8 : -3 5/8.
+Pot 2 : 21 4/8 : 18 5/8 :: 19 1/8 : 18 3/8 :: 21 5/8 : 18 : -3 5/8.
+Pot 2 : - : - :: - : - :: 21 4/8 : 18 : -3 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 22 1/8 : 18 5/8 :: 23 2/8 : 18 5/8 :: 21 : 18 : -3.
+Pot 2 : 20 3/8 : 15 2/8 :: 22 1/8 : 18 :: 21 : 17 3/8 : -3 5/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 18 2/8 : 16 4/8 :: 21 5/8 : 16 4/8 :: 20 3/8 : 16 4/8 : -3 7/8.
+Pot 3 : 21 5/8 : 18 :: 20 3/8 : 16 2/8 :: 19 1/8 : 16 2/8 : -2 7/8.
+Pot 3 : 23 2/8 : 16 2/8 :: 18 2/8 : 15 2/8 :: 18 2/8 : 15 4/8 : -2 6/8.
+Pot 3 : - : - :: - : - :: 12 : 15 2/8 : +3 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 21 : 18 :: 23 : 18 :: 12 : 12 6/8 : +0 6/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 22 1/8 : 12 6/8 :: 22 1/8 : 18.
+Pot 4 : 23 : 15 4/8 :: 21 : 15 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 12 : 18 :: 12 : 12 6/8.
+
+“The observations as I received them are shown in Table 1/1, Columns 2
+and 3, where they certainly have no prima facie appearance of
+regularity. But as soon as we arrange them the in order of their
+magnitudes, as in columns 4 and 5, the case is materially altered. We
+now see, with few exceptions, that the largest plant on the crossed side
+in each pot exceeds the largest plant on the self-fertilised side, that
+the second exceeds the second, the third the third, and so on. Out of
+the fifteen cases in the table, there are only two exceptions to this
+rule. We may therefore confidently affirm that a crossed series will
+always be found to exceed a self-fertilised series, within the range of
+the conditions under which the present experiment has been made.”
+
+TABLE 1/2.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised.
+
+Column 4: Difference.
+
+Pot 1 : 18 7/8 : 19 2/8 : +0 3/8.
+Pot 2 : 20 7/8 : 19 : -1 7/8.
+Pot 3 : 21 1/8 : 16 7/8 : -4 2/8.
+Pot 4 : 19 6/8 : 16 : -3 6/8.
+
+“Next as regards the numerical estimate of this excess. The mean values
+of the several groups are so discordant, as is shown in Table 1/2, that
+a fairly precise numerical estimate seems impossible. But the
+consideration arises, whether the difference between pot and pot may not
+be of much the same order of importance as that of the other conditions
+upon which the growth of the plants has been modified. If so, and only
+on that condition, it would follow that when all the measurements,
+either of the crossed or the self-fertilised plants, were combined into
+a single series, that series would be statistically regular. The
+experiment is tried in Table 1/1, columns 7 and 8, where the regularity
+is abundantly clear, and justifies us in considering its mean as
+perfectly reliable. I have protracted these measurements, and revised
+them in the usual way, by drawing a curve through them with a free hand,
+but the revision barely modifies the means derived from the original
+observations. In the present, and in nearly all the other cases, the
+difference between the original and revised means is under 2 per cent of
+their value. It is a very remarkable coincidence that in the seven kinds
+of plants, whose measurements I have examined, the ratio between the
+heights of the crossed and of the self-fertilised ranges in five cases
+within very narrow limits. In Zea mays it is as 100 to 84, and in the
+others it ranges between 100 to 76 and 100 to 86.”
+
+“The determination of the variability (measured by what is technically
+called the ‘probable error’) is a problem of more delicacy than that of
+determining the means, and I doubt, after making many trials, whether it
+is possible to derive useful conclusions from these few observations. We
+ought to have measurements of at least fifty plants in each case, in
+order to be in a position to deduce fair results. One fact, however,
+bearing on variability, is very evident in most cases, though not in Zea
+mays, namely, that the self-fertilised plants include the larger number
+of exceptionally small specimens, while the crossed are more generally
+full grown.”
+
+“Those groups of cases in which measurements have been made of a few of
+the tallest plants that grew in rows, each of which contained a
+multitude of plants, show very clearly that the crossed plants exceed
+the self-fertilised in height, but they do not tell by inference
+anything about their respective mean values. If it should happen that a
+series is known to follow the law of error or any other law, and if the
+number of individuals in the series is known, it would be always
+possible to reconstruct the whole series when a fragment of it has been
+given. But I find no such method to be applicable in the present case.
+The doubt as to the number of plants in each row is of minor importance;
+the real difficulty lies in our ignorance of the precise law followed by
+the series. The experience of the plants in pots does not help us to
+determine that law, because the observations of such plants are too few
+to enable us to lay down more than the middle terms of the series to
+which they belong with any sort of accuracy, whereas the cases we are
+now considering refer to one of its extremities. There are other special
+difficulties which need not be gone into, as the one already mentioned
+is a complete bar.”]
+
+Mr. Galton sent me at the same time graphical representations which he
+had made of the measurements, and they evidently form fairly regular
+curves. He appends the words “very good” to those of Zea and Limnanthes.
+He also calculated the average height of the crossed and self-fertilised
+plants in the seven tables by a more correct method than that followed
+by me, namely, by including the heights, as estimated in accordance with
+statistical rules, of a few plants which died before they were measured;
+whereas I merely added up the heights of the survivors, and divided the
+sum by their number. The difference in our results is in one way highly
+satisfactory, for the average heights of the self-fertilised plants, as
+deduced by Mr. Galton, is less than mine in all the cases excepting one,
+in which our averages are the same; and this shows that I have by no
+means exaggerated the superiority of the crossed over the
+self-fertilised plants.
+
+After the heights of the crossed and self-fertilised plants had been
+taken, they were sometimes cut down close to the ground, and an equal
+number of both weighed. This method of comparison gives very striking
+results, and I wish that it had been oftener followed. Finally a record
+was often kept of any marked difference in the rate of germination of
+the crossed and self-fertilised seeds,--of the relative periods of
+flowering of the plants raised from them,--and of their productiveness,
+that is, of the number of seed-capsules which they produced and of the
+average number of seeds which each capsule contained.
+
+When I began my experiments I did not intend to raise crossed and
+self-fertilised plants for more than a single generation; but as soon as
+the plants of the first generation were in flower I thought that I would
+raise one more generation, and acted in the following manner. Several
+flowers on one or more of the self-fertilised plants were again
+self-fertilised; and several flowers on one or more of the crossed
+plants were fertilised with pollen from another crossed plant of the
+same lot. Having thus once begun, the same method was followed for as
+many as ten successive generations with some of the species. The seeds
+and seedlings were always treated in exactly the same manner as already
+described. The self-fertilised plants, whether originally descended from
+one or two mother-plants, were thus in each generation as closely
+interbred as was possible; and I could not have improved on my plan. But
+instead of crossing one of the crossed plants with another crossed
+plant, I ought to have crossed the self-fertilised plants of each
+generation with pollen taken from a non-related plant--that is, one
+belonging to a distinct family or stock of the same species and variety.
+This was done in several cases as an additional experiment, and gave
+very striking results. But the plan usually followed was to put into
+competition and compare intercrossed plants, which were almost always
+the offspring of more or less closely related plants, with the
+self-fertilised plants of each succeeding generation;--all having been
+grown under closely similar conditions. I have, however, learnt more by
+this method of proceeding, which was begun by an oversight and then
+necessarily followed, than if I had always crossed the self-fertilised
+plants of each succeeding generation with pollen from a fresh stock.
+
+I have said that the crossed plants of the successive generations were
+almost always inter-related. When the flowers on an hermaphrodite plant
+are crossed with pollen taken from a distinct plant, the seedlings thus
+raised may be considered as hermaphrodite brothers or sisters; those
+raised from the same capsule being as close as twins or animals of the
+same litter. But in one sense the flowers on the same plant are distinct
+individuals, and as several flowers on the mother-plant were crossed by
+pollen taken from several flowers on the father-plant, such seedlings
+would be in one sense half-brothers or sisters, but more closely related
+than are the half-brothers and sisters of ordinary animals. The flowers
+on the mother-plant were, however, commonly crossed by pollen taken from
+two or more distinct plants; and in these cases the seedlings might be
+called with more truth half-brothers or sisters. When two or three
+mother-plants were crossed, as often happened, by pollen taken from two
+or three father-plants (the seeds being all intermingled), some of the
+seedlings of the first generation would be in no way related, whilst
+many others would be whole or half-brothers and sisters. In the second
+generation a large number of the seedlings would be what may be called
+whole or half first-cousins, mingled with whole and half-brothers and
+sisters, and with some plants not at all related. So it would be in the
+succeeding generations, but there would also be many cousins of the
+second and more remote degrees. The relationship will thus have become
+more and more inextricably complex in the later generations; with most
+of the plants in some degree and many of them closely related.
+
+I have only one other point to notice, but this is one of the highest
+importance; namely, that the crossed and self-fertilised plants were
+subjected in the same generation to as nearly similar and uniform
+conditions as was possible. In the successive generations they were
+exposed to slightly different conditions as the seasons varied, and they
+were raised at different periods. But in other respects all were treated
+alike, being grown in pots in the same artificially prepared soil, being
+watered at the same time, and kept close together in the same greenhouse
+or hothouse. They were therefore not exposed during successive years to
+such great vicissitudes of climate as are plants growing out of doors.
+
+ON SOME APPARENT AND REAL CAUSES OF ERROR IN MY EXPERIMENTS.
+
+It has been objected to such experiments as mine, that covering plants
+with a net, although only for a short time whilst in flower, may affect
+their health and fertility. I have seen no such effect except in one
+instance with a Myosotis, and the covering may not then have been the
+real cause of injury. But even if the net were slightly injurious, and
+certainly it was not so in any high degree, as I could judge by the
+appearance of the plants and by comparing their fertility with that of
+neighbouring uncovered plants, it would not have vitiated my
+experiments; for in all the more important cases the flowers were
+crossed as well as self-fertilised under a net, so that they were
+treated in this respect exactly alike.
+
+As it is impossible to exclude such minute pollen-carrying insects as
+Thrips, flowers which it was intended to fertilise with their own pollen
+may sometimes have been afterwards crossed with pollen brought by these
+insects from another flower on the same plant; but as we shall hereafter
+see, a cross of this kind does not produce any effect, or at most only a
+slight one. When two or more plants were placed near one another under
+the same net, as was often done, there is some real though not great
+danger of the flowers which were believed to be self-fertilised being
+afterwards crossed with pollen brought by Thrips from a distinct plant.
+I have said that the danger is not great because I have often found that
+plants which are self-sterile, unless aided by insects, remained sterile
+when several plants of the same species were placed under the same net.
+If, however, the flowers which had been presumably self-fertilised by me
+were in any case afterwards crossed by Thrips with pollen brought from a
+distinct plant, crossed seedlings would have been included amongst the
+self-fertilised; but it should be especially observed that this
+occurrence would tend to diminish and not to increase any superiority in
+average height, fertility, etc., of the crossed over the self-fertilised
+plants.
+
+As the flowers which were crossed were never castrated, it is probable
+or even almost certain that I sometimes failed to cross-fertilise them
+effectually, and that they were afterwards spontaneously
+self-fertilised. This would have been most likely to occur with
+dichogamous species, for without much care it is not easy to perceive
+whether their stigmas are ready to be fertilised when the anthers open.
+But in all cases, as the flowers were protected from wind, rain, and the
+access of insects, any pollen placed by me on the stigmatic surface
+whilst it was immature, would generally have remained there until the
+stigma was mature; and the flowers would then have been crossed as was
+intended. Nevertheless, it is highly probable that self-fertilised
+seedlings have sometimes by this means got included amongst the crossed
+seedlings. The effect would be, as in the former case, not to exaggerate
+but to diminish any average superiority of the crossed over the
+self-fertilised plants.
+
+Errors arising from the two causes just named, and from others,--such as
+some of the seeds not having been thoroughly ripened, though care was
+taken to avoid this error--the sickness or unperceived injury of any of
+the plants,--will have been to a large extent eliminated, in those cases
+in which many crossed and self-fertilised plants were measured and an
+average struck. Some of these causes of error will also have been
+eliminated by the seeds having been allowed to germinate on bare damp
+sand, and being planted in pairs; for it is not likely that ill-matured
+and well-matured, or diseased and healthy seeds, would germinate at
+exactly the same time. The same result will have been gained in the
+several cases in which only a few of the tallest, finest, and healthiest
+plants on each side of the pots were measured.
+
+Kolreuter and Gartner have proved that with some plants several, even as
+many as from fifty to sixty, pollen-grains are necessary for the
+fertilisation of all the ovules in the ovarium. (1/9. ‘Kentniss der
+Befruchtung’ 1844 page 345. Naudin ‘Nouvelles Archives du Museum’ tome 1
+page 27.) Naudin also found in the case of Mirabilis that if only one or
+two of its very large pollen-grains were placed on the stigma, the
+plants raised from such seeds were dwarfed. I was therefore careful to
+give an amply sufficient supply of pollen, and generally covered the
+stigma with it; but I did not take any special pains to place exactly
+the same amount on the stigmas of the self-fertilised and crossed
+flowers. After having acted in this manner during two seasons, I
+remembered that Gartner thought, though without any direct evidence,
+that an excess of pollen was perhaps injurious; and it has been proved
+by Spallanzani, Quatrefages, and Newport, that with various animals an
+excess of the seminal fluid entirely prevents fertilisation. (1/10.
+‘Transactions of the Philosophical Society’ 1853 pages 253-258.) It was
+therefore necessary to ascertain whether the fertility of the flowers
+was affected by applying a rather small and an extremely large quantity
+of pollen to the stigma. Accordingly a very small mass of pollen-grains
+was placed on one side of the large stigma in sixty-four flowers of
+Ipomoea purpurea, and a great mass of pollen over the whole surface of
+the stigma in sixty-four other flowers. In order to vary the experiment,
+half the flowers of both lots were on plants produced from
+self-fertilised seeds, and the other half on plants from crossed seeds.
+The sixty-four flowers with an excess of pollen yielded sixty-one
+capsules; and excluding four capsules, each of which contained only a
+single poor seed, the remainder contained on an average 5.07 seeds per
+capsule. The sixty-four flowers with only a little pollen placed on one
+side of the stigma yielded sixty-three capsules, and excluding one from
+the same cause as before, the remainder contained on an average 5.129
+seeds. So that the flowers fertilised with little pollen yielded rather
+more capsules and seeds than did those fertilised with an excess; but
+the difference is too slight to be of any significance. On the other
+hand, the seeds produced by the flowers with an excess of pollen were a
+little heavier of the two; for 170 of them weighed 79.67 grains, whilst
+170 seeds from the flowers with very little pollen weighed 79.20 grains.
+Both lots of seeds having been placed on damp sand presented no
+difference in their rate of germination. We may therefore conclude that
+my experiments were not affected by any slight difference in the amount
+of pollen used; a sufficiency having been employed in all cases.
+
+The order in which our subject will be treated in the present volume is
+as follows. A long series of experiments will first be given in Chapters
+2 to 6. Tables will afterwards be appended, showing in a condensed form
+the relative heights, weights, and fertility of the offspring of the
+various crossed and self-fertilised species. Another table exhibits the
+striking results from fertilising plants, which during several
+generations had either been self-fertilised or had been crossed with
+plants kept all the time under closely similar conditions, with pollen
+taken from plants of a distinct stock and which had been exposed to
+different conditions. In the concluding chapters various related points
+and questions of general interest will be discussed.
+
+Anyone not specially interested in the subject need not attempt to read
+all the details (marked []); though they possess, I think, some value,
+and cannot be all summarised. But I would suggest to the reader to take
+as an example the experiments on Ipomoea in Chapter 2; to which may be
+added those on Digitalis, Origanum, Viola, or the common cabbage, as in
+all these cases the crossed plants are superior to the self-fertilised
+in a marked degree, but not in quite the same manner. As instances of
+self-fertilised plants being equal or superior to the crossed, the
+experiments on Bartonia, Canna, and the common pea ought to be read; but
+in the last case, and probably in that of Canna, the want of any
+superiority in the crossed plants can be explained.
+
+Species were selected for experiment belonging to widely distinct
+families, inhabiting various countries. In some few cases several genera
+belonging to the same family were tried, and these are grouped together;
+but the families themselves have been arranged not in any natural order,
+but in that which was the most convenient for my purpose. The
+experiments have been fully given, as the results appear to me of
+sufficient value to justify the details. Plants bearing hermaphrodite
+flowers can be interbred more closely than is possible with bisexual
+animals, and are therefore well-fitted to throw light on the nature and
+extent of the good effects of crossing, and on the evil effects of close
+interbreeding or self-fertilisation. The most important conclusion at
+which I have arrived is that the mere act of crossing by itself does no
+good. The good depends on the individuals which are crossed differing
+slightly in constitution, owing to their progenitors having been
+subjected during several generations to slightly different conditions,
+or to what we call in our ignorance spontaneous variation. This
+conclusion, as we shall hereafter see, is closely connected with various
+important physiological problems, such as the benefit derived from
+slight changes in the conditions of life, and this stands in the closest
+connection with life itself. It throws light on the origin of the two
+sexes and on their separation or union in the same individual, and
+lastly on the whole subject of hybridism, which is one of the greatest
+obstacles to the general acceptance and progress of the great principle
+of evolution.
+
+In order to avoid misapprehension, I beg leave to repeat that throughout
+this volume a crossed plant, seedling, or seed, means one of crossed
+PARENTAGE, that is, one derived from a flower fertilised with pollen
+from a distinct plant of the same species. And that a self-fertilised
+plant, seedling, or seed, means one of self-fertilised PARENTAGE, that
+is, one derived from a flower fertilised with pollen from the same
+flower, or sometimes, when thus stated, from another flower on the same
+plant.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+CONVOLVULACEAE.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea, comparison of the height and fertility of the crossed
+and self-fertilised plants during ten successive generations.
+Greater constitutional vigour of the crossed plants.
+The effects on the offspring of crossing different flowers on the same
+plant, instead of crossing distinct individuals.
+The effects of a cross with a fresh stock.
+The descendants of the self-fertilised plant named Hero.
+Summary on the growth, vigour, and fertility of the successive crossed
+and self-fertilised generations.
+Small amount of pollen in the anthers of the self-fertilised plants of
+the later generations, and the sterility of their first-produced
+flowers.
+Uniform colour of the flowers produced by the self-fertilised plants.
+The advantage from a cross between two distinct plants depends on their
+differing in constitution.
+
+A plant of Ipomoea purpurea, or as it is often called in England the
+convolvulus major, a native of South America, grew in my greenhouse. Ten
+flowers on this plant were fertilised with pollen from the same flower;
+and ten other flowers on the same plant were crossed with pollen from a
+distinct plant. The fertilisation of the flowers with their own pollen
+was superfluous, as this convolvulus is highly self-fertile; but I acted
+in this manner to make the experiments correspond in all respects.
+Whilst the flowers are young the stigma projects beyond the anthers; and
+it might have been thought that it could not be fertilised without the
+aid of humble-bees, which often visit the flowers; but as the flower
+grows older the stamens increase in length, and their anthers brush
+against the stigma, which thus receives some pollen. The number of seeds
+produced by the crossed and self-fertilised flowers differed very
+little.
+
+[Crossed and self-fertilised seeds obtained in the above manner were
+allowed to germinate on damp sand, and as often as pairs germinated at
+the same time they were planted in the manner described in the
+Introduction (Chapter 1), on the opposite sides of two pots. Five pairs
+were thus planted; and all the remaining seeds, whether or not in a
+state of germination, were planted on the opposite sides of a third pot,
+so that the young plants on both sides were here greatly crowded and
+exposed to very severe competition. Rods of iron or wood of equal
+diameter were given to all the plants to twine up; and as soon as one of
+each pair reached the summit both were measured. A single rod was placed
+on each side of the crowded pot, Number 3, and only the tallest plant on
+each side was measured.
+
+TABLE 2/1. Ipomoea purpurea (First Generation.).
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Seedlings from Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Seedlings from Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 87 4/8 : 69.
+Pot 1 : 87 4/8 : 66.
+Pot 1 : 89 : 73.
+
+Pot 2 : 88 : 68 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 87 : 60 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 77 : 57.
+Plants crowded; the tallest one measured on each side.
+
+Total : 516 : 394.
+
+The average height of the six crossed plants is here 86 inches, whilst
+that of the six self-fertilised plants is only 65.66 inches, so that the
+crossed plants are to the self-fertilised in height as 100 to 76. It
+should be observed that this difference is not due to a few of the
+crossed plants being extremely tall, or to a few of the self-fertilised
+being extremely short, but to all the crossed plants attaining a greater
+height than their antagonists. The three pairs in Pot 1 were measured at
+two earlier periods, and the difference was sometimes greater and
+sometimes less than that at the final measuring. But it is an
+interesting fact, of which I have seen several other instances, that one
+of the self-fertilised plants, when nearly a foot in height, was half an
+inch taller than the crossed plant; and again, when two feet high, it
+was 1 3/8 of an inch taller, but during the ten subsequent days the
+crossed plant began to gain on its antagonist, and ever afterward
+asserted its supremacy, until it exceeded its self-fertilised opponent
+by 16 inches.
+
+The five crossed plants in Pots 1 and 2 were covered with a net, and
+produced 121 capsules; the five self-fertilised plants produced
+eighty-four capsules, so that the numbers of capsules were as 100 to 69.
+Of the 121 capsules on the crossed plants sixty-five were the product of
+flowers crossed with pollen from a distinct plant, and these contained
+on an average 5.23 seeds per capsule; the remaining fifty-six capsules
+were spontaneously self-fertilised. Of the eighty-four capsules on the
+self-fertilised plants, all the product of renewed self-fertilisation,
+fifty-five (which were alone examined) contained on an average 4.85
+seeds per capsule. Therefore the cross-fertilised capsules, compared
+with the self-fertilised capsules, yielded seeds in the proportion of
+100 to 93. The crossed seeds were relatively heavier than the
+self-fertilised seeds. Combining the above data (i.e., number of
+capsules and average number of contained seeds), the crossed plants,
+compared with the self-fertilised, yielded seeds in the ratio of 100 to
+64.
+
+These crossed plants produced, as already stated, fifty-six
+spontaneously self-fertilised capsules, and the self-fertilised plants
+produced twenty-nine such capsules. The former contained on an average,
+in comparison with the latter, seeds in the proportion of 100 to 99.
+
+In Pot 3, on the opposite sides of which a large number of crossed and
+self-fertilised seeds had been sown and the seedlings allowed to
+struggle together, the crossed plants had at first no great advantage.
+At one time the tallest crossed was 25 1/8 inches high, and the tallest
+self-fertilised plants 21 3/8. But the difference afterwards became much
+greater. The plants on both sides, from being so crowded, were poor
+specimens. The flowers were allowed to fertilise themselves
+spontaneously under a net; the crossed plants produced thirty-seven
+capsules, the self-fertilised plants only eighteen, or as 100 to 47. The
+former contained on an average 3.62 seeds per capsule; and the latter
+3.38 seeds, or as 100 to 93. Combining these data (i.e., number of
+capsules and average number of seeds), the crowded crossed plants
+produced seeds compared with the self-fertilised as 100 to 45. These
+latter seeds, however, were decidedly heavier, a hundred weighing 41.64
+grains, than those from the capsules on the crossed plants, of which a
+hundred weighed 36.79 grains; and this probably was due to the fewer
+capsules borne by the self-fertilised plants having been better
+nourished. We thus see that the crossed plants in this the first
+generation, when grown under favourable conditions, and when grown under
+unfavourable conditions from being much crowded, greatly exceeded in
+height, and in the number of capsules produced, and slightly in the
+number of seeds per capsule, the self-fertilised plants.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+
+Flowers on the crossed plants of the last generation (Table 2/1) were
+crossed by pollen from distinct plants of the same generation; and
+flowers on the self-fertilised plants were fertilised by pollen from the
+same flower. The seeds thus produced were treated in every respect as
+before, and we have in Table 2/2 the result.
+
+TABLE 2/2. Ipomoea purpurea (Second Generation.).
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 87 : 67 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 83 : 68 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 83 : 80 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 85 4/8 : 61 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 89 : 79.
+Pot 2 : 77 4/8 : 41.
+
+Total : 505 : 398.
+
+Here again every single crossed plant is taller than its antagonist. The
+self-fertilised plant in Pot 1, which ultimately reached the unusual
+height of 80 4/8 inches, was for a long time taller than the opposed
+crossed plant, though at last beaten by it. The average height of the
+six crossed plants is 84.16 inches, whilst that of the six
+self-fertilised plants is 66.33 inches, or as 100 to 79.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE THIRD GENERATION.
+
+Seeds from the crossed plants of the last generation (Table 2/2) again
+crossed, and from the self-fertilised plants again self-fertilised, were
+treated in all respects exactly as before, with the following result:--
+
+TABLE 2/3. Ipomoea purpurea (Third Generation.).
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 74 : 56 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 72 : 51 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 73 4/8 : 54.
+
+Pot 2 : 82 : 59.
+Pot 2 : 81 : 30.
+Pot 2 : 82 : 66.
+
+Total : 464.5 : 317.
+
+Again all the crossed plants are higher than their antagonists: their
+average height is 77.41 inches, whereas that of the self-fertilised is
+52.83 inches, or as 100 to 68.
+
+I attended closely to the fertility of the plants of this third
+generation. Thirty flowers on the crossed plants were crossed with
+pollen from other crossed plants of the same generation, and the
+twenty-six capsules thus produced contained, on an average, 4.73 seeds;
+whilst thirty flowers on the self-fertilised plants, fertilised with the
+pollen from the same flower, produced twenty-three capsules, each
+containing 4.43 seeds. Thus the average number of seeds in the crossed
+capsules was to that in the self-fertilised capsules as 100 to 94. A
+hundred of the crossed seeds weighed 43.27 grains, whilst a hundred of
+the self-fertilised seeds weighed only 37.63 grains. Many of these
+lighter self-fertilised seeds placed on damp sand germinated before the
+crossed; thus thirty-six of the former germinated whilst only thirteen
+of the latter or crossed seeds germinated. In Pot 1 the three crossed
+plants produced spontaneously under the net (besides the twenty-six
+artificially cross-fertilised capsules) seventy-seven self-fertilised
+capsules containing on an average 4.41 seeds; whilst the three
+self-fertilised plants produced spontaneously (besides the twenty-three
+artificially self-fertilised capsules) only twenty-nine self-fertilised
+capsules, containing on an average 4.14 seeds. Therefore the average
+number of seeds in the two lots of spontaneously self-fertilised
+capsules was as 100 to 94. Taking into consideration the number of
+capsules together with the average number of seeds, the crossed plants
+(spontaneously self-fertilised) produced seeds in comparison with the
+self-fertilised plants (spontaneously self-fertilised) in the proportion
+of 100 to 35. By whatever method the fertility of these plants is
+compared, the crossed are more fertile than the self-fertilised plants.
+
+I tried in several ways the comparative vigour and powers of growth of
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants of this third generation. Thus,
+four self-fertilised seeds which had just germinated were planted on one
+side of a pot, and after an interval of forty-eight hours, four crossed
+seeds in the same state of germination were planted on the opposite
+side; and the pot was kept in the hothouse. I thought that the advantage
+thus given to the self-fertilised seedlings would have been so great
+that they would never have been beaten by the crossed ones. They were
+not beaten until all had grown to a height of 18 inches; and the degree
+to which they were finally beaten is shown in Table 2/4. We here see
+that the average height of the four crossed plants is 76.62, and of the
+four self-fertilised plants 65.87 inches, or as 100 to 86; therefore
+less than when both sides started fair.
+
+TABLE 2/4. Ipomoea purpurea (Third Generation, the self-fertilised
+plants having had a start of forty-eight hours).
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 3 : 78 4/8 : 73 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 77 4/8 : 53.
+Pot 3 : 73 : 61 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 77 4/8 : 75 4/8.
+
+Total : 306.5 : 263.5.
+
+Crossed and self-fertilised seeds of the third generation were also sown
+out of doors late in the summer, and therefore under unfavourable
+conditions, and a single stick was given to each lot of plants to twine
+up. The two lots were sufficiently separate so as not to interfere with
+each other’s growth, and the ground was clear of weeds. As soon as they
+were killed by the first frost (and there was no difference in their
+hardiness), the two tallest crossed plants were found to be 24.5 and
+22.5 inches, whilst the two tallest self-fertilised plants were only 15
+and 12.5 inches in height, or as 100 to 59.
+
+I likewise sowed at the same time two lots of the same seeds in a part
+of the garden which was shady and covered with weeds. The crossed
+seedlings from the first looked the most healthy, but they twined up a
+stick only to a height of 7 1/4 inches; whilst the self-fertilised were
+not able to twine at all; and the tallest of them was only 3 1/2 inches
+in height.
+
+Lastly, two lots of the same seeds were sown in the midst of a bed of
+candy-tuft (Iberis) growing vigorously. The seedlings came up, but all
+the self-fertilised ones soon died excepting one, which never twined and
+grew to a height of only 4 inches. Many of the crossed seedlings, on the
+other hand, survived; and some twined up the stems of the Iberis to the
+height of 11 inches. These cases prove that the crossed seedlings have
+an immense advantage over the self-fertilised, both when growing
+isolated under very unfavourable conditions, and when put into
+competition with each other or with other plants, as would happen in a
+state of nature.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FOURTH GENERATION.
+
+Seedlings raised as before from the crossed and self-fertilised plants
+of the third generation in Table 2/3, gave results as follows:--
+
+TABLE 2/5. Ipomoea purpurea (Fourth Generation).
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 84 : 80.
+Pot 1 : 47 : 44 1/2.
+
+Pot 2 : 83 : 73 1/2.
+Pot 2 : 59 : 51 1/2.
+
+Pot 3 : 82 : 56 1/2.
+Pot 3 : 65 1/2 : 63.
+Pot 3 : 68 : 52.
+
+Total : 488.5 : 421.0.
+
+Here the average height of the seven crossed plants is 69.78 inches, and
+that of the seven self-fertilised plants 60.14; or as 100 to 86. This
+smaller difference relatively to that in the former generations, may be
+attributed to the plants having been raised during the depth of winter,
+and consequently to their not having grown vigorously, as was shown by
+their general appearance and from several of them never reaching the
+summits of the rods. In Pot 2, one of the self-fertilised plants was for
+a long time taller by two inches than its opponent, but was ultimately
+beaten by it, so that all the crossed plants exceeded their opponents in
+height. Of twenty-eight capsules produced by the crossed plants
+fertilised by pollen from a distinct plant, each contained on an average
+4.75 seeds; of twenty-seven self-fertilised capsules on the
+self-fertilised plants, each contained on an average 4.47 seeds; so that
+the proportion of seeds in the crossed and self-fertilised capsules was
+as 100 to 94.
+
+Some of the same seeds, from which the plants in Table 2/5 had been
+raised, were planted, after they had germinated on damp sand, in a
+square tub, in which a large Brugmansia had long been growing. The soil
+was extremely poor and full of roots; six crossed seeds were planted in
+one corner, and six self-fertilised seeds in the opposite corner. All
+the seedlings from the latter soon died excepting one, and this grew to
+the height of only 1 1/2 inches. Of the crossed plants three survived,
+and they grew to the height of 2 1/2 inches, but were not able to twine
+round a stick; nevertheless, to my surprise, they produced some small
+miserable flowers. The crossed plants thus had a decided advantage over
+the self-fertilised plants under this extremity of bad conditions.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FIFTH GENERATION.
+
+These were raised in the same manner as before, and when measured gave
+the following results:--
+
+TABLE 2/6. Ipomoea purpurea (Fifth Generation).
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 96 : 73.
+Pot 1 : 86 : 78.
+Pot 1 : 69 : 29.
+
+Pot 2 : 84 : 51.
+Pot 2 : 84 : 84.
+Pot 2 : 76 1/4 : 59.
+
+Total : 495.25 : 374.00.
+
+The average height of the six crossed plants is 82.54 inches, and that
+of the six self-fertilised plants 62.33 inches, or as 100 to 75. Every
+crossed plant exceeded its antagonist in height. In Pot 1 the middle
+plant on the crossed side was slightly injured whilst young by a blow,
+and was for a time beaten by its opponent, but ultimately recovered the
+usual superiority. The crossed plants produced spontaneously a vast
+number more capsules than did the self-fertilised plants; and the
+capsules of the former contained on an average 3.37 seeds, whilst those
+of the latter contained only 3.0 per capsule, or as 100 to 89. But
+looking only to the artificially fertilised capsules, those on the
+crossed plants again crossed contained on an average 4.46 seeds, whilst
+those on the self-fertilised plants again self-fertilised contained 4.77
+seeds; so that the self-fertilised capsules were the more fertile of the
+two, and of this unusual fact I can offer no explanation.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SIXTH GENERATION.
+
+These were raised in the usual manner, with the following result. I
+should state that there were originally eight plants on each side; but
+as two of the self-fertilised became extremely unhealthy and never grew
+to near their full height, these as well as their opponents have been
+struck out of the list. If they had been retained, they would have made
+the average height of the crossed plants unfairly greater than that of
+the self-fertilised. I have acted in the same manner in a few other
+instances, when one of a pair plainly became very unhealthy.
+
+TABLE 2/7. Ipomoea purpurea (Sixth Generation).
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 93 : 50 1/2.
+Pot 1 : 91 : 65.
+
+Pot 2 : 79 : 50.
+Pot 2 : 86 1/2 : 87.
+Pot 2 : 88 : 62.
+
+Pot 3 : 87 1/2 : 64 1/2.
+
+Total : 525 : 379.
+
+The average height of the six crossed plants is here 87.5, and of the
+six self-fertilised plants 63.16, or as 100 to 72. This large difference
+was chiefly due to most of the plants, especially the self-fertilised
+ones, having become unhealthy towards the close of their growth, and
+they were severely attacked by aphides. From this cause nothing can be
+inferred with respect to their relative fertility. In this generation we
+have the first instance of a self-fertilised plant in Pot 2 exceeding
+(though only by half an inch) its crossed opponent. This victory was
+fairly won after a long struggle. At first the self-fertilised plant was
+several inches taller than its opponent, but when the latter was 4 1/2
+feet high it had grown equal; it then grew a little taller than the
+self-fertilised plant, but was ultimately beaten by it to the extent of
+half an inch, as shown in Table 2/7. I was so much surprised at this
+case that I saved the self-fertilised seeds of this plant, which I will
+call the “Hero,” and experimented on its descendants, as will hereafter
+be described.
+
+Besides the plants included in Table 2/7, nine crossed and nine
+self-fertilised plants of the same lot were raised in two other pots, 4
+and 5. These pots had been kept in the hothouse, but from want of room
+were, whilst the plants were young, suddenly moved during very cold
+weather into the coldest part of the greenhouse. They all suffered
+greatly, and never quite recovered. After a fortnight only two of the
+nine self-fertilised seedlings were alive, whilst seven of the crossed
+survived. The tallest of these latter plants when measured was 47 inches
+in height, whilst the tallest of the two surviving self-fertilised
+plants was only 32 inches. Here again we see how much more vigorous the
+crossed plants are than the self-fertilised.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SEVENTH GENERATION.
+
+These were raised as heretofore with the following result:--
+
+TABLE 2/8. Ipomoea purpurea (Seventh Generation).
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 84 4/8 : 74 6/8.
+Pot 1 : 84 6/8 : 84.
+Pot 1 : 76 2/8 : 55 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 84 4/8 : 65.
+Pot 2 : 90 : 51 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 82 2/8 : 80 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 83 : 67 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 86 : 60 2/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 84 2/8 : 75 2/8.
+
+Total : 755.50 : 614.25.
+
+Each of these nine crossed plants is higher than its opponent, though in
+one case only by three-quarters of an inch. Their average height is
+83.94 inches, and that of the self-fertilised plants 68.25, or as 100 to
+81. These plants, after growing to their full height, became very
+unhealthy and infested with aphides, just when the seeds were setting,
+so that many of the capsules failed, and nothing can be said on their
+relative fertility.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE EIGHTH GENERATION.
+
+As just stated, the plants of the last generation, from which the
+present ones were raised, were very unhealthy and their seeds of
+unusually small size; and this probably accounts for the two lots
+behaving differently to what they did in any of the previous or
+succeeding generations. Many of the self-fertilised seeds germinated
+before the crossed ones, and these were of course rejected. When the
+crossed seedlings in Table 2/9 had grown to a height of between 1 and 2
+feet, they were all, or almost all, shorter than their self-fertilised
+opponents, but were not then measured. When they had acquired an average
+height of 32.28 inches, that of the self-fertilised plants was 40.68, or
+as 100 to 122. Moreover, every one of the self-fertilised plants, with a
+single exception, exceeded its crossed opponent. When, however, the
+crossed plants had grown to an average height of 77.56 inches, they just
+exceeded (namely, by .7 of an inch) the average height of the
+self-fertilised plants; but two of the latter were still taller than
+their crossed opponents. I was so much astonished at this whole case,
+that I tied string to the summits of the rods; the plants being thus
+allowed to continue climbing upwards. When their growth was complete
+they were untwined, stretched straight, and measured. The crossed plants
+had now almost regained their accustomed superiority, as may be seen in
+Table 2/9.
+
+The average height of the eight crossed plants is here 113.25 inches,
+and that of the self-fertilised plants 96.65, or as 100 to 85.
+Nevertheless two of the self-fertilised plants, as may be seen in Table
+2/9, were still higher than their crossed opponents. The latter
+manifestly had much thicker stems and many more lateral branches, and
+looked altogether more vigorous than the self-fertilised plants, and
+generally flowered before them. The earlier flowers produced by these
+self-fertilised plants did not set any capsules, and their anthers
+contained only a small amount of pollen; but to this subject I shall
+return. Nevertheless capsules produced by two other self-fertilised
+plants of the same lot, not included in Table 2/9, which had been highly
+favoured by being grown in separate pots, contained the large average
+number of 5.1 seeds per capsule.
+
+TABLE 2/9. Ipomoea purpurea (Eighth Generation).
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 111 6/8 : 96.
+Pot 1 : 127 : 54.
+Pot 1 : 130 6/8 : 93 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 97 2/8 : 94.
+Pot 2 : 89 4/8 : 125 6/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 103 6/8 : 115 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 100 6/8 : 84 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 147 4/8 : 109 6/8.
+
+Total : 908.25 : 773.25.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE NINTH GENERATION.
+
+The plants of this generation were raised in the same manner as before,
+with the result shown in Table 2/10.
+
+The fourteen crossed plants average in height 81.39 inches and the
+fourteen self-fertilised plants 64.07, or as 100 to 79. One
+self-fertilised plant in Pot 3 exceeded, and one in Pot 4 equalled in
+height, its opponent. The self-fertilised plants showed no sign of
+inheriting the precocious growth of their parents; this having been due,
+as it would appear, to the abnormal state of the seeds from the
+unhealthiness of their parents. The fourteen self-fertilised plants
+yielded only forty spontaneously self-fertilised capsules, to which must
+be added seven, the product of ten flowers artificially self-fertilised.
+On the other hand, the fourteen crossed plants yielded 152 spontaneously
+self-fertilised capsules; but thirty-six flowers on these plants were
+crossed (yielding thirty-three capsules), and these flowers would
+probably have produced about thirty spontaneously self-fertilised
+capsules. Therefore an equal number of the crossed and self-fertilised
+plants would have produced capsules in the proportion of about 182 to
+47, or as 100 to 26. Another phenomenon was well pronounced in this
+generation, but I believe had occurred previously to a slight extent;
+namely, that most of the flowers on the self-fertilised plants were
+somewhat monstrous. The monstrosity consisted in the corolla being
+irregularly split so that it did not open properly, with one or two of
+the stamens slightly foliaceous, coloured, and firmly coherent to the
+corolla. I observed this monstrosity in only one flower on the crossed
+plants. The self-fertilised plants, if well nourished, would almost
+certainly, in a few more generations, have produced double flowers, for
+they had already become in some degree sterile. (2/1. See on this
+subject ‘Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication’ chapter 18
+2nd edition volume 2 page 152.)
+
+TABLE 2/10. Ipomoea purpurea (Ninth Generation).
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 83 4/8 : 57.
+Pot 1 : 85 4/8 : 71.
+Pot 1 : 83 4/8 : 48 3/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 83 2/8 : 45.
+Pot 2 : 64 2/8 : 43 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 64 3/8 : 38 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 79 : 63.
+Pot 3 : 88 1/8 : 71.
+Pot 3 : 61 : 89 4/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 82 4/8 : 82 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 90 : 76 1/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 89 4/8 : 67.
+Pot 5 : 92 4/8 : 74 2/8.
+Pot 5 : 92 4/8 : 70.
+Crowded plants.
+
+Total : 1139.5 : 897.0.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE TENTH GENERATION.
+
+Six plants were raised in the usual manner from the crossed plants of
+the last generation (Table 2/10) again intercrossed, and from the
+self-fertilised again self-fertilised. As one of the crossed plants in
+Pot 1 in Table 2/11 became much diseased, having crumpled leaves, and
+producing hardly any capsules, it and its opponent have been struck out
+of the table.
+
+TABLE 2/11. Ipomoea purpurea (Tenth Generation).
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 92 3/8 : 47 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 94 4/8 : 34 6/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 87 : 54 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 89 5/8 : 49 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 105 : 66 2/8.
+
+Total : 468.5 : 252.0.
+
+The five crossed plants average 93.7 inches, and the five
+self-fertilised only 50.4, or as 100 to 54. This difference, however, is
+so great that it must be looked at as in part accidental. The six
+crossed plants (the diseased one here included) yielded spontaneously
+101 capsules, and the six self-fertilised plants 88, the latter being
+chiefly produced by one of the plants. But as the diseased plant, which
+yielded hardly any seed, is here included, the ratio of 101 to 88 does
+not fairly give the relative fertility of the two lots. The stems of the
+six crossed plants looked so much finer than those of the six
+self-fertilised plants, that after the capsules had been gathered and
+most of the leaves had fallen off, they were weighed. Those of the
+crossed plants weighed 2,693 grains, whilst those of the self-fertilised
+plants weighed only 1,173 grains, or as 100 to 44; but as the diseased
+and dwarfed crossed plant is here included, the superiority of the
+former in weight was really greater.]
+
+THE EFFECTS ON THE OFFSPRING OF CROSSING DIFFERENT FLOWERS ON THE SAME
+PLANT, INSTEAD OF CROSSING DISTINCT INDIVIDUALS.
+
+In all the foregoing experiments, seedlings from flowers crossed by
+pollen from a distinct plant (though in the later generations more or
+less closely related) were put into competition with, and almost
+invariably proved markedly superior in height to the offspring from
+self-fertilised flowers. I wished, therefore, to ascertain whether a
+cross between two flowers on the same plant would give to the offspring
+any superiority over the offspring from flowers fertilised with their
+own pollen. I procured some fresh seed and raised two plants, which were
+covered with a net; and several of their flowers were crossed with
+pollen from a distinct flower on the same plant. Twenty-nine capsules
+thus produced contained on an average 4.86 seeds per capsule; and 100 of
+these seeds weighed 36.77 grains. Several other flowers were fertilised
+with their own pollen, and twenty-six capsules thus produced contained
+on an average 4.42 seeds per capsule; 100 of which weighed 42.61 grains.
+So that a cross of this kind appears to have increased slightly the
+number of seeds per capsule, in the ratio of 100 to 91; but these
+crossed seeds were lighter than the self-fertilised in the ratio of 86
+to 100. I doubt, however, from other observations, whether these results
+are fully trustworthy. The two lots of seeds, after germinating on sand,
+were planted in pairs on the opposite sides of nine pots, and were
+treated in every respect like the plants in the previous experiments.
+The remaining seeds, some in a state of germination and some not so,
+were sown on the opposite sides of a large pot (Number 10); and the four
+tallest plants on each side of this pot were measured. The result is
+shown in Table 2/12.
+
+TABLE 2/12. Ipomoea purpurea.
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 82 : 77 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 75 : 87.
+Pot 1 : 65 : 64.
+Pot 1 : 76 : 87 2/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 78 4/8 : 84.
+Pot 2 : 43 : 86 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 65 4/8 : 90 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 61 2/8 : 86.
+Pot 3 : 85 : 69 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 89 : 87 4/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 83 : 80 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 73 4/8 : 88 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 67 : 84 4/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 78 : 66 4/8.
+Pot 5 : 76 6/8 : 77 4/8.
+Pot 5 : 57 : 81 4/8.
+
+Pot 6 : 70 4/8 : 80.
+Pot 6 : 79 : 82 4/8.
+Pot 6 : 79 6/8 : 55 4/8.
+
+Pot 7 : 76 : 77.
+Pot 7 : 84 4/8 : 83 4/8.
+Pot 7 : 79 : 73 4/8.
+
+Pot 8 : 73 : 76 4/8.
+Pot 8 : 67 : 82.
+Pot 8 : 83 : 80 4/8.
+
+Pot 9 : 73 2/8 : 78 4/8.
+Pot 9 : 78 : 67 4/8.
+
+Pot 10 : 34 : 82 4/8.
+Pot 10 : 82 : 36 6/8.
+Pot 10 : 84 6/8 : 69 4/8.
+Pot 10 : 71 : 75 2/8.
+Crowded plants.
+
+Total : 2270.25 : 2399.75.
+
+The average height of the thirty-one crossed plants is 73.23 inches, and
+that of the thirty-one self-fertilised plants 77.41 inches; or as 100 to
+106. Looking to each pair, it may be seen that only thirteen of the
+crossed plants, whilst eighteen of the self-fertilised plants exceed
+their opponents. A record was kept with respect to the plant which
+flowered first in each pot; and only two of the crossed flowered before
+one of the self-fertilised in the same pot; whilst eight of the
+self-fertilised flowered first. It thus appears that the crossed plants
+are slightly inferior in height and in earliness of flowering to the
+self-fertilised. But the inferiority in height is so small, namely as
+100 to 106, that I should have felt very doubtful on this head, had I
+not cut down all the plants (except those in the crowded pot Number 10)
+close to the ground and weighed them. The twenty-seven crossed plants
+weighed 16 1/2 ounces, and the twenty-seven self-fertilised plants 20
+1/2 ounces; and this gives a ratio of 100 to 124.
+
+A self-fertilised plant of the same parentage as those in Table 2/12 had
+been raised in a separate pot for a distinct purpose; and it proved
+partially sterile, the anthers containing very little pollen. Several
+flowers on this plant were crossed with the little pollen which could be
+obtained from the other flowers on the same plant; and other flowers
+were self-fertilised. From the seeds thus produced four crossed and four
+self-fertilised plants were raised, which were planted in the usual
+manner on the opposite sides of two pots. All these four crossed plants
+were inferior in height to their opponents; they averaged 78.18 inches,
+whilst the four self-fertilised plants averaged 84.8 inches; or as 100
+to 108. (2/2. From one of these self-fertilised plants, spontaneously
+self-fertilised, I gathered twenty-four capsules, and they contained on
+an average only 3.2 seeds per capsule; so that this plant had apparently
+inherited some of the sterility of its parent.) This case, therefore,
+confirms the last. Taking all the evidence together, we must conclude
+that these strictly self-fertilised plants grew a little taller, were
+heavier, and generally flowered before those derived from a cross
+between two flowers on the same plant. These latter plants thus present
+a wonderful contrast with those derived from a cross between two
+distinct individuals.
+
+THE EFFECTS ON THE OFFSPRING OF A CROSS WITH A DISTINCT OR FRESH STOCK
+BELONGING TO THE SAME VARIETY.
+
+From the two foregoing series of experiments we see, firstly, the good
+effects during several successive generations of a cross between
+distinct plants, although these were in some degree inter-related and
+had been grown under nearly the same conditions; and, secondly, the
+absence of all such good effects from a cross between flowers on the
+same plant; the comparison in both cases being made with the offspring
+of flowers fertilised with their own pollen. The experiments now to be
+given show how powerfully and beneficially plants, which have been
+intercrossed during many successive generations, having been kept all
+the time under nearly uniform conditions, are affected by a cross with
+another plant belonging to the same variety, but to a distinct family or
+stock, which had grown under different conditions.
+
+[Several flowers on the crossed plants of the ninth generation in Table
+2/10, were crossed with pollen from another crossed plant of the same
+lot. The seedlings thus raised formed the tenth intercrossed generation,
+and I will call them the “INTERCROSSED PLANTS.” Several other flowers on
+the same crossed plants of the ninth generation were fertilised (not
+having been castrated) with pollen taken from plants of the same
+variety, but belonging to a distinct family, which had been grown in a
+distant garden at Colchester, and therefore under somewhat different
+conditions. The capsules produced by this cross contained, to my
+surprise, fewer and lighter seeds than did the capsules of the
+intercrossed plants; but this, I think, must have been accidental. The
+seedlings raised from them I will call the “COLCHESTER-CROSSED.” The two
+lots of seeds, after germinating on sand, were planted in the usual
+manner on the opposite sides of five pots, and the remaining seeds,
+whether or not in a state of germination, were thickly sown on the
+opposite sides of a very large pot, Number 6 in Table 2/13. In three of
+the six pots, after the young plants had twined a short way up their
+sticks, one of the Colchester-crossed plants was much taller than any
+one of the intercrossed plants on the opposite side of the same pot; and
+in the three other pots somewhat taller. I should state that two of the
+Colchester-crossed plants in Pot 4, when about two-thirds grown, became
+much diseased, and were, together with their intercrossed opponents,
+rejected. The remaining nineteen plants, when almost fully grown, were
+measured, with the following result:
+
+TABLE 2/13. Ipomoea purpurea.
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Colchester-Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Intercrossed Plants of the Tenth Generation.
+
+Pot 1 : 87 : 78.
+Pot 1 : 87 4/8 : 68 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 85 1/8 : 94 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 93 6/8 : 60.
+Pot 2 : 85 4/8 : 87 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 90 5/8 : 45 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 84 2/8 : 70 1/8.
+Pot 3 : 92 4/8 : 81 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 85 : 86 2/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 95 6/8 : 65 1/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 90 4/8 : 85 6/8.
+Pot 5 : 86 6/8 : 63.
+Pot 5 : 84 : 62 6/8.
+
+Pot 6 : 90 4/8 : 43 4/8.
+Pot 6 : 75 : 39 6/8.
+Pot 6 : 71 : 30 2/8.
+Pot 6 : 83 6/8 : 86.
+Pot 6 : 63 : 53.
+Pot 6 : 65 : 48 6/8.
+Crowded plants in a very large pot.
+
+Total : 1596.50 : 1249.75.
+
+In sixteen out of these nineteen pairs, the Colchester-crossed plant
+exceeded in height its intercrossed opponent. The average height of the
+Colchester-crossed is 84.03 inches, and that of the intercrossed 65.78
+inches; or as 100 to 78. With respect to the fertility of the two lots,
+it was too troublesome to collect and count the capsules on all the
+plants; so I selected two of the best pots, 5 and 6, and in these the
+Colchester-crossed produced 269 mature and half-mature capsules, whilst
+an equal number of the intercrossed plants produced only 154 capsules;
+or as 100 to 57. By weight the capsules from the Colchester-crossed
+plants were to those from the intercrossed plants as 100 to 51; so that
+the former probably contained a somewhat larger average number of
+seeds.]
+
+We learn from this important experiment that plants in some degree
+related, which had been intercrossed during the nine previous
+generations, when they were fertilised with pollen from a fresh stock,
+yielded seedlings as superior to the seedlings of the tenth intercrossed
+generation, as these latter were to the self-fertilised plants of the
+corresponding generation. For if we look to the plants of the ninth
+generation in Table 2/10 (and these offer in most respects the fairest
+standard of comparison) we find that the intercrossed plants were in
+height to the self-fertilised as 100 to 79, and in fertility as 100 to
+26; whilst the Colchester-crossed plants are in height to the
+intercrossed as 100 to 78, and in fertility as 100 to 51.
+
+[THE DESCENDANTS OF THE SELF-FERTILISED PLANT, NAMED HERO, WHICH
+APPEARED IN THE SIXTH SELF-FERTILISED GENERATION.
+
+In the five generations before the sixth, the crossed plant of each pair
+was taller than its self-fertilised opponent; but in the sixth
+generation (Table 2/7, Pot 2) the Hero appeared, which after a long and
+dubious struggle conquered its crossed opponent, though by only half an
+inch. I was so much surprised at this fact, that I resolved to ascertain
+whether this plant would transmit its powers of growth to its seedlings.
+Several flowers on Hero were therefore fertilised with their own pollen,
+and the seedlings thus raised were put into competition with
+self-fertilised and intercrossed plants of the corresponding generation.
+The three lots of seedlings thus all belong to the seventh generation.
+Their relative heights are shown in Tables 2/14 and 2/15.
+
+TABLE 2/14. Ipomoea purpurea.
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants of the Seventh Generation, Children of
+Hero.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants of the Seventh Generation.
+
+Pot 1 : 74 : 89 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 60 : 61.
+Pot 1 : 55 2/8 : 49.
+
+Pot 2 : 92 : 82.
+Pot 2 : 91 6/8 : 56.
+Pot 2 : 74 2/8 : 38.
+
+Total : 447.25 : 375.50.
+
+The average height of the six self-fertilised children of Hero is 74.54
+inches, whilst that of the ordinary self-fertilised plants of the
+corresponding generation is only 62.58 inches, or as 100 to 84.
+
+TABLE 2/15. Ipomoea purpurea.
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants of the Seventh Generation, Children of
+Hero.
+
+Column 3: Intercrossed Plants of the Seventh Generation.
+
+Pot 3 : 92 : 76 6/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 87 : 89.
+Pot 4 : 87 6/8 : 86 6/8.
+
+Total : 266.75 : 252.50.
+
+Here the average height of the three self-fertilised children of Hero is
+88.91 inches, whilst that of the intercrossed plants is 84.16; or as 100
+to 95. We thus see that the self-fertilised children of Hero certainly
+inherit the powers of growth of their parents; for they greatly exceed
+in height the self-fertilised offspring of the other self-fertilised
+plants, and even exceed by a trifle the intercrossed plants,--all of the
+corresponding generation.
+
+Several flowers on the self-fertilised children of Hero in Table 2/14
+were fertilised with pollen from the same flower; and from the seeds
+thus produced, self-fertilised plants of the eighth generation
+(grandchildren of Hero) were raised. Several other flowers on the same
+plants were crossed with pollen from the other children of Hero. The
+seedlings raised from this cross may be considered as the offspring of
+the union of brothers and sisters. The result of the competition between
+these two sets of seedlings (namely self-fertilised and the offspring of
+brothers and sisters) is given in Table 2/16.
+
+TABLE 2/16. Ipomoea purpurea.
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Self-fertilised Grandchildren of Hero, from the
+Self-fertilised Children. Eighth Generation.
+
+Column 3: Grandchildren from a cross between the self-fertilised
+children of Hero. Eighth Generation.
+
+Pot 1 : 86 6/8 : 95 6/8.
+Pot 1 : 90 3/8 : 95 3/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 96 : 85.
+Pot 2 : 77 2/8 : 93.
+
+Pot 3 : 73 : 86 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 66 : 82 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 84 4/8 : 70 6/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 88 1/8 : 66 3/8.
+Pot 4 : 84 : 15 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 36 2/8 : 38.
+Pot 4 : 74 : 78 3/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 90 1/8 : 82 6/8.
+Pot 5 : 90 5/8 : 83 6/8.
+
+Total : 1037.00 : 973.16.
+
+The average height of the thirteen self-fertilised grandchildren of Hero
+is 79.76 inches, and that of the grandchildren from a cross between the
+self-fertilised children is 74.85; or as 100 to 94. But in Pot 4 one of
+the crossed plants grew only to a height of 15 1/2 inches; and if this
+plant and its opponent are struck out, as would be the fairest plan, the
+average height of the crossed plants exceeds only by a fraction of an
+inch that of the self-fertilised plants. It is therefore clear that a
+cross between the self-fertilised children of Hero did not produce any
+beneficial effect worth notice; and it is very doubtful whether this
+negative result can be attributed merely to the fact of brothers and
+sisters having been united, for the ordinary intercrossed plants of the
+several successive generations must often have been derived from the
+union of brothers and sisters (as shown in Chapter 1), and yet all of
+them were greatly superior to the self-fertilised plants. We are
+therefore driven to the suspicion, which we shall soon see strengthened,
+that Hero transmitted to its offspring a peculiar constitution adapted
+for self-fertilisation.
+
+It would appear that the self-fertilised descendants of Hero have not
+only inherited from Hero a power of growth equal to that of the ordinary
+intercrossed plants, but have become more fertile when self-fertilised
+than is usual with the plants of the present species. The flowers on the
+self-fertilised grandchildren of Hero in Table 2.16 (the eighth
+generation of self-fertilised plants) were fertilised with their own
+pollen and produced plenty of capsules, ten of which (though this is too
+few a number for a safe average) contained 5.2 seeds per capsule,--a
+higher average than was observed in any other case with the
+self-fertilised plants. The anthers produced by these self-fertilised
+grandchildren were also as well developed and contained as much pollen
+as those on the intercrossed plants of the corresponding generation;
+whereas this was not the case with the ordinary self-fertilised plants
+of the later generations. Nevertheless some few of the flowers produced
+by the grandchildren of Hero were slightly monstrous, like those of the
+ordinary self-fertilised plants of the later generations. In order not
+to recur to the subject of fertility, I may add that twenty-one
+self-fertilised capsules, spontaneously produced by the
+great-grandchildren of Hero (forming the ninth generation of
+self-fertilised plants), contained on an average 4.47 seeds; and this is
+as high an average as the self-fertilised flowers of any generation
+usually yielded.
+
+Several flowers on the self-fertilised grandchildren of Hero in Table
+2/16 were fertilised with pollen from the same flower; and the seedlings
+raised from them (great-grandchildren of Hero) formed the ninth
+self-fertilised generation. Several other flowers were crossed with
+pollen from another grandchild, so that they may be considered as the
+offspring of brothers and sisters, and the seedlings thus raised may be
+called the INTERCROSSED great-grandchildren. And lastly, other flowers
+were fertilised with pollen from a distinct stock, and the seedlings
+thus raised may be called the COLCHESTER-CROSSED great-grandchildren. In
+my anxiety to see what the result would be, I unfortunately planted the
+three lots of seeds (after they had germinated on sand) in the hothouse
+in the middle of winter, and in consequence of this the seedlings
+(twenty in number of each kind) became very unhealthy, some growing only
+a few inches in height, and very few to their proper height. The result,
+therefore, cannot be fully trusted; and it would be useless to give the
+measurements in detail. In order to strike as fair an average as
+possible, I first excluded all the plants under 50 inches in height,
+thus rejecting all the most unhealthy plants. The six self-fertilised
+thus left were on an average 66.86 inches high; the eight intercrossed
+plants 63.2 high; and the seven Colchester-crossed 65.37 high; so that
+there was not much difference between the three sets, the
+self-fertilised plants having a slight advantage. Nor was there any
+great difference when only the plants under 36 inches in height were
+excluded. Nor again when all the plants, however much dwarfed and
+unhealthy, were included. In this latter case the Colchester-crossed
+gave the lowest average of all; and if these plants had been in any
+marked manner superior to the other two lots, as from my former
+experience I fully expected they would have been, I cannot but think
+that some vestige of such superiority would have been evident,
+notwithstanding the very unhealthy condition of most of the plants. No
+advantage, as far as we can judge, was derived from intercrossing two of
+the grandchildren of Hero, any more than when two of the children were
+crossed. It appears therefore that Hero and its descendants have varied
+from the common type, not only in acquiring great power of growth, and
+increased fertility when subjected to self-fertilisation, but in not
+profiting from a cross with a distinct stock; and this latter fact, if
+trustworthy, is a unique case, as far as I have observed in all my
+experiments.]
+
+SUMMARY ON THE GROWTH, VIGOUR, AND FERTILITY OF THE SUCCESSIVE
+GENERATIONS OF THE CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF Ipomoea
+purpurea, TOGETHER WITH SOME MISCELLANEOUS OBSERVATIONS.
+
+In Table 2/17, we see the average or mean heights of the ten successive
+generations of the intercrossed and self-fertilised plants, grown in
+competition with each other; and in the right hand column we have the
+ratios of the one to the other, the height of the intercrossed plants
+being taken at 100. In the bottom line the mean height of the
+seventy-three intercrossed plants is shown to be 85.84 inches, and that
+of the seventy-three self-fertilised plants 66.02 inches, or as 100 to
+77.
+
+TABLE 2/17. Ipomoea purpurea. Summary of measurements of the ten
+generations.
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Name of Generation.
+
+Column 2: Number of Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Average Height of Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 4: Number of Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Column 5: Average Height of Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Column 6: n in Ratio between Average Heights of Crossed and
+Self-fertilised Plants, expressed as 100 to n.
+
+First generation Table 2/1 : 6 : 86.00 : 6 : 65.66 : 76.
+
+Second generation Table 2/2 : 6 : 84.16 : 6 : 66.33 : 79.
+
+Third generation Table 2/3 : 6 : 77.41 : 6 : 52.83 : 68.
+
+Fourth generation Table 2/5 : 7 : 69.78 : 7 : 60.14 : 86.
+
+Fifth generation Table 2/6 : 6 : 82.54 : 6 : 62.33 : 75.
+
+Sixth generation Table 2/7 : 6 : 87.50 : 6 : 63.16 : 72.
+
+Seventh generation Table 2/8 : 9 : 83.94 : 9 : 68.25 : 81.
+
+Eighth generation Table 2/9 : 8 : 113.25 : 8 : 96.65 : 85.
+
+Ninth generation Table 2/10 : 14 : 81.39 : 14 : 64.07 : 79.
+
+Tenth generation Table 2/11 : 5 : 93.70 : 5 : 50.40 : 54.
+
+All ten generations together : 73 : 85.84 : 73 : 66.02 : 77.
+
+(DIAGRAM 2/1. Diagram showing the mean heights of the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of Ipomoea purpurea in the ten generations; the
+mean height of the crossed plants being taken as 100. On the right hand,
+the mean heights of the crossed and self-fertilised plants of all the
+generations taken together are shown (as eleven pairs of unequal
+vertical lines.))
+
+The mean height of the self-fertilised plants in each of the ten
+generations is also shown in the diagram 2/1, that of the intercrossed
+plants being taken at 100, and on the right side we see the relative
+heights of the seventy-three intercrossed plants, and of the
+seventy-three self-fertilised plants. The difference in height between
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants will perhaps be best appreciated
+by an illustration: If all the men in a country were on an average 6
+feet high, and there were some families which had been long and closely
+interbred, these would be almost dwarfs, their average height during ten
+generations being only 4 feet 8 1/4 inches.
+
+It should be especially observed that the average difference between the
+crossed and self-fertilised plants is not due to a few of the former
+having grown to an extraordinary height, or to a few of the
+self-fertilised being extremely short, but to all the crossed plants
+having surpassed their self-fertilised opponents, with the few following
+exceptions. The first occurred in the sixth generation, in which the
+plant named “Hero” appeared; two in the eighth generation, but the
+self-fertilised plants in this generation were in an anomalous
+condition, as they grew at first at an unusual rate and conquered for a
+time the opposed crossed plants; and two exceptions in the ninth
+generation, though one of these plants only equalled its crossed
+opponent. Therefore, of the seventy-three crossed plants, sixty-eight
+grew to a greater height than the self-fertilised plants, to which they
+were opposed.
+
+In the right-hand column of figures, the difference in height between
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants in the successive generations is
+seen to fluctuate much, as might indeed have been expected from the
+small number of plants measured in each generation being insufficient to
+give a fair average. It should be remembered that the absolute height of
+the plants goes for nothing, as each pair was measured as soon as one of
+them had twined up to the summit of its rod. The great difference in the
+tenth generation, namely, 100 to 54, no doubt was partly accidental,
+though, when these plants were weighed, the difference was even greater,
+namely, 100 to 44. The smallest amount of difference occurred in the
+fourth and the eighth generations, and this was apparently due to both
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants having become unhealthy, which
+prevented the former attaining their usual degree of superiority. This
+was an unfortunate circumstance, but my experiments were not thus
+vitiated, as both lots of plants were exposed to the same conditions,
+whether favourable or unfavourable.
+
+There is reason to believe that the flowers of this Ipomoea, when
+growing out of doors, are habitually crossed by insects, so that the
+first seedlings which I raised from purchased seeds were probably the
+offspring of a cross. I infer that this is the case, firstly from
+humble-bees often visiting the flowers, and from the quantity of pollen
+left by them on the stigmas of such flowers; and, secondly, from the
+plants raised from the same lot of seed varying greatly in the colour of
+their flowers, for as we shall hereafter see, this indicates much
+intercrossing. (2/3. Verlot says ‘Sur la Production des Variétés’ 1865
+page 66, that certain varieties of a closely allied plant, the
+Convolvulus tricolor, cannot be kept pure unless grown at a distance
+from all other varieties.) It is, therefore, remarkable that the plants
+raised by me from flowers which were, in all probability,
+self-fertilised for the first time after many generations of crossing,
+should have been so markedly inferior in height to the intercrossed
+plants as they were, namely, as 76 to 100. As the plants which were
+self-fertilised in each succeeding generation necessarily became much
+more closely interbred in the later than in the earlier generations, it
+might have been expected that the difference in height between them and
+the crossed plants would have gone on increasing; but, so far is this
+from being the case, that the difference between the two sets of plants
+in the seventh, eighth, and ninth generations taken together is less
+than in the first and second generations together. When, however, we
+remember that the self-fertilised and crossed plants are all descended
+from the same mother-plant, that many of the crossed plants in each
+generation were related, often closely related, and that all were
+exposed to the same conditions, which, as we shall hereafter find, is a
+very important circumstance, it is not at all surprising that the
+difference between them should have somewhat decreased in the later
+generations. It is, on the contrary, an astonishing fact, that the
+crossed plants should have been victorious, even to a slight degree,
+over the self-fertilised plants of the later generations.
+
+The much greater constitutional vigour of the crossed than of the
+self-fertilised plants, was proved on five occasions in various ways;
+namely, by exposing them, while young, to a low temperature or to a
+sudden change of temperature, or by growing them, under very
+unfavourable conditions, in competition with full-grown plants of other
+kinds.
+
+With respect to the productiveness of the crossed and self-fertilised
+plants of the successive generations, my observations unfortunately were
+not made on any uniform plan, partly from the want of time, and partly
+from not having at first intended to observe more than a single
+generation. A summary of the results is here given in a tabulated form,
+the fertility of the crossed plants being taken as 100.
+
+TABLE 2/18. Ratio of productiveness of crossed and self-fertilised
+plants. Ipomoea purpurea.
+
+FIRST GENERATION OF CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS GROWING IN
+COMPETITION WITH ONE ANOTHER.
+
+Sixty-five capsules produced from flowers on five crossed plants
+fertilised by pollen from a distinct plant, and fifty-five capsules
+produced from flowers on five self-fertilised plants fertilised by their
+own pollen, contained seeds in the proportion of : 100 to 93.
+
+Fifty-six spontaneously self-fertilised capsules on the above five
+crossed plants, and twenty-five spontaneously self-fertilised capsules
+on the above five self-fertilised plants, yielded seeds in the
+proportion of : 100 to 99.
+
+Combining the total number of capsules produced by these plants, and the
+average number of seeds in each, the above crossed and self-fertilised
+plants yielded seeds in the proportion of : 100 to 64.
+
+Other plants of this first generation grown under unfavourable
+conditions and spontaneously self-fertilised, yielded seeds in the
+proportion of : 100 to 45.
+
+THIRD GENERATION OF CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS.
+
+Crossed capsules compared with self-fertilised capsules contained seeds
+in the ratio of : 100 to 94.
+
+An equal number of crossed and self-fertilised plants, both
+spontaneously self-fertilised, produced capsules in the ratio of : 100
+to 38.
+
+And these capsules contained seeds in the ratio of : 100 to 94.
+
+Combining these data, the productiveness of the crossed to the
+self-fertilised plants, both spontaneously self-fertilised, was as : 100
+to 35.
+
+FOURTH GENERATION OF CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS.
+
+Capsules from flowers on the crossed plants fertilised by pollen from
+another plant, and capsules from flowers on the self-fertilised plants
+fertilised with their own pollen, contained seeds in the proportion of :
+100 to 94.
+
+FIFTH GENERATION OF CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS.
+
+The crossed plants produced spontaneously a vast number more pods (not
+actually counted) than the self-fertilised, and these contained seeds in
+the proportion of : 100 to 89.
+
+NINTH GENERATION OF CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS.
+
+Fourteen crossed plants, spontaneously self-fertilised, and fourteen
+self-fertilised plants spontaneously self-fertilised, yielded capsules
+(the average number of seeds per capsule not having been ascertained) in
+the proportion of : 100 to 26.
+
+PLANTS DERIVED FROM A CROSSED WITH A FRESH STOCK COMPARED WITH
+INTERCROSSED PLANTS.
+
+The offspring of intercrossed plants of the ninth generation, crossed by
+a fresh stock, compared with plants of the same stock intercrossed
+during ten generations, both sets of plants left uncovered and naturally
+fertilised, produced capsules by weight as : 100 to 51.
+
+We see in this table that the crossed plants are always in some degree
+more productive than the self-fertilised plants, by whatever standard
+they are compared. The degree differs greatly; but this depends chiefly
+on whether an average was taken of the seeds alone, or of the capsules
+alone, or of both combined. The relative superiority of the crossed
+plants is chiefly due to their producing a much greater number of
+capsules, and not to each capsule containing a larger average number of
+seeds. For instance, in the third generation the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants produced capsules in the ratio of 100 to 38,
+whilst the seeds in the capsules on the crossed plants were to those on
+the self-fertilised plants only as 100 to 94. In the eighth generation
+the capsules on two self-fertilised plants (not included in table 2/18),
+grown in separate pots and thus not subjected to any competition,
+yielded the large average of 5.1 seeds. The smaller number of capsules
+produced by the self-fertilised plants may be in part, but not
+altogether, attributed to their lessened size or height; this being
+chiefly due to their lessened constitutional vigour, so that they were
+not able to compete with the crossed plants growing in the same pots.
+The seeds produced by the crossed flowers on the crossed plants were not
+always heavier than the self-fertilised seeds on the self-fertilised
+plants. The lighter seeds, whether produced from crossed or
+self-fertilised flowers, generally germinated before the heavier seeds.
+I may add that the crossed plants, with very few exceptions, flowered
+before their self-fertilised opponents, as might have been expected from
+their greater height and vigour.
+
+The impaired fertility of the self-fertilised plants was shown in
+another way, namely, by their anthers being smaller than those in the
+flowers on the crossed plants. This was first observed in the seventh
+generation, but may have occurred earlier. Several anthers from flowers
+on the crossed and self-fertilised plants of the eighth generation were
+compared under the microscope; and those from the former were generally
+longer and plainly broader than the anthers of the self-fertilised
+plants. The quantity of pollen contained in one of the latter was, as
+far as could be judged by the eye, about half of that contained in one
+from a crossed plant. The impaired fertility of the self-fertilised
+plants of the eighth generation was also shown in another manner, which
+may often be observed in hybrids--namely, by the first-formed flowers
+being sterile. For instance, the fifteen first flowers on a
+self-fertilised plant of one of the later generations were carefully
+fertilised with their own pollen, and eight of them dropped off; at the
+same time fifteen flowers on a crossed plant growing in the same pot
+were self-fertilised, and only one dropped off. On two other crossed
+plants of the same generation, several of the earliest flowers were
+observed to fertilise themselves and to produce capsules. In the plants
+of the ninth, and I believe of some previous generations, very many of
+the flowers, as already stated, were slightly monstrous; and this
+probably was connected with their lessened fertility.
+
+All the self-fertilised plants of the seventh generation, and I believe
+of one or two previous generations, produced flowers of exactly the same
+tint, namely, of a rich dark purple. So did all the plants, without any
+exception, in the three succeeding generations of self-fertilised
+plants; and very many were raised on account of other experiments in
+progress not here recorded. My attention was first called to this fact
+by my gardener remarking that there was no occasion to label the
+self-fertilised plants, as they could always be known by their colour.
+The flowers were as uniform in tint as those of a wild species growing
+in a state of nature; whether the same tint occurred, as is probable, in
+the earlier generations, neither my gardener nor self could recollect.
+The flowers on the plants which were first raised from purchased seed,
+as well as during the first few generations, varied much in the depth of
+the purple tint; many were more or less pink, and occasionally a white
+variety appeared. The crossed plants continued to the tenth generation
+to vary in the same manner as before, but to a much less degree, owing,
+probably, to their having become more or less closely inter-related. We
+must therefore attribute the extraordinary uniformity of colour in the
+flowers on the plants of the seventh and succeeding self-fertilised
+generations, to inheritance not having been interfered with by crosses
+during several preceding generations, in combination with the conditions
+of life having been very uniform.
+
+A plant appeared in the sixth self-fertilised generation, named the
+Hero, which exceeded by a little in height its crossed antagonist, and
+which transmitted its powers of growth and increased self-fertility to
+its children and grandchildren. A cross between the children of Hero did
+not give to the grandchildren any advantage over the self-fertilised
+grandchildren raised from the self-fertilised children. And as far as my
+observations can be trusted, which were made on very unhealthy plants,
+the great-grandchildren raised from intercrossing the grandchildren had
+no advantage over the seedlings from the grandchildren the product of
+continued self-fertilisation; and what is far more remarkable, the
+great-grandchildren raised by crossing the grandchildren with a fresh
+stock, had no advantage over either the intercrossed or self-fertilised
+great-grandchildren. It thus appears that Hero and its descendants
+differed in constitution in an extraordinary manner from ordinary plants
+of the present species.
+
+Although the plants raised during ten successive generations from
+crosses between distinct yet inter-related plants almost invariably
+exceeded in height, constitutional vigour, and fertility their
+self-fertilised opponents, it has been proved that seedlings raised by
+intercrossing flowers on the same plant are by no means superior, on the
+contrary are somewhat inferior in height and weight, to seedlings raised
+from flowers fertilised with their own pollen. This is a remarkable
+fact, which seems to indicate that self-fertilisation is in some manner
+more advantageous than crossing, unless the cross brings with it, as is
+generally the case, some decided and preponderant advantage; but to this
+subject I shall recur in a future chapter.
+
+The benefits which so generally follow from a cross between two plants
+apparently depend on the two differing somewhat in constitution or
+character. This is shown by the seedlings from the intercrossed plants
+of the ninth generation, when crossed with pollen from a fresh stock,
+being as superior in height and almost as superior in fertility to the
+again intercrossed plants, as these latter were to seedlings from
+self-fertilised plants of the corresponding generation. We thus learn
+the important fact that the mere act of crossing two distinct plants,
+which are in some degree inter-related and which have been long
+subjected to nearly the same conditions, does little good as compared
+with that from a cross between plants belonging to different stocks or
+families, and which have been subjected to somewhat different
+conditions. We may attribute the good derived from the crossing of the
+intercrossed plants during the ten successive generations to their still
+differing somewhat in constitution or character, as was indeed proved by
+their flowers still differing somewhat in colour. But the several
+conclusions which may be deduced from the experiments on Ipomoea will be
+more fully considered in the final chapters, after all my other
+observations have been given.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+SCROPHULARIACEAE, GESNERIACEAE, LABIATAE, ETC.
+
+Mimulus luteus; height, vigour, and fertility of the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the first four generations.
+Appearance of a new, tall, and highly self-fertile variety.
+Offspring from a cross between self-fertilised plants.
+Effects of a cross with a fresh stock.
+Effects of crossing flowers on the same plant.
+Summary on Mimulus luteus.
+Digitalis purpurea, superiority of the crossed plants.
+Effects of crossing flowers on the same plant.
+Calceolaria.
+Linaria vulgaris.
+Verbascum thapsus.
+Vandellia nummularifolia.
+Cleistogene flowers.
+Gesneria pendulina.
+Salvia coccinea.
+Origanum vulgare, great increase of the crossed plants by stolons.
+Thunbergia alata.
+
+In the family of the Scrophulariaceae I experimented on species in the
+six following genera: Mimulus, Digitalis, Calceolaria, Linaria,
+Verbascum, and Vandellia.
+
+[3/2. SCROPHULARIACEAE.--Mimulus luteus.
+
+The plants which I raised from purchased seed varied greatly in the
+colour of their flowers, so that hardly two individuals were quite
+alike; the corolla being of all shades of yellow, with the most
+diversified blotches of purple, crimson, orange, and coppery brown. But
+these plants differed in no other respect. (3/1. I sent several
+specimens with variously coloured flowers to Kew, and Dr. Hooker informs
+me that they all consisted of Mimulus luteus. The flowers with much red
+have been named by horticulturists as var. Youngiana.) The flowers are
+evidently well adapted for fertilisation by the agency of insects; and
+in the case of a closely allied species, Mimulus rosea, I have watched
+bees entering the flowers, thus getting their backs well dusted with
+pollen; and when they entered another flower the pollen was licked off
+their backs by the two-lipped stigma, the lips of which are irritable
+and close like a forceps on the pollen-grains. If no pollen is enclosed
+between the lips, these open again after a time. Mr. Kitchener has
+ingeniously explained the use of these movements, namely, to prevent the
+self-fertilisation of the flower. (3/2. ‘A Year’s Botany’ 1874 page
+118.) If a bee with no pollen on its back enters a flower it touches the
+stigma, which quickly closes, and when the bee retires dusted with
+pollen, it can leave none on the stigma of the same flower. But as soon
+as it enters any other flower, plenty of pollen is left on the stigma,
+which will be thus cross-fertilised. Nevertheless, if insects are
+excluded, the flowers fertilise themselves perfectly and produce plenty
+of seed; but I did not ascertain whether this is effected by the stamens
+increasing in length with advancing age, or by the bending down of the
+pistil. The chief interest in my experiments on the present species,
+lies in the appearance in the fourth self-fertilised generation of a
+variety which bore large peculiarly-coloured flowers, and grew to a
+greater height than the other varieties; it likewise became more highly
+self-fertile, so that this variety resembles the plant named Hero, which
+appeared in the sixth self-fertilised generation of Ipomoea.
+
+Some flowers on one of the plants raised from the purchased seeds were
+fertilised with their own pollen; and others on the same plant were
+crossed with pollen from a distinct plant. The seeds from twelve
+capsules thus produced were placed in separate watch-glasses for
+comparison; and those from the six crossed capsules appeared to the eye
+hardly more numerous than those from the six self-fertilised capsules.
+But when the seeds were weighed, those from the crossed capsules
+amounted to 1.02 grain, whilst those from the self-fertilised capsules
+were only .81 grain; so that the former were either heavier or more
+numerous than the latter, in the ratio of 100 to 79.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FIRST GENERATION.
+
+Having ascertained, by leaving crossed and self-fertilised seed on damp
+sand, that they germinated simultaneously, both kinds were thickly sown
+on opposite sides of a broad and rather shallow pan; so that the two
+sets of seedlings, which came up at the same time, were subjected to the
+same unfavourable conditions. This was a bad method of treatment, but
+this species was one of the first on which I experimented. When the
+crossed seedlings were on an average half an inch high, the
+self-fertilised ones were only a quarter of an inch high. When grown to
+their full height under the above unfavourable conditions, the four
+tallest crossed plants averaged 7.62, and the four tallest
+self-fertilised 5.87 inches in height; or as 100 to 77. Ten flowers on
+the crossed plants were fully expanded before one on the self-fertilised
+plants. A few of these plants of both lots were transplanted into a
+large pot with plenty of good earth, and the self-fertilised plants, not
+now being subjected to severe competition, grew during the following
+year as tall as the crossed plants; but from a case which follows it is
+doubtful whether they would have long continued equal. Some flowers on
+the crossed plants were crossed with pollen from another plant, and the
+capsules thus produced contained a rather greater weight of seed than
+those on the self-fertilised plants again self-fertilised.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+
+Seeds from the foregoing plants, fertilised in the manner just stated,
+were sown on the opposite sides of a small pot (1) and came up crowded.
+The four tallest crossed seedlings, at the time of flowering, averaged 8
+inches in height, whilst the four tallest self-fertilised plants
+averaged only 4 inches. Crossed seeds were sown by themselves in a
+second small pot, and self-fertilised seeds were sown by themselves in a
+third small pot so that there was no competition whatever between these
+two lots. Nevertheless the crossed plants grew from 1 to 2 inches higher
+on an average than the self-fertilised. Both lots looked equally
+vigorous, but the crossed plants flowered earlier and more profusely
+than the self-fertilised. In Pot 1, in which the two lots competed with
+each other, the crossed plants flowered first and produced a large
+number of capsules, whilst the self-fertilised produced only nineteen.
+The contents of twelve capsules from the crossed flowers on the crossed
+plants, and of twelve capsules from self-fertilised flowers on the
+self-fertilised plants, were placed in separate watch-glasses for
+comparison; and the crossed seeds seemed more numerous by half than the
+self-fertilised.
+
+The plants on both sides of Pot 1, after they had seeded, were cut down
+and transplanted into a large pot with plenty of good earth, and on the
+following spring, when they had grown to a height of between 5 and 6
+inches, the two lots were equal, as occurred in a similar experiment in
+the last generation. But after some weeks the crossed plants exceeded
+the self-fertilised ones on the opposite side of the same pot, though
+not nearly to so great a degree as before, when they were subjected to
+very severe competition.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE THIRD GENERATION.
+
+Crossed seeds from the crossed plants, and self-fertilised seeds from
+the self-fertilised plants of the last generation, were sown thickly on
+opposite sides of a small pot, Number 1. The two tallest plants on each
+side were measured after they had flowered, and the two crossed ones
+were 12 and 7 1/2 inches, and the two self-fertilised ones 8 and 5 1/2
+inches in height; that is, in the ratio of 100 to 69. Twenty flowers on
+the crossed plants were again crossed and produced twenty capsules; ten
+of which contained 1.33 grain weight of seeds. Thirty flowers on the
+self-fertilised plants were again self-fertilised and produced
+twenty-six capsules; ten of the best of which (many being very poor)
+contained only .87 grain weight of seeds; that is, in the ratio of 100
+to 65 by weight.
+
+The superiority of the crossed over the self-fertilised plants was
+proved in various ways. Self-fertilised seeds were sown on one side of a
+pot, and two days afterwards crossed seeds on the opposite side. The two
+lots of seedlings were equal until they were above half an inch high;
+but when fully grown the two tallest crossed plants attained a height of
+12 1/2 and 8 3/4 inches, whilst the two tallest self-fertilised plants
+were only 8 and 5 1/2 inches high.
+
+In a third pot, crossed seeds were sown four days after the
+self-fertilised, and the seedlings from the latter had at first, as
+might have been expected, an advantage; but when the two lots were
+between 5 and 6 inches in height, they were equal, and ultimately the
+three tallest crossed plants were 11, 10, and 8 inches, whilst the three
+tallest self-fertilised were 12, 8 1/2, and 7 1/2 inches in height. So
+that there was not much difference between them, the crossed plants
+having an average advantage of only the third of an inch. The plants
+were cut down, and without being disturbed were transplanted into a
+larger pot. Thus the two lots started fair on the following spring, and
+now the crossed plants showed their inherent superiority, for the two
+tallest were 13 inches, whilst the two tallest self-fertilised plants
+were only 11 and 8 1/2 inches in height; or as 100 to 75. The two lots
+were allowed to fertilise themselves spontaneously: the crossed plants
+produced a large number of capsules, whilst the self-fertilised produced
+very few and poor ones. The seeds from eight of the capsules on the
+crossed plants weighed .65 grain, whilst those from eight of the
+capsules on the self-fertilised plants weighed only .22 grain; or as 100
+to 34.
+
+The crossed plants in the above three pots, as in almost all the
+previous experiments, flowered before the self-fertilised. This occurred
+even in the third pot in which the crossed seeds were sown four days
+after the self-fertilised seeds.
+
+Lastly, seeds of both lots were sown on opposite sides of a large pot in
+which a Fuchsia had long been growing, so that the earth was full of
+roots. Both lots grew miserably; but the crossed seedlings had an
+advantage at all times, and ultimately attained to a height of 3 1/2
+inches, whilst the self-fertilised seedlings never exceeded 1 inch. The
+several foregoing experiments prove in a decisive manner the superiority
+in constitutional vigour of the crossed over the self-fertilised plants.
+
+In the three generations now described and taken together, the average
+height of the ten tallest crossed plants was 8.19 inches, and that of
+the ten tallest self-fertilised plants 5.29 inches (the plants having
+been grown in small pots), or as 100 to 65.
+
+In the next or fourth self-fertilised generation, several plants of a
+new and tall variety appeared, which increased in the later
+self-fertilised generations, owing to its great self-fertility, to the
+complete exclusion of the original kinds. The same variety also appeared
+amongst the crossed plants, but as it was not at first regarded with any
+particular attention, I know not how far it was used for raising the
+intercrossed plants; and in the later crossed generations it was rarely
+present. Owing to the appearance of this tall variety, the comparison of
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants of the fifth and succeeding
+generations was rendered unfair, as all the self-fertilised and only a
+few or none of the crossed plants consisted of it. Nevertheless, the
+results of the later experiments are in some respects well worth giving.
+
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FOURTH GENERATION.
+
+Seeds of the two kinds, produced in the usual way from the two sets of
+plants of the third generation, were sown on opposite sides of two pots
+(1 and 2); but the seedlings were not thinned enough and did not grow
+well. Many of the self-fertilised plants, especially in one of the pots,
+consisted of the new and tall variety above referred to, which bore
+large and almost white flowers marked with crimson blotches. I will call
+it the WHITE VARIETY. I believe that it first appeared amongst both the
+crossed and self-fertilised plants of the last generation; but neither
+my gardener nor myself could remember any such variety in the seedlings
+raised from the purchased seed. It must therefore have arisen either
+through ordinary variation, or, judging from its appearance amongst both
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants, more probably through reversion
+to a formerly existing variety.
+
+In Pot 1 the tallest crossed plant was 8 1/2 inches, and the tallest
+self-fertilised 5 inches in height. In Pot 2, the tallest crossed plant
+was 6 1/2 inches, and the tallest self-fertilised plant, which consisted
+of the white variety, 7 inches in height; and this was the first
+instance in my experiments on Mimulus in which the tallest
+self-fertilised plant exceeded the tallest crossed. Nevertheless, the
+two tallest crossed plants taken together were to the two tallest
+self-fertilised plants in height as 100 to 80. As yet the crossed plants
+were superior to the self-fertilised in fertility; for twelve flowers on
+the crossed plants were crossed and yielded ten capsules, the seeds of
+which weighed 1.71 grain. Twenty flowers on the self-fertilised plants
+were self-fertilised, and produced fifteen capsules, all appearing poor;
+and the seeds from ten of them weighed only .68 grain, so that from an
+equal number of capsules the crossed seeds were to the self-fertilised
+in weight as 100 to 40.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FIFTH GENERATION.
+
+Seeds from both lots of the fourth generation, fertilised in the usual
+manner, were sown on opposite sides of three pots. When the seedlings
+flowered, most of the self-fertilised plants were found to consist of
+the tall white variety. Several of the crossed plants in Pot 1 likewise
+belonged to this variety, as did a very few in Pots 2 and 3. The tallest
+crossed plant in Pot 1 was 7 inches, and the tallest self-fertilised
+plant on the opposite side 8 inches; in Pots 2 and 3 the tallest crossed
+were 4 1/2 and 5 1/2, and the tallest self-fertilised 7 and 6 1/2 inches
+in height; so that the average height of the tallest plants in the two
+lots was as 100 for the crossed to 126 for the self-fertilised; and thus
+we have a complete reversal of what occurred in the four previous
+generations. Nevertheless, in all three pots the crossed plants retained
+their habit of flowering before the self-fertilised. The plants were
+unhealthy from being crowded and from the extreme heat of the season,
+and were in consequence more or less sterile; but the crossed plants
+were somewhat less sterile than the self-fertilised plants.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SIXTH GENERATION.
+
+Seeds from plants of the fifth generation crossed and self-fertilised in
+the usual manner were sown on opposite sides of several pots. On the
+self-fertilised side every single plant belonged to the tall white
+variety. On the crossed side some plants belonged to this variety, but
+the greater number approached in character to the old and shorter kinds
+with smaller yellowish flowers blotched with coppery brown. When the
+plants on both sides were from 2 to 3 inches in height they were equal,
+but when fully grown the self-fertilised were decidedly the tallest and
+finest plants, but, from want of time, they were not actually measured.
+In half the pots the first plant which flowered was a self-fertilised
+one, and in the other half a crossed one. And now another remarkable
+change was clearly perceived, namely, that the self-fertilised plants
+had become more self-fertile than the crossed. The pots were all put
+under a net to exclude insects, and the crossed plants produced
+spontaneously only fifty-five capsules, whilst the self-fertilised
+plants produced eighty-one capsules, or as 100 to 147. The seeds from
+nine capsules of both lots were placed in separate watch-glasses for
+comparison, and the self-fertilised appeared rather the more numerous.
+Besides these spontaneously self-fertilised capsules, twenty flowers on
+the crossed plants again crossed yielded sixteen capsules; twenty-five
+flowers on the self-fertilised plants again self-fertilised yielded
+seventeen capsules, and this is a larger proportional number of capsules
+than was produced by the self-fertilised flowers on the self-fertilised
+plants in the previous generations. The contents of ten capsules of both
+these lots were compared in separate watch-glasses, and the seeds from
+the self-fertilised appeared decidedly more numerous than those from the
+crossed plants.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SEVENTH GENERATION.
+
+Crossed and self-fertilised seeds from the crossed and self-fertilised
+plants of the sixth generation were sown in the usual manner on opposite
+sides of three pots, and the seedlings were well and equally thinned.
+Every one of the self-fertilised plants (and many were raised) in this,
+as well as in the eighth and ninth generations, belonged to the tall
+white variety. Their uniformity of character, in comparison with the
+seedlings first raised from the purchased seed, was quite remarkable. On
+the other hand, the crossed plants differed much in the tints of their
+flowers, but not, I think, to so great a degree as those first raised. I
+determined this time to measure the plants on both sides carefully. The
+self-fertilised seedlings came up rather before the crossed, but both
+lots were for a time of equal height. When first measured, the average
+height of the six tallest crossed plants in the three pots was 7.02, and
+that of the six tallest self-fertilised plants 8.97 inches, or as 100 to
+128. When fully grown the same plants were again measured, with the
+result shown in Table 3/18.
+
+TABLE 3/18. Mimulus luteus (Seventh Generation).
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 11 2/8 : 19 1/8.
+Pot 1 : 11 7/8 : 18.
+
+Pot 2 : 12 6/8 : 18 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 11 2/8 : 14 6/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 9 6/8 : 12 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 11 6/8 : 11.
+
+Total : 68.63 : 93.88.
+
+The average height of the six crossed is here 11.43, and that of the six
+self-fertilised 15.64, or as 100 to 137.
+
+As it is now evident that the tall white variety transmitted its
+characters faithfully, and as the self-fertilised plants consisted
+exclusively of this variety, it was manifest that they would always
+exceed in height the crossed plants which belonged chiefly to the
+original shorter varieties. This line of experiment was therefore
+discontinued, and I tried whether intercrossing two self-fertilised
+plants of the sixth generation, growing in distinct pots, would give
+their offspring any advantage over the offspring of flowers on one of
+the same plants fertilised with their own pollen. These latter seedlings
+formed the seventh generation of self-fertilised plants, like those in
+the right hand column in Table 3/18; the crossed plants were the product
+of six previous self-fertilised generations with an intercross in the
+last generation. The seeds were allowed to germinate on sand, and were
+planted in pairs on opposite sides of four pots, all the remaining seeds
+being sown crowded on opposite sides of Pot 5 in Table 3/19; the three
+tallest on each side in this latter pot being alone measured. All the
+plants were twice measured--the first time whilst young, and the average
+height of the crossed plants to that of the self-fertilised was then as
+100 to 122. When fully grown they were again measured, as in Table 3/19.
+
+TABLE 3/19. Mimulus luteus.
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Intercrossed Plants from Self-fertilised Plants of the Sixth
+Generation.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants of the Seventh Generation.
+
+Pot 1 : 12 6/8 : 15 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 10 4/8 : 11 5/8.
+Pot 1 : 10 : 11.
+Pot 1 : 14 5/8 : 11.
+
+Pot 2 : 10 2/8 : 11 3/8.
+Pot 2 : 7 6/8 : 11 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 12 1/8 : 8 5/8.
+Pot 2 : 7 : 14 3/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 13 5/8 : 10 3/8.
+Pot 3 : 12 2/8 : 11 6/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 7 1/8 : 14 6/8.
+Pot 4 : 8 2/8 : 7.
+Pot 4 : 7 2/8 : 8.
+
+Pot 5 : 8 5/8 : 10 2/8
+Pot 5 : 9 : 9 3/8.
+Pot 5 : 8 2/8 : 9 2/8.
+Crowded.
+
+Total : 159.38 : 175.50.
+
+The average height of the sixteen intercrossed plants is here 9.96
+inches, and that of the sixteen self-fertilised plants 10.96, or as 100
+to 110; so that the intercrossed plants, the progenitors of which had
+been self-fertilised for the six previous generations, and had been
+exposed during the whole time to remarkably uniform conditions, were
+somewhat inferior in height to the plants of the seventh self-fertilised
+generation. But as we shall presently see that a similar experiment made
+after two additional generations of self-fertilisation gave a different
+result, I know not how far to trust the present one. In three of the
+five pots in Table 3/19 a self-fertilised plant flowered first, and in
+the other two a crossed plant. These self-fertilised plants were
+remarkably fertile, for twenty flowers fertilised with their own pollen
+produced no less than nineteen very fine capsules!
+
+THE EFFECTS OF A CROSS WITH A DISTINCT STOCK.
+
+Some flowers on the self-fertilised plants in Pot 4 in Table 3/19 were
+fertilised with their own pollen, and plants of the eighth
+self-fertilised generation were thus raised, merely to serve as parents
+in the following experiment. Several flowers on these plants were
+allowed to fertilise themselves spontaneously (insects being of course
+excluded), and the plants raised from these seeds formed the ninth
+self-fertilised generation; they consisted wholly of the tall white
+variety with crimson blotches. Other flowers on the same plants of the
+eighth self-fertilised generation were crossed with pollen taken from
+another plant of the same lot; so that the seedlings thus raised were
+the offspring of eight previous generations of self-fertilisation with
+an intercross in the last generation; these I will call the INTERCROSSED
+PLANTS. Lastly, other flowers on the same plants of the eighth
+self-fertilised generation were crossed with pollen taken from plants
+which had been raised from seed procured from a garden at Chelsea. The
+Chelsea plants bore yellow flowers blotched with red, but differed in no
+other respect. They had been grown out of doors, whilst mine had been
+cultivated in pots in the greenhouse for the last eight generations, and
+in a different kind of soil. The seedlings raised from this cross with a
+wholly different stock may be called the CHELSEA-CROSSED. The three lots
+of seeds thus obtained were allowed to germinate on bare sand; and
+whenever a seed in all three lots, or in only two, germinated at the
+same time, they were planted in pots superficially divided into three or
+two compartments. The remaining seeds, whether or not in a state of
+germination, were thickly sown in three divisions in a large pot, 10, in
+Table 3/20. When the plants had grown to their full height they were
+measured, as shown in Table 3/20; but only the three tallest plants in
+each of the three divisions in Pot 10 were measured.
+
+TABLE 3/20. Mimulus luteus.
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Plants from Self-fertilised Plants of the Eighth Generation
+crossed by Chelsea Plants.
+
+Column 3: Plants from an intercross between the Plants of the Eighth
+Self-fertilised Generation.
+
+Column 4: Self-fertilised Plants of the Ninth Generation from Plants of
+the Eighth Self-fertilised Generation.
+
+Pot 1 : 30 7/8 : 14 : 9 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 28 3/8 : 13 6/8 : 10 5/8.
+Pot 1 : -- : 13 7/8 : 10.
+
+Pot 2 : 20 6/8 : 11 4/8 : 11 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 22 2/8 : 12 : 12 3/8.
+Pot 2 : -- : 9 1/8 : --.
+
+Pot 3 : 23 6/8 : 12 2/8 : 8 5/8.
+Pot 3 : 24 1/8 : -- : 11 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 25 6/8 : -- : 6 7/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 22 5/8 : 9 2/8 : 4.
+Pot 4 : 22 : 8 1/8 : 13 3/8.
+Pot 4 : 17 : -- : 11.
+
+Pot 5 : 22 3/8 : 9 : 4 4/8.
+Pot 5 : 19 5/8 : 11 : 13.
+Pot 5 : 23 4/8 : -- : 13 4/8.
+
+Pot 6 : 28 2/8 : 18 6/8 : 12.
+Pot 6 : 22 : 7 : 16 1/8.
+Pot 6 : -- : 12 4/8 : --.
+
+Pot 7 : 12 4/8 : 15 : --.
+Pot 7 : 24 3/8 : 12 3/8 : --.
+Pot 7 : 20 4/8 : 11 2/8 : --.
+Pot 7 : 26 4/8 : 15 2/8 : --.
+
+Pot 8 : 17 2/8 : 13 3/8 : --.
+Pot 8 : 22 6/8 : 14 5/8 : --.
+Pot 8 : 27 : 14 3/8 : --.
+
+Pot 9 : 22 6/8 : 11 6/8 : --.
+Pot 9 : 6 : 17 : --.
+Pot 9 : 20 2/8 : 14 7/8 : --.
+
+Pot 10 : 18 1/8 : 9 2/8 : 10 3/8.
+Pot 10 : 16 5/8 : 8 2/8 : 8 1/8.
+Pot 10 : 17 4/8 : 10 : 11 2/8.
+Crowded plants.
+
+Total : 605.38 : 329.50 : 198.50.
+
+In this table the average height of the twenty-eight Chelsea-crossed
+plants is 21.62 inches; that of the twenty-seven intercrossed plants
+12.2; and that of the nineteen self-fertilised 10.44. But with respect
+to the latter it will be the fairest plan to strike out two dwarfed ones
+(only 4 inches in height), so as not to exaggerate the inferiority of
+the self-fertilised plants; and this will raise the average height of
+the seventeen remaining self-fertilised plants to 11.2 inches. Therefore
+the Chelsea-crossed are to the intercrossed in height as 100 to 56; the
+Chelsea-crossed to the self-fertilised as 100 to 52; and the
+intercrossed to the self-fertilised as 100 to 92. We thus see how
+immensely superior in height the Chelsea-crossed are to the intercrossed
+and to the self-fertilised plants. They began to show their superiority
+when only one inch high. They were also, when fully grown, much more
+branched with larger leaves and somewhat larger flowers than the plants
+of the other two lots, so that if they had been weighed, the ratio would
+certainly have been much higher than that of 100 to 56 and 52.
+
+The intercrossed plants are here to the self-fertilised in height as 100
+to 92; whereas in the analogous experiment given in Table 3/19 the
+intercrossed plants from the self-fertilised plants of the sixth
+generation were inferior in height to the self-fertilised plants in the
+ratio of 100 to 110. I doubt whether this discordance in the results of
+the two experiments can be explained by the self-fertilised plants in
+the present case having been raised from spontaneously self-fertilised
+seeds, whereas in the former case they were raised from artificially
+self-fertilised seeds; nor by the present plants having been
+self-fertilised during two additional generations, though this is a more
+probable explanation.
+
+With respect to fertility, the twenty-eight Chelsea-crossed plants
+produced 272 capsules; the twenty-seven intercrossed plants produced 24;
+and the seventeen self-fertilised plants 17 capsules. All the plants
+were left uncovered so as to be naturally fertilised, and empty capsules
+were rejected.
+
+Therefore 20 Chelsea-crossed plants would have produced 194.29 capsules.
+
+Therefore 20 Intercrossed plants would have produced 17.77 capsules.
+
+Therefore 20 Self-fertilised plants would have produced 20.00 capsules.
+
+The seeds contained in 8 capsules from the Chelsea-crossed plants
+weighed 1.1 grains.
+
+The seeds contained in 8 capsules from the Intercrossed plants weighed
+0.51 grains.
+
+The seeds contained in 8 capsules from the Self-fertilised plants
+weighed 0.33 grains.
+
+If we combine the number of capsules produced together with the average
+weight of contained seeds, we get the following extraordinary ratios:
+
+Weight of seed produced by the same number of Chelsea-crossed and
+intercrossed plants as 100 to 4.
+
+Weight of seed produced by the same number of Chelsea-crossed and
+self-fertilised plants as 100 to 3.
+
+Weight of seeds produced by the same number of intercrossed and
+self-fertilised plants as 100 to 73.
+
+It is also a remarkable fact that the Chelsea-crossed plants exceeded
+the two other lots in hardiness, as greatly as they did in height,
+luxuriance, and fertility. In the early autumn most of the pots were
+bedded out in the open ground; and this always injures plants which have
+been long kept in a warm greenhouse. All three lots consequently
+suffered greatly, but the Chelsea-crossed plants much less than the
+other two lots. On the 3rd of October the Chelsea-crossed plants began
+to flower again, and continued to do so for some time; whilst not a
+single flower was produced by the plants of the other two lots, the
+stems of which were cut almost down to the ground and seemed half dead.
+Early in December there was a sharp frost, and the stems of
+Chelsea-crossed were now cut down; but on the 23rd of December they
+began to shoot up again from the roots, whilst all the plants of the
+other two lots were quite dead.
+
+Although several of the self-fertilised seeds, from which the plants in
+the right hand column in Table 3/20 were raised, germinated (and were of
+course rejected) before any of those of the other two lots, yet in only
+one of the ten pots did a self-fertilised plant flower before the
+Chelsea-crossed or the intercrossed plants growing in the same pots. The
+plants of these two latter lots flowered at the same time, though the
+Chelsea-crossed grew so much taller and more vigorously than the
+intercrossed.
+
+As already stated, the flowers of the plants originally raised from the
+Chelsea seeds were yellow; and it deserves notice that every one of the
+twenty-eight seedlings raised from the tall white variety fertilised,
+without being castrated, with pollen from the Chelsea plants, produced
+yellow flowers; and this shows how prepotent this colour, which is the
+natural one of the species, is over the white colour.
+
+THE EFFECTS ON THE OFFSPRING OF INTERCROSSING FLOWERS ON THE SAME PLANT,
+INSTEAD OF CROSSING DISTINCT INDIVIDUALS.
+
+In all the foregoing experiments the crossed plants were the product of
+a cross between distinct plants. I now selected a very vigorous plant in
+Table 3/20, raised by fertilising a plant of the eighth self-fertilised
+generation with pollen from the Chelsea stock. Several flowers on this
+plant were crossed with pollen from other flowers on the same plant, and
+several other flowers were fertilised with their own pollen. The seed
+thus produced was allowed to germinate on bare sand; and the seedlings
+were planted in the usual manner on the opposite sides of six pots. All
+the remaining seeds, whether or not in a state of germination, were sown
+thickly in Pot 7; the three tallest plants on each side of this latter
+pot being alone measured. As I was in a hurry to learn the result, some
+of these seeds were sown late in the autumn, but the plants grew so
+irregularly during the winter, that one crossed plant was 28 1/2 inches,
+and two others only 4, or less than 4 inches in height, as may be seen
+in Table 3/21. Under such circumstances, as I have observed in many
+other cases, the result is not in the least trustworthy; nevertheless I
+feel bound to give the measurements.
+
+TABLE 3/21. Mimulus luteus.
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Plants raised from a Cross between different Flowers on the
+same Plant.
+
+Column 3: Plants raised from Flowers fertilised with their own Pollen.
+
+Pot 1 : 17 : 17.
+Pot 1 : 9 : 3 1/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 28 2/8 : 19 1/8.
+Pot 2 : 16 4/8 : 6.
+Pot 2 : 13 5/8 : 2.
+
+Pot 3 : 4 : 15 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 2 2/8 : 10.
+
+Pot 4 : 23 4/8 : 6 2/8.
+Pot 4 : 15 4/8 : 7 1/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 7 : 13 4/8.
+
+Pot 6 : 18 3/8 : 1 4/8.
+Pot 6 : 11 : 2.
+
+Pot 7 : 21 : 15 1/8.
+Pot 7 : 11 6/8 : 11.
+Pot 7 : 12 1/8 : 11 2/8.
+Crowded.
+
+Total : 210.88 : 140.75.
+
+The fifteen crossed plants here average 14.05, and the fifteen
+self-fertilised plants 9.38 in height, or as 100 to 67. But if all the
+plants under ten inches in height are struck out, the ratio of the
+eleven crossed plants to the eight self-fertilised plants is as 100 to
+82.
+
+On the following spring, some remaining seeds of the two lots were
+treated in exactly the same manner; and the measurements of the
+seedlings are given in Table 3/22.
+
+TABLE 3/22. Mimulus luteus.
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Plants raised from a Cross between different Flowers on the
+same Plant.
+
+Column 3: Plants raised from Flowers fertilised with their own Pollen.
+
+Pot 1 : 15 1/8 : 19 1/8.
+Pot 1 : 12 : 20 5/8.
+Pot 1 : 10 1/8 : 12 6/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 16 2/8 : 11 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 13 5/8 : 19 3/8.
+Pot 2 : 20 1/8 : 17 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 18 7/8 : 12 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 15 : 15 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 13 7/8 : 17.
+
+Pot 4 : 19 2/8 : 16 2/8.
+Pot 4 : 19 6/8 : 21 5/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 25 3/8 : 22 5/8.
+
+Pot 6 : 15 : 19 5/8.
+Pot 6 : 20 2/8 : 16 2/8.
+Pot 6 : 27 2/8 : 19 5/8.
+
+Pot 7 : 7 6/8 : 7 6/8.
+Pot 7 : 14 : 8.
+Pot 7 : 13 4/8 : 7.
+
+Pot 8 : 18 2/8 : 20 3/8.
+Pot 8 : 18 6/8 : 17 6/8.
+Pot 8 : 18 3/8 : 15 4/8.
+Pot 8 : 18 3/8 : 15 1/8.
+Crowded.
+
+Total : 370.88 : 353.63.
+
+Here the average height of the twenty-two crossed plants is 16.85, and
+that of the twenty-two self-fertilised plants 16.07; or as 100 to 95.
+But if four of the plants in Pot 7, which are much shorter than any of
+the others, are struck out (and this would be the fairest plan), the
+twenty-one crossed are to the nineteen self-fertilised plants in height
+as 100 to 100.6--that is, are equal. All the plants, except the crowded
+ones in Pot 8, after being measured were cut down, and the eighteen
+crossed plants weighed 10 ounces, whilst the same number of
+self-fertilised plants weighed 10 1/4 ounces, or as 100 to 102.5; but if
+the dwarfed plants in Pot 7 had been excluded, the self-fertilised would
+have exceeded the crossed in weight in a higher ratio. In all the
+previous experiments in which seedlings were raised from a cross between
+distinct plants, and were put into competition with self-fertilised
+plants, the former generally flowered first; but in the present case, in
+seven out of the eight pots a self-fertilised plant flowered before a
+crossed one on the opposite side. Considering all the evidence with
+respect to the plants in Table3/ 22, a cross between two flowers on the
+same plant seems to give no advantage to the offspring thus produced,
+the self-fertilised plants being in weight superior. But this conclusion
+cannot be absolutely trusted, owing to the measurements given in Table
+3/21, though these latter, from the cause already assigned, are very
+much less trustworthy than the present ones.]
+
+SUMMARY OF OBSERVATIONS ON Mimulus luteus.
+
+In the three first generations of crossed and self-fertilised plants,
+the tallest plants alone on each side of the several pots were measured;
+and the average height of the ten crossed to that of the ten
+self-fertilised plants was as 100 to 64. The crossed were also much more
+fertile than the self-fertilised, and so much more vigorous that they
+exceeded them in height, even when sown on the opposite side of the same
+pot after an interval of four days. The same superiority was likewise
+shown in a remarkable manner when both kinds of seeds were sown on the
+opposite sides of a pot with very poor earth full of the roots of
+another plant. In one instance crossed and self-fertilised seedlings,
+grown in rich soil and not put into competition with each other,
+attained to an equal height. When we come to the fourth generation the
+two tallest crossed plants taken together exceeded by only a little the
+two tallest self-fertilised plants, and one of the latter beat its
+crossed opponent,--a circumstance which had not occurred in the previous
+generations. This victorious self-fertilised plant consisted of a new
+white-flowered variety, which grew taller than the old yellowish
+varieties. From the first it seemed to be rather more fertile, when
+self-fertilised, than the old varieties, and in the succeeding
+self-fertilised generations became more and more self-fertile. In the
+sixth generation the self-fertilised plants of this variety compared
+with the crossed plants produced capsules in the proportion of 147 to
+100, both lots being allowed to fertilise themselves spontaneously. In
+the seventh generation twenty flowers on one of these plants
+artificially self-fertilised yielded no less than nineteen very fine
+capsules!
+
+This variety transmitted its characters so faithfully to all the
+succeeding self-fertilised generations, up to the last or ninth, that
+all the many plants which were raised presented a complete uniformity of
+character; thus offering a remarkable contrast with the seedlings raised
+from the purchased seeds. Yet this variety retained to the last a latent
+tendency to produce yellow flowers; for when a plant of the eighth
+self-fertilised generation was crossed with pollen from a
+yellow-flowered plant of the Chelsea stock, every single seedling bore
+yellow flowers. A similar variety, at least in the colour of its
+flowers, also appeared amongst the crossed plants of the third
+generation. No attention was at first paid to it, and I know not how far
+it was at first used either for crossing or self-fertilisation. In the
+fifth generation most of the self-fertilised plants, and in the sixth
+and all the succeeding generations every single plant consisted of this
+variety; and this no doubt was partly due to its great and increasing
+self-fertility. On the other hand, it disappeared from amongst the
+crossed plants in the later generations; and this was probably due to
+the continued intercrossing of the several plants. From the tallness of
+this variety, the self-fertilised plants exceeded the crossed plants in
+height in all the generations from the fifth to the seventh inclusive;
+and no doubt would have done so in the later generations, had they been
+grown in competition with one another. In the fifth generation the
+crossed plants were in height to the self-fertilised, as 100 to 126; in
+the sixth, as 100 to 147; and in the seventh generation, as 100 to 137.
+This excess of height may be attributed not only to this variety
+naturally growing taller than the other plants, but to its possessing a
+peculiar constitution, so that it did not suffer from continued
+self-fertilisation.
+
+This variety presents a strikingly analogous case to that of the plant
+called the Hero, which appeared in the sixth self-fertilised generation
+of Ipomoea. If the seeds produced by Hero had been as greatly in excess
+of those produced by the other plants, as was the case with Mimulus, and
+if all the seeds had been mingled together, the offspring of Hero would
+have increased to the entire exclusion of the ordinary plants in the
+later self-fertilised generations, and from naturally growing taller
+would have exceeded the crossed plants in height in each succeeding
+generation.
+
+Some of the self-fertilised plants of the sixth generation were
+intercrossed, as were some in the eighth generation; and the seedlings
+from these crosses were grown in competition with self-fertilised plants
+of the two corresponding generations. In the first trial the
+intercrossed plants were less fertile than the self-fertilised, and less
+tall in the ratio of 100 to 110. In the second trial, the intercrossed
+plants were more fertile than the self-fertilised in the ratio of 100 to
+73, and taller in the ratio of 100 to 92. Notwithstanding that the
+self-fertilised plants in the second trial were the product of two
+additional generations of self-fertilisation, I cannot understand this
+discordance in the results of the two analogous experiments.
+
+The most important of all the experiments on Mimulus are those in which
+flowers on plants of the eighth self-fertilised generation were again
+self-fertilised; other flowers on distinct plants of the same lot were
+intercrossed; and others were crossed with a new stock of plants from
+Chelsea. The Chelsea-crossed seedlings were to the intercrossed in
+height as 100 to 56, and in fertility as 100 to 4; and they were to the
+self-fertilised plants, in height as 100 to 52, and in fertility as 100
+to 3. These Chelsea-crossed plants were also much more hardy than the
+plants of the other two lots; so that altogether the gain from the cross
+with a fresh stock was wonderfully great.
+
+Lastly, seedlings raised from a cross between flowers on the same plant
+were not superior to those from flowers fertilised with their own
+pollen; but this result cannot be absolutely trusted, owing to some
+previous observations, which, however, were made under very unfavourable
+circumstances.
+
+[Digitalis purpurea.
+
+The flowers of the common Foxglove are proterandrous; that is, the
+pollen is mature and mostly shed before the stigma of the same flower is
+ready for fertilisation. This is effected by the larger humble-bees,
+which, whilst in search of nectar, carry pollen from flower to flower.
+The two upper and longer stamens shed their pollen before the two lower
+and shorter ones. The meaning of this fact probably is, as Dr. Ogle
+remarks, that the anthers of the longer stamens stand near to the
+stigma, so that they would be the most likely to fertilise it (3/3.
+‘Popular Science Review’ January 1870 page 50.); and as it is an
+advantage to avoid self-fertilisation, they shed their pollen first,
+thus lessening the chance. There is, however, but little danger of
+self-fertilisation until the bifid stigma opens; for Hildebrand found
+that pollen placed on the stigma before it had opened produced no
+effect. (3/4. ‘Geschlechter-Vertheilung bei den Pflanzen’ 1867 page 20.)
+The anthers, which are large, stand at first transversely with respect
+to the tubular corolla, and if they were to dehisce in this position
+they would, as Dr. Ogle also remarks, smear with pollen the whole back
+and sides of an entering humble-bee in a useless manner; but the anthers
+twist round and place themselves longitudinally before they dehisce. The
+lower and inner side of the mouth of the corolla is thickly clothed with
+hairs, and these collect so much of the fallen pollen that I have seen
+the under surface of a humble-bee thickly dusted with it; but this can
+never be applied to the stigma, as the bees in retreating do not turn
+their under surfaces upwards. I was therefore puzzled whether these
+hairs were of any use; but Mr. Belt has, I think, explained their use:
+the smaller kinds of bees are not fitted to fertilise the flowers, and
+if they were allowed to enter easily they would steal much nectar, and
+fewer large bees would haunt the flowers. Humble-bees can crawl into the
+dependent flowers with the greatest ease, using the “hairs as footholds
+while sucking the honey; but the smaller bees are impeded by them, and
+when, having at length struggled through them, they reach the slippery
+precipice above, they are completely baffled.” Mr. Belt says that he
+watched many flowers during a whole season in North Wales, and “only
+once saw a small bee reach the nectary, though many were seen trying in
+vain to do so.” (3/5. ‘The Naturalist in Nicaragua’ 1874 page 132. But
+it appears from H. Muller ‘Die Befruchtung der Blumen’ 1873 page 285,
+that small insects sometimes succeed in entering the flowers.)
+
+I covered a plant growing in its native soil in North Wales with a net,
+and fertilised six flowers each with its own pollen, and six others with
+pollen from a distinct plant growing within the distance of a few feet.
+The covered plant was occasionally shaken with violence, so as to
+imitate the effects of a gale of wind, and thus to facilitate as far as
+possible self-fertilisation. It bore ninety-two flowers (besides the
+dozen artificially fertilised), and of these only twenty-four produced
+capsules; whereas almost all the flowers on the surrounding uncovered
+plants were fruitful. Of the twenty-four spontaneously self-fertilised
+capsules, only two contained their full complement of seed; six
+contained a moderate supply; and the remaining sixteen extremely few
+seeds. A little pollen adhering to the anthers after they had dehisced,
+and accidentally falling on the stigma when mature, must have been the
+means by which the above twenty-four flowers were partially
+self-fertilised; for the margins of the corolla in withering do not curl
+inwards, nor do the flowers in dropping off turn round on their axes, so
+as to bring the pollen-covered hairs, with which the lower surface is
+clothed, into contact with the stigma--by either of which means
+self-fertilisation might be effected.
+
+Seeds from the above crossed and self-fertilised capsules, after
+germinating on bare sand, were planted in pairs on the opposite sides of
+five moderately-sized pots, which were kept in the greenhouse. The
+plants after a time appeared starved, and were therefore, without being
+disturbed, turned out of their pots, and planted in the open ground in
+two close parallel rows. They were thus subjected to tolerably severe
+competition with one another; but not nearly so severe as if they had
+been left in the pots. At the time when they were turned out, their
+leaves were between 5 and 8 inches in length, and the longest leaf on
+the finest plant on each side of each pot was measured, with the result
+that the leaves of the crossed plants exceeded, on an average, those of
+the self-fertilised plants by .4 of an inch.
+
+In the following summer the tallest flower-stem on each plant, when
+fully grown, was measured. There were seventeen crossed plants; but one
+did not produce a flower-stem. There were also, originally, seventeen
+self-fertilised plants, but these had such poor constitutions that no
+less than nine died in the course of the winter and spring, leaving only
+eight to be measured, as in Table 3/23.
+
+TABLE 3/23. Digitalis purpurea.
+
+The tallest Flower-stem on each Plant measured in inches: 0 means that
+the Plant died before a Flower-stem was produced.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 53 6/8 : 27 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 57 4/8 : 55 6/8.
+Pot 1 : 57 6/8 : 0.
+Pot 1 : 65 : 0.
+
+Pot 2 : 34 4/8 : 39.
+Pot 2 : 52 4/8 : 32.
+Pot 2 : 63 6/8 : 21.
+
+Pot 3 : 57 4/8 : 53 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 53 4/8 : 0.
+Pot 3 : 50 6/8 : 0.
+Pot 3 : 37 2/8 : 0.
+
+Pot 4 : 64 4/8 : 34 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 37 4/8 : 23 6/8.
+Pot 4 : -- : 0.
+
+Pot 5 : 53 : 0.
+Pot 5 : 47 6/8 : 0.
+Pot 5 : 34 6/8 : 0.
+
+Total : 821.25 : 287.00.
+
+The average height of the flower-stems of the sixteen crossed plants is
+here 51.33 inches; and that of the eight self-fertilised plants, 35.87;
+or as 100 to 70. But this difference in height does not give at all a
+fair idea of the vast superiority of the crossed plants. These latter
+produced altogether sixty-four flower-stems, each plant producing, on an
+average, exactly four flower-stems, whereas the eight self-fertilised
+plants produced only fifteen flower-stems, each producing an average
+only of 1.87 stems, and these had a less luxuriant appearance. We may
+put the result in another way: the number of flower-stems on the crossed
+plants was to those on an equal number of self-fertilised plants as 100
+to 48.
+
+Three crossed seeds in a state of germination were also planted in three
+separate pots; and three self-fertilised seeds in the same state in
+three other pots. These plants were therefore at first exposed to no
+competition with one another, and when turned out of their pots into the
+open ground they were planted at a moderate distance apart, so that they
+were exposed to much less severe competition than in the last case. The
+longest leaves on the three crossed plants, when turned out, exceeded
+those on the self-fertilised plants by a mere trifle, namely, on an
+average by .17 of an inch. When fully grown the three crossed plants
+produced twenty-six flower-stems; the two tallest of which on each plant
+were on an average 54.04 inches in height. The three self-fertilised
+plants produced twenty-three flower-stems, the two tallest of which on
+each plant had an average height of 46.18 inches. So that the difference
+between these two lots, which hardly competed together, is much less
+than in the last case when there was moderately severe competition,
+namely, as 100 to 85, instead of as 100 to 70.
+
+THE EFFECTS ON THE OFFSPRING OF INTERCROSSING DIFFERENT FLOWERS ON THE
+SAME PLANT, INSTEAD OF CROSSING DISTINCT INDIVIDUALS.
+
+A fine plant growing in my garden (one of the foregoing seedlings) was
+covered with a net, and six flowers were crossed with pollen from
+another flower on the same plant, and six others were fertilised with
+their own pollen. All produced good capsules. The seeds from each were
+placed in separate watch-glasses, and no difference could be perceived
+by the eye between the two lots of seeds; and when they were weighed
+there was no difference of any significance, as the seeds from the
+self-fertilised capsules weighed 7.65 grains, whilst those from the
+crossed capsules weighed 7.7 grains. Therefore the sterility of the
+present species, when insects are excluded, is not due to the impotence
+of pollen on the stigma of the same flower. Both lots of seeds and
+seedlings were treated in exactly the same manner as in Table 3/23,
+excepting that after the pairs of germinating seeds had been planted on
+the opposite sides of eight pots, all the remaining seeds were thickly
+sown on the opposite sides of Pots 9 and 10 in Table 3/24. The young
+plants during the following spring were turned out of their pots,
+without being disturbed, and planted in the open ground in two rows, not
+very close together, so that they were subjected to only moderately
+severe competition with one another. Very differently to what occurred
+in the first experiment, when the plants were subjected to somewhat
+severe mutual competition, an equal number on each side either died or
+did not produce flower-stems. The tallest flower-stems on the surviving
+plants were measured, as shown in Table 3/24.
+
+TABLE 3/24. Digitalis purpurea.
+
+The tallest Flower-stem on each Plant measured in inches: 0 signifies
+that the Plant died, or did not produce a Flower-stem.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Plants raised from a Cross between different Flowers on the
+same Plant.
+
+Column 3: Plants raised from Flowers fertilised with their own Pollen.
+
+Pot 1 : 49 4/8 : 45 5/8.
+Pot 1 : 46 7/8 : 52.
+Pot 1 : 43 6/8 : 0.
+
+Pot 2 : 38 4/8 : 54 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 47 4/8 : 47 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 0 : 32 5/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 54 7/8 : 46 5/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 32 1/8 : 41 3/8.
+Pot 4 : 0 : 29 7/8.
+Pot 4 : 43 7/8 : 37 1/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 46 6/8 : 42 1/8.
+Pot 5 : 40 4/8 : 42 1/8.
+Pot 5 : 43 : 0.
+
+Pot 6 : 48 2/8 : 47 7/8.
+Pot 6 : 46 2/8 : 48 3/8.
+
+Pot 7 : 48 5/8 : 25.
+Pot 7 : 42 : 40 5/8.
+
+Pot 8 : 46 7/8 : 39 1/8.
+
+Pot 9 : 49 : 30 3/8.
+Pot 9 : 50 3/8 : 15.
+Pot 9 : 46 3/8 : 36 7/8.
+Pot 9 : 47 6/8 : 44 1/8.
+Pot 9 : 0 : 31 6/8.
+Crowded Plants.
+
+Pot 10 : 46 4/8 : 47 7/8.
+Pot 10 : 35 2/8 : 0.
+Pot 10 : 24 5/8 : 34 7/8.
+Pot 10 : 41 4/8 : 40 7/8.
+Pot 10 : 17 3/8 : 41 1/8.
+Crowded Plants.
+
+Total : 1078.00 : 995.38.
+
+The average height of the flower-stems on the twenty-five crossed plants
+in all the pots taken together is 43.12 inches, and that of the
+twenty-five self-fertilised plants 39.82, or as 100 to 92. In order to
+test this result, the plants planted in pairs in Pots 1 and 8 were
+considered by themselves, and the average height of the sixteen crossed
+plants is here 44.9, and that of the sixteen self-fertilised plants
+42.03, or as 100 to 94. Again, the plants raised from the thickly sown
+seed in Pots 9 and 10, which were subjected to very severe mutual
+competition, were taken by themselves, and the average height of the
+nine crossed plants is 39.86, and that of the nine self-fertilised
+plants 35.88, or as 100 to 90. The plants in these two latter pots (9
+and 10), after being measured, were cut down close to the ground and
+weighed: the nine crossed plants weighed 57.66 ounces, and the nine
+self-fertilised plants 45.25 ounces, or as 100 to 78. On the whole we
+may conclude, especially from the evidence of weight, that seedlings
+from a cross between flowers on the same plant have a decided, though
+not great, advantage over those from flowers fertilised with their own
+pollen, more especially in the case of the plants subjected to severe
+mutual competition. But the advantage is much less than that exhibited
+by the crossed offspring of distinct plants, for these exceeded the
+self-fertilised plants in height as 100 to 70, and in the number of
+flower-stems as 100 to 48. Digitalis thus differs from Ipomoea, and
+almost certainly from Mimulus, as with these two species a cross between
+flowers on the same plant did no good.
+
+CALCEOLARIA.
+
+A BUSHY GREENHOUSE VARIETY, WITH YELLOW FLOWERS BLOTCHED WITH PURPLE.
+
+The flowers in this genus are constructed so as to favour or almost
+ensure cross-fertilisation (3/6. Hildebrand as quoted by H. Muller ‘Die
+Befruchtung der Blumen’ 1873 page 277.); and Mr. Anderson remarks that
+extreme care is necessary to exclude insects in order to preserve any
+kind true. (3/7. ‘Gardeners’ Chronicle’ 1853 page 534.) He adds the
+interesting statement, that when the corolla is cut quite away, insects,
+as far as he has seen, never discover or visit the flowers. This plant
+is, however, self-fertile if insects are excluded. So few experiments
+were made by me, that they are hardly worth giving. Crossed and
+self-fertilised seeds were sown on opposite sides of a pot, and after a
+time the crossed seedlings slightly exceeded the self-fertilised in
+height. When a little further grown, the longest leaves on the former
+were very nearly 3 inches in length, whilst those on the self-fertilised
+plants were only 2 inches. Owing to an accident, and to the pot being
+too small, only one plant on each side grew up and flowered; the crossed
+plant was 19 1/2 inches in height, and the self-fertilised one 15
+inches; or as 100 to 77.
+
+Linaria vulgaris.
+
+It has been mentioned in the introductory chapter that two large beds of
+this plant were raised by me many years ago from crossed and
+self-fertilised seeds, and that there was a conspicuous difference in
+height and general appearance between the two lots. The trial was
+afterwards repeated with more care; but as this was one of the first
+plants experimented on, my usual method was not followed. Seeds were
+taken from wild plants growing in this neighbourhood and sown in poor
+soil in my garden. Five plants were covered with a net, the others being
+left exposed to the bees, which incessantly visit the flowers of this
+species, and which, according to H. Muller, are the exclusive
+fertilisers. This excellent observer remarks that, as the stigma lies
+between the anthers and is mature at the same time with them,
+self-fertilisation is possible. (3/8. ‘Die Befruchtung’ etc. page 279.)
+But so few seeds are produced by protected plants, that the pollen and
+stigma of the same flower seem to have little power of mutual
+interaction. The exposed plants bore numerous capsules forming solid
+spikes. Five of these capsules were examined and appeared to contain an
+equal number of seeds; and these being counted in one capsule, were
+found to be 166. The five protected plants produced altogether only
+twenty-five capsules, of which five were much finer than all the others,
+and these contained an average of 23.6 seeds, with a maximum in one
+capsule of fifty-five. So that the number of seeds in the capsules on
+the exposed plants to the average number in the finest capsules on the
+protected plants was as 100 to 14.
+
+Some of the spontaneously self-fertilised seeds from under the net, and
+some seeds from the uncovered plants naturally fertilised and almost
+certainly intercrossed by the bees, were sown separately in two large
+pots of the same size; so that the two lots of seedlings were not
+subjected to any mutual competition. Three of the crossed plants when in
+full flower were measured, but no care was taken to select the tallest
+plants; their heights were 7 4/8, 7 2/8, and 6 4/8 inches; averaging
+7.08 in height. The three tallest of all the self-fertilised plants were
+then carefully selected, and their heights were 6 3/8, 5 5/8, and 5 2/8,
+averaging 5.75 in height. So that the naturally crossed plants were to
+the spontaneously self-fertilised plants in height, at least as much as
+100 to 81.
+
+Verbascum thapsus.
+
+The flowers of this plant are frequented by various insects, chiefly by
+bees, for the sake of the pollen. Hermann Muller, however, has shown
+(‘Die Befruchtung’ etc. page 277) that V. nigrum secretes minute drops
+of nectar. The arrangement of the reproductive organs, though not at all
+complex, favours cross-fertilisation; and even distinct species are
+often crossed, for a greater number of naturally produced hybrids have
+been observed in this genus than in almost any other. (3/9. I have given
+a striking case of a large number of such hybrids between Verbascum
+thapsus and lychnitis found growing wild: ‘Journal of Linnean Society
+Botany’ volume 10 page 451.) Nevertheless the present species is
+perfectly self-fertile, if insects are excluded; for a plant protected
+by a net was as thickly loaded with fine capsules as the surrounding
+uncovered plants. Verbascum lychnitis is rather less self-fertile, for
+some protected plants did not yield quite so many capsules as the
+adjoining uncovered plants.
+
+Plants of Verbascum thapsus had been raised for a distinct purpose from
+self-fertilised seeds; and some flowers on these plants were again
+self-fertilised, yielding seed of the second self-fertilised generation;
+and other flowers were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant. The
+seeds thus produced were sown on the opposite sides of four large pots.
+They germinated, however, so irregularly (the crossed seedlings
+generally coming up first) that I was able to save only six pairs of
+equal age. These when in full flower were measured, as in Table 3/25.
+
+TABLE 3/25. Verbascum thapsus.
+
+Heights of Plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants of the Second Generation.
+
+Pot 1 : 76 : 53 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 54 : 66.
+
+Pot 3 : 62 : 75.
+Pot 3 : 60 5/8 : 30 4/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 73 : 62.
+Pot 4 : 66 4/8 : 52.
+
+Total : 392.13 : 339.00.
+
+We here see that two of the self-fertilised plants exceed in height
+their crossed opponents. Nevertheless the average height of the six
+crossed plants is 65.34 inches, and that of the six self-fertilised
+plants 56.5 inches; or as 100 to 86.
+
+Vandellia nummularifolia.
+
+Seeds were sent to me by Mr. J. Scott from Calcutta of this small Indian
+weed, which bears perfect and cleistogene flowers. (3/10. The convenient
+term of CLEISTOGENE was proposed by Kuhn in an article on the present
+genus in ‘Bot. Zeitung’ 1867 page 65.) The latter are extremely small,
+imperfectly developed, and never expand, yet yield plenty of seeds. The
+perfect and open flowers are also small, of a white colour with purple
+marks; they generally produce seed, although the contrary has been
+asserted; and they do so even if protected from insects. They have a
+rather complicated structure, and appear to be adapted for
+cross-fertilisation, but were not carefully examined by me. They are not
+easy to fertilise artificially, and it is possible that some of the
+flowers which I thought that I had succeeded in crossing were afterwards
+spontaneously self-fertilised under the net. Sixteen capsules from the
+crossed perfect flowers contained on an average ninety-three seeds (with
+a maximum in one capsule of 137), and thirteen capsules from the
+self-fertilised perfect flowers contained sixty-two seeds (with a
+maximum in one capsule of 135); or as 100 to 67. But I suspect that this
+considerable excess was accidental, as on one occasion nine crossed
+capsules were compared with seven self-fertilised capsules (both
+included in the above number), and they contained almost exactly the
+same average number of seed. I may add that fifteen capsules from
+self-fertilised cleistogene flowers contained on an average sixty-four
+seeds, with a maximum in one of eighty-seven.
+
+Crossed and self-fertilised seeds from the perfect flowers, and other
+seeds from the self-fertilised cleistogene flowers, were sown in five
+pots, each divided superficially into three compartments. The seedlings
+were thinned at an early age, so that twenty plants were left in each of
+the three divisions. The crossed plants when in full flower averaged 4.3
+inches, and the self-fertilised plants from the perfect flowers 4.27
+inches in height; or as 100 to 99. The self-fertilised plants from the
+cleistogene flowers averaged 4.06 inches in height; so that the crossed
+were in height to these latter plants as 100 to 94.
+
+I determined to compare again the growth of plants raised from crossed
+and self-fertilised perfect flowers, and obtained two fresh lots of
+seeds. These were sown on opposite sides of five pots, but they were not
+sufficiently thinned, so that they grew rather crowded. When fully
+grown, all those above 2 inches in height were selected, all below this
+standard being rejected; the former consisted of forty-seven crossed and
+forty-one self-fertilised plants; thus a greater number of the crossed
+than of the self-fertilised plants grew to a height of above 2 inches.
+Of the crossed plants, the twenty-four tallest were on an average 3.6
+inches in height; whilst the twenty-four tallest self-fertilised plants
+were 3.38 inches in average height; or as 100 to 94. All these plants
+were then cut down close to the ground, and the forty-seven crossed
+plants weighed 1090.3 grains, and the forty-one self-fertilised plants
+weighed 887.4 grains. Therefore an equal number of crossed and
+self-fertilised would have been to each other in weight as 100 to 97.
+From these several facts we may conclude that the crossed plants had
+some real, though very slight, advantage in height and weight over the
+self-fertilised plants, when grown in competition with one another.
+
+The crossed plants were, however, inferior in fertility to the
+self-fertilised. Six of the finest plants were selected out of the
+forty-seven crossed plants, and six out of the forty-one self-fertilised
+plants; and the former produced 598 capsules, whilst the latter or
+self-fertilised plants produced 752 capsules. All these capsules were
+the product of cleistogene flowers, for the plants did not bear during
+the whole of this season any perfect flowers. The seeds were counted in
+ten cleistogene capsules produced by crossed plants, and their average
+number was 46.4 per capsule; whilst the number in ten cleistogene
+capsules produced by the self-fertilised plants was 49.4; or as 100 to
+106.
+
+3. GESNERIACEAE.--Gesneria pendulina.
+
+In Gesneria the several parts of the flower are arranged on nearly the
+same plan as in Digitalis, and most or all of the species are
+dichogamous. (3/11. Dr. Ogle ‘Popular Science Review’ January 1870 page
+51.) Plants were raised from seed sent me by Fritz Muller from South
+Brazil. Seven flowers were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant,
+and produced seven capsules containing by weight 3.01 grains of seeds.
+Seven flowers on the same plants were fertilised with their own pollen,
+and their seven capsules contained exactly the same weight of seeds.
+Germinating seeds were planted on opposite sides of four pots, and when
+fully grown measured to the tips of their leaves.
+
+TABLE 3/26. Gesneria pendulina.
+
+Heights of Plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 42 2/8 : 39.
+Pot 1 : 24 4/8 : 27 3/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 33 : 30 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 27 : 19 2/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 33 4/8 : 31 7/8.
+Pot 3 : 29 4/8 : 28 6/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 30 6/8 : 29 6/8.
+Pot 4 : 36 : 26 3/8.
+
+Total : 256.50 : 233.13.
+
+The average height of the eight crossed plants is 32.06 inches, and that
+of the eight self-fertilised plants 29.14; or as 100 to 90.
+
+4. LABIATAE.--Salvia coccinea. (3/12. The admirable mechanical
+adaptations in this genus for favouring or ensuring cross-fertilisation,
+have been fully described by Sprengel, Hildebrand, Delpino, H. Muller,
+Ogle, and others, in their several works.)
+
+This species, unlike most of the others in the same genus, yields a good
+many seeds when insects are excluded. I gathered ninety-eight capsules
+produced by flowers spontaneously self-fertilised under a net, and they
+contained on an average 1.45 seeds, whilst flowers artificially
+fertilised with their own pollen, in which case the stigma will have
+received plenty of pollen, yielded on an average 3.3 seeds, or more than
+twice as many. Twenty flowers were crossed with pollen from a distinct
+plant, and twenty-six were self-fertilised. There was no great
+difference in the proportional number of flowers which produced capsules
+by these two processes, or in the number of the contained seeds, or in
+the weight of an equal number of seeds.
+
+Seeds of both kinds were sown rather thickly on opposite sides of three
+pots. When the seedlings were about 3 inches in height, the crossed
+showed a slight advantage over the self-fertilised. When two-thirds
+grown, the two tallest plants on each side of each pot were measured;
+the crossed averaged 16.37 inches, and the self-fertilised 11.75 in
+height; or as 100 to 71. When the plants were fully grown and had done
+flowering, the two tallest plants on each side were again measured, with
+the results shown in Table 3/27.
+
+TABLE 3/27. Salvia coccinea.
+
+Heights of Plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 32 6/8 : 25.
+Pot 1 : 20 : 18 6/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 32 3/8 : 20 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 24 4/8 : 19 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 29 4/8 : 25.
+Pot 3 : 28 : 18.
+
+Total : 167.13 : 127.00.
+
+It may be here seen that each of the six tallest crossed plants exceeds
+in height its self-fertilised opponent; the former averaged 27.85
+inches, whilst the six tallest self-fertilised plants averaged 21.16
+inches; or as 100 to 76. In all three pots the first plant which
+flowered was a crossed one. All the crossed plants together produced 409
+flowers, whilst all the self-fertilised together produced only 232
+flowers; or as 100 to 57. So that the crossed plants in this respect
+were far more productive than the self-fertilised.
+
+Origanum vulgare.
+
+This plant exists, according to H. Muller, under two forms; one
+hermaphrodite and strongly proterandrous, so that it is almost certain
+to be fertilised by pollen from another flower; the other form is
+exclusively female, has a smaller corolla, and must of course be
+fertilised by pollen from a distinct plant in order to yield any seeds.
+The plants on which I experimented were hermaphrodites; they had been
+cultivated for a long period as a pot-herb in my kitchen garden, and
+were, like so many long-cultivated plants, extremely sterile. As I felt
+doubtful about the specific name I sent specimens to Kew, and was
+assured that the species was Origanum vulgare. My plants formed one
+great clump, and had evidently spread from a single root by stolons. In
+a strict sense, therefore, they all belonged to the same individual. My
+object in experimenting on them was, firstly, to ascertain whether
+crossing flowers borne by plants having distinct roots, but all derived
+asexually from the same individual, would be in any respect more
+advantageous than self-fertilisation; and, secondly, to raise for future
+trial seedlings which would constitute really distinct individuals.
+Several plants in the above clump were covered by a net, and about two
+dozen seeds (many of which, however, were small and withered) were
+obtained from the flowers thus spontaneously self-fertilised. The
+remainder of the plants were left uncovered and were incessantly visited
+by bees, so that they were doubtless crossed by them. These exposed
+plants yielded rather more and finer seed (but still very few) than did
+the covered plants. The two lots of seeds thus obtained were sown on
+opposite sides of two pots; the seedlings were carefully observed from
+their first growth to maturity, but they did not differ at any period in
+height or in vigour, the importance of which latter observation we shall
+presently see. When fully grown, the tallest crossed plant in one pot
+was a very little taller than the tallest self-fertilised plant on the
+opposite side, and in the other pot exactly the reverse occurred. So
+that the two lots were in fact equal; and a cross of this kind did no
+more good than crossing two flowers on the same plant of Ipomoea or
+Mimulus.
+
+The plants were turned out of the two pots without being disturbed and
+planted in the open ground, in order that they might grow more
+vigorously. In the following summer all the self-fertilised and some of
+the quasi-crossed plants were covered by a net. Many flowers on the
+latter were crossed by me with pollen from a distinct plant, and others
+were left to be crossed by the bees. These quasi-crossed plants produced
+rather more seed than did the original ones in the great clump when left
+to the action of the bees. Many flowers on the self-fertilised plants
+were artificially self-fertilised, and others were allowed to fertilise
+themselves spontaneously under the net, but they yielded altogether very
+few seeds. These two lots of seeds--the product of a cross between
+distinct seedlings, instead of as in the last case between plants
+multiplied by stolons, and the product of self-fertilised flowers--were
+allowed to germinate on bare sand, and several equal pairs were planted
+on opposite sides of two LARGE pots. At a very early age the crossed
+plants showed some superiority over the self-fertilised, which was ever
+afterwards retained. When the plants were fully grown, the two tallest
+crossed and the two tallest self-fertilised plants in each pot were
+measured, as shown in Table 3/28. I regret that from want of time I did
+not measure all the pairs; but the tallest on each side seemed fairly to
+represent the average difference between the two lots.
+
+TABLE 3/28. Origanum vulgare.
+
+Heights of Plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants (two tallest in each pot).
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants (two tallest in each pot).
+
+Pot 1 : 26 : 24.
+Pot 1 : 21 : 21.
+
+Pot 2 : 17 : 12.
+Pot 2 : 16 : 11 4/8.
+
+Total : 80.0 : 68.5.
+
+The average height of the crossed plants is here 20 inches, and that of
+the self-fertilised 17.12; or as 100 to 86. But this excess of height by
+no means gives a fair idea of the vast superiority in vigour of the
+crossed over the self-fertilised plants. The crossed flowered first and
+produced thirty flower-stems, whilst the self-fertilised produced only
+fifteen, or half the number. The pots were then bedded out, and the
+roots probably came out of the holes at the bottom and thus aided their
+growth. Early in the following summer the superiority of the crossed
+plants, owing to their increase by stolons, over the self-fertilised
+plants was truly wonderful. In Pot 1, and it should be remembered that
+very large pots had been used, the oval clump of crossed plants was 10
+by 4 1/2 inches across, with the tallest stem, as yet young, 5 1/2
+inches in height; whilst the clump of self-fertilised plants, on the
+opposite side of the same pot, was only 3 1/2 by 2 1/2 inches across,
+with the tallest young stem 4 inches in height. In Pot 2, the clump of
+crossed plants was 18 by 9 inches across, with the tallest young stem 8
+1/2 inches in height; whilst the clump of self-fertilised plants on the
+opposite side of the same pot was 12 by 4 1/2 inches across, with the
+tallest young stem 6 inches in height. The crossed plants during this
+season, as during the last, flowered first. Both the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants being left freely exposed to the visits of bees,
+manifestly produced much more seed than their grand-parents,--the plants
+of the original clump still growing close by in the same garden, and
+equally left to the action of the bees.
+
+5. ACANTHACEAE.--Thunbergia alata.
+
+It appears from Hildebrand’s description (‘Botanische Zeitung’ 1867 page
+285) that the conspicuous flowers of this plant are adapted for
+cross-fertilisation. Seedlings were twice raised from purchased seed;
+but during the early summer, when first experimented on, they were
+extremely sterile, many of the anthers containing hardly any pollen.
+Nevertheless, during the autumn these same plants spontaneously produced
+a good many seeds. Twenty-six flowers during the two years were crossed
+with pollen from a distinct plant, but they yielded only eleven
+capsules; and these contained very few seeds! Twenty-eight flowers were
+fertilised with pollen from the same flower, and these yielded only ten
+capsules, which, however, contained rather more seed than the crossed
+capsules. Eight pairs of germinating seeds were planted on opposite
+sides of five pots; and exactly half the crossed and half the
+self-fertilised plants exceeded their opponents in height. Two of the
+self-fertilised plants died young, before they were measured, and their
+crossed opponents were thrown away. The six remaining pairs of these
+grew very unequally, some, both of the crossed and self-fertilised
+plants, being more than twice as tall as the others. The average height
+of the crossed plants was 60 inches, and that of the self-fertilised
+plants 65 inches, or as 100 to 108. A cross, therefore, between distinct
+individuals here appears to do no good; but this result deduced from so
+few plants in a very sterile condition and growing very unequally,
+obviously cannot be trusted.]
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+CRUCIFERAE, PAPAVERACEAE, RESEDACEAE, ETC.
+
+Brassica oleracea, crossed and self-fertilised plants.
+Great effect of a cross with a fresh stock on the weight of the
+offspring.
+Iberis umbellata.
+Papaver vagum.
+Eschscholtzia californica, seedlings from a cross with a fresh stock not
+more vigorous, but more fertile than the self-fertilised seedlings.
+Reseda lutea and odorata, many individuals sterile with their own pollen.
+Viola tricolor, wonderful effects of a cross.
+Adonis aestivalis.
+Delphinium consolida.
+Viscaria oculata, crossed plants hardly taller, but more fertile than
+the self-fertilised.
+Dianthus caryophyllus, crossed and self-fertilised plants compared for
+four generations.
+Great effects of a cross with a fresh stock.
+Uniform colour of the flowers on the self-fertilised plants.
+Hibiscus africanus.
+
+[6. CRUCIFERAE.--Brassica oleracea.
+
+VAR. CATTELL’S EARLY BARNES CABBAGE.
+
+The flowers of the common cabbage are adapted, as shown by H. Muller,
+for cross-fertilisation, and should this fail, for self-fertilisation.
+(4/1. ‘Die Befruchtung’ etc. page 139.) It is well known that the
+varieties are crossed so largely by insects, that it is impossible to
+raise pure kinds in the same garden, if more than one kind is in flower
+at the same time. Cabbages, in one respect, were not well fitted for my
+experiments, as, after they had formed heads, they were often difficult
+to measure. The flower-stems also differ much in height; and a poor
+plant will sometimes throw up a higher stem than that of a fine plant.
+In the later experiments, the fully-grown plants were cut down and
+weighed, and then the immense advantage from a cross became manifest.
+
+A single plant of the above variety was covered with a net just before
+flowering, and was crossed with pollen from another plant of the same
+variety growing close by; and the seven capsules thus produced contained
+on an average 16.3 seeds, with a maximum of twenty in one capsule. Some
+flowers were artificially self-fertilised, but their capsules did not
+contain so many seeds as those from flowers spontaneously
+self-fertilised under the net, of which a considerable number were
+produced. Fourteen of these latter capsules contained on an average 4.1
+seeds, with a maximum in one of ten seeds; so that the seeds in the
+crossed capsules were in number to those in the self-fertilised capsules
+as 100 to 25. The self-fertilised seeds, fifty-eight of which weighed
+3.88 grains, were, however, a little finer than those from the crossed
+capsules, fifty-eight of which weighed 3.76 grains. When few seeds are
+produced, these seem often to be better nourished and to be heavier than
+when many are produced.
+
+The two lots of seeds in an equal state of germination were planted,
+some on opposite sides of a single pot, and some in the open ground. The
+young crossed plants in the pot at first exceeded by a little in height
+the self-fertilised; then equalled them; were then beaten; and lastly
+were again victorious. The plants, without being disturbed, were turned
+out of the pot, and planted in the open ground; and after growing for
+some time, the crossed plants, which were all of nearly the same height,
+exceeded the self-fertilised ones by 2 inches. When they flowered, the
+flower-stems of the tallest crossed plant exceeded that of the tallest
+self-fertilised plant by 6 inches. The other seedlings which were
+planted in the open ground stood separate, so that they did not compete
+with one another; nevertheless the crossed plants certainly grew to a
+rather greater height than the self-fertilised; but no measurements were
+made. The crossed plants which had been raised in the pot, and those
+planted in the open ground, all flowered a little before the
+self-fertilised plants.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+
+Some flowers on the crossed plants of the last generation were again
+crossed with pollen from another crossed plant, and produced fine
+capsules. The flowers on the self-fertilised plants of the last
+generation were allowed to fertilise themselves spontaneously under a
+net, and they produced some remarkably fine capsules. The two lots of
+seeds thus produced germinated on sand, and eight pairs were planted on
+opposite sides of four pots. These plants were measured to the tips of
+their leaves on the 20th of October of the same year, and the eight
+crossed plants averaged in height 8.4 inches, whilst the self-fertilised
+averaged 8.53 inches, so that the crossed were a little inferior in
+height, as 100 to 101.5. By the 5th of June of the following year these
+plants had grown much bulkier, and had begun to form heads. The crossed
+had now acquired a marked superiority in general appearance, and
+averaged 8.02 inches in height, whilst the self-fertilised averaged 7.31
+inches; or as 100 to 91. The plants were then turned out of their pots
+and planted undisturbed in the open ground. By the 5th of August their
+heads were fully formed, but several had grown so crooked that their
+heights could hardly be measured with accuracy. The crossed plants,
+however, were on the whole considerably taller than the self-fertilised.
+In the following year they flowered; the crossed plants flowering before
+the self-fertilised in three of the pots, and at the same time in Pot 2.
+The flower-stems were now measured, as shown in Table 4/29.
+
+TABLE 3/29. Brassica oleracea.
+
+Measured in inches to tops of flower-stems: 0 signifies that a
+Flower-stem was not formed.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 49 2/8 : 44.
+Pot 1 : 39 4/8 : 41.
+
+Pot 2 : 37 4/8 : 38.
+Pot 2 : 33 4/8 : 35 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 47 : 51 1/8.
+Pot 3 : 40 : 41 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 42 : 46 4/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 43 6/8 : 20 2/8.
+Pot 4 : 37 2/8 : 33 3/8.
+Pot 4 : 0 : 0.
+
+Total : 369.75 : 351.00.
+
+The nine flower-stems on the crossed plants here average 41.08 inches,
+and the nine on the self-fertilised plants 39 inches in height, or as
+100 to 95. But this small difference, which, moreover, depended almost
+wholly on one of the self-fertilised plants being only 20 inches high,
+does not in the least show the vast superiority of the crossed over the
+self-fertilised plants. Both lots, including the two plants in Pot 4,
+which did not flower, were now cut down close to the ground and weighed,
+but those in Pot 2 were excluded, for they had been accidentally injured
+by a fall during transplantation, and one was almost killed. The eight
+crossed plants weighed 219 ounces, whilst the eight self-fertilised
+plants weighed only 82 ounces, or as 100 to 37; so that the superiority
+of the former over the latter in weight was great.
+
+THE EFFECTS OF A CROSS WITH A FRESH STOCK.
+
+Some flowers on a crossed plant of the last or second generation were
+fertilised, without being castrated, by pollen taken from a plant of the
+same variety, but not related to my plants, and brought from a nursery
+garden (whence my seeds originally came) having a different soil and
+aspect. The flowers on the self-fertilised plants of the last or second
+generation (Table 4/29) were allowed to fertilise themselves
+spontaneously under a net, and yielded plenty of seeds. These latter and
+the crossed seeds, after germinating on sand, were planted in pairs on
+the opposite sides of six large pots, which were kept at first in a cool
+greenhouse. Early in January their heights were measured to the tips of
+their leaves. The thirteen crossed plants averaged 13.16 inches in
+height, and the twelve (for one had died) self-fertilised plants
+averaged 13.7 inches, or as 100 to 104; so that the self-fertilised
+plants exceeded by a little the crossed plants.
+
+TABLE 3/30. Brassica oleracea.
+
+Weights in ounces of plants after they had formed heads.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants from Pollen of fresh Stock.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants of the Third Generation.
+
+Pot 1 : 130 : 18 2/4.
+
+Pot 2 : 74 : 34 3/4.
+
+Pot 3 : 121 : 17 2/4.
+
+Pot 4 : 127 2/4 : 14.
+
+Pot 5 : 90 : 11 2/4.
+
+Pot 6 : 106 2/4 : 46.
+
+Total : 649.00 : 142.25.
+
+Early in the spring the plants were gradually hardened, and turned out
+of their pots into the open ground without being disturbed. By the end
+of August the greater number had formed fine heads, but several grew
+extremely crooked, from having been drawn up to the light whilst in the
+greenhouse. As it was scarcely possible to measure their heights, the
+finest plant on each side of each pot was cut down close to the ground
+and weighed. In Table 4/30 we have the result.
+
+The six finest crossed plants average 108.16 ounces, whilst the six
+finest self-fertilised plants average only 23.7 ounces, or as 100 to 22.
+This difference shows in the clearest manner the enormous benefit which
+these plants derived from a cross with another plant belonging to the
+same sub-variety, but to a fresh stock, and grown during at least the
+three previous generations under somewhat different conditions.
+
+THE OFFSPRING FROM A CUT-LEAVED, CURLED, AND VARIEGATED WHITE-GREEN
+CABBAGE CROSSED WITH A CUT-LEAVED, CURLED, AND VARIEGATED CRIMSON-GREEN
+CABBAGE, COMPARED WITH THE SELF-FERTILISED OFFSPRING FROM THE TWO
+VARIETIES.
+
+These trials were made, not for the sake of comparing the growth of the
+crossed and self-fertilised seedlings, but because I had seen it stated
+that these varieties would not naturally intercross when growing
+uncovered and near one another. This statement proved quite erroneous;
+but the white-green variety was in some degree sterile in my garden,
+producing little pollen and few seeds. It was therefore no wonder that
+seedlings raised from the self-fertilised flowers of this variety were
+greatly exceeded in height by seedlings from a cross between it and the
+more vigorous crimson-green variety; and nothing more need be said about
+this experiment.
+
+The seedlings from the reciprocal cross, that is, from the crimson-green
+variety fertilised with pollen from the white-green variety, offer a
+somewhat more curious case. A few of these crossed seedlings reverted to
+a pure green variety with their leaves less cut and curled, so that they
+were altogether in a much more natural state, and these plants grew more
+vigorously and taller than any of the others. Now it is a strange fact
+that a much larger number of the self-fertilised seedlings from the
+crimson-green variety than of the crossed seedlings thus reverted; and
+as a consequence the self-fertilised seedlings grew taller by 2 1/2
+inches on an average than the crossed seedlings, with which they were
+put into competition. At first, however, the crossed seedlings exceeded
+the self-fertilised by an average of a quarter of an inch. We thus see
+that reversion to a more natural condition acted more powerfully in
+favouring the ultimate growth of these plants than did a cross; but it
+should be remembered that the cross was with a semi-sterile variety
+having a feeble constitution.
+
+Iberis umbellata.
+
+VAR. KERMESIANA.
+
+This variety produced plenty of spontaneously self-fertilised seed under
+a net. Other plants in pots in the greenhouse were left uncovered, and
+as I saw small flies visiting the flowers, it seemed probable that they
+would be intercrossed. Consequently seeds supposed to have been thus
+crossed and spontaneously self-fertilised seeds were sown on opposite
+sides of a pot. The self-fertilised seedlings grew from the first
+quicker than the supposed crossed seedlings, and when both lots were in
+full flower the former were from 5 to 6 inches higher than the crossed!
+I record in my notes that the self-fertilised seeds from which these
+self-fertilised plants were raised were not so well ripened as the
+crossed; and this may possibly have caused the great difference in their
+growth, in a somewhat analogous manner as occurred with the
+self-fertilised plants of the eighth generation of Ipomoea raised from
+unhealthy parents. It is a curious circumstance, that two other lots of
+the above seeds were sown in pure sand mixed with burnt earth, and
+therefore without any organic matter; and here the supposed crossed
+seedlings grew to double the height of the self-fertilised, before both
+lots died, as necessarily occurred at an early period. We shall
+hereafter meet with another case apparently analogous to this of Iberis
+in the third generation of Petunia.
+
+The above self-fertilised plants were allowed to fertilise themselves
+again under a net, yielding self-fertilised plants of the second
+generation, and the supposed crossed plants were crossed by pollen of a
+distinct plant; but from want of time this was done in a careless
+manner, namely, by smearing one head of expanded flowers over another. I
+should have thought that this would have succeeded, and perhaps it did
+so; but the fact of 108 of the self-fertilised seeds weighing 4.87
+grains, whilst the same number of the supposed crossed seeds weighed
+only 3.57 grains, does not look like it. Five seedlings from each lot of
+seeds were raised, and the self-fertilised plants, when fully grown,
+exceeded in average height by a trifle (namely .4 of an inch) the five
+probably crossed plants. I have thought it right to give this case and
+the last, because had the supposed crossed plants proved superior to the
+self-fertilised in height, I should have assumed without doubt that the
+former had really been crossed. As it is, I do not know what to
+conclude.
+
+Being much surprised at the two foregoing trials, I determined to make
+another, in which there should be no doubt about the crossing. I
+therefore fertilised with great care (but as usual without castration)
+twenty-four flowers on the supposed crossed plants of the last
+generation with pollen from distinct plants, and thus obtained
+twenty-one capsules. The self-fertilised plants of the last generation
+were allowed to fertilise themselves again under a net, and the
+seedlings reared from these seeds formed the third self-fertilised
+generation. Both lots of seeds, after germinating on bare sand, were
+planted in pairs on the opposite sides of two pots. All the remaining
+seeds were sown crowded on opposite sides of a third pot; but as all the
+self-fertilised seedlings in this latter pot died before they grew to
+any considerable height, they were not measured. The plants in Pots 1
+and 2 were measured when between 7 and 8 inches in height, and the
+crossed exceeded the self-fertilised in average height by 1.57 inches.
+When fully grown they were again measured to the summits of their
+flower-heads, with the following result:--
+
+TABLE 4/31. Iberis umbellata.
+
+Heights of plants to the summits of their flower-heads, in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants of the Third Generation.
+
+Pot 1 : 18 : 19.
+Pot 1 : 21 : 21.
+Pot 1 : 18 2/8 : 19 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 19 : 16 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 18 4/8 : 7 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 17 6/8 : 14 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 21 3/8 : 16 4/8.
+
+Total : 133.88 : 114.75.
+
+The average height of the seven crossed plants is here 19.12 inches, and
+that of the seven self-fertilised plants 16.39, or as 100 to 86. But as
+the plants on the self-fertilised side grew very unequally, this ratio
+cannot be fully trusted, and is probably too high. In both pots a
+crossed plant flowered before any one of the self-fertilised. These
+plants were left uncovered in the greenhouse; but from being too much
+crowded they were not very productive. The seeds from all seven plants
+of both lots were counted; the crossed produced 206, and the
+self-fertilised 154; or as 100 to 75.
+
+CROSS BY A FRESH STOCK.
+
+From the doubts caused by the two first trials, in which it was not
+known with certainty that the plants had been crossed; and from the
+crossed plants in the last experiment having been put into competition
+with plants self-fertilised for three generations, which moreover grew
+very unequally, I resolved to repeat the trial on a larger scale, and in
+a rather different manner. I obtained seeds of the same crimson variety
+of Iberis umbellata from another nursery garden, and raised plants from
+them. Some of these plants were allowed to fertilise themselves
+spontaneously under a net; others were crossed by pollen taken from
+plants raised from seed sent me by Dr. Durando from Algiers, where the
+parent-plants had been cultivated for some generations. These latter
+plants differed in having pale pink instead of crimson flowers, but in
+no other respect. That the cross had been effective (though the flowers
+on the crimson mother-plant had NOT been castrated) was well shown when
+the thirty crossed seedlings flowered, for twenty-four of them produced
+pale pink flowers, exactly like those of their father; the six others
+having crimson flowers exactly like those of their mother and like those
+of all the self-fertilised seedlings. This case offers a good instance
+of a result which not rarely follows from crossing varieties having
+differently coloured flowers; namely, that the colours do not blend, but
+resemble perfectly those either of the father or mother plant. The seeds
+of both lots, after germinating on sand, were planted on opposite sides
+of eight pots. When fully grown, the plants were measured to the summits
+of the flower-heads, as shown in Table 4/32.
+
+TABLE 4/32. Iberis umbellata.
+
+Height of Plants to the summits of the flower-heads, measured in inches:
+0 signifies that the Plant died.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Plants from a Cross with a fresh Stock.
+
+Column 3: Plants from Spontaneously Self-fertilised Seeds.
+
+Pot 1 : 18 6/8 : 17 3/8.
+Pot 1 : 17 5/8 : 16 7/8.
+Pot 1 : 17 6/8 : 13 1/8.
+Pot 1 : 20 1/8 : 15 3/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 20 2/8 : 0.
+Pot 2 : 15 7/8 : 16 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 17 : 15 2/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 19 2/8 : 13 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 18 1/8 : 14 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 15 2/8 : 13 4/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 17 1/8 : 16 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 18 7/8 : 14 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 17 5/8 : 16.
+Pot 4 : 15 6/8 : 15 3/8.
+Pot 4 : 14 4/8 : 14 7/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 18 1/8 : 16 4/8.
+Pot 5 : 14 7/8 : 16 2/8.
+Pot 5 : 16 2/8 : 14 2/8.
+Pot 5 : 15 5/8 : 14 2/8.
+Pot 5 : 12 4/8 : 16 1/8.
+
+Pot 6 : 18 6/8 : 16 1/8.
+Pot 6 : 18 6/8 : 15.
+Pot 6 : 17 3/8 : 15 2/8.
+
+Pot 7 : 18 : 16 3/8.
+Pot 7 : 16 4/8 : 14 4/8.
+Pot 7 : 18 2/8 : 13 5/8.
+
+Pot 8 : 20 6/8 : 15 6/8.
+Pot 8 : 17 7/8 : 16 3/8.
+Pot 8 : 13 5/8 : 20 2/8.
+Pot 8 : 19 2/8 : 15 6/8.
+
+Total : 520.38 : 449.88.
+
+The average height of the thirty crossed plants is here 17.34, and that
+of the twenty-nine self-fertilised plants (one having died) 15.51, or as
+100 to 89. I am surprised that the difference did not prove somewhat
+greater, considering that in the last experiment it was as 100 to 86;
+but this latter ratio, as before explained, was probably too great. It
+should, however, be observed that in the last experiment (Table 4/31),
+the crossed plants competed with plants of the third self-fertilised
+generation; whilst in the present case, plants derived from a cross with
+a fresh stock competed with self-fertilised plants of the first
+generation.
+
+The crossed plants in the present case, as in the last, were more
+fertile than the self-fertilised, both lots being left uncovered in the
+greenhouse. The thirty crossed plants produced 103 seed-bearing
+flowers-heads, as well as some heads which yielded no seeds; whereas the
+twenty-nine self-fertilised plants produced only 81 seed-bearing heads;
+therefore thirty such plants would have produced 83.7 heads. We thus get
+the ratio of 100 to 81, for the number of seed-bearing flower-heads
+produced by the crossed and self-fertilised plants. Moreover, a number
+of seed-bearing heads from the crossed plants, compared with the same
+number from the self-fertilised, yielded seeds by weight, in the ratio
+of 100 to 92. Combining these two elements, namely, the number of
+seed-bearing heads and the weight of seeds in each head, the
+productiveness of the crossed to the self-fertilised plants was as 100
+to 75.
+
+The crossed and self-fertilised seeds, which remained after the above
+pairs had been planted, (some in a state of germination and some not
+so), were sown early in the year out of doors in two rows. Many of the
+self-fertilised seedlings suffered greatly, and a much larger number of
+them perished than of the crossed. In the autumn the surviving
+self-fertilised plants were plainly less well-grown than the crossed
+plants.
+
+7. PAPAVERACEAE.--Papaver vagum.
+
+A SUB-SPECIES OF Papaver dubium, FROM THE SOUTH OF FRANCE.
+
+The poppy does not secrete nectar, but the flowers are highly
+conspicuous and are visited by many pollen-collecting bees, flies and
+beetles. The anthers shed their pollen very early, and in the case of
+Papaver rhoeas, it falls on the circumference of the radiating stigmas,
+so that this species must often be self-fertilised; but with Papaver
+dubium the same result does not follow (according to H. Muller ‘Die
+Befruchtung’ page 128), owing to the shortness of the stamens, unless
+the flower happens to stand inclined. The present species, therefore,
+does not seem so well fitted for self-fertilisation as most of the
+others. Nevertheless Papaver vagum produced plenty of capsules in my
+garden when insects were excluded, but only late in the season. I may
+here add that Papaver somniferum produces an abundance of spontaneously
+self-fertilised capsules, as Professor H. Hoffmann likewise found to be
+the case. (4/2. ‘Zur Speciesfrage’ 1875 page 53.) Some species of
+Papaver cross freely when growing in the same garden, as I have known to
+be the case with Papaver bracteatum and orientale.
+
+Plants of Papaver vagum were raised from seeds sent me from Antibes
+through the kindness of Dr. Bornet. Some little time after the flowers
+had expanded, several were fertilised with their own pollen, and others
+(not castrated) with pollen from a distinct individual; but I have
+reason to believe, from observations subsequently made, that these
+flowers had been already fertilised by their own pollen, as this process
+seems to take place soon after their expansion. (4/3. Mr. J. Scott found
+‘Report on the Experimental Culture of the Opium Poppy’ Calcutta 1874
+page 47, in the case of Papaver somniferum, that if he cut away the
+stigmatic surface before the flower had expanded, no seeds were
+produced; but if this was done “on the second day, or even a few hours
+after the expansion of the flower on the first day, a partial
+fertilisation had already been effected, and a few good seeds were
+almost invariably produced.” This proves at how early a period
+fertilisation takes place.) I raised, however, a few seedlings of both
+lots, and the self-fertilised rather exceeded the crossed plants in
+height.
+
+Early in the following year I acted differently, and fertilised seven
+flowers, very soon after their expansion, with pollen from another
+plant, and obtained six capsules. From counting the seeds in a
+medium-sized one, I estimated that the average number in each was at
+least 120. Four out of twelve capsules, spontaneously self-fertilised at
+the same time, were found to contain no good seeds; and the remaining
+eight contained on an average 6.6 seeds per capsule. But it should be
+observed that later in the season the same plants produced under a net
+plenty of very fine spontaneously self-fertilised capsules.
+
+The above two lots of seeds, after germinating on sand, were planted in
+pairs on opposite sides of five pots. The two lots of seedlings, when
+half an inch in height, and again when 6 inches high, were measured to
+the tips of their leaves, but presented no difference. When fully grown,
+the flower-stalks were measured to the summits of the seed capsules,
+with the following result:--
+
+TABLE 4/33. Papaver vagum.
+
+Heights of flower-stalks to the summits of the seed capsules measured in
+inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 24 2/8 : 21.
+Pot 1 : 30 : 26 5/8.
+Pot 1 : 18 4/8 : 16.
+
+Pot 2 : 14 4/8 : 15 3/8.
+Pot 2 : 22 : 20 1/8.
+Pot 2 : 19 5/8 : 14 1/8.
+Pot 2 : 21 5/8 : 16 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 20 6/8 : 19 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 20 2/8 : 13 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 20 6/8 : 18.
+
+Pot 4 : 25 3/8 : 23 2/8.
+Pot 4 : 24 2/8 : 23.
+
+Pot 5 : 20 : 18 3/8.
+Pot 5 : 27 7/8 : 27.
+Pot 5 : 19 : 21 2/8.
+
+Total : 328.75 : 293.13.
+
+The fifteen crossed plants here average 21.91 inches, and the fifteen
+self-fertilised plants 19.54 inches in height, or as 100 to 89. These
+plants did not differ in fertility, as far as could be judged by the
+number of capsules produced, for there were seventy-five on the crossed
+side and seventy-four on the self-fertilised side.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica.
+
+This plant is remarkable from the crossed seedlings not exceeding in
+height or vigour the self-fertilised. On the other hand, a cross greatly
+increases the productiveness of the flowers on the parent-plant, and is
+indeed sometimes necessary in order that they should produce any seed;
+moreover, plants thus derived are themselves much more fertile than
+those raised from self-fertilised flowers; so that the whole advantage
+of a cross is confined to the reproductive system. It will be necessary
+for me to give this singular case in considerable detail.
+
+Twelve flowers on some plants in my flower-garden were fertilised with
+pollen from distinct plants, and produced twelve capsules; but one of
+these contained no good seed. The seeds of the eleven good capsules
+weighed 17.4 grains. Eighteen flowers on the same plants were fertilised
+with their own pollen and produced twelve good capsules, which contained
+13.61 grains weight of seed. Therefore an equal number of crossed and
+self-fertilised capsules would have yielded seed by weight as 100 to 71.
+(4/4. Professor Hildebrand experimented on plants in Germany on a larger
+scale than I did, and found them much more self-fertile. Eighteen
+capsules, produced by cross-fertilisation, contained on an average
+eighty-five seeds, whilst fourteen capsules from self-fertilised flowers
+contained on an average only nine seeds; that is, as 100 to 11: ‘Jahrb.
+fur Wissen Botanik.’ B. 7 page 467.) If we take into account of the fact
+that a much greater proportion of flowers produced capsules when crossed
+than when self-fertilised, the relative fertility of the crossed to the
+self-fertilised flowers was as 100 to 52. Nevertheless these plants,
+whilst still protected by the net, spontaneously produced a considerable
+number of self-fertilised capsules.
+
+The seeds of the two lots after germinating on sand were planted in
+pairs on the opposite sides of four large pots. At first there was no
+difference in their growth, but ultimately the crossed seedlings
+exceeded the self-fertilised considerably in height, as shown in Table
+4/34. But I believe from the cases which follow that this result was
+accidental, owing to only a few plants having been measured, and to one
+of the self-fertilised plants having grown only to a height of 15
+inches. The plants had been kept in the greenhouse, and from being drawn
+up to the light had to be tied to sticks in this and the following
+trials. They were measured to the summits of their flower-stems.
+
+TABLE 4/34. Eschscholtzia californica.
+
+Heights of Plants to the summits of their flower-stems measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 33 4/8 : 25.
+
+Pot 2 : 34 2/8 : 35.
+
+Pot 3 : 29 : 27 2/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 22 : 15.
+
+Total : 118.75 : 102.25.
+
+The four crossed plants here average 29.68 inches, and the four
+self-fertilised 25.56 in height; or as 100 to 86. The remaining seeds
+were sown in a large pot in which a Cineraria had long been growing; and
+in this case again the two crossed plants on the one side greatly
+exceeded in height the two self-fertilised plants on the opposite side.
+The plants in the above four pots from having been kept in the
+greenhouse did not produce on this or any other similar occasion many
+capsules; but the flowers on the crossed plants when again crossed were
+much more productive than the flowers on the self-fertilised plants when
+again self-fertilised. These plants after seeding were cut down and kept
+in the greenhouse; and in the following year, when grown again, their
+relative heights were reversed, as the self-fertilised plants in three
+out of the four pots were now taller than and flowered before the
+crossed plants.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+
+The fact just given with respect to the growth of the cut-down plants
+made me doubtful about my first trial, so I determined to make another
+on a larger scale with crossed and self-fertilised seedlings raised from
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants of the last generation. Eleven
+pairs were raised and grown in competition in the usual manner; and now
+the result was different, for the two lots were nearly equal during
+their whole growth. It would therefore be superfluous to give a table of
+their heights. When fully grown and measured, the crossed averaged
+32.47, and the self-fertilised 32.81 inches in height; or as 100 to 101.
+There was no great difference in the number of flowers and capsules
+produced by the two lots when both were left freely exposed to the
+visits of insects.
+
+PLANTS RAISED FROM BRAZILIAN SEED.
+
+Fritz Muller sent me from South Brazil seeds of plants which were there
+absolutely sterile when fertilised with pollen from the same plant, but
+were perfectly fertile when fertilised with pollen from any other plant.
+The plants raised by me in England from these seeds were examined by
+Professor Asa Gray, and pronounced to belong to E. Californica, with
+which they were identical in general appearance. Two of these plants
+were covered by a net, and were found not to be so completely
+self-sterile as in Brazil. But I shall recur to this subject in another
+part of this work. Here it will suffice to state that eight flowers on
+these two plants, fertilised with pollen from another plant under the
+net, produced eight fine capsules, each containing on an average about
+eighty seeds. Eight flowers on these same plants, fertilised with their
+own pollen, produced seven capsules, which contained on an average only
+twelve seeds, with a maximum in one of sixteen seeds. Therefore the
+cross-fertilised capsules, compared with the self-fertilised, yielded
+seeds in the ratio of about 100 to 15. These plants of Brazilian
+parentage differed also in a marked manner from the English plants in
+producing extremely few spontaneously self-fertilised capsules under a
+net.
+
+Crossed and self-fertilised seeds from the above plants, after
+germinating on bare sand, were planted in pairs on the opposite sides of
+five large pots. The seedlings thus raised were the grandchildren of the
+plants which grew in Brazil; the parents having been grown in England.
+As the grandparents in Brazil absolutely require cross-fertilisation in
+order to yield any seeds, I expected that self-fertilisation would have
+proved very injurious to these seedlings, and that the crossed ones
+would have been greatly superior in height and vigour to those raised
+from self-fertilised flowers. But the result showed that my anticipation
+was erroneous; for as in the last experiment with plants of the English
+stock, so in the present one, the self-fertilised plants exceeded the
+crossed by a little in height. It will be sufficient to state that the
+fourteen crossed plants averaged 44.64, and the fourteen self-fertilised
+45.12 inches in height; or as 100 to 101.
+
+THE EFFECTS OF A CROSS WITH A FRESH STOCK.
+
+I now tried a different experiment. Eight flowers on the self-fertilised
+plants of the last experiment (i.e., grandchildren of the plants which
+grew in Brazil) were again fertilised with pollen from the same plant,
+and produced five capsules, containing on an average 27.4 seeds, with a
+maximum in one of forty-two seeds. The seedlings raised from these seeds
+formed the second SELF-FERTILISED generation of the Brazilian stock.
+
+Eight flowers on one of the crossed plants of the last experiment were
+crossed with pollen from another grandchild, and produced five capsules.
+These contained on an average 31.6 seeds, with a maximum in one of
+forty-nine seeds. The seedlings raised from these seeds may be called
+the INTERCROSSED.
+
+Lastly, eight other flowers on the crossed plants of the last experiment
+were fertilised with pollen from a plant of the English stock, growing
+in my garden, and which must have been exposed during many previous
+generations to very different conditions from those to which the
+Brazilian progenitors of the mother-plant had been subjected. These
+eight flowers produced only four capsules, containing on an average 63.2
+seeds, with a maximum in one of ninety. The plants raised from these
+seeds may be called the ENGLISH-CROSSED. As far as the above averages
+can be trusted from so few capsules, the English-crossed capsules
+contained twice as many seeds as the intercrossed, and rather more than
+twice as many as the self-fertilised capsules. The plants which yielded
+these capsules were grown in pots in the greenhouse, so that their
+absolute productiveness must not be compared with that of plants growing
+out of doors.
+
+The above three lots of seeds, namely, the self-fertilised,
+intercrossed, and English-crossed, were planted in an equal state of
+germination (having been as usual sown on bare sand) in nine large pots,
+each divided into three parts by superficial partitions. Many of the
+self-fertilised seeds germinated before those of the two crossed lots,
+and these were of course rejected. The seedlings thus raised are the
+great-grandchildren of the plants which grew in Brazil. When they were
+from 2 to 4 inches in height, the three lots were equal. They were
+measured when four-fifths grown, and again when fully grown, and as
+their relative heights were almost exactly the same at these two ages, I
+will give only the last measurements. The average height of the nineteen
+English-crossed plants was 45.92 inches; that of the eighteen
+intercrossed plants (for one died), 43.38; and that of the nineteen
+self-fertilised plants, 50.3 inches. So that we have the following
+ratios in height:--
+
+The English-crossed to the self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 109.
+
+The English-crossed to the intercrossed plants, as 100 to 94.
+
+The intercrossed to the self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 116.
+
+After the seed-capsules had been gathered, all these plants were cut
+down close to the ground and weighed. The nineteen English crossed
+plants weighed 18.25 ounces; the intercrossed plants (with their weight
+calculated as if there had been nineteen) weighed 18.2 ounces; and the
+nineteen self-fertilised plants, 21.5 ounces. We have therefore for the
+weights of the three lots of plants the following ratios:--
+
+The English-crossed to the self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 118.
+
+The English-crossed to the intercrossed plants, as 100 to 100.
+
+The intercrossed to the self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 118.
+
+We thus see that in weight, as in height, the self-fertilised plants had
+a decided advantage over the English-crossed and intercrossed plants.
+
+The remaining seeds of the three kinds, whether or not in a state of
+germination, were sown in three long parallel rows in the open ground;
+and here again the self-fertilised seedlings exceeded in height by
+between 2 and 3 inches the seedlings in the two other rows, which were
+of nearly equal heights. The three rows were left unprotected throughout
+the winter, and all the plants were killed, with the exception of two of
+the self-fertilised; so that as far as this little bit of evidence goes,
+some of the self-fertilised plants were more hardy than any of the
+crossed plants of either lot.
+
+We thus see that the self-fertilised plants which were grown in the nine
+pots were superior in height (as 116 to 100), and in weight (as 118 to
+100), and apparently in hardiness, to the intercrossed plants derived
+from a cross between the grandchildren of the Brazilian stock. The
+superiority is here much more strongly marked than in the second trial
+with the plants of the English stock, in which the self-fertilised were
+to the crossed in height as 101 to 100. It is a far more remarkable
+fact--if we bear in mind the effects of crossing plants with pollen from
+a fresh stock in the cases of Ipomoea, Mimulus, Brassica, and
+Iberis--that the self-fertilised plants exceeded in height (as 109 to
+100), and in weight (as 118 to 100), the offspring of the Brazilian
+stock crossed by the English stock; the two stocks having been long
+subjected to widely different conditions.
+
+If we now turn to the fertility of the three lots of plants we find a
+very different result. I may premise that in five out of the nine pots
+the first plant which flowered was one of the English-crossed; in four
+of the pots it was a self-fertilised plant; and in not one did an
+intercrossed plant flower first; so that these latter plants were beaten
+in this respect, as in so many other ways. The three closely adjoining
+rows of plants growing in the open ground flowered profusely, and the
+flowers were incessantly visited by bees, and certainly thus
+intercrossed. The manner in which several plants in the previous
+experiments continued to be almost sterile as long as they were covered
+by a net, but set a multitude of capsules immediately that they were
+uncovered, proves how effectually the bees carry pollen from plant to
+plant. My gardener gathered, at three successive times, an equal number
+of ripe capsules from the plants of the three lots, until he had
+collected forty-five from each lot. It is not possible to judge from
+external appearance whether or not a capsule contains any good seeds; so
+that I opened all the capsules. Of the forty-five from the
+English-crossed plants, four were empty; of those from the intercrossed,
+five were empty; and of those from the self-fertilised, nine were empty.
+The seeds were counted in twenty-one capsules taken by chance out of
+each lot, and the average number of seeds in the capsules from the
+English-crossed plants was 67; from the intercrossed, 56; and from the
+self-fertilised, 48.52. It therefore follows that:--
+
+The forty-five capsules (the four empty ones included) from the
+English-crossed plants contained 2747 seeds.
+
+The forty-five capsules (the five empty ones included) from the
+intercrossed plants contained 2240 seeds.
+
+The forty-five capsules (the nine empty ones included) from the
+self-fertilised plants contained 1746.7 seeds.
+
+The reader should remember that these capsules are the product of
+cross-fertilisation, effected by the bees; and that the difference in
+the number of the contained seeds must depend on the constitution of the
+plants;--that is, on whether they were derived from a cross with a
+distinct stock, or from a cross between plants of the same stock, or
+from self-fertilisation. From the above facts we obtain the following
+ratios:--
+
+Number of seeds contained in an equal number of naturally fertilised
+capsules produced:--
+
+By the English-crossed and self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 63.
+
+By the English-crossed and intercrossed plants, as 100 to 81.
+
+By the intercrossed and self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 78.
+
+But to have ascertained the productiveness of the three lots of plants,
+it would have been necessary to know how many capsules were produced by
+the same number of plants. The three long rows, however, were not of
+quite equal lengths, and the plants were much crowded, so that it would
+have been extremely difficult to have ascertained how many capsules were
+produced by them, even if I had been willing to undertake so laborious a
+task as to collect and count all the capsules. But this was feasible
+with the plants grown in pots in the greenhouse; and although these were
+much less fertile than those growing out of doors, their relative
+fertility appeared, after carefully observing them, to be the same. The
+nineteen plants of the English-crossed stock in the pots produced
+altogether 240 capsules; the intercrossed plants (calculated as
+nineteen) produced 137.22 capsules; and the nineteen self-fertilised
+plants, 152 capsules. Now, knowing the number of seeds contained in
+forty-five capsules of each lot, it is easy to calculate the relative
+numbers of seeds produced by an equal number of the plants of the three
+lots.
+
+Number of seeds produced by an equal number of naturally-fertilised
+plants:--
+
+Plants of English-crossed and self-fertilised parentage, as 100 to 40
+seeds.
+
+Plants of English-crossed and intercrossed parentage, as 100 to 45
+seeds.
+
+Plants of intercrossed and self-fertilised parentage, as 100 to 89
+seeds.
+
+The superiority in productiveness of the intercrossed plants (that is,
+the product of a cross between the grandchildren of the plants which
+grew in Brazil) over the self-fertilised, small as it is, is wholly due
+to the larger average number of seeds contained in the capsules; for the
+intercrossed plants produced fewer capsules in the greenhouse than did
+the self-fertilised plants. The great superiority in productiveness of
+the English-crossed over the self-fertilised plants is shown by the
+larger number of capsules produced, the larger average number of
+contained seeds, and the smaller number of empty capsules. As the
+English-crossed and intercrossed plants were the offspring of crosses in
+every previous generation (as must have been the case from the flowers
+being sterile with their own pollen), we may conclude that the great
+superiority in productiveness of the English-crossed over the
+intercrossed plants is due to the two parents of the former having been
+long subjected to different conditions.
+
+The English-crossed plants, though so superior in productiveness, were,
+as we have seen, decidedly inferior in height and weight to the
+self-fertilised, and only equal to, or hardly superior to, the
+intercrossed plants. Therefore, the whole advantage of a cross with a
+distinct stock is here confined to productiveness, and I have met with
+no similar case.
+
+8. RESEDACEAE.--Reseda lutea.
+
+Seeds collected from wild plants growing in this neighbourhood were sown
+in the kitchen-garden; and several of the seedlings thus raised were
+covered with a net. Of these, some were found (as will hereafter be more
+fully described) to be absolutely sterile when left to fertilise
+themselves spontaneously, although plenty of pollen fell on their
+stigmas; and they were equally sterile when artificially and repeatedly
+fertilised with their own pollen; whilst other plants produced a few
+spontaneously self-fertilised capsules. The remaining plants were left
+uncovered, and as pollen was carried from plant to plant by the hive and
+humble-bees which incessantly visit the flowers, they produced an
+abundance of capsules. Of the necessity of pollen being carried from one
+plant to another, I had ample evidence in the case of this species and
+of R. odorata; for those plants, which set no seeds or very few as long
+as they were protected from insects, became loaded with capsules
+immediately that they were uncovered.
+
+Seeds from the flowers spontaneously self-fertilised under the net, and
+from flowers naturally crossed by the bees, were sown on opposite sides
+of five large pots. The seedlings were thinned as soon as they appeared
+above ground, so that an equal number were left on the two sides. After
+a time the pots were plunged into the open ground. The same number of
+plants of crossed and self-fertilised parentage were measured up to the
+summits of their flower-stems, with the result given in Table 4/35.
+Those which did not produce flower-stems were not measured.
+
+TABLE 4/35. Reseda lutea, in pots.
+
+Heights of plants to the summits of the flower-stems measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 21 : 12 7/8.
+Pot 1 : 14 2/8 : 16.
+Pot 1 : 19 1/8 : 11 7/8.
+Pot 1 : 7 : 15 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 15 1/8 : 19 1/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 20 4/8 : 12 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 17 3/8 : 16 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 23 7/8 : 16 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 17 1/8 : 13 3/8.
+Pot 2 : 20 6/8 : 13 5/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 16 1/8 : 14 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 17 6/8 : 19 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 16 2/8 : 20 7/8.
+Pot 3 : 10 : 7 7/8.
+Pot 3 : 10 : 17 6/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 22 1/8 : 9.
+Pot 4 : 19 : 11 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 18 7/8 : 11.
+Pot 4 : 16 4/8 : 16.
+Pot 4 : 19 2/8 : 16 3/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 25 2/8 : 14 6/8.
+Pot 5 : 22 : 16.
+Pot 5 : 8 6/8 : 14 3/8.
+Pot 5 : 14 2/8 : 14 2/8.
+
+Total : 412.25 : 350.86.
+
+The average height of the twenty-four crossed plants is here 17.17
+inches, and that of the same number of self-fertilised plants 14.61; or
+as 100 to 85. Of the crossed plants all but five flowered, whilst
+several of the self-fertilised did not do so. The above pairs, whilst
+still in flower, but with some capsules already formed, were afterwards
+cut down and weighed. The crossed weighed 90.5 ounces; and an equal
+number of the self-fertilised only 19 ounces, or as 100 to 21; and this
+is an astonishing difference.
+
+Seeds of the same two lots were also sown in two adjoining rows in the
+open ground. There were twenty crossed plants in the one row and
+thirty-two self-fertilised plants in the other row, so that the
+experiment was not quite fair; but not so unfair as it at first appears,
+for the plants in the same row were not crowded so much as seriously to
+interfere with each other’s growth, and the ground was bare on the
+outside of both rows. These plants were better nourished than those in
+the pots and grew to a greater height. The eight tallest plants in each
+row were measured in the same manner as before, with the following
+result:--
+
+TABLE 4/36. Reseda lutea, growing in the open ground.
+
+Heights of plants to the summits of the flower-stems measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+ 28 : 33 2/8.
+ 27 3/8 : 23.
+ 27 5/8 : 21 5/8.
+ 28 6/8 : 20 4/8.
+ 29 7/8 : 21 5/8.
+ 26 6/8 : 22.
+ 26 2/8 : 21 2/8.
+ 30 1/8 : 21 7/8.
+
+Total : 224.75 : 185.13
+
+The average height of the crossed plants, whilst in full flower, was
+here 28.09, and that of the self-fertilised 23.14 inches; or as 100 to
+82. It is a singular fact that the tallest plant in the two rows, was
+one of the self-fertilised. The self-fertilised plants had smaller and
+paler green leaves than the crossed. All the plants in the two rows were
+afterwards cut down and weighed. The twenty crossed plants weighed 65
+ounces, and twenty self-fertilised (by calculation from the actual
+weight of the thirty-two self-fertilised plants) weighed 26.25 ounces;
+or as 100 to 40. Therefore the crossed plants did not exceed in weight
+the self-fertilised plants in nearly so great a degree as those growing
+in the pots, owing probably to the latter having been subjected to more
+severe mutual competition. On the other hand, they exceeded the
+self-fertilised in height in a slightly greater degree.
+
+Reseda odorata.
+
+Plants of the common mignonette were raised from purchased seed, and
+several of them were placed under separate nets. Of these some became
+loaded with spontaneously self-fertilised capsules; others produced a
+few, and others not a single one. It must not be supposed that these
+latter plants produced no seed because their stigmas did not receive any
+pollen, for they were repeatedly fertilised with pollen from the same
+plant with no effect; but they were perfectly fertile with pollen from
+any other plant. Spontaneously self-fertilised seeds were saved from one
+of the highly self-fertile plants, and other seeds were collected from
+the plants growing outside the nets, which had been crossed by the bees.
+These seeds after germinating on sand were planted in pairs on the
+opposite sides of five pots. The plants were trained up sticks, and
+measured to the summits of their leafy stems--the flower-stems not being
+included. We here have the result:--
+
+TABLE 4/37. Reseda odorata (seedlings from a highly self-fertile plant).
+
+Heights of plants to the summits of the leafy stems, flower-stems not
+included, measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 20 7/8 : 22 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 34 7/8 : 28 5/8.
+Pot 1 : 26 6/8 : 23 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 32 6/8 : 30 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 34 3/8 : 28 5/8.
+Pot 2 : 34 5/8 : 30 5/8.
+Pot 2 : 11 6/8 : 23.
+Pot 2 : 33 3/8 : 30 1/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 17 7/8 : 4 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 27 : 25.
+Pot 3 : 30 1/8 : 26 3/8.
+Pot 3 : 30 2/8 : 25 1/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 21 5/8 : 22 6/8.
+Pot 4 : 28 : 25 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 32 5/8 : 15 1/8.
+Pot 4 : 32 3/8 : 24 6/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 21 : 11 6/8.
+Pot 5 : 25 2/8 : 19 7/8.
+Pot 5 : 26 6/8 : 10 4/8.
+
+Total : 522.25 : 428.50.
+
+The average height of the nineteen crossed plants is here 27.48, and
+that of the nineteen self-fertilised 22.55 inches; or as 100 to 82. All
+these plants were cut down in the early autumn and weighed: the crossed
+weighed 11.5 ounces, and the self-fertilised 7.75 ounces, or as 100 to
+67. These two lots having been left freely exposed to the visits of
+insects, did not present any difference to the eye in the number of
+seed-capsules which they produced.
+
+The remainder of the same two lots of seeds were sown in two adjoining
+rows in the open ground; so that the plants were exposed to only
+moderate competition. The eight tallest on each side were measured, as
+shown in Table 4/38.
+
+TABLE 4/38. Reseda odorata, growing in the open ground.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+ 24 4/8 : 26 5/8.
+ 27 2/8 : 25 7/8.
+ 24 : 25.
+ 26 6/8 : 28 3/8.
+ 25 : 29 7/8.
+ 26 2/8 : 25 7/8.
+ 27 2/8 : 26 7/8.
+ 25 1/8 : 28 2/8.
+
+Total : 206.13 : 216.75
+
+The average height of the eight crossed plants is 25.76, and that of the
+eight self-fertilised 27.09; or as 100 to 105.
+
+We here have the anomalous result of the self-fertilised plants being a
+little taller than the crossed; of which fact I can offer no
+explanation. It is of course possible, but not probable, that the labels
+may have been interchanged by accident.
+
+Another experiment was now tried: all the self-fertilised capsules,
+though very few in number, were gathered from one of the
+semi-self-sterile plants under a net; and as several flowers on this
+same plant had been fertilised with pollen from a distinct individual,
+crossed seeds were thus obtained. I expected that the seedlings from
+this semi-self-sterile plant would have profited in a higher degree from
+a cross, than did the seedlings from the fully self-fertile plants. But
+my anticipation was quite wrong, for they profited in a less degree. An
+analogous result followed in the case of Eschscholtzia, in which the
+offspring of the plants of Brazilian parentage (which were partially
+self-sterile) did not profit more from a cross, than did the plants of
+the far more self-fertile English stock. The above two lots of crossed
+and self-fertilised seeds from the same plant of Reseda odorata, after
+germinating on sand, were planted on opposite sides of five pots, and
+measured as in the last case, with the result in Table 4/39.
+
+TABLE 4/39. Reseda odorata (seedlings from a semi-self-sterile plant).
+
+Heights of plants to the summits of the leafy stems, flower-stems not
+included, measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 33 4/8 : 31.
+Pot 1 : 30 6/8 : 28.
+Pot 1 : 29 6/8 : 13 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 20 : 32.
+
+Pot 2 : 22 : 21 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 33 4/8 : 26 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 31 2/8 : 25 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 32 4/8 : 30 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 30 1/8 : 17 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 32 1/8 : 29 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 31 4/8 : 24 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 32 2/8 : 34 2/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 19 1/8 : 20 6/8.
+Pot 4 : 30 1/8 : 32 6/8.
+Pot 4 : 24 3/8 : 31 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 30 6/8 : 36 6/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 34 6/8 : 24 5/8.
+Pot 5 : 37 1/8 : 34.
+Pot 5 : 31 2/8 : 22 2/8.
+Pot 5 : 33 : 37 1/8.
+
+Total : 599.75 : 554.25.
+
+The average height of the twenty crossed plants is here 29.98, and that
+of the twenty self-fertilised 27.71 inches; or as 100 to 92. These
+plants were then cut down and weighed; and the crossed in this case
+exceeded the self-fertilised in weight by a mere trifle, namely, in the
+ratio of 100 to 99. The two lots, left freely exposed to insects, seemed
+to be equally fertile.
+
+The remainder of the seed was sown in two adjoining rows in the open
+ground; and the eight tallest plants in each row were measured, with the
+result in Table 4/40.
+
+TABLE 4/40. Reseda odorata, (seedlings from a semi-self-sterile plant,
+planted in the open ground).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+ 28 2/8 : 22 3/8.
+ 22 4/8 : 24 3/8.
+ 25 7/8 : 23 4/8.
+ 25 3/8 : 21 4/8.
+ 29 4/8 : 22 5/8.
+ 27 1/8 : 27 3/8.
+ 22 4/8 : 27 3/8.
+ 26 2/8 : 19 2/8.
+
+Total : 207.38 : 188.38.
+
+The average height of the eight crossed plants is here 25.92, and that
+of the eight self-fertilised plants 23.54 inches; or as 100 to 90.
+
+9. VIOLACEAE.--Viola tricolor.
+
+Whilst the flowers of the common cultivated heartsease are young, the
+anthers shed their pollen into a little semi-cylindrical passage, formed
+by the basal portion of the lower petal, and surrounded by papillae. The
+pollen thus collected lies close beneath the stigma, but can seldom gain
+access into its cavity, except by the aid of insects, which pass their
+proboscides down this passage into the nectary. (4/5. The flowers of
+this plant have been fully described by Sprengel, Hildebrand, Delpino,
+and H. Muller. The latter author sums up all the previous observations
+in his ‘Befruchtung der Blumen’ and in ‘Nature’ November 20, 1873 page
+44. See also Mr. A.W. Bennett in ‘Nature’ May 15, 1873 page 50 and some
+remarks by Mr. Kitchener ibid page 143. The facts which follow on the
+effects of covering up a plant of V. tricolor have been quoted by Sir J.
+Lubbock in his ‘British Wild Flowers’ etc. page 62.) Consequently when I
+covered up a large plant of a cultivated variety, it set only eighteen
+capsules, and most of these contained very few good seeds--several from
+only one to three; whereas an equally fine uncovered plant of the same
+variety, growing close by, produced 105 fine capsules. The few flowers
+which produce capsules when insects are excluded, are perhaps fertilised
+by the curling inwards of the petals as their wither, for by this means
+pollen-grains adhering to the papillae might be inserted into the cavity
+of the stigma. But it is more probable that their fertilisation is
+effected, as Mr. Bennett suggests, by Thrips and certain minute beetles
+which haunt the flowers, and which cannot be excluded by any net.
+Humble-bees are the usual fertilisers; but I have more than once seen
+flies (Rhingia rostrata) at work, with the under sides of their bodies,
+heads and legs dusted with pollen; and having marked the flowers which
+they visited, I found them after a few days fertilised. (4/6. I should
+add that this fly apparently did not suck the nectar, but was attracted
+by the papillae which surround the stigma. Hermann Muller also saw a
+small bee, an Andrena, which could not reach the nectar, repeatedly
+inserting its proboscis beneath the stigma, where the papillae are
+situated; so that these papillae must be in some way attractive to
+insects. A writer asserts ‘Zoologist’ volume 3-4 page 1225, that a moth
+(Plusia) frequently visits the flowers of the pansy. Hive-bees do not
+ordinarily visit them, but a case has been recorded ‘Gardeners’
+Chronicle’ 1844 page 374, of these bees doing so. Hermann Muller has
+also seen the hive-bee at work, but only on the wild small-flowered
+form. He gives a list ‘Nature’ 1873 page 45, of all the insects which he
+has seen visiting both the large and small-flowered forms. From his
+account, I suspect that the flowers of plants in a state of nature are
+visited more frequently by insects than those of the cultivated
+varieties. He has seen several butterflies sucking the flowers of wild
+plants, and this I have never observed in gardens, though I have watched
+the flowers during many years.) It is curious for how long a time the
+flowers of the heartsease and of some other plants may be watched
+without an insect being seen to visit them. During the summer of 1841, I
+observed many times daily for more than a fortnight some large clumps of
+heartsease growing in my garden, before I saw a single humble-bee at
+work. During another summer I did the same, but at last saw some
+dark-coloured humble-bees visiting on three successive days almost every
+flower in several clumps; and almost all these flowers quickly withered
+and produced fine capsules. I presume that a certain state of the
+atmosphere is necessary for the secretion of nectar, and that as soon as
+this occurs the insects discover the fact by the odour emitted, and
+immediately frequent the flowers.
+
+As the flowers require the aid of insects for their complete
+fertilisation, and as they are not visited by insects nearly so often as
+most other nectar-secreting flowers, we can understand the remarkable
+fact discovered by H. Muller and described by him in ‘Nature,’ namely,
+that this species exists under two forms. One of these bears conspicuous
+flowers, which, as we have seen, require the aid of insects, and are
+adapted to be cross-fertilised by them; whilst the other form has much
+smaller and less conspicuously coloured flowers, which are constructed
+on a slightly different plan, favouring self-fertilisation, and are thus
+adapted to ensure the propagation of the species. The self-fertile form,
+however, is occasionally visited, and may be crossed by insects, though
+this is rather doubtful.
+
+In my first experiments on Viola tricolor I was unsuccessful in raising
+seedlings, and obtained only one full-grown crossed and self-fertilised
+plant. The former was 12 1/2 inches and the latter 8 inches in height.
+On the following year several flowers on a fresh plant were crossed with
+pollen from another plant, which was known to be a distinct seedling;
+and to this point it is important to attend. Several other flowers on
+the same plant were fertilised with their own pollen. The average number
+of seeds in the ten crossed capsules was 18.7, and in the twelve
+self-fertilised capsules 12.83; or as 100 to 69. These seeds, after
+germinating on bare sand, were planted in pairs on the opposite sides of
+five pots. They were first measured when about a third of their full
+size, and the crossed plants then averaged 3.87 inches, and the
+self-fertilised only 2.00 inches in height; or as 100 to 52. They were
+kept in the greenhouse, and did not grow vigorously. Whilst in flower
+they were again measured to the summits of their stems (see Table 4/41),
+with the following result:--
+
+TABLE 4/41. Viola tricolor.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 8 2/8 : 0 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 7 4/8 : 2 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 5 : 1 2/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 5 : 6.
+Pot 2 : 4 : 4.
+Pot 2 : 4 4/8 : 3 1/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 9 4/8 : 3 1/8.
+Pot 3 : 3 3/8 : 1 7/8.
+Pot 3 : 8 4/8 : 0 5/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 4 7/8 : 2 1/8.
+Pot 4 : 4 2/8 : 1 6/8.
+Pot 4 : 4 : 2 1/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 6 : 3.
+Pot 5 : 3 3/8 : 1 4/8.
+
+Total : 78.13 : 33.25.
+
+The average height of the fourteen crossed plants is here 5.58 inches,
+and that of the fourteen self-fertilised 2.37; or as 100 to 42. In four
+out of the five pots, a crossed plant flowered before any one of the
+self-fertilised; as likewise occurred with the pair raised during the
+previous year. These plants without being disturbed were now turned out
+of their pots and planted in the open ground, so as to form five
+separate clumps. Early in the following summer (1869) they flowered
+profusely, and being visited by humble-bees set many capsules, which
+were carefully collected from all the plants on both sides. The crossed
+plants produced 167 capsules, and the self-fertilised only 17; or as 100
+to 10. So that the crossed plants were more than twice the height of the
+self-fertilised, generally flowered first, and produced ten times as
+many naturally fertilised capsules.
+
+By the early part of the summer of 1870 the crossed plants in all the
+five clumps had grown and spread so much more than the self-fertilised,
+that any comparison between them was superfluous. The crossed plants
+were covered with a sheet of bloom, whilst only a single self-fertilised
+plant, which was much finer than any of its brethren, flowered. The
+crossed and self-fertilised plants had now grown all matted together on
+the respective sides of the superficial partitions still separating
+them; and in the clump which included the finest self-fertilised plant,
+I estimated that the surface covered by the crossed plants was about
+nine times as large as that covered by the self-fertilised plants. The
+extraordinary superiority of the crossed over the self-fertilised plants
+in all five clumps, was no doubt due to the crossed plants at first
+having had a decided advantage over the self-fertilised, and then
+robbing them more and more of their food during the succeeding seasons.
+But we should remember that the same result would follow in a state of
+nature even to a greater degree; for my plants grew in ground kept clear
+of weeds, so that the self-fertilised had to compete only with the
+crossed plants; whereas the whole surface of the ground is naturally
+covered with various kinds of plants, all of which have to struggle
+together for existence.
+
+The ensuing winter was very severe, and in the following spring (1871)
+the plants were again examined. All the self-fertilised were now dead,
+with the exception of a single branch on one plant, which bore on its
+summit a minute rosette of leaves about as large as a pea. On the other
+hand, all the crossed plants without exception were growing vigorously.
+So that the self-fertilised plants, besides their inferiority in other
+respects, were more tender.
+
+Another experiment was now tried for the sake of ascertaining how far
+the superiority of the crossed plants, or to speak more correctly, the
+inferiority of the self-fertilised plants, would be transmitted to their
+offspring. The one crossed and one self-fertilised plant, which were
+first raised, had been turned out of their pot and planted in the open
+ground. Both produced an abundance of very fine capsules, from which
+fact we may safely conclude that they had been cross-fertilised by
+insects. Seeds from both, after germinating on sand, were planted in
+pairs on the opposite sides of three pots. The naturally crossed
+seedlings derived from the crossed plants flowered in all three pots
+before the naturally crossed seedlings derived from the self-fertilised
+plants. When both lots were in full flower, the two tallest plants on
+each side of each pot were measured, and the result is shown in Table
+4/42.
+
+TABLE 4/42. Viola tricolor: seedlings from crossed and self-fertilised
+plants, the parents of both sets having been left to be naturally
+fertilised.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Naturally Crossed Plants from artificially crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Naturally Crossed Plants from Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 12 1/8 : 9 6/8.
+Pot 1 : 11 6/8 : 8 3/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 13 2/8 : 9 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 10 : 11 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 14 4/8 : 11 1/8.
+Pot 3 : 13 6/8 : 11 3/8.
+
+Total : 75.38 : 61.88.
+
+The average height of the six tallest plants derived from the crossed
+plants is 12.56 inches; and that of the six tallest plants derived from
+the self-fertilised plants is 10.31 inches; or as 100 to 82. We here see
+a considerable difference in height between the two sets, though very
+far from equalling that in the previous trials between the offspring
+from crossed and self-fertilised flowers. This difference must be
+attributed to the latter set of plants having inherited a weak
+constitution from their parents, the offspring of self-fertilised
+flowers; notwithstanding that the parents themselves had been freely
+intercrossed with other plants by the aid of insects.
+
+10. RANUNCULACEAE.--Adonis aestivalis.
+
+The results of my experiments on this plant are hardly worth giving, as
+I remark in my notes made at the time, “seedlings, from some unknown
+cause, all miserably unhealthy.” Nor did they ever become healthy; yet I
+feel bound to give the present case, as it is opposed to the general
+results at which I have arrived. Fifteen flowers were crossed and all
+produced fruit, containing on an average 32.5 seeds; nineteen flowers
+were fertilised with their own pollen, and they likewise all yielded
+fruit, containing a rather larger average of 34.5 seeds; or as 100 to
+106. Seedlings were raised from these seeds. In one of the pots all the
+self-fertilised plants died whilst quite young; in the two others, the
+measurements were as follows:
+
+TABLE 4/43. Adonis aestivalis.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 14 : 13 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 13 4/8 : 13 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 16 2/8 : 15 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 13 2/8 : 15.
+
+Total : 57.00 : 57.25.
+
+The average height of the four crossed plants is 14.25, and that of the
+four self-fertilised plants 14.31; or as 100 to 100.4; so that they were
+in fact of equal height. According to Professor H. Hoffman, this plant
+is proterandrous (4/7. ‘Zur Speciesfrage’ 1875 page 11.); nevertheless
+it yields plenty of seeds when protected from insects.
+
+Delphinium consolida.
+
+It has been said in the case of this plant, as of so many others, that
+the flowers are fertilised in the bud, and that distinct plants or
+varieties can never naturally intercross. (4/8. Decaisne
+‘Comptes-Rendus’ July 1863 page 5.) But this is an error, as we may
+infer, firstly from the flowers being proterandrous,--the mature stamens
+bending up, one after the other, into the passage which leads to the
+nectary, and afterwards the mature pistils bending in the same
+direction; secondly, from the number of humble-bees which visit the
+flowers (4/9. Their structure is described by H. Muller ‘Befruchtung’
+etc., page 122.); and thirdly, from the greater fertility of the flowers
+when crossed with pollen from a distinct plant than when spontaneously
+self-fertilised. In the year 1863 I enclosed a large branch in a net,
+and crossed five flowers with pollen from a distinct plant; these
+yielded capsules containing on an average 35.2 very fine seeds, with a
+maximum of forty-two in one capsule. Thirty-two other flowers on the
+same branch produced twenty-eight spontaneously self-fertilised
+capsules, containing on an average 17.2 seeds, with a maximum in one of
+thirty-six seeds. But six of these capsules were very poor, yielding
+only from one to five seeds; if these are excluded, the remaining
+twenty-two capsules give an average of 20.9 seeds, though many of these
+seeds were small. The fairest ratio, therefore, for the number of seeds
+produced by a cross and by spontaneous self-fertilisation is as 100 to
+59. These seeds were not sown, as I had too many other experiments in
+progress.
+
+In the summer of 1867, which was a very unfavourable one, I again
+crossed several flowers under a net with pollen from a distinct plant,
+and fertilised other flowers on the same plant with their own pollen.
+The former yielded a much larger proportion of capsules than the latter;
+and many of the seeds in the self-fertilised capsules, though numerous,
+were so poor that an equal number of seeds from the crossed and
+self-fertilised capsules were in weight as 100 to 45. The two lots were
+allowed to germinate on sand, and pairs were planted on the opposite
+sides of four pots. When nearly two-thirds grown they were measured, as
+shown in Table 4/44.
+
+TABLE 4/44. Delphinium consolida.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 11 : 11.
+
+Pot 2 : 19 : 16 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 16 2/8 : 11 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 26 : 22.
+
+Pot 4 : 9 4/8 : 8 2/8.
+Pot 4 : 8 : 6 4/8.
+
+Total : 89.75 : 75.50.
+
+The six crossed plants here average 14.95, and the six self-fertilised
+12.50 inches in height; or as 100 to 84. When fully grown they were
+again measured, but from want of time only a single plant on each side
+was measured; so that I have thought it best to give the earlier
+measurements. At the later period the three tallest crossed plants still
+exceeded considerably in height the three tallest self-fertilised, but
+not in quite so great a degree as before. The pots were left uncovered
+in the greenhouse, but whether the flowers were intercrossed by bees or
+self-fertilised I do not know. The six crossed plants produced 282
+mature and immature capsules, whilst the six self-fertilised plants
+produced only 159; or as 100 to 56. So that the crossed plants were very
+much more productive than the self-fertilised.
+
+11. CARYOPHYLLACEAE.--Viscaria oculata.
+
+Twelve flowers were crossed with pollen from another plant, and yielded
+ten capsules, containing by weight 5.77 grains of seeds. Eighteen
+flowers were fertilised with their own pollen and yielded twelve
+capsules, containing by weight 2.63 grains. Therefore the seeds from an
+equal number of crossed and self-fertilised flowers would have been in
+weight as 100 to 38. I had previously selected a medium-sized capsule
+from each lot, and counted the seeds in both; the crossed one contained
+284, and the self-fertilised one 126 seeds; or as 100 to 44. These seeds
+were sown on opposite sides of three pots, and several seedlings raised;
+but only the tallest flower-stem of one plant on each side was measured.
+The three on the crossed side averaged 32.5 inches, and the three on the
+self-fertilised side 34 inches in height; or as 100 to 104. But this
+trial was on much too small a scale to be trusted; the plants also grew
+so unequally that one of the three flower-stems on the crossed plants
+was very nearly twice as tall as that on one of the others; and one of
+the three flower-stems on the self-fertilised plants exceeded in an
+equal degree one of the others.
+
+In the following year the experiment was repeated on a larger scale: ten
+flowers were crossed on a new set of plants and yielded ten capsules
+containing by weight 6.54 grains of seed. Eighteen spontaneously
+self-fertilised capsules were gathered, of which two contained no seed;
+the other sixteen contained by weight 6.07 grains of seed. Therefore the
+weight of seed from an equal number of crossed and spontaneously
+self-fertilised flowers (instead of artificially fertilised as in the
+previous case) was as 100 to 58.
+
+The seeds after germinating on sand were planted in pairs on the
+opposite sides of four pots, with all the remaining seeds sown crowded
+in the opposite sides of a fifth pot; in this latter pot only the
+tallest plant on each side was measured. Until the seedlings had grown
+about 5 inches in height no difference could be perceived in the two
+lots. Both lots flowered at nearly the same time. When they had almost
+done flowering, the tallest flower-stem on each plant was measured, as
+shown in Table 4/45.
+
+TABLE 4/45. Viscaria oculata.
+
+Tallest flower-stem on each plant measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 19 : 32 3/8.
+Pot 1 : 33 : 38.
+Pot 1 : 41 : 38.
+Pot 1 : 41 : 28 7/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 37 4/8 : 36.
+Pot 2 : 36 4/8 : 32 3/8.
+Pot 2 : 38 : 35 6/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 44 4/8 : 36.
+Pot 3 : 39 4/8 : 20 7/8.
+Pot 3 : 39 : 30 5/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 30 2/8 : 36.
+Pot 4 : 31 : 39.
+Pot 4 : 33 1/8 : 29.
+Pot 4 : 24 : 38 4/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 30 2/8 : 32.
+Crowded.
+
+Total : 517.63 : 503.36.
+
+The fifteen crossed plants here average 34.5, and the fifteen
+self-fertilised 33.55 inches in height; or as 100 to 97. So that the
+excess of height of the crossed plants is quite insignificant. In
+productiveness, however, the difference was much more plainly marked.
+All the capsules were gathered from both lots of plants (except from the
+crowded and unproductive ones in Pot 5), and at the close of the season
+the few remaining flowers were added in. The fourteen crossed plants
+produced 381, whilst the fourteen self-fertilised plants produced only
+293 capsules and flowers; or as 100 to 77.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus.
+
+The common carnation is strongly proterandrous, and therefore depends to
+a large extent upon insects for fertilisation. I have seen only
+humble-bees visiting the flowers, but I dare say other insects likewise
+do so. It is notorious that if pure seed is desired, the greatest care
+is necessary to prevent the varieties which grow in the same garden from
+intercrossing. (4/10. ‘Gardeners’ Chronicle’ 1847 page 268.) The pollen
+is generally shed and lost before the two stigmas in the same flower
+diverge and are ready to be fertilised. I was therefore often forced to
+use for self-fertilisation pollen from the same plant instead of from
+the same flower. But on two occasions, when I attended to this point, I
+was not able to detect any marked difference in the number of seeds
+produced by these two forms of self-fertilisation.
+
+Several single-flowered carnations were planted in good soil, and were
+all covered with a net. Eight flowers were crossed with pollen from a
+distinct plant and yielded six capsules, containing on an average 88.6
+seeds, with a maximum in one of 112 seeds. Eight other flowers were
+self-fertilised in the manner above described, and yielded seven
+capsules containing on an average 82 seeds, with a maximum in one of 112
+seeds. So that there was very little difference in the number of seeds
+produced by cross-fertilisation and self-fertilisation, namely, as 100
+to 92. As these plants were covered by a net, they produced
+spontaneously only a few capsules containing any seeds, and these few
+may perhaps be attributed to the action of Thrips and other minute
+insects which haunt the flowers. A large majority of the spontaneously
+self-fertilised capsules produced by several plants contained no seeds,
+or only a single one. Excluding these latter capsules, I counted the
+seeds in eighteen of the finest ones, and these contained on an average
+18 seeds. One of the plants was spontaneously self-fertile in a higher
+degree than any of the others. On another occasion a single covered-up
+plant produced spontaneously eighteen capsules, but only two of these
+contained any seed, namely 10 and 15.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FIRST GENERATION.
+
+The many seeds obtained from the above crossed and artificially
+self-fertilised flowers were sown out of doors, and two large beds of
+seedlings, closely adjoining one another, thus raised. This was the
+first plant on which I experimented, and I had not then formed any
+regular scheme of operation. When the two lots were in full flower, I
+measured roughly a large number of plants but record only that the
+crossed were on an average fully 4 inches taller than the
+self-fertilised. Judging from subsequent measurements, we may assume
+that the crossed plants were about 28 inches, and the self-fertilised
+about 24 inches in height; and this will give us a ratio of 100 to 86.
+Out of a large number of plants, four of the crossed ones flowered
+before any one of the self-fertilised plants.
+
+Thirty flowers on these crossed plants of the first generation were
+again crossed with pollen from a distinct plant of the same lot, and
+yielded twenty-nine capsules, containing on an average 55.62 seeds, with
+a maximum in one of 110 seeds.
+
+Thirty flowers on the self-fertilised plants were again self-fertilised;
+eight of them with pollen from the same flower, and the remainder with
+pollen from another flower on the same plant; and these produced
+twenty-two capsules, containing on an average 35.95 seeds, with a
+maximum in one of sixty-one seeds. We thus see, judging by the number of
+seeds per capsule, that the crossed plants again crossed were more
+productive than the self-fertilised again self-fertilised, in the ratio
+of 100 to 65. Both the crossed and self-fertilised plants, from having
+grown much crowded in the two beds, produced less fine capsules and
+fewer seeds than did their parents.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+
+The crossed and self-fertilised seeds from the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the last generation were sown on opposite
+sides of two pots; but the seedlings were not thinned enough, so that
+both lots grew very irregularly, and most of the self-fertilised plants
+after a time died from being smothered. My measurements were, therefore,
+very incomplete. From the first the crossed seedlings appeared the
+finest, and when they were on an average, by estimation, 5 inches high,
+the self-fertilised plants were only 4 inches. In both pots the crossed
+plants flowered first. The two tallest flower-stems on the crossed
+plants in the two pots were 17 and 16 1/2 inches in height; and the two
+tallest flower-stems on the self-fertilised plants 10 1/2 and 9 inches;
+so that their heights were as 100 to 58. But this ratio, deduced from
+only two pairs, obviously is not in the least trustworthy, and would not
+have been given had it not been otherwise supported. I state in my notes
+that the crossed plants were very much more luxuriant than their
+opponents, and seemed to be twice as bulky. This latter estimate may be
+believed from the ascertained weights of the two lots in the next
+generation. Some flowers on these crossed plants were again crossed with
+pollen from another plant of the same lot, and some flowers on the
+self-fertilised plants again self-fertilised; and from the seeds thus
+obtained the plants of the next generation were raised.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE THIRD GENERATION.
+
+The seeds just alluded to were allowed to germinate on bare sand, and
+were planted in pairs on the opposite sides of four pots. When the
+seedlings were in full flower, the tallest stem on each plant was
+measured to the base of the calyx. The measurements are given in Table
+4/46. In Pot 1 the crossed and self-fertilised plants flowered at the
+same time; but in the other three pots the crossed flowered first. These
+latter plants also continued flowering much later in the autumn than the
+self-fertilised.
+
+TABLE 4/46. Dianthus caryophyllus (third generation).
+
+Tallest flower-stem on each plant measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 28 6/8 : 30.
+Pot 1 : 27 3/8 : 26.
+
+Pot 2 : 29 : 30 7/8.
+Pot 2 : 29 4/8 : 27 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 28 4/8 : 31 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 23 4/8 : 24 5/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 27 : 30.
+Pot 4 : 33 4/8 : 25.
+
+Total : 227.13 : 225.75.
+
+The average height of the eight crossed plants is here 28.39 inches, and
+of the eight self-fertilised 28.21; or as 100 to 99. So that there was
+no difference in height worth speaking of; but in general vigour and
+luxuriance there was an astonishing difference, as shown by their
+weights. After the seed-capsules had been gathered, the eight crossed
+and the eight self-fertilised plants were cut down and weighed; the
+former weighed 43 ounces, and the latter only 21 ounces; or as 100 to
+49.
+
+These plants were all kept under a net, so that the capsules which they
+produced must have been all spontaneously self-fertilised. The eight
+crossed plants produced twenty-one such capsules, of which only twelve
+contained any seed, averaging 8.5 per capsule. On the other hand, the
+eight self-fertilised plants produced no less than thirty-six capsules,
+of which I examined twenty-five, and, with the exception of three, all
+contained seeds, averaging 10.63 seeds per capsule. Thus the
+proportional number of seeds per capsule produced by the plants of
+crossed origin to those produced by the plants of self-fertilised origin
+(both lots being spontaneously self-fertilised) was as 100 to 125. This
+anomalous result is probably due to some of the self-fertilised plants
+having varied so as to mature their pollen and stigmas more nearly at
+the same time than is proper to the species; and we have already seen
+that some plants in the first experiment differed from the others in
+being slightly more self-fertile.
+
+THE EFFECTS OF A CROSS WITH A FRESH STOCK.
+
+Twenty flowers on the self-fertilised plants of the last or third
+generation, in Table 4/46, were fertilised with their own pollen, but
+taken from other flowers on the same plants. These produced fifteen
+capsules, which contained (omitting two with only three and six seeds)
+on an average 47.23 seeds, with a maximum of seventy in one. The
+self-fertilised capsules from the self-fertilised plants of the first
+generation yielded the much lower average of 35.95 seeds; but as these
+latter plants grew extremely crowded, nothing can be inferred with
+respect to this difference in their self-fertility. The seedlings raised
+from the above seeds constitute the plants of the fourth self-fertilised
+generation in Table 4/47.
+
+Twelve flowers on the same plants of the third self-fertilised
+generation, in Table 4/46, were crossed with pollen from the crossed
+plants in the same table. These crossed plants had been intercrossed for
+the three previous generations; and many of them, no doubt, were more or
+less closely inter-related, but not so closely as in some of the
+experiments with other species; for several carnation plants had been
+raised and crossed in the earlier generations. They were not related, or
+only in a distant degree, to the self-fertilised plants. The parents of
+both the self-fertilised and crossed plants had been subjected to as
+nearly as possible the same conditions during the three previous
+generations. The above twelve flowers produced ten capsules, containing
+on an average 48.66 seeds, with a maximum in one of seventy-two seeds.
+The plants raised from these seeds may be called the INTERCROSSED.
+
+Lastly, twelve flowers on the same self-fertilised plants of the third
+generation were crossed with pollen from plants which had been raised
+from seeds purchased in London. It is almost certain that the plants
+which produced these seeds had grown under very different conditions to
+those to which my self-fertilised and crossed plants had been subjected;
+and they were in no degree related. The above twelve flowers thus
+crossed all produced capsules, but these contained the low average of
+37.41 seeds per capsule, with a maximum in one of sixty-four seeds. It
+is surprising that this cross with a fresh stock did not give a much
+higher average number of seeds; for, as we shall immediately see, the
+plants raised from these seeds, which may be called the LONDON-CROSSED,
+benefited greatly by the cross, both in growth and fertility.
+
+The above three lots of seeds were allowed to germinate on bare sand.
+Many of the London-crossed germinated before the others, and were
+rejected; and many of the intercrossed later than those of the other two
+lots. The seeds after thus germinating were planted in ten pots, made
+tripartite by superficial divisions; but when only two kinds of seeds
+germinated at the same time, they were planted on the opposite sides of
+other pots; and this is indicated by blank spaces in one of the three
+columns in Table 4/47. A 0 in the table signifies that the seedling died
+before it was measured; and a + signifies that the plant did not produce
+a flower-stem, and therefore was not measured. It deserves notice that
+no less than eight out of the eighteen self-fertilised plants either
+died or did not flower; whereas only three out of the eighteen
+intercrossed, and four out of the twenty London-crossed plants, were in
+this predicament. The self-fertilised plants had a decidedly less
+vigorous appearance than the plants of the other two lots, their leaves
+being smaller and narrower. In only one pot did a self-fertilised plant
+flower before one of the two kinds of crossed plants, between which
+there was no marked difference in the period of flowering. The plants
+were measured to the base of the calyx, after they had completed their
+growth, late in the autumn.
+
+TABLE 4/47. Dianthus caryophyllus.
+
+Heights of plants to the base of the calyx, measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: London-Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Intercrossed Plants.
+
+Column 4: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 39 5/8 : 25 1/8 : 29 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 30 7/8 : 21 6/8 : +.
+
+Pot 2 : 36 2/8 : : 22 3/8.
+Pot 2 : 0 : : +.
+
+Pot 3 : 28 5/8 : 30 2/8 : .
+Pot 3 : + : 23 1/8 : .
+
+Pot 4 : 33 4/8 : 35 5/8 : 30.
+Pot 4 : 28 7/8 : 32 : 24 4/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 28 : 34 4/8 : +.
+Pot 5 : 0 : 24 2/8 : +.
+
+Pot 6 : 32 5/8 : 24 7/8 : 30 3/8.
+Pot 6 : 31 : 26 : 24 4/8.
+
+Pot 7 : 41 7/8 : 29 7/8 : 27 7/8.
+Pot 7 : 34 7/8 : 26 4/8 : 27.
+
+Pot 8 : 34 5/8 : 29 : 26 6/8.
+Pot 8 : 28 5/8 : 0 : +.
+
+Pot 9 : 25 5/8 : 28 5/8 : +.
+Pot 9 : 0 : + : 0.
+
+Pot 10 : 38 : 28 4/8 : 22 7/8.
+Pot 10 : 32 1/8 : + : 0.
+
+Total : 525.13 : 420.00 : 265.50.
+
+The average height of the sixteen London-crossed plants in Table 4/47 is
+32.82 inches; that of the fifteen intercrossed plants, 28 inches; and
+that of the ten self-fertilised plants, 26.55.
+
+So that in height we have the following ratios:--
+
+The London-crossed to the self-fertilised as 100 to 81.
+
+The London-crossed to the intercrossed as 100 to 85.
+
+The intercrossed to the self-fertilised as 100 to 95.
+
+These three lots of plants, which it should be remembered were all
+derived on the mother-side from plants of the third self-fertilised
+generation, fertilised in three different ways, were left exposed to the
+visits of insects, and their flowers were freely crossed by them. As the
+capsules of each lot became ripe they were gathered and kept separate,
+the empty or bad ones being thrown away. But towards the middle of
+October, when the capsules could no longer ripen, all were gathered and
+were counted, whether good or bad. The capsules were then crushed, and
+the seed cleaned by sieves and weighed. For the sake of uniformity the
+results are given from calculation, as if there had been twenty plants
+in each lot.
+
+The sixteen London-crossed plants actually produced 286 capsules;
+therefore twenty such plants would have produced 357.5 capsules; and
+from the actual weight of the seeds, the twenty plants would have
+yielded 462 grains weight of seeds.
+
+The fifteen intercrossed plants actually produced 157 capsules;
+therefore twenty of them would have produced 209.3 capsules and the
+seeds would have weighed 208.48 grains.
+
+The ten self-fertilised plants actually produced 70 capsules, therefore
+twenty of them would have produced 140 capsules; and the seeds would
+have weighed 153.2 grains.
+
+From these data we get the following ratios:--
+
+NUMBER OF CAPSULES PRODUCED BY AN EQUAL NUMBER OF PLANTS OF THE THREE
+LOTS.
+
+NUMBER OF CAPSULES:
+
+The London-crossed to the self-fertilised as 100 to 39.
+
+The London-crossed to the intercrossed as 100 to 45.
+
+The intercrossed to the self-fertilised as 100 to 67.
+
+WEIGHT OF SEEDS PRODUCED BY AN EQUAL NUMBER OF PLANTS OF THE THREE LOTS.
+
+WEIGHT OF SEED:
+
+The London-crossed to the self-fertilised as 100 to 33.
+
+The London-crossed to the intercrossed as 100 to 45.
+
+The intercrossed to the self-fertilised as 100 to 73.
+
+We thus see how greatly the offspring from the self-fertilised plants of
+the third generation crossed by a fresh stock, had their fertility
+increased, whether tested by the number of capsules produced or by the
+weight of the contained seeds; this latter being the more trustworthy
+method. Even the offspring from the self-fertilised plants crossed by
+one of the crossed plants of the same stock, notwithstanding that both
+lots had been long subjected to the same conditions, had their fertility
+considerably increased, as tested by the same two methods.
+
+In conclusion it may be well to repeat in reference to the fertility of
+these three lots of plants, that their flowers were left freely exposed
+to the visits of insects and were undoubtedly crossed by them, as may be
+inferred from the large number of good capsules produced. These plants
+were all the offspring of the same mother-plants, and the strongly
+marked difference in their fertility must be attributed to the nature of
+the pollen employed in fertilising their parents; and the difference in
+the nature of the pollen must be attributed to the different treatment
+to which the pollen-bearing parents had been subjected during several
+previous generations.
+
+COLOUR OF THE FLOWERS.
+
+The flowers produced by the self-fertilised plants of the last or fourth
+generation were as uniform in tint as those of a wild species, being of
+a pale pink or rose colour. Analogous cases with Mimulus and Ipomoea,
+after several generations of self-fertilisation, have been already
+given. The flowers of the intercrossed plants of the fourth generation
+were likewise nearly uniform in colour. On the other hand, the flowers
+of the London-crossed plants, or those raised from a cross with the
+fresh stock which bore dark crimson flowers, varied extremely in colour,
+as might have been expected, and as is the general rule with seedling
+carnations. It deserves notice that only two or three of the
+London-crossed plants produced dark crimson flowers like those of their
+fathers, and only a very few of a pale pink like those of their mothers.
+The great majority had their petals longitudinally and variously striped
+with the two colours,--the groundwork tint being, however, in some cases
+darker than that of the mother-plants.
+
+12. MALVACEAE.--Hibiscus africanus.
+
+Many flowers on this Hibiscus were crossed with pollen from a distinct
+plant, and many others were self-fertilised. A rather larger
+proportional number of the crossed than of the self-fertilised flowers
+yielded capsules, and the crossed capsules contained rather more seeds.
+The self-fertilised seeds were a little heavier than an equal number of
+the crossed seeds, but they germinated badly, and I raised only four
+plants of each lot. In three out of the four pots, the crossed plants
+flowered first.
+
+TABLE 4/48. Hibiscus africanus.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 13 4/8 : 16 2/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 14 : 14.
+
+Pot 3 : 8 : 7.
+
+Pot 4 : 17 4/8 : 20 4/8.
+
+Total : 53.00 : 57.75.
+
+The four crossed plants average 13.25, and the four self-fertilised
+14.43 inches in height; or as 100 to 109. Here we have the unusual case
+of self-fertilised plants exceeding the crossed in height; but only four
+pairs were measured, and these did not grow well or equally. I did not
+compare the fertility of the two lots.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+GERANIACEAE, LEGUMINOSAE, ONAGRACEAE, ETC.
+
+Pelargonium zonale, a cross between plants propagated by cuttings does
+no good.
+Tropaeolum minus.
+Limnanthes douglasii.
+Lupinus luteus and pilosus.
+Phaseolus multiflorus and vulgaris.
+Lathyrus odoratus, varieties of, never naturally intercross in England.
+Pisum sativum, varieties of, rarely intercross, but a cross between them
+highly beneficial.
+Sarothamnus scoparius, wonderful effects of a cross.
+Ononis minutissima, cleistogene flowers of.
+Summary on the Leguminosae.
+Clarkia elegans.
+Bartonia aurea.
+Passiflora gracilis.
+Apium petroselinum.
+Scabiosa atropurpurea.
+Lactuca sativa.
+Specularia speculum.
+Lobelia ramosa, advantages of a cross during two generations.
+Lobelia fulgens.
+Nemophila insignis, great advantages of a cross.
+Borago officinalis.
+Nolana prostrata.
+
+13. GERANIACEAE.--Pelargonium zonale.
+
+This plant, as a general rule, is strongly proterandrous, and is
+therefore adapted for cross-fertilisation by the aid of insects. (5/1.
+Mr. J. Denny, a great raiser of new varieties of pelargoniums, after
+stating that this species is proterandrous, adds ‘The Florist and
+Pomologist’ January 1872 page 11, “there are some varieties, especially
+those with petals of a pink colour, or which possess a weakly
+constitution, where the pistil expands as soon as or even before the
+pollen-bag bursts, and in which also the pistil is frequently short, so
+when it expands it is smothered as it were by the bursting anthers;
+these varieties are great seeders, each pip being fertilised by its own
+pollen. I would instance Christine as an example of this fact.” We have
+here an interesting case of variability in an important functional
+point.) Some flowers on a common scarlet variety were self-fertilised,
+and other flowers were crossed with pollen from another plant; but no
+sooner had I done so, than I remembered that these plants had been
+propagated by cuttings from the same stock, and were therefore parts in
+a strict sense of the same individual. Nevertheless, having made the
+cross I resolved to save the seeds, which, after germinating on sand,
+were planted on the opposite sides of three pots. In one pot the
+quasi-crossed plant was very soon and ever afterwards taller and finer
+than the self-fertilised. In the two other pots the seedlings on both
+sides were for a time exactly equal; but when the self-fertilised plants
+were about 10 inches in height, they surpassed their antagonists by a
+little, and ever afterwards showed a more decided and increasing
+advantage; so that the self-fertilised plants, taken altogether, were
+somewhat superior to the quasi-crossed plants. In this case, as in that
+of the Origanum, if individuals which have been asexually propagated
+from the same stock, and which have been long subjected to the same
+conditions, are crossed, no advantage whatever is gained.
+
+Several flowers on another plant of the same variety were fertilised
+with pollen from the younger flowers on the same plant, so as to avoid
+using the old and long-shed pollen from the same flower, as I thought
+that this latter might be less efficient than fresh pollen. Other
+flowers on the same plant were crossed with fresh pollen from a plant
+which, although closely similar, was known to have arisen as a distinct
+seedling. The self-fertilised seeds germinated rather before the others;
+but as soon as I got equal pairs they were planted on the opposite sides
+of four pots.
+
+TABLE 5/49. Pelargonium zonale.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 22 3/8 : 25 5/8.
+Pot 1 : 19 6/8 : 12 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 15 : 19 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 12 2/8 : 22 3/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 30 5/8 : 19 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 18 4/8 : 7 4/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 38 : 9 1/8.
+
+Total : 156.50 : 116.38.
+
+When the two lots of seedlings were between 4 and 5 inches in height
+they were equal, excepting in Pot 4, in which the crossed plant was much
+the tallest. When between 11 and 14 inches in height, they were measured
+to the tips of their uppermost leaves; the crossed averaged 13.46, and
+the self-fertilised 11.07 inches in height, or as 100 to 82. Five months
+later they were again measured in the same manner, and the results are
+given in Table 5/49.
+
+The seven crossed plants now averaged 22.35, and the seven
+self-fertilised 16.62 inches in height, or as 100 to 74. But from the
+great inequality of the several plants, the result is less trustworthy
+than in most other cases. In Pot 2 the two self-fertilised plants always
+had an advantage, except whilst quite young over the two crossed plants.
+
+As I wished to ascertain how these plants would behave during a second
+growth, they were cut down close to the ground whilst growing freely.
+The crossed plants now showed their superiority in another way, for only
+one out of the seven was killed by the operation, whilst three of the
+self-fertilised plants never recovered. There was, therefore, no use in
+keeping any of the plants excepting those in Pots 1 and 3; and in the
+following year the crossed plants in these two pots showed during their
+second growth nearly the same relative superiority over the
+self-fertilised plants as before.
+
+Tropaeolum minus.
+
+The flowers are proterandrous, and are manifestly adapted for
+cross-fertilisation by insects, as shown by Sprengel and Delpino. Twelve
+flowers on some plants growing out of doors were crossed with pollen
+from a distinct plant and produced eleven capsules, containing
+altogether twenty-four good seeds. Eighteen flowers were fertilised with
+their own pollen and produced only eleven capsules, containing
+twenty-two good seeds; so that a much larger proportion of the crossed
+than of the self-fertilised flowers produced capsules, and the crossed
+capsules contained rather more seed than the self-fertilised in the
+ratio of 100 to 92. The seeds from the self-fertilised capsules were
+however the heavier of the two, in the ratio of 100 to 87.
+
+Seeds in an equal state of germination were planted on the opposite
+sides of four pots, but only the two tallest plants on each side of each
+pot were measured to the tops of their stems. The pots were placed in
+the greenhouse, and the plants trained up sticks, so that they ascended
+to an unusual height. In three of the pots the crossed plants flowered
+first, but in the fourth at the same time with the self-fertilised. When
+the seedlings were between 6 and 7 inches in height, the crossed began
+to show a slight advantage over their opponents. When grown to a
+considerable height the eight tallest crossed plants averaged 44.43, and
+the eight tallest self-fertilised plants 37.34 inches, or as 100 to 84.
+When their growth was completed they were again measured, as shown in
+Table 5/50.
+
+TABLE 5/50. Tropaeolum minus.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 65 : 31.
+Pot 1 : 50 : 45.
+
+Pot 2 : 69 : 42.
+Pot 2 : 35 : 45.
+
+Pot 3 : 70 : 50 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 59 4/8 : 55 4/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 61 4/8 : 37 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 57 4/8 : 61 4/8.
+
+Total : 467.5 : 368.0.
+
+The eight tallest crossed plants now averaged 58.43, and the eight
+tallest self-fertilised plants 46 inches in height, or as 100 to 79.
+
+There was also a great difference in the fertility of the two lots which
+were left uncovered in the greenhouse. On the 17th of September the
+capsules from all the plants were gathered, and the seeds counted. The
+crossed plants yielded 243, whilst the same number of self-fertilised
+plants yielded only 155 seeds, or as 100 to 64.
+
+Limnanthes douglasii.
+
+Several flowers were crossed and self-fertilised in the usual manner,
+but there was no marked difference in the number of seeds which they
+yielded. A vast number of spontaneously self-fertilised capsules were
+also produced under the net. Seedlings were raised in five pots from the
+above seeds, and when the crossed were about 3 inches in height they
+showed a slight advantage over the self-fertilised. When double this
+height, the sixteen crossed and sixteen self-fertilised plants were
+measured to the tips of their leaves; the former averaged 7.3 inches,
+and the self-fertilised 6.07 inches in height, or as 100 to 83. In all
+the pots, excepting 4, a crossed plant flowered before any one of the
+self-fertilised plants. The plants, when fully grown, were again
+measured to the summits of their ripe capsules, with the result in Table
+5/51.
+
+TABLE 5/51. Limnanthes douglasii.
+
+Heights of plants to the summits of their ripe capsules, measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 17 7/8 : 15 1/8.
+Pot 1 : 17 6/8 : 16 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 13 : 11.
+
+Pot 2 : 20 : 14 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 22 : 15 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 21 : 16 1/8.
+Pot 2 : 18 4/8 : 17.
+
+Pot 3 : 15 6/8 : 11 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 17 2/8 : 10 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 14 : 0.
+
+Pot 4 : 20 4/8 : 13 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 14 : 13.
+Pot 4 : 18 : 12 2/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 17 : 14 2/8.
+Pot 5 : 18 5/8 : 14 1/8.
+Pot 5 : 14 2/8 : 12 5/8.
+
+Total : 279.50 : 207.75.
+
+The sixteen crossed plants now averaged 17.46, and the fifteen (for one
+had died) self-fertilised plants 13.85 inches in height, or as 100 to
+79. Mr. Galton considers that a higher ratio would be fairer, namely,
+100 to 76. He made a graphical representation of the above measurements,
+and adds the words “very good” to the curvature thus formed. Both lots
+of plants produced an abundance of seed-capsules, and, as far as could
+be judged by the eye, there was no difference in their fertility.]
+
+14. LEGUMINOSAE.
+
+In this family I experimented on the following six genera, Lupinus,
+Phaseolus, Lathyrus, Pisum, Sarothamnus, and Ononis.
+
+[Lupinus luteus. (5/2. The structure of the flowers of this plant, and
+their manner of fertilisation, have been described by H. Muller
+‘Befruchtung’ etc. page 243. The flowers do not secrete free nectar, and
+bees generally visit them for their pollen. Mr. Farrer, however, remarks
+‘Nature’ 1872 page 499, that “there is a cavity at the back and base of
+the vexillum, in which I have not been able to find nectar. But the
+bees, which constantly visit these flowers, certainly go to this cavity
+for what they want, and not to the staminal tube.”)
+
+A few flowers were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant, but owing
+to the unfavourable season only two crossed seeds were produced. Nine
+seeds were saved from flowers spontaneously self-fertilised under a net,
+on the same plant which yielded the two crossed seeds. One of these
+crossed seeds was sown in a pot with two self-fertilised seeds on the
+opposite side; the latter came up between two and three days before the
+crossed seed. The second crossed seed was sown in like manner with two
+self-fertilised seeds on the opposite side; these latter also came up
+about a day before the crossed one. In both pots, therefore, the crossed
+seedlings from germinating later, were at first completely beaten by the
+self-fertilised; nevertheless, this state of things was afterwards
+completely reversed. The seeds were sown late in the autumn, and the
+pots, which were much too small, were kept in the greenhouse. The plants
+in consequence grew badly, and the self-fertilised suffered most in both
+pots. The two crossed plants when in flower during the following spring
+were 9 inches in height; one of the self-fertilised plants was 8, and
+the three others only 3 inches in height, being thus mere dwarfs. The
+two crossed plants produced thirteen pods, whilst the four
+self-fertilised plants produced only a single one. Some other
+self-fertilised plants which had been raised separately in larger pots
+produced several spontaneously self-fertilised pods under a net, and
+seeds from these were used in the following experiment.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+
+The spontaneously self-fertilised seeds just mentioned, and crossed
+seeds obtained by intercrossing the two crossed plants of the last
+generation, after germinating on sand, were planted in pairs on the
+opposite sides of three large pots. When the seedlings were only 4
+inches in height, the crossed had a slight advantage over their
+opponents. When grown to their full height, every one of the crossed
+plants exceeded its opponent in height. Nevertheless the self-fertilised
+plants in all three pots flowered before the crossed! The measurements
+are given in Table 5/52.
+
+TABLE 5/52. Lupinus luteus.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 33 2/8 : 24 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 30 4/8 : 18 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 30 : 28.
+
+Pot 2 : 29 4/8 : 26.
+Pot 2 : 30 : 25.
+
+Pot 3 : 30 4/8 : 28.
+Pot 3 : 31 : 27 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 31 4/8 : 24 4/8.
+
+Total : 246.25 : 201.75.
+
+The eight crossed plants here average 30.78, and the eight
+self-fertilised 25.21 inches in height; or as 100 to 82. These plants
+were left uncovered in the greenhouse to set their pods, but they
+produced very few good ones, perhaps in part owing to few bees visiting
+them. The crossed plants produced nine pods, containing on an average
+3.4 seeds, and the self-fertilised plants seven pods, containing on an
+average 3 seeds, so that the seeds from an equal number of plants were
+as 100 to 88.
+
+Two other crossed seedlings, each with two self-fertilised seedlings on
+the opposite sides of the same large pot, were turned out of their pots
+early in the season, without being disturbed, into open ground of good
+quality. They were thus subjected to but little competition with one
+another, in comparison with the plants in the above three pots. In the
+autumn the two crossed plants were about 3 inches taller than the four
+self-fertilised plants; they looked also more vigorous and produced many
+more pods.
+
+Two other crossed and self-fertilised seeds of the same lot, after
+germinating on sand, were planted on the opposite sides of a large pot,
+in which a Calceolaria had long been growing, and were therefore exposed
+to unfavourable conditions: the two crossed plants ultimately attained a
+height of 20 1/2 and 20 inches, whilst the two self-fertilised were only
+18 and 9 1/2 inches high.
+
+Lupinus pilosus.
+
+From a series of accidents I was again unfortunate in obtaining a
+sufficient number of crossed seedlings; and the following results would
+not be worth giving, did they not strictly accord with those just given
+with respect to Lupinus luteus. I raised at first only a single crossed
+seedling, which was placed in competition with two self-fertilised ones
+on the opposite side of the same pot. These plants, without being
+disturbed, were soon afterwards turned into the open ground. By the
+autumn the crossed plant had grown to so large a size that it almost
+smothered the two self-fertilised plants, which were mere dwarfs; and
+the latter died without maturing a single pod. Several self-fertilised
+seeds had been planted at the same time separately in the open ground;
+and the two tallest of these were 33 and 32 inches, whereas the one
+crossed plant was 38 inches in height. This latter plant also produced
+many more pods than did any one of the self-fertilised plants, although
+growing separately. A few flowers on the one crossed plant were crossed
+with pollen from one of the self-fertilised plants, for I had no other
+crossed plant from which to obtain pollen. One of the self-fertilised
+plants having been covered by a net produced plenty of spontaneously
+self-fertilised pods.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+
+From crossed and self-fertilised seeds obtained in the manner just
+described, I succeeded in raising to maturity only a pair of plants,
+which were kept in a pot in the greenhouse. The crossed plant grew to a
+height of 33 inches, and the self-fertilised to that of 26 1/2 inches.
+The former produced, whilst still kept in the greenhouse, eight pods,
+containing on an average 2.77 seeds; and the latter only two pods,
+containing on an average 2.5 seeds. The average height of the two
+crossed plants of the two generations taken together was 35.5, and that
+of the three self-fertilised plants of the same two generations 30.5; or
+as 100 to 86. (5/3. We here see that both Lupinus luteus and pilosus
+seed freely when insects are excluded; but Mr. Swale, of Christchurch,
+in New Zealand, informs me ‘Gardeners’ Chronicle’ 1858 page 828, that
+the garden varieties of the lupine are not there visited by any bees,
+and that they seed less freely than any other introduced leguminous
+plant, with the exception of red clover. He adds “I have, for amusement,
+during the summer, released the stamens with a pin, and a pod of seed
+has always rewarded me for my trouble, the adjoining flowers not so
+served having all proved blind.” I do not know to what species this
+statement refers.)
+
+Phaseolus multiflorus.
+
+This plant, the scarlet-runner of English gardeners and the Phaseolus
+coccineus of Lamarck, originally came from Mexico, as I am informed by
+Mr. Bentham. The flowers are so constructed that hive and humble-bees,
+which visit them incessantly, almost always alight on the left
+wing-petal, as they can best suck the nectar from this side. Their
+weight and movements depress the petal, and this causes the stigma to
+protrude from the spirally-wound keel, and a brush of hairs round the
+stigma pushes out the pollen before it. The pollen adheres to the head
+or proboscis of the bee which is at work, and is thus placed either on
+the stigma of the same flower, or is carried to another flower. (5/4.
+The flowers have been described by Delpino, and in an admirable manner
+by Mr. Farrer in the ‘Annals and Magazine of Natural History’ volume 2
+4th series October 1868 page 256. My son Francis has explained ‘Nature’
+January 8, 1874 page 189, the use of one peculiarity in their structure,
+namely, a little vertical projection on the single free stamen near its
+base, which seems placed as if to guard the entrance into the two
+nectar-holes in the staminal sheath. He shows that this projection
+prevents the bees reaching the nectar, unless they go to the left side
+of the flower, and it is absolutely necessary for cross-fertilisation
+that they should alight on the left wing-petal.) Several years ago I
+covered some plants under a large net, and these produced on one
+occasion about one-third, and on another occasion about one-eighth, of
+the number of pods which the same number of uncovered plants growing
+close alongside produced. (5/5. ‘Gardeners’ Chronicle’ 1857 page 725 and
+more especially ibid 1858 page 828. Also ‘Annals and Magazine of Natural
+History’ 3rd series volume 2 1858 page 462.) This lessened fertility was
+not caused by any injury from the net, as I moved the wing-petals of
+several protected flowers, in the same manner as bees do, and these
+produced remarkably fine pods. When the net was taken off, the flowers
+were immediately visited by bees, and it was interesting to observe how
+quickly the plants became covered with young pods. As the flowers are
+much frequented by Thrips, the self-fertilisation of most of the flowers
+under the net may have been due to the action of these minute insects.
+Dr. Ogle likewise covered up a large portion of a plant, and “out of a
+vast number of blossoms thus protected not a single one produced a pod,
+while the unprotected blossoms were for the most part fruitful.” Mr.
+Belt gives a more curious case; this plant grows well and flowers in
+Nicaragua; but as none of the native bees visit the flowers, not a
+single pod is ever produced. (5/6. Dr. Ogle ‘Popular Science Review’
+1870 page 168. Mr. Belt ‘The Naturalist in Nicaragua’ 1874 page 70. The
+latter author gives a case ‘Nature’ 1875 page 26, of a late crop of
+Phaseolus multiflorus near London which “was rendered barren” by the
+humble-bees cutting, as they frequently do, holes at the bases of the
+flowers instead of entering them in the proper manner.)
+
+From the facts now given we may feel nearly sure that individuals of the
+same variety or of different varieties, if growing near each other and
+in flower at the same time, would intercross; but I cannot myself
+advance any direct evidence of such an occurrence, as only a single
+variety is commonly cultivated in England. I have, however, received an
+account from the Reverend W.A. Leighton, that plants raised by him from
+ordinary seed produced seeds differing in an extraordinary manner in
+colour and shape, leading to the belief that their parents must have
+been crossed. In France M. Fermond more than once planted close together
+varieties which ordinarily come true and which bear differently coloured
+flowers and seeds; and the offspring thus raised varied so greatly that
+there could hardly be a doubt that they had intercrossed. (5/7.
+‘Fécondation chez les Végétaux’ 1859 pages 34-40. He adds that M.
+Villiers has described a spontaneous hybrid, which he calls Phaseolus
+coccineus hybridus, in the ‘Annales de la Soc. R. de Horticulture’ June
+1844.) On the other hand, Professor H. Hoffman does not believe in the
+natural crossing of the varieties; for although seedlings raised from
+two varieties growing close together produced plants which yielded seeds
+of a mixed character, he found that this likewise occurred with plants
+separated by a space of from 40 to 150 paces from any other variety; he
+therefore attributes the mixed character of the seed to spontaneous
+variability. (5/8. ‘Bestimmung des Werthes von Species und Varietat’
+1869 pages 47-72.) But the above distance would be very far from
+sufficient to prevent intercrossing: cabbages have been known to cross
+at several times this distance; and the careful Gartner gives many
+instances of plants growing at from 600 to 800 yards apart fertilising
+one another. (5/9. ‘Kenntnis der Befruchtung’ 1844 pages 573, 577.)
+Professor Hoffman even maintains that the flowers of the kidney-bean are
+specially adapted for self-fertilisation. He enclosed several flowers in
+bags; and as the buds often dropped off, he attributes the partial
+sterility of these flowers to the injurious effects of the bags, and not
+to the exclusion of insects. But the only safe method of experimenting
+is to cover up a whole plant, which then never suffers.
+
+Self-fertilised seeds were obtained by moving up and down in the same
+manner as bees do the wing-petals of flowers protected by a net; and
+crossed seeds were obtained by crossing two of the plants under the same
+net. The seeds after germinating on sand were planted on the opposite
+sides of two large pots, and equal-sized sticks were given them to twine
+up. When 8 inches in height, the plants on the two sides were equal. The
+crossed plants flowered before the self-fertilised in both pots. As soon
+as one of each pair had grown to the summit of its stick both were
+measured.
+
+TABLE 5/53. Phaseolus multiflorus.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 87 : 84 6/8.
+Pot 1 : 88 : 87.
+Pot 1 : 82 4/8 : 76.
+
+Pot 2 : 90 : 76 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 82 4/8 : 87 4/8.
+
+Total : 430.00 : 411.75.
+
+The average height of the five crossed plants is 86 inches, and that of
+the five self-fertilised plants 82.35; or as 100 to 96. The pots were
+kept in the greenhouse, and there was little or no difference in the
+fertility of the two lots. Therefore as far as these few observations
+serve, the advantage gained by a cross is very small.
+
+Phaseolus vulgaris.
+
+With respect to this species, I merely ascertained that the flowers were
+highly fertile when insects were excluded, as indeed must be the case,
+for the plants are often forced during the winter when no insects are
+present. Some plants of two varieties (namely Canterbury and Fulmer’s
+Forcing Bean) were covered with a net, and they seemed to produce as
+many pods, containing as many beans, as some uncovered plants growing
+alongside; but neither the pods nor the beans were actually counted.
+This difference in self-fertility between Phaseolus vulgaris and
+multifloris is remarkable, as these two species are so closely related
+that Linnaeus thought that they formed one. When the varieties of
+Phaseolus vulgaris grow near one another in the open ground, they
+sometimes cross largely, notwithstanding their capacity for
+self-fertilisation. Mr. Coe has given me a remarkable instance of this
+fact with respect to the negro and a white-seeded and a brown-seeded
+variety, which were all grown together. The diversity of character in
+the seedlings of the second generation raised by me from his plants was
+wonderful. I could add other analogous cases, and the fact is well-known
+to gardeners. (5/10. I have given Mr. Coe’s case in the ‘Gardeners’
+Chronicle’ 1858 page 829. See also for another case ibid page 845.)
+
+Lathyrus odoratus.
+
+Almost everyone who has studied the structure of papilionaceous flowers
+has been convinced that they are specially adapted for
+cross-fertilisation, although many of the species are likewise capable
+of self-fertilisation. The case therefore of Lathyrus odoratus or the
+sweet-pea is curious, for in this country it seems invariably to
+fertilise itself. I conclude that this is so, as five varieties,
+differing greatly in the colour of their flowers but in no other
+respect, are commonly sold and come true; yet on inquiry from two great
+raisers of seed for sale, I find that they take no precautions to insure
+purity--the five varieties being habitually grown close together. (5/11.
+See Mr. W. Earley in ‘Nature’ 1872 page 242, to the same effect. He
+once, however, saw bees visiting the flowers, and supposed that on this
+occasion they would have been intercrossed.) I have myself purposely
+made similar trials with the same result. Although the varieties always
+come true, yet, as we shall presently see, one of the five well-known
+varieties occasionally gives birth to another, which exhibits all its
+usual characters. Owing to this curious fact, and to the darker-coloured
+varieties being the most productive, these increase, to the exclusion of
+the others, as I was informed by the late Mr. Masters, if there be no
+selection.
+
+In order to ascertain what would be the effect of crossing two
+varieties, some flowers on the Purple sweet-pea, which has a dark
+reddish-purple standard-petal with violet-coloured wing-petals and keel,
+were castrated whilst very young, and were fertilised with pollen of the
+Painted Lady. This latter variety has a pale cherry-coloured standard,
+with almost white wings and keel. On two occasions I raised from a
+flower thus crossed plants perfectly resembling both parent-forms; but
+the greater number resembled the paternal variety. So perfect was the
+resemblance, that I should have suspected some mistake in the label, had
+not the plants, which were at first identical in appearance with the
+father or Painted Lady, later in the season produced flowers blotched
+and streaked with dark purple. This is an interesting example of partial
+reversion in the same individual plant as it grows older. The
+purple-flowered plants were thrown away, as they might possibly have
+been the product of the accidental self-fertilisation of the
+mother-plant, owing to the castration not having been effectual. But the
+plants which resembled in the colour of their flowers the paternal
+variety or Painted Lady were preserved, and their seeds saved. Next
+summer many plants were raised from these seeds, and they generally
+resembled their grandfather the Painted Lady, but most of them had their
+wing-petals streaked and stained with dark pink; and a few had pale
+purple wings with the standard of a darker crimson than is natural to
+the Painted Lady, so that they formed a new sub-variety. Amongst these
+plants a single one appeared having purple flowers like those of the
+grandmother, but with the petals slightly streaked with a paler tint:
+this was thrown away. Seeds were again saved from the foregoing plants,
+and the seedlings thus raised still resembled the Painted Lady, or
+great-grandfather; but they now varied much, the standard petal varying
+from pale to dark red, in a few instances with blotches of white; and
+the wing-petals varied from nearly white to purple, the keel being in
+all nearly white.
+
+As no variability of this kind can be detected in plants raised from
+seeds, the parents of which have grown during many successive
+generations in close proximity, we may infer that they cannot have
+intercrossed. What does occasionally occur is that in a row of plants
+raised from seeds of one variety, another variety true of its kind
+appears; for instance, in a long row of Scarlets (the seeds of which had
+been carefully gathered from Scarlets for the sake of this experiment)
+two Purples and one Painted Lady appeared. Seeds from these three
+aberrant plants were saved and sown in separate beds. The seedlings from
+both the Purples were chiefly Purples, but with some Painted Ladies and
+some Scarlets. The seedlings from the aberrant Painted Lady were chiefly
+Painted Ladies with some Scarlets. Each variety, whatever its parentage
+may have been, retained all its characters perfect, and there was no
+streaking or blotching of the colours, as in the foregoing plants of
+crossed origin. Another variety, however, is often sold, which is
+striped and blotched with dark purple; and this is probably of crossed
+origin, for I found, as well as Mr. Masters, that it did not transmit
+its characters at all truly.
+
+From the evidence now given, we may conclude that the varieties of the
+sweet-pea rarely or never intercross in this country; and this is a
+highly remarkable fact, considering, firstly, the general structure of
+the flowers; secondly, the large quantity of pollen produced, far more
+than is requisite for self-fertilisation; and thirdly, the occasional
+visit of insects. That insects should sometimes fail to cross-fertilise
+the flowers is intelligible, for I have thrice seen humble-bees of two
+kinds, as well as hive-bees, sucking the nectar, and they did not
+depress the keel-petals so as to expose the anthers and stigma; they
+were therefore quite inefficient for fertilising the flowers. One of
+these bees, namely, Bombus lapidarius, stood on one side at the base of
+the standard and inserted its proboscis beneath the single separate
+stamen, as I afterwards ascertained by opening the flower and finding
+this stamen prised up. Bees are forced to act in this manner from the
+slit in the staminal tube being closely covered by the broad membranous
+margin of the single stamen, and from the tube not being perforated by
+nectar-passages. On the other hand, in the three British species of
+Lathyrus which I have examined, and in the allied genus Vicia, two
+nectar-passages are present. Therefore British bees might well be
+puzzled how to act in the case of the sweet-pea. I may add that the
+staminal tube of another exotic species, Lathyrus grandiflorus, is not
+perforated by nectar-passages, and this species has rarely set any pods
+in my garden, unless the wing-petals were moved up and down, in the same
+manner as bees ought to do; and then pods were generally formed, but
+from some cause often dropped off afterwards. One of my sons caught an
+elephant sphinx-moth whilst visiting the flowers of the sweet-pea, but
+this insect would not depress the wing-petals and keel. On the other
+hand, I have seen on one occasion hive-bees, and two or three occasions
+the Megachile willughbiella in the act of depressing the keel; and these
+bees had the under sides of their bodies thickly covered with pollen,
+and could not thus fail to carry pollen from one flower to the stigma of
+another. Why then do not the varieties occasionally intercross, though
+this would not often happen, as insects so rarely act in an efficient
+manner? The fact cannot, as it appears, be explained by the flowers
+being self-fertilised at a very early age; for although nectar is
+sometimes secreted and pollen adheres to the viscid stigma before the
+flowers are fully expanded, yet in five young flowers which were
+examined by me the pollen-tubes were not exserted. Whatever the cause
+may be, we may conclude, that in England the varieties never or very
+rarely intercross. But it does not follow from this, that they would not
+be cross by the aid of other and larger insects in their native country,
+which in botanical works is said to be the south of Europe and the East
+Indies. Accordingly I wrote to Professor Delpino, in Florence, and he
+informs me “that it is the fixed opinion of gardeners there that the
+varieties do intercross, and that they cannot be preserved pure unless
+they are sown separately.”
+
+It follows also from the foregoing facts that the several varieties of
+the sweet-pea must have propagated themselves in England by
+self-fertilisation for very many generations, since the time when each
+new variety first appeared. From the analogy of the plants of Mimulus
+and Ipomoea, which had been self-fertilised for several generations, and
+from trials previously made with the common pea, which is in nearly the
+same state as the sweet-pea, it appeared to me very improbable that a
+cross between the individuals of the same variety would benefit the
+offspring. A cross of this kind was therefore not tried, which I now
+regret. But some flowers of the Painted Lady, castrated at an early age,
+were fertilised with pollen from the Purple sweet-pea; and it should be
+remembered that these varieties differ in nothing except in the colour
+of their flowers. The cross was manifestly effectual (though only two
+seeds were obtained), as was shown by the two seedlings, when they
+flowered, closely resembling their father, the Purple pea, excepting
+that they were a little lighter coloured, with their keels slightly
+streaked with pale purple. Seeds from flowers spontaneously
+self-fertilised under a net were at the same time saved from the same
+mother-plant, the Painted Lady. These seeds unfortunately did not
+germinate on sand at the same time with the crossed seeds, so that they
+could not be planted simultaneously. One of the two crossed seeds in a
+state of germination was planted in a pot (Number 1) in which a
+self-fertilised seed in the same state had been planted four days
+before, so that this latter seedling had a great advantage over the
+crossed one. In Pot 2 the other crossed seed was planted two days before
+a self-fertilised one; so that here the crossed seedling had a
+considerable advantage over the self-fertilised one. But this crossed
+seedling had its summit gnawed off by a slug, and was in consequence for
+a time quite beaten by the self-fertilised plant. Nevertheless I allowed
+it to remain, and so great was its constitutional vigour that it
+ultimately beat its uninjured self-fertilised rival. When all four
+plants were almost fully grown they were measured, as here shown:--
+
+TABLE 5/54. Lathyrus odoratus.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 80 : 64 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 78 4/8 : 63.
+
+Total : 158.5 : 127.5.
+
+The two crossed plants here average 79.25, and the two self-fertilised
+63.75 inches in height, or as 100 to 80. Six flowers on these two
+crossed plants were reciprocally crossed with pollen from the other
+plant, and the six pods thus produced contained on an average six peas,
+with a maximum in one of seven. Eighteen spontaneously self-fertilised
+pods from the Painted Lady, which, as already stated, had no doubt been
+self-fertilised for many previous generations, contained on an average
+only 3.93 peas, with a maximum in one of five peas; so that the number
+of peas in the crossed and self-fertilised pods was as 100 to 65. The
+self-fertilised peas were, however, quite as heavy as those from the
+crossed pods. From these two lots of seeds, the plants of the next
+generation were raised.
+
+PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+
+Many of the self-fertilised peas just referred to germinated on sand
+before any of the crossed ones, and were rejected. As soon as I got
+equal pairs, they were planted on the opposite sides of two large pots,
+which were kept in the greenhouse. The seedlings thus raised were the
+grandchildren of the Painted Lady, which was first crossed by the Purple
+variety. When the two lots were from 4 to 6 inches in height there was
+no difference between them. Nor was there any marked difference in the
+period of their flowering. When fully grown they were measured, as
+follows:--
+
+TABLE 5/55. Lathyrus odoratus (Second Generation).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Seedlings from Plants Crossed during the two previous
+Generations.
+
+Column 3: Seedlings from Plants Self-fertilised during many previous
+Generations.
+
+Pot 1 : 72 4/8 : 57 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 71 : 67.
+Pot 1 : 52 2/8 : 56 2/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 81 4/8 : 66 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 45 2/8 : 38 7/8.
+Pot 2 : 55 : 46.
+
+Total : 377.50 : 331.86.
+
+The average height of the six crossed plants is here 62.91, and that of
+the six self-fertilised 55.31 inches; or as 100 to 88. There was not
+much difference in the fertility of the two lots; the crossed plants
+having produced in the greenhouse thirty-five pods, and the
+self-fertilised thirty-two pods.
+
+Seeds were saved from the self-fertilised flowers on these two lots of
+plants, for the sake of ascertaining whether the seedlings thus raised
+would inherit any difference in growth or vigour. It must therefore be
+understood that both lots in the following trial are plants of
+self-fertilised parentage; but that in the one lot the plants were the
+children of plants which had been crossed during two previous
+generations, having been before that self-fertilised for many
+generations; and that in the other lot they were the children of plants
+which had not been crossed for very many previous generations. The seeds
+germinated on sand and were planted in pairs on the opposite sides of
+four pots. They were measured, when fully grown, with the following
+result:--
+
+TABLE 5/56. Lathyrus odoratus.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants from Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants from Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 72 : 65.
+Pot 1 : 72 : 61 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 58 : 64.
+Pot 2 : 68 : 68 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 72 4/8 : 56 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 81 : 60 2/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 77 4/8 : 76 4/8.
+
+Total : 501 : 452.
+
+The average height of the seven self-fertilised plants, the offspring of
+crossed plants, is 71.57, and that of the seven self-fertilised plants,
+the offspring of self-fertilised plants, is 64.57; or as 100 to 90. The
+self-fertilised plants from the self-fertilised produced rather more
+pods--namely, thirty-six--than the self-fertilised plants from the
+crossed, for these produced only thirty-one pods.
+
+A few seeds of the same two lots were sown in the opposite corners of a
+large box in which a Brugmansia had long been growing, and in which the
+soil was so exhausted that seeds of Ipomoea purpurea would hardly
+vegetate; yet the two plants of the sweet-pea which were raised
+flourished well. For a long time the self-fertilised plant from the
+self-fertilised beat the self-fertilised plant from the crossed plant;
+the former flowered first, and was at one time 77 1/2 inches, whilst the
+latter was only 68 1/2 in height; but ultimately the plant from the
+previous cross showed its superiority and attained a height of 108 1/2
+inches, whilst the other was only 95 inches. I also sowed some of the
+same two lots of seeds in poor soil in a shady place in a shrubbery.
+Here again the self-fertilised plants from the self-fertilised for a
+long time exceeded considerably in height those from the previously
+crossed plants; and this may probably be attributed, in the present as
+in the last case, to these seeds having germinated rather sooner than
+those from the crossed plants; but at the close of the season the
+tallest of the self-fertilised plants from the crossed plants was 30
+inches, whilst the tallest of the self-fertilised from the
+self-fertilised was 29 3/8 inches in height.
+
+From the various facts now given we see that plants derived from a cross
+between two varieties of the sweet-pea, which differ in no respect
+except in the colour of their flowers, exceed considerably in height the
+offspring from self-fertilised plants, both in the first and second
+generations. The crossed plants also transmit their superiority in
+height and vigour to their self-fertilised offspring.
+
+Pisum sativum.
+
+The common pea is perfectly fertile when its flowers are protected from
+the visits of insects; I ascertained this with two or three different
+varieties, as did Dr. Ogle with another. But the flowers are likewise
+adapted for cross-fertilisation; Mr. Farrer specifies the following
+points, namely: “The open blossom displaying itself in the most
+attractive and convenient position for insects; the conspicuous
+vexillum; the wings forming an alighting place; the attachment of the
+wings to the keel, by which any body pressing on the former must press
+down the latter; the staminal tube enclosing nectar, and affording by
+means of its partially free stamen with apertures on each side of its
+base an open passage to an insect seeking the nectar; the moist and
+sticky pollen placed just where it will be swept out of the apex of the
+keel against the entering insect; the stiff elastic style so placed that
+on a pressure being applied to the keel it will be pushed upwards out of
+the keel; the hairs on the style placed on that side of the style only
+on which there is space for the pollen, and in such a direction as to
+sweep it out; and the stigma so placed as to meet an entering
+insect,--all these become correlated parts of one elaborate mechanism,
+if we suppose that the fertilisation of these flowers is effected by the
+carriage of pollen from one to the other.” (5/12. ‘Nature’ October 10,
+1872 page 479. Hermann Muller gives an elaborate description of the
+flowers ‘Befruchtung’ etc. page 247.) Notwithstanding these manifest
+provisions for cross-fertilisation, varieties which have been cultivated
+for very many successive generations in close proximity, although
+flowering at the same time, remain pure. I have elsewhere given evidence
+on this head, and if required could give more. (5/13. ‘Variation of
+Animals and Plants under Domestication’ chapter 9 2nd edition volume 1
+page 348.) There can hardly be a doubt that some of Knight’s varieties,
+which were originally produced by an artificial cross and were very
+vigorous, lasted for at least sixty years, and during all these years
+were self-fertilised; for had it been otherwise, they would not have
+kept true, as the several varieties are generally grown near together.
+Most of the varieties, however, endure for a shorter period; and this
+may be in part due to their weakness of constitution from long-continued
+self-fertilisation.
+
+It is remarkable, considering that the flowers secrete much nectar and
+afford much pollen, how seldom they are visited by insects either in
+England, or, as H. Muller remarks, in North Germany. I have observed the
+flowers for the last thirty years, and in all this time have only thrice
+seen bees of the proper kind at work (one of them being Bombus
+muscorum), such as were sufficiently powerful to depress the keel, so as
+to get the undersides of their bodies dusted with pollen. These bees
+visited several flowers, and could hardly have failed to cross-fertilise
+them. Hive-bees and other small kinds sometimes collect pollen from old
+and already fertilised flowers, but this is of no account. The rarity of
+the visits of efficient bees to this exotic plant is, I believe, the
+chief cause of the varieties so seldom intercrossing. That a cross does
+occasionally take place, as might be expected from what has just been
+stated, is certain, from the recorded cases of the direct action of the
+pollen of one variety on the seed-coats of another. (5/14. ‘Variation of
+Animals and Plants under Domestication’ chapter 11 2nd edition volume 1
+page 428.) The late Mr. Masters, who particularly attended to the
+raising of new varieties of peas, was convinced that some of them had
+originated from accidental crosses. But as such crosses are rare, the
+old varieties would not often be thus deteriorated, more especially as
+plants departing from the proper type are generally rejected by those
+who collect seed for sale. There is another cause which probably tends
+to render cross-fertilisation rare, namely, the early age at which the
+pollen-tubes are exserted; eight flowers not fully expanded were
+examined, and in seven of these the pollen-tubes were in this state; but
+they had not as yet penetrated the stigma. Although so few insects visit
+the flowers of the pea in this country or in North Germany, and although
+the anthers seem here to open abnormally soon, it does not follow that
+the species in its native country would be thus circumstanced.
+
+Owing to the varieties having been self-fertilised for many generations,
+and to their having been subjected in each generation to nearly the same
+conditions (as will be explained in a future chapter) I did not expect
+that a cross between two such plants would benefit the offspring; and so
+it proved on trial. In 1867 I covered up several plants of the Early
+Emperor pea, which was not then a very new variety, so that it must
+already have been propagated by self-fertilisation for at least a dozen
+generations. Some flowers were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant
+growing in the same row, and others were allowed to fertilise themselves
+under a net. The two lots of seeds thus obtained were sown on opposite
+sides of two large pots, but only four pairs came up at the same time.
+The pots were kept in the greenhouse. The seedlings of both lots when
+between 6 and 7 inches in height were equal. When nearly full-grown they
+were measured, as in Table 5/57.
+
+TABLE 5/57. Pisum sativum.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 35 : 29 6/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 31 4/8 : 51.
+Pot 2 : 35 : 45.
+Pot 2 : 37 : 33.
+
+Total : 138.50 : 158.75.
+
+The average height of the four crossed plants is here 34.62, and that of
+the four self-fertilised plants 39.68, or as 100 to 115. So that the
+crossed plants, far from beating the self-fertilised, were completely
+beaten by them.
+
+There can be no doubt that the result would have been widely different,
+if any two varieties out of the numberless ones which exist had been
+crossed. Notwithstanding that both had been self-fertilised for many
+previous generations, each would almost certainly have possessed its own
+peculiar constitution; and this degree of differentiation would have
+been sufficient to make a cross highly beneficial. I have spoken thus
+confidently of the benefit which would have been derived from crossing
+any two varieties of the pea from the following facts: Andrew Knight in
+speaking of the results of crossing reciprocally very tall and short
+varieties, says, “I had in this experiment a striking instance of the
+stimulative effects of crossing the breeds; for the smallest variety,
+whose height rarely exceeded 2 feet, was increased to 6 feet; whilst the
+height of the large and luxuriant kind was very little diminished.”
+(5/15. ‘Philosophical Transactions’ 1799 page 200.) Recently Mr. Laxton
+has made numerous crosses, and everyone had been astonished at the
+vigour and luxuriance of the new varieties which he has thus raised and
+afterwards fixed by selection. He gave me seed-peas produced from
+crosses between four distinct kinds; and the plants thus raised were
+extraordinarily vigorous, being in each case from 1 to 2 or even 3 feet
+taller than the parent-forms, which were raised at the same time close
+alongside. But as I did not measure their actual height I cannot give
+the exact ratio, but it must have been at least as 100 to 75. A similar
+trial was subsequently made with two other peas from a different cross,
+and the result was nearly the same. For instance, a crossed seedling
+between the Maple and Purple-podded pea was planted in poor soil and
+grew to the extraordinary height of 116 inches; whereas the tallest
+plant of either parent variety, namely, a Purple-podded pea, was only 70
+inches in height; or as 100 to 60.
+
+Sarothamnus scoparius.
+
+Bees incessantly visit the flowers of the common Broom, and these are
+adapted by a curious mechanism for cross-fertilisation. When a bee
+alights on the wing-petals of a young flower, the keel is slightly
+opened and the short stamens spring out, which rub their pollen against
+the abdomen of the bee. If a rather older flower is visited for the
+first time (or if the bee exerts great force on a younger flower), the
+keel opens along its whole length, and the longer as well as the shorter
+stamens, together with the much elongated curved pistil, spring forth
+with violence. The flattened, spoon-like extremity of the pistil rests
+for a time on the back of the bee, and leaves on it the load of pollen
+with which it is charged. As soon as the bee flies away, the pistil
+instantly curls round, so that the stigmatic surface is now upturned and
+occupies a position, in which it would be rubbed against the abdomen of
+another bee visiting the same flower. Thus, when the pistil first
+escapes from the keel, the stigma is rubbed against the back of the bee,
+dusted with pollen from the longer stamens, either of the same or
+another flower; and afterwards against the lower surface of the bee
+dusted with pollen from the shorter stamens, which is often shed a day
+or two before that from the longer stamens. (5/16. These observations
+have been quoted in an abbreviated form by the Reverend G. Henslow, in
+the ‘Journal of Linnean Society Botany’ volume 9 1866 page 358. Hermann
+Muller has since published a full and excellent account of the flower in
+his ‘Befruchtung’ etc. page 240.) By this mechanism cross-fertilisation
+is rendered almost inevitable, and we shall immediately see that pollen
+from a distinct plant is more effective than that from the same flower.
+I need only add that, according to H. Muller, the flowers do not secrete
+nectar, and he thinks that bees insert their proboscides only in the
+hope of finding nectar; but they act in this manner so frequently and
+for so long a time that I cannot avoid the belief that they obtain
+something palatable within the flowers.
+
+If the visits of bees are prevented, and if the flowers are not dashed
+by the wind against any object, the keel never opens, so that the
+stamens and pistil remain enclosed. Plants thus protected yield very few
+pods in comparison with those produced by neighbouring uncovered bushes,
+and sometimes none at all. I fertilised a few flowers on a plant growing
+almost in a state of nature with pollen from another plant close
+alongside, and the four crossed capsules contained on an average 9.2
+seeds. This large number no doubt was due to the bush being covered up,
+and thus not exhausted by producing many pods; for fifty pods gathered
+from an adjoining plant, the flowers of which had been fertilised by the
+bees, contained an average of only 7.14 seeds. Ninety-three pods
+spontaneously self-fertilised on a large bush which had been covered up,
+but had been much agitated by the wind, contained an average of 2.93
+seeds. Ten of the finest of these ninety-three capsules yielded an
+average of 4.30 seeds, that is less than half the average number in the
+four artificially crossed capsules. The ratio of 7.14 to 2.93, or as 100
+to 41, is probably the fairest for the number of seeds per pod, yielded
+by naturally-crossed and spontaneously self-fertilised flowers. The
+crossed seeds compared with an equal number of the spontaneously
+self-fertilised seeds were heavier, in the ratio of 100 to 88. We thus
+see that besides the mechanical adaptations for cross-fertilisation, the
+flowers are much more productive with pollen from a distinct plant than
+with their own pollen.
+
+Eight pairs of the above crossed and self-fertilised seeds, after they
+had germinated on sand, were planted (1867) on the opposite sides of two
+large pots. When several of the seedlings were an inch and a half in
+height, there was no marked difference between the two lots. But even at
+this early age the leaves of the self-fertilised seedlings were smaller
+and of not so bright a green as those of the crossed seedlings. The pots
+were kept in the greenhouse, and as the plants on the following spring
+(1868) looked unhealthy and had grown but little, they were plunged,
+still in their pots, into the open ground. The plants all suffered much
+from the sudden change, especially the self-fertilised, and two of the
+latter died. The remainder were measured, and I give the measurements in
+Table 5/58, because I have not seen in any other species so great a
+difference between the crossed and self-fertilised seedlings at so early
+an age.
+
+TABLE 5/58. Sarothamnus scoparius (very young plants).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 4 4/8 : 2 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 6 : 1 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 2 : 1.
+
+Pot 2 : 2 : 1 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 2 4/8 : 1.
+Pot 2 : 0 4/8 : 0 4/8.
+
+Total : 17.5 : 8.0.
+
+The six crossed plants here average 2.91, and the six self-fertilised
+1.33 inches in height; so that the former were more than twice as high
+as the latter, or as 100 to 46.
+
+In the spring of the succeeding year (1869) the three crossed plants in
+Pot 1 had all grown to nearly a foot in height, and they had smothered
+the three little self-fertilised plants so completely that two were
+dead; and the third, only an inch and a half in height, was dying. It
+should be remembered that these plants had been bedded out in their
+pots, so that they were subjected to very severe competition. This pot
+was now thrown away.
+
+The six plants in Pot 2 were all alive. One of the self-fertilised was
+an inch and a quarter taller than any one of the crossed plants; but the
+other two self-fertilised plants were in a very poor condition. I
+therefore resolved to leave these plants to struggle together for some
+years. By the autumn of the same year (1869) the self-fertilised plant
+which had been victorious was now beaten. The measurements are shown in
+Table 5/59.
+
+TABLE 5/59. Pot 2.--Sarothamnus scoparius.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+ : 15 6/8 : 13 1/8.
+ : 9 6/8 : 3.
+ : 8 2/8 : 2 4/8.
+
+The same plants were again measured in the autumn of the following year,
+1870.
+
+TABLE 5/60. Pot 2.--Sarothamnus scoparius.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+ : 26 2/8 : 14 2/8.
+ : 16 4/8 : 11 4/8.
+ : 14 : 9 6/8.
+
+Total : 56.75 : 35.50.
+
+The three crossed plants now averaged 18.91, and the three
+self-fertilised 11.83 inches in height; or as 100 to 63. The three
+crossed plants in Pot 1, as already shown, had beaten the three
+self-fertilised plants so completely, that any comparison between them
+was superfluous.
+
+The winter of 1870-1871 was severe. In the spring the three crossed
+plants in Pot 2 had not even the tips of their shoots in the least
+injured, whereas all three self-fertilised plants were killed half-way
+down to the ground; and this shows how much more tender they were. In
+consequence not one of these latter plants bore a single flower during
+the ensuing summer of 1871, whilst all three crossed plants flowered.
+
+Ononis minutissima.
+
+This plant, of which seeds were sent me from North Italy, produces,
+besides the ordinary papilionaceous flowers, minute, imperfect, closed
+or cleistogene flowers, which can never be cross-fertilised, but are
+highly self-fertile. Some of the perfect flowers were crossed with
+pollen from a distinct plant, and six capsules thus produced yielded on
+an average 3.66 seeds, with a maximum of five in one. Twelve perfect
+flowers were marked and allowed to fertilise themselves spontaneously
+under a net, and they yielded eight capsules, containing on an average
+2.38 seeds, with a maximum of three seeds in one. So that the crossed
+and self-fertilised capsules from the perfect flowers yielded seeds in
+the proportion of 100 to 65. Fifty-three capsules produced by the
+cleistogene flowers contained on an average 4.1 seeds, so that these
+were the most productive of all; and the seeds themselves looked finer
+even than those from the crossed perfect flowers.
+
+The seeds from the crossed perfect flowers and from the self-fertilised
+cleistogene flowers were allowed to germinate on sand; but unfortunately
+only two pairs germinated at the same time. These were planted on the
+opposite sides of the same pot, which was kept in the greenhouse. In the
+summer of the same year, when the seedlings were about 4 1/2 inches in
+height, the two lots were equal. In the autumn of the following year
+(1868) the two crossed plants were of exactly the same height, namely,
+11 4/8 inches, and the two self-fertilised plants 12 6/8 and 7 2/8
+inches; so that one of the self-fertilised exceeded considerably in
+height all the others. By the autumn of 1869 the two crossed plants had
+acquired the supremacy; their height being 16 4/8 and 15 1/8, whilst
+that of the two self-fertilised plants was 14 5/8 and 11 4/8 inches.
+
+By the autumn of 1870, the heights were as follows:--
+
+TABLE 5/61. Ononis minutissima.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+ : 20 3/8 : 17 4/8.
+ : 19 2/8 : 17 2/8.
+
+Total : 39.63 : 34.75.
+
+So that the mean height of the two crossed plants was 19.81, and that of
+the two self-fertilised 17.37 inches; or as 100 to 88. It should be
+remembered that the two lots were at first equal in height; that one of
+the self-fertilised plants then had the advantage, the two crossed
+plants being at last victorious.]
+
+SUMMARY ON THE LEGUMINOSAE.
+
+Six genera in this family were experimented on, and the results are in
+some respects remarkable. The crossed plants of the two species of
+Lupinus were conspicuously superior to the self-fertilised plants in
+height and fertility; and when grown under very unfavourable conditions,
+in vigour. The scarlet-runner (Phaseolus multiflorus) is partially
+sterile if the visits of bees are prevented, and there is reason to
+believe that varieties growing near one another intercross. The five
+crossed plants, however, exceeded in height the five self-fertilised
+only by a little. Phaseolus vulgaris is perfectly self-sterile;
+nevertheless, varieties growing in the same garden sometimes intercross
+largely. The varieties of Lathyrus odoratus, on the other hand, appear
+never to intercross in this country; and though the flowers are not
+often visited by efficient insects, I cannot account for this fact, more
+especially as the varieties are believed to intercross in North Italy.
+Plants raised from a cross between two varieties, differing only in the
+colour of their flowers, grew much taller and were under unfavourable
+conditions more vigorous than the self-fertilised plants; they also
+transmitted, when self-fertilised, their superiority to their offspring.
+The many varieties of the common Pea (Pisum sativum), though growing in
+close proximity, very seldom intercross; and this seems due to the
+rarity in this country of the visits of bees sufficiently powerful to
+effect cross-fertilisation. A cross between the self-fertilised
+individuals of the same variety does no good whatever to the offspring;
+whilst a cross between distinct varieties, though closely allied, does
+great good, of which we have excellent evidence. The flowers of the
+Broom (Sarothamnus) are almost sterile if they are not disturbed and if
+insects are excluded. The pollen from a distinct plant is more effective
+than that from the same flower in producing seeds. The crossed seedlings
+have an enormous advantage over the self-fertilised when grown together
+in close competition. Lastly, only four plants of the Ononis minutissima
+were raised; but as these were observed during their whole growth, the
+advantage of the crossed over the self-fertilised plants may, I think,
+be fully trusted.
+
+[15. ONAGRACEAE.--Clarkia elegans.
+
+Owing to the season being very unfavourable (1867), few of the flowers
+which I fertilised formed capsules; twelve crossed flowers produced only
+four, and eighteen self-fertilised flowers yielded only one capsule. The
+seeds after germinating on sand were planted in three pots, but all the
+self-fertilised plants died in one of them. When the two lots were
+between 4 and 5 inches in height, the crossed began to show a slight
+superiority over the self-fertilised. When in full flower they were
+measured, with the following result:--
+
+TABLE 5/62. Clarkia elegans.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 40 4/8 : 33.
+Pot 1 : 35 : 24.
+Pot 1 : 25 : 23.
+
+Pot 2 : 33 4/8 : 30 4/8.
+
+Total : 134.0 : 110.5.
+
+The average height of the four crossed plants is 33.5, and that of the
+four self-fertilised plants 27.62 inches, or as 100 to 82. The crossed
+plants altogether produced 105 and the self-fertilised plants 63
+capsules; or as 100 to 60. In both pots a self-fertilised plant flowered
+before any one of the crossed plants.
+
+16. LOASACEAE.--Bartonia aurea.
+
+Some flowers were crossed and self-fertilised in the usual manner during
+two seasons; but as I reared on the first occasion only two pairs, the
+results are given together. On both occasions the crossed capsules
+contained slightly more seeds than the self-fertilised. During the first
+year, when the plants were about 7 inches in height, the self-fertilised
+were the tallest, and in the second year the crossed were the tallest.
+When the two lots were in full flower they were measured, as in Table
+5/63.
+
+TABLE 5/63. Bartonia aurea.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 31 : 37.
+
+Pot 2 : 18 4/8 : 20 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 19 4/8 : 40 4/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 25 : 35.
+Pot 4 : 36 : 15 4/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 31 : 18.
+Pot 5 : 16 : 11 4/8.
+
+Pot 6 : 20 : 32 4/8.
+
+Total : 197.0 : 210.5.
+
+The average height of the eight crossed plants is 24.62, and that of the
+eight self-fertilised 26.31 inches; or as 100 to 107. So that the
+self-fertilised had a decided advantage over the crossed. But the plants
+from some cause never grew well, and finally became so unhealthy that
+only three crossed and three self-fertilised plants survived to set any
+capsules, and these were few in number. The two lots seemed to be about
+equally unproductive.
+
+17. PASSIFLORACEAE.--Passiflora gracilis.
+
+This annual species produces spontaneously numerous fruits when insects
+are excluded, and behaves in this respect very differently from most of
+the other species in the genus, which are extremely sterile unless
+fertilised with pollen from a distinct plant. (5/17. ‘Variation of
+Animals and Plants under Domestication’ chapter 17 2nd edition volume 2
+page 118.) Fourteen fruits from crossed flowers contained on an average
+24.14 seeds. Fourteen fruits (two poor ones being rejected),
+spontaneously self-fertilised under a net, contained on an average 20.58
+seeds per fruit; or as 100 to 85. These seeds were sown on the opposite
+sides of three pots, but only two pairs came up at the same time; and
+therefore a fair judgment cannot be formed.
+
+TABLE 5/64. Passiflora gracilis.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 56 : 38.
+
+Pot 2 : 42 : 64.
+
+Total : 98 : 102.
+
+The mean of the two crossed is 49 inches, and that of the two
+self-fertilised 51 inches; or as 100 to 104.
+
+18. UMBELLIFERAE.--Apium petroselinum.
+
+The Umbelliferae are proterandrous, and can hardly fail to be
+cross-fertilised by the many flies and small Hymenoptera which visit the
+flowers. (5/18. Hermann Muller ‘Befruchtung’ etc. page 96. According to
+M. Mustel as stated by Godron ‘De l’espèce’ tome 2 page 58 1859,
+varieties of the carrot growing near each other readily intercross.) A
+plant of the common parsley was covered by a net, and it apparently
+produced as many and as fine spontaneously self-fertilised fruits or
+seeds as the adjoining uncovered plants. The flowers on the latter were
+visited by so many insects that they must have received pollen from one
+another. Some of these two lots of seeds were left on sand, but nearly
+all the self-fertilised seeds germinated before the others, so that I
+was forced to throw all away. The remaining seeds were then sown on the
+opposite sides of four pots. At first the self-fertilised seedlings were
+a little taller in most of the pots than the naturally crossed
+seedlings, and this no doubt was due to the self-fertilised seeds having
+germinated first. But in the autumn all the plants were so equal that it
+did not seem worth while to measure them. In two of the pots they were
+absolutely equal; in a third, if there was any difference, it was in
+favour of the crossed plants, and in a somewhat plainer manner in the
+fourth pot. But neither side had any substantial advantage over the
+other; so that in height they may be said to be as 100 to 100.
+
+19. DIPSACEAE.--Scabiosa atro-purpurea.
+
+The flowers, which are proterandrous, were fertilised during the
+unfavourable season of 1867, so that I got few seeds, especially from
+the self-fertilised heads, which were extremely sterile. The crossed and
+self-fertilised plants raised from these seeds were measured before they
+were in full flower, as in Table 5/65.
+
+TABLE 5/65. Scabiosa atro-purpurea.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 14 : 20.
+
+Pot 2 : 15 : 14 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 21 : 14.
+Pot 3 : 18 4/8 : 13.
+
+Total : 68.5 : 61.5.
+
+The four crossed plants averaged 17.12, and the four self-fertilised
+15.37 inches in height; or as 100 to 90. One of the self-fertilised
+plants in Pot 3 was killed by an accident, and its fellow pulled up; so
+that when they were again measured to the summits of their flowers,
+there were only three on each side; the crossed now averaged in height
+32.83, and the self-fertilised 30.16 inches; or as 100 to 92.
+
+20. COMPOSITAE.--Lactuca sativa. (5/19. The Compositae are well-adapted
+for cross-fertilisation, but a nurseryman on whom I can rely, told me
+that he had been in the habit of sowing several kinds of lettuce near
+together for the sake of seed, and had never observed that they became
+crossed. It is very improbable that all the varieties which were thus
+cultivated near together flowered at different times; but two which I
+selected by hazard and sowed near each other did not flower at the same
+time; and my trial failed.)
+
+Three plants of Lettuce (Great London Cos var.) grew close together in
+my garden; one was covered by a net, and produced self-fertilised seeds,
+the other two were allowed to be naturally crossed by insects; but the
+season (1867) was unfavourable, and I did not obtain many seeds. Only
+one crossed and one self-fertilised plant were raised in Pot 1, and
+their measurements are given in Table 5/66. The flowers on this one
+self-fertilised plant were again self-fertilised under a net, not with
+pollen from the same floret, but from other florets on the same head.
+The flowers on the two crossed plants were left to be crossed by
+insects, but the process was aided by some pollen being occasionally
+transported by me from plant to plant. These two lots of seeds, after
+germinating on sand, were planted in pairs on the opposite sides of Pots
+2 and 3, which were at first kept in the greenhouse and then turned out
+of doors. The plants were measured when in full flower. Table 5/66,
+therefore, includes plants belonging to two generations. When the
+seedlings of the two lots were only 5 or 6 inches in height they were
+equal. In Pot 3 one of the self-fertilised plants died before flowering,
+as has occurred in so many other cases.
+
+TABLE 5/66. Lactuca sativa.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 27 : 21 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 25 : 20.
+First generation, planted in open ground.
+
+Pot 2 : 29 4/8 : 24.
+Pot 2 : 17 4/8 : 10.
+Pot 2 : 12 4/8 : 11.
+Second generation, planted in open ground.
+
+Pot 3 : 14 : 9 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 10 4/8 : 0.
+Second generation, kept in the pot.
+
+Total : 136 : 96.
+
+The average height of the seven crossed plants is 19.43, and that of the
+six self-fertilised plants 16 inches; or as 100 to 82.
+
+21. CAMPANULACEAE.--Specularia speculum.
+
+In the closely allied genus, Campanula, in which Specularia was formerly
+included, the anthers shed at an early period their pollen, and this
+adheres to the collecting hairs which surround the pistil beneath the
+stigma; so that without some mechanical aid the flowers cannot be
+fertilised. For instance, I covered up a plant of Campanula carpathica,
+and it did not produce a single capsule, whilst the surrounding
+uncovered plants seeded profusely. On the other hand, the present
+species of Specularia appears to set almost as many capsules when
+covered up, as when left to the visits of the Diptera, which, as far as
+I have seen, are the only insects that frequent the flowers. (5/20. It
+has long been known that another species of the genus, Specularia
+perfoliata, produces cleistogene as well as perfect flowers, and the
+former are of course self-fertile.) I did not ascertain whether the
+naturally crossed and spontaneously self-fertilised capsules contained
+an equal number of seeds, but a comparison of artificially crossed and
+self-fertilised flowers, showed that the former were probably the most
+productive. It appears that this plant is capable of producing a large
+number of self-fertilised capsules owing to the petals closing at night,
+as well as during cold weather. In the act of closing, the margins of
+the petals become reflexed, and their inwardly projecting midribs then
+pass between the clefts of the stigma, and in doing so push the pollen
+from the outside of the pistil on to the stigmatic surfaces. (5/21. Mr.
+Meehan has lately shown ‘Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Science
+Philadelphia’ May 16, 1876 page 84, that the closing of the flowers of
+Claytonia virginica and Ranunculus bulbosus during the night causes
+their self-fertilisation.)
+
+Twenty flowers were fertilised by me with their own pollen, but owing to
+the bad season, only six capsules were produced; they contained on an
+average 21.7 seeds, with a maximum of forty-eight in one. Fourteen
+flowers were crossed with pollen from another plant, and these produced
+twelve capsules, containing on an average 30 seeds, with a maximum in
+one of fifty-seven seeds; so that the crossed seeds were to the
+self-fertilised from an equal number of capsules as 100 to 72. The
+former were also heavier than an equal number of self-fertilised seeds,
+in the ratio of 100 to 86. Thus, whether we judge by the number of
+capsules produced from an equal number of flowers, or by the average
+number of the contained seeds, or the maximum number in any one capsule,
+or by their weight, crossing does great good in comparison with
+self-fertilisation. The two lots of seeds were sown on the opposite
+sides of four pots; but the seedlings were not sufficiently thinned.
+Only the tallest plant on each side was measured, when fully grown. The
+measurements are given in Table 5/67. In all four pots the crossed
+plants flowered first. When the seedlings were only about an inch and a
+half in height both lots were equal.
+
+TABLE 5/67. Specularia speculum.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Tallest Crossed Plant in each Pot.
+
+Column 3: Tallest Self-fertilised Plant in each Pot.
+
+Pot 1 : 18 : 15 6/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 17 : 19.
+
+Pot 3 : 22 1/8 : 18.
+
+Pot 4 : 20 : 23.
+
+Total : 77.13 : 75.75.
+
+The four tallest crossed plants averaged 19.28, and the four tallest
+self-fertilised 18.93 inches in height; or as 100 to 98. So that there
+was no difference worth speaking of between the two lots in height;
+though other great advantages are derived, as we have seen, from
+cross-fertilisation. From being grown in pots and kept in the
+greenhouse, none of the plants produced any capsules.
+
+Lobelia ramosa. (5/22. I have adopted the name given to this plant in
+the ‘Gardeners’ Chronicle’ 1866. Professor T. Dyer, however, informs me
+that it probably is a white variety of L. tenuior of R. Brown, from W.
+Australia.)
+
+VAR. SNOW-FLAKE.
+
+The well-adapted means by which cross-fertilisation is ensured in this
+genus have been described by several authors. (5/23. See the works of
+Hildebrand and Delpino. Mr. Farrer also has given a remarkably clear
+description of the mechanism by which cross-fertilisation is effected in
+this genus, in the ‘Annals and Magazine of Natural History’ volume 2 4th
+series 1868 page 260. In the allied genus Isotoma, the curious spike
+which projects rectangularly from the anthers, and which when shaken
+causes the pollen to fall on the back of an entering insect, seems to
+have been developed from a bristle, like one of those which spring from
+the anthers in some of or all the species of Lobelia, as described by
+Mr. Farrer.) The pistil as it slowly increases in length pushes the
+pollen out of the conjoined anthers, by the aid of a ring of bristles;
+the two lobes of the stigma being at this time closed and incapable of
+fertilisation. The extrusion of the pollen is also aided by insects,
+which rub against the little bristles that project from the anthers. The
+pollen thus pushed out is carried by insects to the older flowers, in
+which the stigma of the now freely projecting pistil is open and ready
+to be fertilised. I proved the importance of the gaily-coloured corolla,
+by cutting off the large flowers of Lobelia erinus; and these flowers
+were neglected by the hive-bees which were incessantly visiting the
+other flowers.
+
+A capsule was obtained by crossing a flower of L. ramosa with pollen
+from another plant, and two other capsules from artificially
+self-fertilised flowers. The contained seeds were sown on the opposite
+sides of four pots. Some of the crossed seedlings which came up before
+the others had to be pulled up and thrown away. Whilst the plants were
+very small there was not much difference in height between the two lots;
+but in Pot 3 the self-fertilised were for a time the tallest. When in
+full flower the tallest plant on each side of each pot was measured, and
+the result is shown in Table 5/68. In all four pots a crossed plant
+flowered before any one of its opponents.
+
+TABLE 5/68. Lobelia ramosa (First Generation).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Tallest Crossed Plant in each Pot.
+
+Column 3: Tallest Self-fertilised Plant in each Pot.
+
+Pot 1 : 22 4/8 : 17 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 27 4/8 : 24.
+
+Pot 3 : 16 4/8 : 15.
+
+Pot 4 : 22 4/8 : 17.
+
+Total : 89.0 : 73.5.
+
+The four tallest crossed plants averaged 22.25, and the four tallest
+self-fertilised 18.37 inches in height; or as 100 to 82. I was surprised
+to find that the anthers of a good many of these self-fertilised plants
+did not cohere and did not contain any pollen; and the anthers even of a
+very few of the crossed plants were in the same condition. Some flowers
+on the crossed plants were again crossed, four capsules being thus
+obtained; and some flowers on the self-fertilised plants were again
+self-fertilised, seven capsules being thus obtained. The seeds from both
+lots were weighed, and it was calculated that an equal number of
+capsules would have yielded seed in the proportion by weight of 100 for
+the crossed to 60 for the self-fertilised capsules. So that the flowers
+on the crossed plants again crossed were much more fertile than those on
+the self-fertilised plants again self-fertilised.
+
+PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+
+The above two lots of seeds were placed on damp sand, and many of the
+crossed seeds germinated, as on the last occasion, before the
+self-fertilised, and were rejected. Three or four pairs in the same
+state of germination were planted on the opposite sides of two pots; a
+single pair in a third pot; and all the remaining seeds were sown
+crowded in a fourth pot. When the seedlings were about one and a half
+inches in height, they were equal on both sides of the three first pots;
+but in Pot 4, in which they grew crowded and were thus exposed to severe
+competition, the crossed were about a third taller than the
+self-fertilised. In this latter pot, when the crossed averaged 5 inches
+in height, the self-fertilised were about 4 inches; nor did they look
+nearly such fine plants. In all four pots the crossed plants flowered
+some days before the self-fertilised. When in full flower the tallest
+plant on each side was measured; but before this time the single crossed
+plant in Pot 3, which was taller than its antagonist, had died and was
+not measured. So that only the tallest plant on each side of three pots
+was measured, as in Table 5/69.
+
+TABLE 5/69. Lobelia ramosa (Second Generation).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Tallest Crossed Plant in each Pot.
+
+Column 3: Tallest Self-fertilised Plant in each Pot.
+
+Pot 1 : 27 4/8 : 18 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 21 : 19 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 21 4/8 : 19.
+Crowded.
+
+Total : 70 : 57.
+
+The average height of the three tallest crossed plants is here 23.33,
+and that of the tallest self-fertilised 19 inches; or as 100 to 81.
+Besides this difference in height, the crossed plants were much more
+vigorous and more branched than the self-fertilised plants, and it is
+unfortunate that they were not weighed.
+
+Lobelia fulgens.
+
+This species offers a somewhat perplexing case. In the first generation
+the self-fertilised plants, though few in number, greatly exceeded the
+crossed in height; whilst in the second generation, when the trial was
+made on a much larger scale, the crossed beat the self-fertilised
+plants. As this species is generally propagated by off-sets, some
+seedlings were first raised, in order to have distinct plants. On one of
+these plants several flowers were fertilised with their own pollen; and
+as the pollen is mature and shed long before the stigma of the same
+flower is ready for fertilisation, it was necessary to number each
+flower and keep its pollen in paper with a corresponding number. By this
+means well-matured pollen was used for self-fertilisation. Several
+flowers on the same plant were crossed with pollen from a distinct
+individual, and to obtain this the conjoined anthers of young flowers
+were roughly squeezed, and as it is naturally protruded very slowly by
+the growth of the pistil, it is probable that the pollen used by me was
+hardly mature, certainly less mature than that employed for
+self-fertilisation. I did not at the time think of this source of error,
+but I now suspect that the growth of the crossed plants was thus
+injured. Anyhow the trial was not perfectly fair. Opposed to the belief
+that the pollen used in crossing was not in so good a state as that used
+for self-fertilisation, is the fact that a greater proportional number
+of the crossed than of the self-fertilised flowers produced capsules;
+but there was no marked difference in the amount of seed contained in
+the capsules of the two lots. (5/24. Gartner has shown that certain
+plants of Lobelia fulgens are quite sterile with pollen from the same
+plant, though this pollen is efficient on any other individual; but none
+of the plants on which I experimented, which were kept in the
+greenhouse, were in this peculiar condition.)
+
+As the seeds obtained by the above two methods would not germinate when
+left on bare sand, they were sown on the opposite sides of four pots;
+but I succeeded in raising only a single pair of seedlings of the same
+age in each pot. The self-fertilised seedlings, when only a few inches
+in height, were in most of the pots taller than their opponents; and
+they flowered so much earlier in all the pots, that the height of the
+flower-stems could be fairly compared only in Pots 1 and 2.
+
+TABLE 5/70. Lobelia fulgens (First Generation).
+
+Heights of flower-stems measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Height of Flower-stems on the Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Height of Flower-stems on the Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 33 : 50.
+
+Pot 2 : 36 4/8 : 38 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 21* : 43.
+
+Pot 4 : 12* : 35 6/8.
+
+*Not in full flower.
+
+The mean height of the flower-stems of the two crossed plants in Pots 1
+and 2 is here 34.75 inches, and that of the two self-fertilised plants
+in the same pots 44.25 inches; or as 100 to 127. The self-fertilised
+plants in Pots 3 and 4 were in every respect very much finer than the
+crossed plants.
+
+I was so much surprised at this great superiority of the self-fertilised
+over the crossed plants, that I determined to try how they would behave
+in one of the pots during a second growth. The two plants, therefore, in
+Pot 1 were cut down, and repotted without being disturbed in a much
+larger pot. In the following year the self-fertilised plant showed even
+a greater superiority than before; for the two tallest flower-stems
+produced by the one crossed plant were only 29 4/8 and 30 1/8 inches in
+height, whereas the two tallest stems on the one self-fertilised plant
+were 49 4/8 and 49 6/8 inches; and this gives a ratio of 100 to 167.
+Considering all the evidence, there can be no doubt that these
+self-fertilised plants had a great superiority over the crossed plants.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+
+TABLE 5/71. Lobelia fulgens (Second Generation).
+
+Heights of flower-stems measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 27 3/8 : 32 3/8.
+Pot 1 : 26 : 26 3/8.
+Pot 1 : 24 3/8 : 25 1/8.
+Pot 1 : 24 4/8 : 26 2/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 34 : 36 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 26 6/8 : 28 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 25 1/8 : 30 1/8.
+Pot 2 : 26 : 32 2/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 40 4/8 : 30 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 37 5/8 : 28 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 32 1/8 : 23.
+
+Pot 4 : 34 5/8 : 29 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 32 2/8 : 28 3/8.
+Pot 4 : 29 3/8 : 26.
+Pot 4 : 27 1/8 : 25 2/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 28 1/8 : 29.
+Pot 5 : 27 : 24 6/8.
+Pot 5 : 25 3/8 : 23 2/8.
+Pot 5 : 24 3/8 : 24.
+
+Pot 6 : 33 5/8 : 44 2/8.
+Pot 6 : 32 : 37 6/8.
+Pot 6 : 26 1/8 : 37.
+Pot 6 : 25 : 35.
+
+Pot 7 : 30 6/8 : 27 2/8.
+Pot 7 : 30 3/8 : 19 2/8.
+Pot 7 : 29 2/8 : 21.
+
+Pot 8 : 39 3/8 : 23 1/8.
+Pot 8 : 37 2/8 : 23 4/8.
+Pot 8 : 36 : 25 4/8.
+Pot 8 : 36 : 25 1/8.
+
+Pot 9 : 33 3/8 : 19 3/8.
+Pot 9 : 25 : 16 3/8.
+Pot 9 : 25 3/8 : 19.
+Pot 9 : 21 7/8 : 18 6/8.
+
+Total : 1014.00 : 921.63.
+
+I determined on this occasion to avoid the error of using pollen of not
+quite equal maturity for crossing and self-fertilisation; so that I
+squeezed pollen out of the conjoined anthers of young flowers for both
+operations. Several flowers on the crossed plant in Pot 1 in Table 5/70
+were again crossed with pollen from a distinct plant. Several other
+flowers on the self-fertilised plant in the same pot were again
+self-fertilised with pollen from the anthers of other flowers on the
+SAME PLANT. Therefore the degree of self-fertilisation was not quite so
+close as in the last generation, in which pollen from the SAME FLOWER,
+kept in paper, was used. These two lots of seeds were thinly sown on
+opposite sides of nine pots; and the young seedlings were thinned, an
+equal number of nearly as possible the same age being left on the two
+sides. In the spring of the following year (1870), when the seedlings
+had grown to a considerable size, they were measured to the tips of
+their leaves; and the twenty-three crossed plants averaged 14.04 inches
+in height, whilst the twenty-three self-fertilised seedlings were 13.54
+inches; or as 100 to 96.
+
+In the summer of the same year several of these plants flowered, the
+crossed and self-fertilised plants flowering almost simultaneously, and
+all the flower-stems were measured. Those produced by eleven of the
+crossed plants averaged 30.71 inches, and those by nine of the
+self-fertilised plants 29.43 inches in height; or as 100 to 96.
+
+The plants in these nine pots, after they had flowered, were repotted
+without being disturbed in much larger pots; and in the following year,
+1871, all flowered freely; but they had grown into such an entangled
+mass, that the separate plants on each side could no longer be
+distinguished. Accordingly three or four of the tallest flower-stems on
+each side of each pot were measured; and the measurements in Table 5/71
+are, I think, more trustworthy than the previous ones, from being more
+numerous, and from the plants being well established and growing
+vigorously.
+
+The average height of the thirty-four tallest flower-stems on the
+twenty-three crossed plants is 29.82 inches, and that of the same number
+of flower-stems on the same number of self-fertilised plants is 27.10
+inches, or as 100 to 91. So that the crossed plants now showed a decided
+advantage over their self-fertilised opponents.
+
+22. POLEMONIACEAE.--Nemophila insignis.
+
+Twelve flowers were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant, but
+produced only six capsules, containing on an average 18.3 seeds.
+Eighteen flowers were fertilised with their own pollen and produced ten
+capsules, containing on an average 12.7 seeds, so that the seeds per
+capsule were as 100 to 69. (5/25. Several species of Polemoniaceae are
+known to be proterandrous, but I did not attend to this point in
+Nemophila. Verlot says ‘Des Variétés’ 1865 page 66, that varieties
+growing near one another spontaneously intercross.) The crossed seeds
+weighed a little less than an equal number of self-fertilised seeds, in
+the proportion of 100 to 105; but this was clearly due to some of the
+self-fertilised capsules containing very few seeds, and these were much
+bulkier than the others, from having been better nourished. A subsequent
+comparison of the number of seeds in a few capsules did not show so
+great a superiority on the side of the crossed capsules as in the
+present case.
+
+The seeds were placed on sand, and after germinating were planted in
+pairs on the opposite sides of five pots, which were kept in the
+greenhouse. When the seedlings were from 2 to 3 inches in height, most
+of the crossed had a slight advantage over the self-fertilised. The
+plants were trained up sticks, and thus grew to a considerable height.
+In four out of the five pots a crossed plant flowered before any one of
+the self-fertilised. The plants were first measured to the tips of their
+leaves, before they had flowered and when the crossed were under a foot
+in height. The twelve crossed plants averaged 11.1 inches in height,
+whilst the twelve self-fertilised were less than half of this height,
+namely, 5.45; or as 100 to 49. Before the plants had grown to their full
+height, two of the self-fertilised died, and as I feared that this might
+happen with others, they were again measured to the tops of their stems,
+as shown in Table 5/72.
+
+TABLE 5/72. Nemophila insignis; 0 means that the plant died.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 32 4/8 : 21 2/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 34 4/8 : 23 5/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 33 1/8 : 19.
+Pot 3 : 22 2/8 : 7 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 29 : 17 4/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 35 4/8 : 10 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 33 4/8 : 27.
+
+Pot 5 : 35 : 0.
+Pot 5 : 38 : 18 3/8.
+Pot 5 : 36 : 20 4/8.
+Pot 5 : 37 4/8 : 34.
+Pot 5 : 32 4/8 : 0.
+
+Total : 399.38 : 199.00.
+
+The twelve crossed plants now averaged 33.28, and the ten
+self-fertilised 19.9 inches in height, or as 100 to 60; so that they
+differed somewhat less than before.
+
+The plants in Pots 3 and 5 were placed under a net in the greenhouse,
+two of the crossed plants in the latter pot being pulled up on account
+of the death of two of the self-fertilised; so that altogether six
+crossed and six self-fertilised plants were left to fertilise themselves
+spontaneously. The pots were rather small, and the plants did not
+produce many capsules. The small size of the self-fertilised plants will
+largely account for the fewness of the capsules which they produced. The
+six crossed plants bore 105, and the six self-fertilised only 30
+capsules; or as 100 to 29.
+
+The self-fertilised seeds thus obtained from the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants, after germinating on sand, were planted on the
+opposite sides of four small pots, and treated as before. But many of
+the plants were unhealthy, and their heights were so unequal--some on
+both sides being five times as tall as the others--that the averages
+deduced from the measurements in Table 5/73 are not in the least
+trustworthy. Nevertheless I have felt bound to give them, as they are
+opposed to my general conclusions.
+
+The seven self-fertilised plants from the crossed plants here average
+15.73, and the seven self-fertilised from the self-fertilised 21 inches
+in height; or as 100 to 133. Strictly analogous experiments with Viola
+tricolor and Lathyrus odoratus gave a very different result.
+
+TABLE 5/73. Nemophila insignis.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants from Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants from Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 27 : 27 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 14 : 34 2/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 17 6/8 : 23.
+Pot 2 : 24 4/8 : 32.
+
+Pot 3 : 16 : 7.
+
+Pot 4 : 5 3/8 : 7 2/8.
+Pot 4 : 5 4/8 : 16.
+
+Total : 110.13 : 147.00.
+
+23. BORAGINACEAE.--Borago officinalis.
+
+This plant is frequented by a greater number of bees than any other one
+which I have observed. It is strongly proterandrous (H. Muller
+‘Befruchtung’ etc. page 267), and the flowers can hardly fail to be
+cross-fertilised; but should this not occur, they are capable of
+self-fertilisation to a limited extent, as some pollen long remains
+within the anthers, and is apt to fall on the mature stigma. In the year
+1863 I covered up a plant, and examined thirty-five flowers, of which
+only twelve yielded any seeds; whereas of thirty-five flowers on an
+exposed plant growing close by, all with the exception of two yielded
+seeds. The covered-up plant, however, produced altogether twenty-five
+spontaneously self-fertilised seeds; the exposed plant producing
+fifty-five seeds, the product, no doubt, of cross-fertilisation.
+
+In the year 1868 eighteen flowers on a protected plant were crossed with
+pollen from a distinct plant, but only seven of these produced fruit;
+and I suspect that I applied pollen to many of the stigmas before they
+were mature. These fruits contained on an average 2 seeds, with a
+maximum in one of three seeds. Twenty-four spontaneously self-fertilised
+fruits were produced by the same plant, and these contained on an
+average 1.2 seeds, with a maximum of two in one fruit. So that the
+fruits from the artificially crossed flowers yielded seeds compared with
+those from the spontaneously self-fertilised flowers, in the ratio of
+100 to 60. But the self-fertilised seeds, as often occurs when few are
+produced, were heavier than the crossed seeds in the ratio of 100 to 90.
+
+These two lots of seeds were sown on opposite sides of two large pots;
+but I succeeded in raising only four pairs of equal age. When the
+seedlings on both sides were about 8 inches in height they were equal.
+When in full flower they were measured, as follows:--
+
+TABLE 5/74. Borago officinalis.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 19 : 13 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 21 : 18 6/8.
+Pot 1 : 16 4/8 : 20 2/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 26 2/8 : 32 2/8.
+
+Total : 82.75 : 84.75.
+
+The average height of the four crossed plants is here 20.68, and that of
+the four self-fertilised 21.18 inches; or as 100 to 102. The
+self-fertilised plants thus exceeded the crossed in height by a little;
+but this was entirely due to the tallness of one of the self-fertilised.
+The crossed plants in both pots flowered before the self-fertilised.
+Therefore I believe if more plants had been raised, the result would
+have been different. I regret that I did not attend to the fertility of
+the two lots.
+
+24. NOLANACEAE.--Nolana prostrata.
+
+In some of the flowers the stamens are considerably shorter than the
+pistil, in others equal to it in length. I suspected, therefore, but
+erroneously as it proved, that this plant was dimorphic, like Primula,
+Linum, etc., and in the year 1862 twelve plants, covered by a net in the
+greenhouse, were subjected to trial. The spontaneously self-fertilised
+flowers yielded 64 grains weight of seeds, but the product of fourteen
+artificially crossed flowers is here included, which falsely increases
+the weight of the self-fertilised seeds. Nine uncovered plants, the
+flowers of which were eagerly visited by bees for their pollen and were
+no doubt intercrossed by them, produced 79 grains weight of seeds:
+therefore twelve plants thus treated would have yielded 105 grains. Thus
+the seeds produced by the flowers on an equal number of plants, when
+crossed by bees, and spontaneously self-fertilised (the product of
+fourteen artificially crossed flowers being, however, included in the
+latter) were in weight as 100 to 61.
+
+In the summer of 1867 the trial was repeated; thirty flowers were
+crossed with pollen from a distinct plant and produced twenty-seven
+capsules, each containing five seeds. Thirty-two flowers were fertilised
+with their own pollen, and produced only six capsules, each with five
+seeds. So that the crossed and self-fertilised capsules contained the
+same number of seeds, though many more capsules were produced by the
+cross-fertilised than by the self-fertilised flowers, in the ratio of
+100 to 21.
+
+An equal number of seeds of both lots were weighed, and the crossed
+seeds were to the self-fertilised in weight as 100 to 82. Therefore a
+cross increases the number of capsules produced and the weight of the
+seeds, but not the number of seeds in each capsule.
+
+These two lots of seeds, after germinating on sand, were planted on the
+opposite sides of three pots. The seedlings when from 6 to 7 inches in
+height were equal. The plants were measured when fully grown, but their
+heights were so unequal in the several pots, that the result cannot be
+fully trusted.
+
+TABLE 5/75. Nolana prostrata.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 8 4/8 : 4 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 6 4/8 : 7 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 10 4/8 : 14 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 18 : 18.
+
+Pot 3 : 20 2/8 : 22 6/8.
+
+Total : 63.75 : 67.00.
+
+The five crossed plants average 12.75, and the five self-fertilised 13.4
+inches in height; or as 100 to 105.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+SOLANACEAE, PRIMULACEAE, POLYGONEAE, ETC.
+
+Petunia violacea, crossed and self-fertilised plants compared for four
+generations.
+Effects of a cross with a fresh stock.
+Uniform colour of the flowers on the self-fertilised plants of the
+fourth generation.
+Nicotiana tabacum, crossed and self-fertilised plants of equal height.
+Great effects of a cross with a distinct sub-variety on the height, but
+not on the fertility, of the offspring.
+Cyclamen persicum, crossed seedlings greatly superior to the self-fertilised.
+Anagallis collina.
+Primula veris.
+Equal-styled variety of Primula veris, fertility of, greatly increased
+by a cross with a fresh stock.
+Fagopyrum esculentum.
+Beta vulgaris.
+Canna warscewiczi, crossed and self-fertilised plants of equal height.
+Zea mays.
+Phalaris canariensis.
+
+25. SOLANACEAE. Petunia violacea.
+
+DINGY PURPLE VARIETY.
+
+The flowers of this plant are so seldom visited during the day by
+insects in this country, that I have never seen an instance; but my
+gardener, on whom I can rely, once saw some humble-bees at work. Mr.
+Meehan says, that in the United States bees bore through the corolla for
+the nectar, and adds that their “fertilisation is carried on by
+night-moths.” (6/1. ‘Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Science of
+Philadelphia’ August 2, 1870 page 90.)
+
+In France M. Naudin, after castrating a large number of flowers whilst
+in bud, left them exposed to the visits of insects, and about a quarter
+produced capsules (6/2. ‘Annales des Sc. Nat.’ 4th series Bot. Tome 9
+cah. 5); but I am convinced that a much larger proportion of flowers in
+my garden are cross-fertilised by insects, for protected flowers with
+their own pollen placed on the stigma never yielded nearly a full
+complement of seed; whilst those left uncovered produced fine capsules,
+showing that pollen from other plants must have been brought to them,
+probably by moths. Plants growing vigorously and flowering in pots in
+the greenhouse, never yielded a single capsule; and this may be
+attributed, at least in chief part, to the exclusion of moths.
+
+Six flowers on a plant covered by a net were crossed with pollen from a
+distinct plant and produced six capsules, containing by weight 4.44
+grains of seed. Six other flowers were fertilised with their own pollen
+and produced only three capsules, containing only 1.49 grains weight of
+seed. From this it follows that an equal number of crossed and
+self-fertilised capsules would have contained seeds by weight as 100 to
+67. I should not have thought the proportional contents of so few
+capsules worth giving, had not nearly the same result been confirmed by
+several subsequent trials.
+
+Seeds of the two lots were placed on sand, and many of the
+self-fertilised seeds germinated before the crossed, and were rejected.
+Several pairs in an equal state of germination were planted on the
+opposite sides of Pots 1 and 2; but only the tallest plant on each side
+was measured. Seeds were also sown thickly on the two sides of a large
+pot (3), the seedlings being afterwards thinned, so that an equal number
+was left on each side; the three tallest on each side being measured.
+The pots were kept in the greenhouse, and the plants were trained up
+sticks. For some time the young crossed plants had no advantage in
+height over the self-fertilised; but their leaves were larger. When
+fully grown and in flower the plants were measured, as follows:--
+
+TABLE 6/76. Petunia violacea (first generation).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 30 : 20 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 34 4/8 : 27 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 34 : 28 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 30 4/8 : 27 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 25 : 26.
+
+Total : 154 : 130.
+
+The five tallest crossed plants here average 30.8, and the five tallest
+self-fertilised 26 inches in height, or as 100 to 84.
+
+Three capsules were obtained by crossing flowers on the above crossed
+plants, and three other capsules by again self-fertilising flowers on
+the self-fertilised plants. One of the latter capsules appeared as fine
+as any one of the crossed capsules; but the other two contained many
+imperfect seeds. From these two lots of seeds the plants of the
+following generation were raised.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+
+As in the last generation, many of the self-fertilised seeds germinated
+before the crossed.
+
+Seeds in an equal state of germination were planted on the opposite
+sides of three pots. The crossed seedlings soon greatly exceeded in
+height the self-fertilised. In Pot 1, when the tallest crossed plant was
+10 1/2 inches high, the tallest self-fertilised was only 3 1/2 inches;
+in Pot 2 the excess in height of the crossed was not quite so great. The
+plants were treated as in the last generation, and when fully grown
+measured as before. In Pot 3 both the crossed plants were killed at an
+early age by some animal, so that the self-fertilised had no
+competitors. Nevertheless these two self-fertilised plants were
+measured, and are included in Table 6/77. The crossed plants flowered
+long before their self-fertilised opponents in Pots 1 and 2, and before
+those growing separately in Pot 3.
+
+TABLE 6/77. Petunia violacea (Second generation).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 57 2/8 : 13 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 36 2/8 : 8.
+
+Pot 2 : 44 4/8 : 33 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 24 : 28.
+
+Pot 3 : 0 : 46 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 0 : 28 4/8.
+
+Total : 162.0 : 157.5.
+
+The four crossed plants average 40.5, and the six self-fertilised 26.25
+inches in height; or as 100 to 65. But this great inequality is in part
+accidental, owing to some of the self-fertilised plants being very
+short, and to one of the crossed being very tall.
+
+Twelve flowers on these crossed plants were again crossed, and eleven
+capsules were produced; of these, five were poor and six good; the
+latter contained by weight 3.75 grains of seeds. Twelve flowers on the
+self-fertilised plants were again fertilised with their own pollen and
+produced no less than twelve capsules, and the six finest of these
+contained by weight 2.57 grains of seeds. It should however be observed
+that these latter capsules were produced by the plants in Pot 3, which
+were not exposed to any competition. The seeds in the six fine crossed
+capsules to those in the six finest self-fertilised capsules were in
+weight as 100 to 68. From these seeds the plants of the next generation
+were raised.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE THIRD GENERATION.
+
+TABLE 6/78. Petunia violacea (third generation; plants very young).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 1 4/8 : 5 6/8.
+Pot 1 : 1 : 4 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 5 7/8 : 8 3/8.
+Pot 2 : 5 6/8 : 6 7/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 4 : 5 5/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 1 4/8 : 5 3/8.
+
+Total : 19.63 : 36.50.
+
+The above seeds were placed on sand, and after germinating were planted
+in pairs on the opposite sides of four pots; and all the remaining seeds
+were thickly sown on the two sides of a fifth large pot. The result was
+surprising, for the self-fertilised seedlings very early in life beat
+the crossed, and at one time were nearly double their height. At first
+the case appeared like that of Mimulus, in which after the third
+generation a tall and highly self-fertile variety appeared. But as in
+the two succeeding generations the crossed plants resumed their former
+superiority over the self-fertilised, the case must be looked at as an
+anomaly. The sole conjecture which I can form is that the crossed seeds
+had not been sufficiently ripened, and thus produced weakly plants, as
+occurred with Iberis. When the crossed plants were between 3 and 4
+inches in height, the six finest in four of the pots were measured to
+the summits of their stems, and at the same time the six finest of the
+self-fertilised plants. The measurements are given in Table 6/78, and it
+may be here seen that all the self-fertilised plants exceed their
+opponents in height, whereas when subsequently measured the excess of
+the self-fertilised depended chiefly on the unusual tallness of two of
+the plants in Pot 2. The crossed plants here average 3.27, and the
+self-fertilised 6.08 inches in height; or as 100 to 186.
+
+When fully grown they were again measured, as follows:--
+
+TABLE 6/79. Petunia violacea (third generation; plants fully grown).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 41 4/8 : 40 6/8.
+Pot 1 : 48 : 39.
+Pot 1 : 36 : 48.
+
+Pot 2 : 36 : 47.
+Pot 2 : 21 : 80 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 36 2/8 : 86 2/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 52 : 46.
+
+Pot 4 : 57 : 43 6/8.
+
+Total : 327.75 : 431.00.
+
+The eight crossed plants now averaged 40.96, and the eight
+self-fertilised plants 53.87 inches in height, or as 100 to 131; and
+this excess chiefly depended, as already stated, on the unusual tallness
+of two of the self-fertilised plants in Pot 2. The self-fertilised had
+therefore lost some of their former great superiority over the crossed
+plants. In three of the pots the self-fertilised plants flowered first;
+but in Pot 3 at the same time with the crossed.
+
+The case is rendered the more strange, because the crossed plants in the
+fifth pot (not included in the two last tables), in which all the
+remaining seeds had been thickly sown, were from the first finer plants
+than the self-fertilised, and had larger leaves. At the period when the
+two tallest crossed plants in this pot were 6 4/8 and 4 5/8 inches high,
+the two tallest self-fertilised were only 4 inches. When the two crossed
+plants were 12 and 10 inches high, the two self-fertilised were only 8
+inches. These latter plants, as well as many others on the same side of
+this pot never grew any higher, whereas several of the crossed plants
+grew to the height of two feet! On account of this great superiority of
+the crossed plants, the plants on neither side of this pot have been
+included in the two last tables.
+
+Thirty flowers on the crossed plants in Pots 1 and 4 (Table 6/79) were
+again crossed, and produced seventeen capsules. Thirty flowers on the
+self-fertilised plants in the same two pots were again self-fertilised,
+but produced only seven capsules. The contents of each capsule of both
+lots were placed in separate watch-glasses, and the seeds from the
+crossed appeared to the eye to be at least double the number of those
+from the self-fertilised capsules.
+
+In order to ascertain whether the fertility of the self-fertilised
+plants had been lessened by the plants having been self-fertilised for
+the three previous generations, thirty flowers on the crossed plants
+were fertilised with their own pollen. These yielded only five capsules,
+and their seeds being placed in separate watch-glasses did not seem more
+numerous than those from the capsules on the self-fertilised plants
+self-fertilised for the fourth time. So that as far as can be judged
+from so few capsules, the self-fertility of the self-fertilised plants
+had not decreased in comparison with that of the plants which had been
+intercrossed during the three previous generations. It should, however,
+be remembered that both lots of plants had been subjected in each
+generation to almost exactly similar conditions.
+
+Seeds from the crossed plants again crossed, and from the
+self-fertilised again self-fertilised, produced by the plants in Pot 1
+(Table 6/79), in which the three self-fertilised plants were on an
+average only a little taller than the crossed, were used in the
+following experiment. They were kept separate from two similar lots of
+seeds produced by the two plants in Pot 4 in the same table, in which
+the crossed plant was much taller than its self-fertilised opponent.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FOURTH GENERATION (RAISED FROM
+THE PLANTS IN POT 1, TABLE 6/79).
+
+Crossed and self-fertilised seeds from plants of the last generation in
+Pot 1 in Table 6/79, were placed on sand, and after germinating, were
+planted in pairs on the opposite sides of four pots. The seedlings when
+in full flower were measured to the base of the calyx. The remaining
+seeds were sown crowded on the two sides of Pot 5; and the four tallest
+plants on each side of this pot were measured in the same manner.
+
+TABLE 6/80. Petunia violacea (fourth generation; raised from plants of
+the third generation in Pot 1, table 6/79).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 29 2/8 : 30 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 36 2/8 : 34 6/8.
+Pot 1 : 49 : 31 3/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 33 3/8 : 31 5/8.
+Pot 2 : 37 3/8 : 38 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 56 4/8 : 38 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 46 : 45 1/8.
+Pot 3 : 67 2/8 : 45.
+Pot 3 : 54 3/8 : 23 2/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 51 6/8 : 34.
+Pot 4 : 51 7/8 : 0.
+
+Pot 5 : 49 4/8 : 22 3/8.
+Pot 5 : 46 3/8 : 24 2/8.
+Pot 5 : 40 : 24 6/8.
+Pot 5 : 53 : 30.
+Crowded plants.
+
+Total : 701.88 : 453.50.
+
+The fifteen crossed plants average 46.79, and the fourteen (one having
+died) self-fertilised plants 32.39 inches in height; or as 100 to 69. So
+that the crossed plants in this generation had recovered their wonted
+superiority over the self-fertilised plants; though the parents of the
+latter in Pot 1, Table 6/79, were a little taller than their crossed
+opponents.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FOURTH GENERATION (RAISED FROM
+THE PLANTS IN POT 4, TABLE 6/79).
+
+Two similar lots of seeds, obtained from the plants in Pot 4 in Table
+6/79, in which the single crossed plant was at first shorter, but
+ultimately much taller than its self-fertilised opponent, were treated
+in every way like their brethren of the same generation in the last
+experiment. We have in Table 6/81 the measurements of the present
+plants. Although the crossed plants greatly exceeded in height the
+self-fertilised; yet in three out of the five pots a self-fertilised
+plant flowered before any one of the crossed; in a fourth pot
+simultaneously; and in a fifth (namely Pot 2) a crossed plant flowered
+first.
+
+TABLE 6/81. Petunia violacea (fourth generation; raised from plants of
+the third generation in Pot 4, Table 6/79).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 46 : 30 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 46 : 28.
+
+Pot 2 : 50 6/8 : 25.
+Pot 2 : 40 2/8 : 31 3/8.
+Pot 2 : 37 3/8 : 22 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 54 2/8 : 22 5/8.
+Pot 3 : 61 1/8 : 26 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 45 : 32.
+
+Pot 4 : 30 : 24 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 29 1/8 : 26.
+
+Pot 5 : 37 4/8 : 40 2/8.
+Pot 5 : 63 : 18 5/8.
+Pot 5 : 41 2/8 : 17 4/8.
+Crowded plants.
+
+Total : 581.63 : 349.36.
+
+The thirteen crossed plants here average 44.74, and the thirteen
+self-fertilised plants 26.87 inches in height; or as 100 to 60. The
+crossed parents of these were much taller, relatively to the
+self-fertilised parents, than in the last case; and apparently they
+transmitted some of this superiority to their crossed offspring. It is
+unfortunate that I did not turn these plants out of doors, so as to
+observe their relative fertility, for I compared the pollen from some of
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants in Pot 1, Table 6/81, and there
+was a marked difference in its state; that of the crossed plants
+contained hardly any bad and empty grains, whilst such abounded in the
+pollen of the self-fertilised plants.
+
+THE EFFECTS OF A CROSS WITH A FRESH STOCK.
+
+I procured from a garden in Westerham, whence my plants originally came,
+a fresh plant differing in no respect from mine except in the colour of
+the flowers, which was a fine purple. But this plant must have been
+exposed during at least four generations to very different conditions
+from those to which my plants had been subjected, as these had been
+grown in pots in the greenhouse. Eight flowers on the self-fertilised
+plants in Table 6/81, of the last or fourth self-fertilised generation,
+were fertilised with pollen from this fresh stock; all eight produced
+capsules containing together by weight 5.01 grains of seeds. The plants
+raised from these seeds may be called the Westerham-crossed.
+
+Eight flowers on the crossed plants of the last or fourth generation in
+Table 6/81 were again crossed with pollen from one of the other crossed
+plants, and produced five capsules, containing by weight 2.07 grains of
+seeds. The plants raised from these seeds may be called the
+INTERCROSSED; and these form the fifth intercrossed generation.
+
+Eight flowers on the self-fertilised plants of the same generation in
+Table 6/81 were again self-fertilised, and produced seven capsules,
+containing by weight 2.1 grains of seeds. The SELF-FERTILISED plants
+raised from these seeds form the fifth self-fertilised generation. These
+latter plants and the intercrossed are comparable in all respects with
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants of the four previous generations.
+
+From the foregoing data it is easy to calculate that:
+
+Ten Westerham-crossed capsules would have contained 6.26 grains weight
+of seed.
+
+Ten intercrossed capsules would have contained 4.14 grains weight of
+seed.
+
+Ten self-fertilised capsules would have contained 3.00 grains weight of
+seed.
+
+We thus get the following ratios:--
+
+Seeds from the Westerham-crossed capsules to those from the capsules of
+the fifth self-fertilised generation, in weight as 100 to 48.
+
+Seeds from the Westerham-crossed capsules to those from the capsules of
+the fifth intercrossed generation, in weight as 100 to 66.
+
+Seeds from the intercrossed capsules to those from the self-fertilised
+capsules, in weight as 100 to 72.
+
+So that a cross with pollen from a fresh stock greatly increased the
+productiveness of the flowers on plants which had been self-fertilised
+for the four previous generations, in comparison not only with the
+flowers on the same plants self-fertilised for the fifth time, but with
+the flowers on the crossed plants crossed with pollen from another plant
+of the same old stock for the fifth time.
+
+These three lots of seeds were placed on sand, and were planted in an
+equal state of germination in seven pots, each made tripartite by three
+superficial partitions. Some of the remaining seeds, whether or not in a
+state of germination, were thickly sown in an eighth pot. The pots were
+kept in the greenhouse, and the plants trained up sticks. They were
+first measured to the tops of their stems when coming into flower; and
+the twenty-two Westerham-crossed plants then averaged 25.51 inches; the
+twenty-three intercrossed plants 30.38; and the twenty-three
+self-fertilised plants 23.40 inches in height. We thus get the following
+ratios:--
+
+The Westerham-crossed plants in height to the self-fertilised as 100 to
+91.
+
+The Westerham-crossed plants in height to the intercrossed as 100 to
+119.
+
+The intercrossed plants in height to the self-fertilised as 100 to 77.
+
+These plants were again measured when their growth appeared on a casual
+inspection to be complete. But in this I was mistaken, for after cutting
+them down, I found that the summits of the stems of the
+Westerham-crossed plants were still growing vigorously; whilst the
+intercrossed had almost, and the self-fertilised had quite completed
+their growth. Therefore I do not doubt, if the three lots had been left
+to grow for another month, that the ratios would have been somewhat
+different from those deduced from the measurements in Table 6/82.
+
+TABLE 6/82. Petunia violacea.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Westerham-Crossed Plants (from self-fertilised Plants of
+fourth generation crossed by a fresh stock).
+
+Column 3: Intercrossed Plants (Plants of one and the same stock
+intercrossed for five generations).
+
+Column 4: Self-fertilised Plants (self-fertilised for five generations).
+
+Pot 1 : 64 5/8 : 57 2/8 : 43 6/8.
+Pot 1 : 24 : 64 : 56 3/8.
+Pot 1 : 51 4/8 : 58 6/8 : 31 5/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 48 7/8 : 59 7/8 : 41 5/8.
+Pot 2 : 54 4/8 : 58 2/8 : 41 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 58 1/8 : 53 : 18 2/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 62 : 52 2/8 : 46 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 53 2/8 : 54 6/8 : 45.
+Pot 3 : 62 7/8 : 61 6/8 : 19 4/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 44 4/8 : 58 7/8 : 37 5/8.
+Pot 4 : 49 2/8 : 65 2/8 : 33 2/8.
+Pot 4 : .. : 59 6/8 : 32 2/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 43 1/8 : 35 6/8 : 41 6/8.
+Pot 5 : 53 7/8 : 34 6/8 : 26 4/8.
+Pot 5 : 53 2/8 : 54 6/8 : 0.
+
+Pot 6 : 37 4/8 : 56 : 46 4/8.
+Pot 6 : 61 : 63 5/8 : 29 6/8.
+Pot 6 : 0 : 57 7/8 : 14 4/8.
+
+Pot 7 : 59 6/8 : 51 : 43.
+Pot 7 : 43 4/8 : 49 6/8 : 12 2/8.
+Pot 7 : 50 5/8 : 0 : 0.
+
+Pot 8 : 37 7/8 : 38 5/8 : 21 6/8.
+Pot 8 : 37 2/8 : 44 5/8 : 14 5/8.
+
+Total : 1051.25 : 1190.50 : 697.88.
+
+The twenty-one Westerham-crossed plants now averaged 50.05 inches; the
+twenty-two intercrossed plants, 54.11 inches; and the twenty-one
+self-fertilised plants, 33.23 inches in height. We thus get the
+following ratios:--
+
+The Westerham-crossed plants in height to the self-fertilised as 100 to
+66.
+
+The Westerham-crossed plants in height to the intercrossed as 100 to
+108.
+
+The intercrossed plants in height to the self-fertilised as 100 to 61.
+
+We here see that the Westerham-crossed (the offspring of plants
+self-fertilised for four generations and then crossed with a fresh
+stock) have gained greatly in height, since they were first measured,
+relatively to the plants self-fertilised for five generations. They were
+then as 100 to 91, and now as 100 to 66 in height. The intercrossed
+plants (i.e., those which had been intercrossed for the last five
+generations) likewise exceed in height the self-fertilised plants, as
+occurred in all the previous generations with the exception of the
+abnormal plants of the third generation. On the other hand, the
+Westerham-crossed plants are exceeded in height by the intercrossed; and
+this is a surprising fact, judging from most of the other strictly
+analogous cases. But as the Westerham-crossed plants were still growing
+vigorously, while the intercrossed had almost ceased to grow, there can
+hardly be a doubt that if left to grow for another month they would have
+beaten the intercrossed in height. That they were gaining on them is
+clear, as when measured before they were as 100 to 119, and now as only
+100 to 108 in height. The Westerham-crossed plants had also leaves of a
+darker green, and looked altogether more vigorous than the intercrossed;
+and what is much more important, they produced, as we shall presently
+see, much heavier seed-capsules. So that in fact the offspring from the
+self-fertilised plants of the fourth generation crossed by a fresh stock
+were superior to the intercrossed, as well as to the self-fertilised
+plants of the fifth generation--of which latter fact there could not be
+the least doubt.
+
+These three lots of plants were cut down close to the ground and
+weighed. The twenty-one Westerham-crossed plants weighed 32 ounces; the
+twenty-two intercrossed plants, 34 ounces, and the twenty-one
+self-fertilised plants 7 1/4 ounces. The following ratios are calculated
+for an equal number of plants of each kind. But as the self-fertilised
+plants were just beginning to wither, their relative weight is here
+slightly too small; and as the Westerham-crossed were still growing
+vigorously, their relative weight with time allowed would no doubt have
+greatly increased.
+
+The Westerham-crossed plants in weight to the self-fertilised as 100 to
+22.
+
+The Westerham-crossed plants in weight to the intercrossed as 100 to
+101.
+
+The intercrossed plants in weight to the self-fertilised as 100 to 22.3.
+
+We here see, judging by weight instead of as before by height, that the
+Westerham-crossed and the intercrossed have an immense advantage over
+the self-fertilised. The Westerham-crossed are inferior to the
+intercrossed by a mere trifle; but it is almost certain that if they had
+been allowed to go on growing for another month, the former would have
+completely beaten the latter.
+
+As I had an abundance of seeds of the same three lots, from which the
+foregoing plants had been raised, these were sown in three long parallel
+and adjoining rows in the open ground, so as to ascertain whether under
+these circumstances the results would be nearly the same as before. Late
+in the autumn (November 13) the ten tallest plants were carefully
+selected out of each row, and their heights measured, with the following
+result:--
+
+TABLE 6/83. Petunia violacea (plants growing in the open ground).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Westerham-Crossed Plants (from self-fertilised Plants of the
+fourth generation crossed by a fresh stock).
+
+Column 2: intercrossed Plants (Plants of one and the same stock
+intercrossed for five generations).
+
+Column 3: self-fertilised Plants (self-fertilised for five generations).
+
+ 34 2/8 : 38 : 27 3/8.
+ 36 2/8 : 36 2/8 : 23.
+ 35 2/8 : 39 5/8 : 25.
+ 32 4/8 : 37 : 24 1/8.
+ 37 : 36 : 22 4/8.
+ 36 4/8 : 41 3/8 : 23 3/8.
+ 40 7/8 : 37 2/8 : 21 5/8.
+ 37 2/8 : 40 : 23 4/8.
+ 38 2/8 : 41 2/8 : 21 3/8.
+ 38 5/8 : 36 : 21 2/8.
+
+ 366.76 : 382.76 : 233.13.
+
+The ten Westerham-crossed plants here average 36.67 inches in height;
+the ten intercrossed plants, 38.27 inches; and the ten self-fertilised,
+23.31 inches. These three lots of plants were also weighed; the
+Westerham-crossed plants weighed 28 ounces; the intercrossed plants, 41
+ounces; and the self-fertilised, 14.75 ounces. We thus get the following
+ratios:--
+
+The Westerham-crossed plants in height to the self-fertilised as 100 to
+63.
+
+The Westerham-crossed plants in weight to the self-fertilised as 100 to
+53.
+
+The Westerham-crossed plants in height to the intercrossed as 100 to
+104.
+
+The Westerham-crossed plants in weight to the intercrossed as 100 to
+146.
+
+The intercrossed plants in height to the self-fertilised as 100 to 61.
+
+The intercrossed plants in weight to the self-fertilised as 100 to 36.
+
+Here the relative heights of the three lots are nearly the same (within
+three or four per cent) as with the plants in the pots. In weight there
+is a much greater difference: the Westerham-crossed exceed the
+self-fertilised by much less than they did before; but the
+self-fertilised plants in the pots had become slightly withered, as
+before stated, and were in consequence unfairly light. The
+Westerham-crossed plants are here inferior in weight to the intercrossed
+plants in a much higher degree than in the pots; and this appeared due
+to their being much less branched, owing to their having germinated in
+greater numbers and consequently being much crowded. Their leaves were
+of a brighter green than those of the intercrossed and self-fertilised
+plants.
+
+RELATIVE FERTILITY OF THE THREE LOTS OF PLANTS.
+
+None of the plants in pots in the greenhouse ever produced a capsule;
+and this may be attributed in chief part to the exclusion of moths.
+Therefore the fertility of the three lots could be judged of only by
+that of the plants growing out of doors, which from being left uncovered
+were probably cross-fertilised. The plants in the three rows were
+exactly of the same age and had been subjected to closely similar
+conditions, so that any difference in their fertility must be attributed
+to their different origin; namely, to the one lot being derived from
+plants self-fertilised for four generations and then crossed with a
+fresh stock; to the second lot being derived from plants of the same old
+stock intercrossed for five generations; and to the third lot being
+derived from plants self-fertilised for five generations. All the
+capsules, some nearly mature and some only half-grown, were gathered,
+counted, and weighed from the ten finest plants in each of the three
+rows, of which the measurements and weights have already been given. The
+intercrossed plants, as we have seen, were taller and considerably
+heavier than the plants of the other two lots, and they produced a
+greater number of capsules than did even the Westerham-crossed plants;
+and this may be attributed to the latter having grown more crowded and
+being in consequence less branched. Therefore the average weight of an
+equal number of capsules from each lot of plants seems to be the fairest
+standard of comparison, as their weights will have been determined
+chiefly by the number of the included seeds. As the intercrossed plants
+were taller and heavier than the plants of the other two lots, it might
+have been expected that they would have produced the finest or heaviest
+capsules; but this was very far from being the case.
+
+The ten tallest Westerham-crossed plants produced 111 ripe and unripe
+capsules, weighing 121.2 grains. Therefore 100 of such capsules would
+have weighed 109.18 grains.
+
+The ten tallest intercrossed plants produced 129 capsules, weighing
+76.45 grains. Therefore 100 of these capsules would have weighed 59.26
+grains.
+
+The ten tallest self-fertilised plants produced only 44 capsules,
+weighing 22.35 grains. Therefore 100 of these capsules would have
+weighed 50.79 grains.
+
+From these data we get the following ratios for the fertility of the
+three lots, as deduced from the relative weights of an equal number of
+capsules from the finest plants in each lot:--
+
+Westerham-crossed plants to self-fertilised plants as 100 to 46.
+
+Westerham-crossed plants to intercrossed plants as 100 to 54.
+
+Intercrossed plants to self-fertilised plants as 100 to 86.
+
+We here see how potent the influence of a cross with pollen from a fresh
+stock has been on the fertility of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations, in comparison with plants of the old stock when either
+intercrossed or self-fertilised for five generations; the flowers on all
+these plants having been left to be freely crossed by insects or to
+fertilise themselves. The Westerham-crossed plants were also much taller
+and heavier plants than the self-fertilised, both in the pots and open
+ground; but they were less tall and heavy than the intercrossed plants.
+This latter result, however, would almost certainly have been reversed,
+if the plants had been allowed to grow for another month, as the
+Westerham-crossed were still growing vigorously, whilst the intercrossed
+had almost ceased to grow. This case reminds us of the somewhat
+analogous one of Eschscholtzia, in which plants raised from a cross with
+a fresh stock did not grow higher than the self-fertilised or
+intercrossed plants, but produced a greater number of seed-capsules,
+which contained a far larger average number of seeds.
+
+COLOUR OF THE FLOWERS ON THE ABOVE THREE LOTS OF PLANTS.
+
+The original mother-plant, from which the five successive
+self-fertilised generations were raised, bore dingy purple flowers. At
+no time was any selection practised, and the plants were subjected in
+each generation to extremely uniform conditions. The result was, as in
+some previous cases, that the flowers on all the self-fertilised plants,
+both in the pots and open ground, were absolutely uniform in tint; this
+being a dull, rather peculiar flesh colour. This uniformity was very
+striking in the long row of plants growing in the open ground, and these
+first attracted my attention. I did not notice in which generation the
+original colour began to change and to become uniform, but I have every
+reason to believe that the change was gradual. The flowers on the
+intercrossed plants were mostly of the same tint, but not nearly so
+uniform as those on the self-fertilised plants, and many of them were
+pale, approaching almost to white. The flowers on the plants from the
+cross with the purple-flowered Westerham stock were, as might have been
+expected, much more purple and not nearly so uniform in tint. The
+self-fertilised plants were also remarkably uniform in height, as judged
+by the eye; the intercrossed less so, whilst the Westerham-crossed
+plants varied much in height.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum.
+
+This plant offers a curious case. Out of six trials with crossed and
+self-fertilised plants, belonging to three successive generations, in
+one alone did the crossed show any marked superiority in height over the
+self-fertilised; in four of the trials they were approximately equal;
+and in one (i.e., in the first generation) the self-fertilised plants
+were greatly superior to the crossed. In no case did the capsules from
+flowers fertilised with pollen from a distinct plant yield many more,
+and sometimes they yielded much fewer seeds than the capsules from
+self-fertilised flowers. But when the flowers of one variety were
+crossed with pollen from a slightly different variety, which had grown
+under somewhat different conditions,--that is, by a fresh stock,--the
+seedlings derived from this cross exceeded in height and weight those
+from the self-fertilised flowers in an extraordinary degree.
+
+Twelve flowers on some plants of the common tobacco, raised from
+purchased seeds, were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant of the
+same lot, and these produced ten capsules. Twelve flowers on the same
+plants were fertilised with their own pollen, and produced eleven
+capsules. The seeds in the ten crossed capsules weighed 31.7 grains,
+whilst those in ten of the self-fertilised capsules weighed 47.67
+grains; or as 100 to 150. The much greater productiveness of the
+self-fertilised than of the crossed capsules can hardly be attributed to
+chance, as all the capsules of both lots were very fine and healthy
+ones.
+
+The seeds were placed on sand, and several pairs in an equal state of
+germination were planted on the opposite sides of three pots. The
+remaining seeds were thickly sown on the two sides of Pot 4, so that the
+plants in this pot were much crowded. The tallest plant on each side of
+each pot was measured. Whilst the plants were quite young the four
+tallest crossed plants averaged 7.87 inches, and the four tallest
+self-fertilised 14.87 inches in height; or as 100 to 189. The heights at
+this age are given in the two left columns of Table 6/84.
+
+When in full flower the tallest plants on each side were again measured,
+see the two right hand columns in Table 6/84. But I should state that
+the pots were not large enough, and the plants never grew to their
+proper height. The four tallest crossed plants now averaged 18.5, and
+the four tallest self-fertilised plants 32.75 inches in height; or as
+100 to 178. In all four pots a self-fertilised plant flowered before any
+one of the crossed.
+
+In Pot 4, in which the plants were extremely crowded, the two lots were
+at first equal; and ultimately the tallest crossed plant exceeded by a
+trifle the tallest self-fertilised plant. This recalled to my mind an
+analogous case in the one generation of Petunia, in which the
+self-fertilised plants were throughout their growth taller than the
+crossed in all the pots except in the crowded one. Accordingly another
+trial was made, and some of the same crossed and self-fertilised seeds
+of tobacco were sown thickly on opposite sides of two additional pots;
+the plants being left to grow up much crowded. When they were between 13
+and 14 inches in height there was no difference between the two sides,
+nor was there any marked difference when the plants had grown as tall as
+they could; for in one pot the tallest crossed plant was 26 1/2 inches
+in height, and exceeded by 2 inches the tallest self-fertilised plant,
+whilst in the other pot, the tallest crossed plant was shorter by 3 1/2
+inches than the tallest self-fertilised plant, which was 22 inches in
+height.
+
+TABLE 6/84. Nicotiana tabacum (first generation).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants, May 20, 1868.
+
+Column 3: self-fertilised Plants, May 20, 1868.
+
+Column 4: Crossed Plants, December 6, 1868.
+
+Column 5: self-fertilised Plants, December 6, 1868.
+
+Pot 1 : 15 4/8 : 26 : 40 : 44.
+
+Pot 2 : 3 : 15 : 6 4/8 : 43.
+
+Pot 3 : 8 : 13 4/8 : 16 : 33.
+
+Pot 4 : 5 : 5 : 11 4/8 : 11.
+
+Total : 31.5 : 59.5 : 74.0 : 131.0.
+
+As the plants did not grow to their proper height in the above small
+pots in Table 6/84, four crossed and four self-fertilised plants were
+raised from the same seed, and were planted in pairs on the opposite
+sides of four very large pots containing rich soil; so that they were
+not exposed to at all severe mutual competition. When these plants were
+in flower I neglected to measure them, but record in my notes that all
+four self-fertilised plants exceeded in height the four crossed plants
+by 2 or 3 inches. We have seen that the flowers on the original or
+parent-plants which were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant
+yielded much fewer seeds than those fertilised with their own pollen;
+and the trial just given, as well as that in Table 6/84, show us clearly
+that the plants raised from the crossed seeds were inferior in height to
+those from the self-fertilised seeds; but only when not greatly crowded.
+When crowded and thus subjected to very severe competition, the crossed
+and self-fertilised plants were nearly equal in height.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+
+Twelve flowers on the crossed plants of the last generation growing in
+the four large pots just mentioned, were crossed with pollen from a
+crossed plant growing in one of the other pots; and twelve flowers on
+the self-fertilised plants were fertilised with their own pollen. All
+these flowers of both lots produced fine capsules. Ten of the crossed
+capsules contained by weight 38.92 grains of seeds, and ten of the
+self-fertilised capsules 37.74 grains; or as 100 to 97. Some of these
+seeds in an equal state of germination were planted in pairs on the
+opposite sides of five large pots. A good many of the crossed seeds
+germinated before the self-fertilised, and were of course rejected. The
+plants thus raised were measured when several of them were in full
+flower.
+
+TABLE 6/85. Nicotiana tabacum (second generation).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 14 4/8 : 27 6/8.
+Pot 1 : 78 4/8 : 8 6/8.
+Pot 1 : 9 : 56.
+
+Pot 2 : 60 4/8 : 16 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 44 6/8 : 7.
+Pot 2 : 10 : 50 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 57 1/8 : 87 (A).
+Pot 3 : 1 2/8 : 81 2/8 (B).
+
+Pot 4 : 6 6/8 : 19.
+Pot 4 : 31 : 43 2/8.
+Pot 4 : 69 4/8 : 4.
+
+Pot 5 : 99 4/8 : 9 4/8.
+Pot 5 : 29 2/8 : 3.
+
+Total : 511.63 : 413.75.
+
+The thirteen crossed plants here average 39.35, and the thirteen
+self-fertilised plants 31.82 inches in height; or as 100 to 81. But it
+would be a very much fairer plan to exclude all the starved plants of
+only 10 inches and under in height; and in this case the nine remaining
+crossed plants average 53.84, and the seven remaining self-fertilised
+plants 51.78 inches in height, or as 100 to 96; and this difference is
+so small that the crossed and self-fertilised plants may be considered
+as of equal heights.
+
+In addition to these plants, three crossed plants were planted
+separately in three large pots, and three self-fertilised plants in
+three other large pots, so that they were not exposed to any
+competition; and now the self-fertilised plants exceeded the crossed in
+height by a little, for the three crossed averaged 55.91, and the three
+self-fertilised 59.16 inches; or as 100 to 106.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE THIRD GENERATION.
+
+TABLE 6/86. Nicotiana tabacum (third generation). Seedlings from the
+self-fertilised plant A in pot 3, Table 6/85, of the last or second
+generation.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: From Self-fertilised Plant, crossed by a Crossed Plant.
+
+Column 3: From Self-fertilised Plant again self-fertilised, forming the
+third Self-fertilised generation.
+
+Pot 1 : 100 2/8 : 98.
+Pot 1 : 91 : 79.
+
+Pot 2 : 110 2/8 : 59 1/8.
+Pot 2 : 100 4/8 : 66 6/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 104 : 79 6/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 84 2/8 : 110 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 76 4/8 : 64 1/8.
+
+Total : 666.75 : 557.25.
+
+As I wished to ascertain, firstly, whether those self-fertilised plants
+of the last generation, which greatly exceeded in height their crossed
+opponents, would transmit the same tendency to their offspring, and
+secondly, whether they possessed the same sexual constitution, I
+selected for experiment the two self-fertilised plants marked A and B in
+Pot 3 in Table 6/85, as these two were of nearly equal height, and were
+greatly superior to their crossed opponents. Four flowers on each plant
+were fertilised with their own pollen, and four others on the same
+plants were crossed with pollen from one of the crossed plants growing
+in another pot. This plan differs from that before followed, in which
+seedlings from crossed plants again crossed, have been compared with
+seedlings from self-fertilised plants again self-fertilised. The seeds
+from the crossed and self-fertilised capsules of the above two plants
+were placed in separate watch-glasses and compared, but were not
+weighed; and in both cases those from the crossed capsules seemed to be
+rather less numerous than those from the self-fertilised capsules. These
+seeds were planted in the usual manner, and the heights of the crossed
+and self-fertilised seedlings, when fully grown, are given in Tables
+6/86 and 6/87.
+
+The seven crossed plants in the first of these two tables average 95.25,
+and the seven self-fertilised 79.6 inches in height; or as 100 to 83. In
+half the pots a crossed plant, and in the other half a self-fertilised
+plant flowered first.
+
+We now come to the seedlings raised from the other parent-plant B.
+
+TABLE 6/87. Nicotiana tabacum (third generation). Seedlings from the
+self-fertilised plant B in pot 3, Table 6/85, of the last or second
+generation.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: From Self-fertilised Plant, crossed by a Crossed Plant.
+
+Column 3: From Self-fertilised Plant again self-fertilised, forming the
+third Self-fertilised generation.
+
+Pot 1 : 87 2/8 : 72 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 49 : 14 2/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 98 4/8 : 73.
+Pot 2 : 0 : 110 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 99 : 106 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 15 2/8 : 73 6/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 97 6/8 : 48 6/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 48 6/8 : 81 2/8.
+Pot 5 : 0 : 61 2/8.
+
+Total : 495.50 : 641.75.
+
+The seven crossed plants (for two of them died) here average 70.78
+inches, and the nine self-fertilised plants 71.3 inches in height; or as
+100 to barely 101. In four out of these five pots, a self-fertilised
+plant flowered before any one of the crossed plants. So that,
+differently from the last case, the self-fertilised plants are in some
+respects slightly superior to the crossed.
+
+If we now consider the crossed and self-fertilised plants of the three
+generations, we find an extraordinary diversity in their relative
+heights. In the first generation, the crossed plants were inferior to
+the self-fertilised as 100 to 178; and the flowers on the original
+parent-plants which were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant
+yielded much fewer seeds than the self-fertilised flowers, in the
+proportion of 100 to 150. But it is a strange fact that the
+self-fertilised plants, which were subjected to very severe competition
+with the crossed, had on two occasions no advantage over them. The
+inferiority of the crossed plants of this first generation cannot be
+attributed to the immaturity of the seeds, for I carefully examined
+them; nor to the seeds being diseased or in any way injured in some one
+capsule, for the contents of the ten crossed capsules were mingled
+together and a few taken by chance for sowing. In the second generation
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants were nearly equal in height. In
+the third generation, crossed and self-fertilised seeds were obtained
+from two plants of the previous generation, and the seedlings raised
+from them differed remarkably in constitution; the crossed in the one
+case exceeded the self-fertilised in height in the ratio of 100 to 83,
+and in the other case were almost equal. This difference between the two
+lots, raised at the same time from two plants growing in the same pot,
+and treated in every respect alike, as well as the extraordinary
+superiority of the self-fertilised over the crossed plants in the first
+generation, considered together, make me believe that some individuals
+of the present species differ to a certain extent from others in their
+sexual affinities (to use the term employed by Gartner), like closely
+allied species of the same genus. Consequently if two plants which thus
+differ are crossed, the seedlings suffer and are beaten by those from
+the self-fertilised flowers, in which the sexual elements are of the
+same nature. It is known that with our domestic animals certain
+individuals are sexually incompatible, and will not produce offspring,
+although fertile with other individuals. (6/3. I have given evidence on
+this head in my ‘Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication’
+chapter 18 2nd edition volume 2 page 146.) But Kolreuter has recorded a
+case which bears more closely on our present one, as it shows that in
+the genus Nicotiana the varieties differ in their sexual affinities.
+(6/4. ‘Das Geschlecht der Pflanzen, Zweite Fortsetzung’ 1764 pages
+55-60.) He experimented on five varieties of the common tobacco, and
+proved that they were varieties by showing that they were perfectly
+fertile when reciprocally crossed; but one of these varieties, if used
+either as the father or the mother, was more fertile than any of the
+others when crossed with a widely distinct species, N. glutinosa. As the
+different varieties thus differ in their sexual affinities, there is
+nothing surprising in the individuals of the same variety differing in a
+like manner to a slight degree.
+
+Taking the plants of the three generations altogether, the crossed show
+no superiority over the self-fertilised, and I can account for this fact
+only by supposing that with this species, which is perfectly
+self-fertile without insect aid, most of the individuals are in the same
+condition, as those of the same variety of the common pea and of a few
+other exotic plants, which have been self-fertilised for many
+generations. In such cases a cross between two individuals does no good;
+nor does it in any case, unless the individuals differ in general
+constitution, either from so-called spontaneous variation, or from their
+progenitors having been subjected to different conditions. I believe
+that this is the true explanation in the present instance, because, as
+we shall immediately see, the offspring of plants, which did not profit
+at all by being crossed with a plant of the same stock, profited to an
+extraordinary degree by a cross with a slightly different sub-variety.
+
+THE EFFECTS OF A CROSS WITH A FRESH STOCK.
+
+I procured some seed of N. tabacum from Kew and raised some plants,
+which formed a slightly different sub-variety from my former plants; as
+the flowers were a shade pinker, the leaves a little more pointed, and
+the plants not quite so tall. Therefore the advantage in height which
+the seedlings gained by this cross cannot be attributed to direct
+inheritance. Two of the plants of the third self-fertilised generation,
+growing in Pots 2 and 5 in Table 6/87, which exceeded in height their
+crossed opponents (as did their parents in a still higher degree) were
+fertilised with pollen from the Kew plants, that is, by a fresh stock.
+The seedlings thus raised may be called the Kew-crossed. Some other
+flowers on the same two plants were fertilised with their own pollen,
+and the seedlings thus raised from the fourth self-fertilised
+generation. The crossed capsules produced by the plant in Pot 2, Table
+6/87, were plainly less fine than the self-fertilised capsules on the
+same plant. In Pot 5 the one finest capsule was also a self-fertilised
+one; but the seeds produced by the two crossed capsules together
+exceeded in number those produced by the two self-fertilised capsules on
+the same plant. Therefore as far as the flowers on the parent-plants are
+concerned, a cross with pollen from a fresh stock did little or no good;
+and I did not expect that the offspring would have received any benefit,
+but in this I was completely mistaken.
+
+The crossed and self-fertilised seeds from the two plants were placed on
+bare sand, and very many of the crossed seeds of both sets germinated
+before the self-fertilised seeds, and protruded their radicles at a
+quicker rate. Hence many of the crossed seeds had to be rejected, before
+pairs in an equal state of germination were obtained for planting on the
+opposite sides of sixteen large pots. The two series of seedlings raised
+from the parent-plants in the two Pots 2 and 5 were kept separate, and
+when fully grown were measured to the tips of their highest leaves, as
+shown in Table 6/88. But as there was no uniform difference in height
+between the crossed and self-fertilised seedlings raised from the two
+plants, their heights have been added together in calculating the
+averages. I should state that by the accidental fall of a large bush in
+the greenhouse, several plants in both the series were much injured.
+These were at once measured together with their opponents and afterwards
+thrown away. The others were left to grow to their full height, and were
+measured when in flower. This accident accounts for the small height of
+some of the pairs; but as all the pairs, whether only partly or fully
+grown, were measured at the same time, the measurements are fair.
+
+The average height of the twenty-six crossed plants in the sixteen pots
+of the two series is 63.29, and that of the twenty-six self-fertilised
+plants is 41.67 inches; or as 100 to 66. The superiority of the crossed
+plants was shown in another way, for in every one of the sixteen pots a
+crossed plant flowered before a self-fertilised one, with the exception
+of Pot 6 of the second series, in which the plants on the two sides
+flowered simultaneously.
+
+TABLE 6/88. Nicotiana tabacum. Plants raised from two plants of the
+third self-fertilised generation in Pots 2 and 5, in Table 6/87.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Kew-crossed Plants, pot 2, Table 6/87.
+
+Column 3: Plants of the fourth Self-fertilised generation, pot 2, Table
+6/87.
+
+Column 4: Kew-crossed Plants, pot 5, Table 6/87.
+
+Column 5: Plants of the fourth Self-fertilised generation, pot 5, Table
+6/87.
+
+Pot 1 : 84 6/8 : 68 4/8 : 77 6/8 : 56.
+Pot 1 : 31 : 5 : 7 2/8 : 5 3/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 78 4/8 : 51 4/8 : 55 4/8 : 27 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 48 : 70 : 18 : 7.
+
+Pot 3 : 77 3/8 : 12 6/8 : 76 2/8 : 60 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 77 1/8 : 6 6/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 49 2/8 : 29 4/8 : 90 4/8 : 11 6/8.
+Pot 4 : 15 6/8 : 32 : 22 2/8 : 4 1/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 89 : 85 : 94 2/8 : 28 4/8.
+Pot 5 : 17 : 5 3/8.
+
+Pot 6 : 90 : 80 : 78 : 78 6/8.
+
+Pot 7 : 84 4/8 : 48 6/8 : 85 4/8 : 61 4/8.
+Pot 7 : 76 4/8 : 56 4/8.
+
+Pot 8 : 83 4/8 : 84 4/8 : 65 5/8 : 78 3/8.
+Pot 8 : : : 72 2/8 : 27 4/8.
+
+Total : 902.63 : 636.13 : 743.13 : 447.38.
+
+Some of the remaining seeds of both series, whether or not in a state of
+germination, were thickly sown on the opposite sides of two very large
+pots; and the six highest plants on each side of each pot were measured
+after they had grown to nearly their full height. But their heights were
+much less than in the former trials, owing to their extremely crowded
+condition. Even whilst quite young, the crossed seedlings manifestly had
+much broader and finer leaves than the self-fertilised seedlings.
+
+TABLE 6/89. Nicotiana tabacum. Plants of the same parentage as those in
+Table 6/88, but grown extremely crowded in two large pots.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Kew-crossed Plants, from pot 2, Table 6/87.
+
+Column 2: Plants of the fourth Self-fertilised generation, from pot 2,
+Table 6/87.
+
+Column 3: Kew-crossed Plants, from pot 5, Table 6/87.
+
+Column 4: Plants of the fourth Self-fertilised generation, from pot 5,
+Table 6/87.
+
+ 42 4/8 : 22 4/8 : 44 6/8 : 22 4/8.
+ 34 : 19 2/8 : 42 4/8 : 21.
+ 30 4/8 : 14 2/8 : 27 4/8 : 18.
+ 23 4/8 : 16 : 31 2/8 : 15 2/8.
+ 26 6/8 : 13 4/8 : 32 : 13 5/8.
+ 18 3/8 : 16 : 24 6/8 : 14 6/8.
+
+175.63 : 101.50 : 202.75 : 105.13.
+
+The twelve tallest crossed plants in the two pots belonging to the two
+series average here 31.53, and the twelve tallest self-fertilised plants
+17.21 inches in height; or as 100 to 54. The plants on both sides, when
+fully grown, some time after they had been measured, were cut down close
+to the ground and weighed. The twelve crossed plants weighed 21.25
+ounces; and the twelve self-fertilised plants only 7.83 ounces; or in
+weight as 100 to 37.
+
+The rest of the crossed and self-fertilised seeds from the two
+parent-plants (the same as in the last experiment) was sown on the 1st
+of July in four long parallel and separate rows in good soil in the open
+ground; so that the seedlings were not subjected to any mutual
+competition. The summer was wet and unfavourable for their growth.
+Whilst the seedlings were very small the two crossed rows had a clear
+advantage over the two self-fertilised rows. When fully grown the twenty
+tallest crossed plants and the twenty tallest self-fertilised plants
+were selected and measured on the 11th of November to the extremities of
+their leaves, as shown in Table 6/90. Of the twenty crossed plants,
+twelve had flowered; whilst of the twenty self-fertilised plants one
+alone had flowered.
+
+TABLE 6/90. Nicotiana tabacum. Plants raised from the same seeds as in
+the last two experiments, but sown separately in the open ground, so as
+not to compete together.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Kew-crossed Plants, from pot 2, Table 6/87.
+
+Column 2: Plants of the fourth Self-fertilised generation, from pot 2,
+Table 6/87.
+
+Column 3: Kew-crossed Plants, from pot 5, Table 6/87.
+
+Column 4: Plants of the fourth Self-fertilised generation, from pot 5,
+Table 6/87.
+
+ 42 2/8 : 22 6/8 : 54 4/8 : 34 4/8.
+ 54 5/8 : 37 4/8 : 51 4/8 : 38 5/8.
+ 39 3/8 : 34 4/8 : 45 : 40 6/8.
+ 53 2/8 : 30 : 43 : 43 2/8.
+ 49 3/8 : 28 6/8 : 43 : 40.
+ 50 3/8 : 31 2/8 : 48 6/8 : 38 2/8.
+ 47 1/8 : 25 4/8 : 44 : 35 6/8.
+ 57 3/8 : 26 2/8 : 48 2/8 : 39 6/8.
+ 37 : 22 3/8 : 55 1/8 : 47 6/8.
+ 48 : 28 : 63 : 58 5/8.
+
+478.75 : 286.86 : 496.13 : 417.25
+
+The twenty tallest crossed plants here average 48.74, and the twenty
+tallest self-fertilised 35.2 inches in height; or as 100 to 72. These
+plants after being measured were cut down close to the ground, and the
+twenty crossed plants weighed 195.75 ounces, and the twenty
+self-fertilised plants 123.25 ounces; or as 100 to 63.
+
+In Tables 6/88, 6/89 and 6/90, we have the measurements of fifty-six
+plants derived from two plants of the third self-fertilised generation
+crossed with pollen from a fresh stock, and of fifty-six plants of the
+fourth self-fertilised generation derived from the same two plants.
+These crossed and self-fertilised plants were treated in three different
+ways, having been put, firstly, into moderately close competition with
+one another in pots; secondly, having been subjected to unfavourable
+conditions and to very severe competition from being greatly crowded in
+two large pots; and thirdly, having been sown separately in open and
+good ground, so as not to suffer from any mutual competition. In all
+these cases the crossed plants in each lot were greatly superior to the
+self-fertilised. This was shown in several ways,--by the earlier
+germination of the crossed seeds, by the more rapid growth of the
+seedlings whilst quite young, by the earlier flowering of the mature
+plants, as well as by the greater height which they ultimately attained.
+The superiority of the crossed plants was shown still more plainly when
+the two lots were weighed; the weight of the crossed plants to that of
+the self-fertilised in the two crowded pots being as 100 to 37. Better
+evidence could hardly be desired of the immense advantage derived from a
+cross with a fresh stock.
+
+26. PRIMULACEAE.--Cyclamen persicum. (6/5. Cyclamen repandum according
+to Lecoq ‘Geographie Botanique de l’Europe’ tome 8 1858 page 150, is
+proterandrous, and this I believe to be the case with Cyclamen
+persicum.)
+
+Ten flowers crossed with pollen from plants known to be distinct
+seedlings, yielded nine capsules, containing on an average 34.2 seeds,
+with a maximum of seventy-seven in one. Ten flowers self-fertilised
+yielded eight capsules, containing on an average only 13.1 seeds, with a
+maximum of twenty-five in one. This gives a ratio of 100 to 38 for the
+average number of seeds per capsule for the crossed and self-fertilised
+flowers. The flowers hang downwards, and as the stigmas stand close
+beneath the anthers, it might have been expected that pollen would have
+fallen on them, and that they would have been spontaneously
+self-fertilised; but these covered-up plants did not produce a single
+capsule. On some other occasions uncovered plants in the same greenhouse
+produced plenty of capsules, and I suppose that the flowers had been
+visited by bees, which could hardly fail to carry pollen from plant to
+plant.
+
+The seeds obtained in the manner just described were placed on sand, and
+after germinating were planted in pairs,--three crossed and three
+self-fertilised plants on the opposite sides of four pots. When the
+leaves were 2 or 3 inches in length, including the foot-stalks, the
+seedlings on both sides were equal. In the course of a month or two the
+crossed plants began to show a slight superiority over the
+self-fertilised, which steadily increased; and the crossed flowered in
+all four pots some weeks before, and much more profusely than the
+self-fertilised. The two tallest flower-stems on the crossed plants in
+each pot were now measured, and the average height of the eight stems
+was 9.49 inches. After a considerable interval of time the
+self-fertilised plants flowered, and several of their flower-stems (but
+I forgot to record how many) were roughly measured, and their average
+height was a little under 7.5 inches; so that the flower-stems on the
+crossed plants to those on the self-fertilised were at least as 100 to
+79. The reason why I did not make more careful measurements of the
+self-fertilised plants was, that they looked such poor specimens that I
+determined to there them re-potted in larger pots and in the following
+year to measure them carefully; but we shall see that this was partly
+frustrated by so few flower-stems being then produced.
+
+These plants were left uncovered in the greenhouse; and the twelve
+crossed plants produced forty capsules, whilst the twelve
+self-fertilised plants produced only five; or as 100 to 12. But this
+difference does not give a just idea of the relative fertility of the
+two lots. I counted the seeds in one of the finest capsules on the
+crossed plants, and it contained seventy-three; whilst the finest of the
+five capsules produced by the self-fertilised plants contained only
+thirty-five good seeds. In the other four capsules most of the seeds
+were barely half as large as those in the crossed capsules.
+
+TABLE 6/91. Cyclamen persicum: 0 implies that no flower-stem was
+produced.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 10 : 0.
+Pot 1 : 9 2/8 : 0.
+Pot 1 : 10 2/8 : 0.
+
+Pot 2 : 9 2/8 : 0.
+Pot 2 : 10 : 0.
+Pot 2 : 10 2/8 : 0.
+
+Pot 3 : 9 1/8 : 8.
+Pot 3 : 9 5/8 : 6 7/8.
+Pot 3 : 9 5/8 : 6 6/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 11 1/8 : 0.
+Pot 4 : 10 5/8 : 7 7/8.
+Pot 4 : 10 6/8 : 0.
+
+Total : 119.88 : 29.50.
+
+In the following year the crossed plants again bore many flowers before
+the self-fertilised bore a single one. The three tallest flower-stems on
+the crossed plants in each of the pots were measured, as shown in Table
+6/91. In Pots 1 and 2 the self-fertilised plants did not produce a
+single flower-stem; in Pot 4 only one; and in Pot 3 six, of which the
+three tallest were measured.
+
+The average height of the twelve flower-stems on the crossed plants is
+9.99, and that of the four flower-stems on the self-fertilised plants
+7.37 inches; or as 100 to 74. The self-fertilised plants were miserable
+specimens, whilst the crossed ones looked very vigorous.
+
+ANAGALLIS.
+
+Anagallis collina, var. grandiflora (pale red and blue-flowered
+sub-varieties).
+
+Firstly, twenty-five flowers on some plants of the red variety were
+crossed with pollen from a distinct plant of the same variety, and
+produced ten capsules; thirty-one flowers were fertilised with their own
+pollen, and produced eighteen capsules. These plants, which were grown
+in pots in the greenhouse, were evidently in a very sterile condition,
+and the seeds in both sets of capsules, especially in the
+self-fertilised, although numerous, were of so poor a quality that it
+was very difficult to determine which were good and which bad. But as
+far as I could judge, the crossed capsules contained on an average 6.3
+good seeds, with a maximum in one of thirteen; whilst the
+self-fertilised contained 6.05 such seeds, with a maximum in one of
+fourteen.
+
+Secondly, eleven flowers on the red variety were castrated whilst young
+and fertilised with pollen from the blue variety, and this cross
+evidently much increased their fertility; for the eleven flowers yielded
+seven capsules, which contained on an average twice as many good seeds
+as before, namely, 12.7; with a maximum in two of the capsules of
+seventeen seeds. Therefore these crossed capsules yielded seeds compared
+with those in the foregoing self-fertilised capsules, as 100 to 48.
+These seeds were also conspicuously larger than those from the cross
+between two individuals of the same red variety, and germinated much
+more freely. The flowers on most of the plants produced by the cross
+between the two-coloured varieties (of which several were raised), took
+after their mother, and were red-coloured. But on two of the plants the
+flowers were plainly stained with blue, and to such a degree in one case
+as to be almost intermediate in tint.
+
+The crossed seeds of the two foregoing kinds and the self-fertilised
+were sown on the opposite sides of two large pots, and the seedlings
+were measured when fully grown, as shown in Tables 6/92a and 6/92b.
+
+TABLE 6/92a. Anagallis collina: Red variety crossed by a distinct plant
+of the red variety, and red variety self-fertilised.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 23 4/8 : 15 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 21 : 15 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 17 2/8 : 14.
+
+Total : 61.75 : 45.00.
+
+TABLE 6/92b. Anagallis collina: Red variety crossed by blue variety, and
+red variety self-fertilised.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 2 : 30 4/8 : 24 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 27 3/8 : 18 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 25 : 11 6/8.
+
+Total : 82.88 : 54.75.
+
+Total of both lots:
+ : 144.63 : 99.75.
+
+As the plants of the two lots are few in number, they may be run
+together for the general average; but I may first state that the height
+of the seedlings from the cross between two individuals of the red
+variety is to that of the self-fertilised plants of the red variety as
+100 to 73; whereas the height of the crossed offspring from the two
+varieties to the self-fertilised plants of the red variety is as 100 to
+66. So that the cross between the two varieties is here seen to be the
+most advantageous. The average height of all six crossed plants in the
+two lots taken together is 48.20, and that of the six self-fertilised
+plants 33.25; or as 100 to 69.
+
+These six crossed plants produced spontaneously twenty-six capsules,
+whilst the six self-fertilised plants produced only two, or as 100 to 8.
+There is therefore the same extraordinary difference in fertility
+between the crossed and self-fertilised plants as in the last genus,
+Cyclamen, which belongs to the same family of the Primulaceae.
+
+Primula veris. British flora. (var. officinalis, Linn.).
+
+THE COWSLIP.
+
+Most of the species in this genus are heterostyled or dimorphic; that
+is, they present two forms,--one long-styled with short stamens, and the
+other short-styled with long stamens. (6/6. See my paper ‘On the Two
+Forms or Dimorphic Condition in the Species of Primula’ in ‘Journal of
+the Proceedings of the Linnean Society’ volume 6 1862 page 77. A second
+paper, to which I presently refer ‘On the Hybrid-like Nature of the
+Offspring from the Illegitimate Unions of Dimorphic and Trimorphic
+Plants’ was published in volume 10 1867 page 393 of the same journal.)
+For complete fertilisation it is necessary that pollen from the one form
+should be applied to the stigma of the other form; and this is effected
+under nature by insects. Such unions, and the seedlings raised from
+them, I have called legitimate. If one form is fertilised with pollen
+from the same form, the full complement of seed is not produced; and in
+the case of some heterostyled genera no seed at all is produced. Such
+unions, and the seedlings raised from them, I have called illegitimate.
+These seedlings are often dwarfed and more or less sterile, like
+hybrids. I possessed some long-styled plants of Primula veris, which
+during four successive generations had been produced from illegitimate
+unions between long-styled plants; they were, moreover, in some degree
+inter-related, and had been subjected all the time to similar conditions
+in pots in the greenhouse. As long as they were cultivated in this
+manner, they grew well and were healthy and fertile. Their fertility
+even increased in the later generations, as if they were becoming
+habituated to illegitimate fertilisation. Plants of the first
+illegitimate generation when taken from the greenhouse and planted in
+moderately good soil out of doors grew well and were healthy; but when
+those of the two last illegitimate generations were thus treated they
+became excessively sterile and dwarfed, and remained so during the
+following year, by which time they ought to have become accustomed to
+growing out of doors, so that they must have possessed a weak
+constitution.
+
+Under these circumstances, it seemed advisable to ascertain what would
+be the effect of legitimately crossing long-styled plants of the fourth
+illegitimate generation with pollen taken from non-related short-styled
+plants, growing under different conditions. Accordingly several flowers
+on plants of the fourth illegitimate generation (i.e.,
+great-great-grandchildren of plants which had been legitimately
+fertilised), growing vigorously in pots in the greenhouse, were
+legitimately fertilised with pollen from an almost wild short-styled
+cowslip, and these flowers yielded some fine capsules. Thirty other
+flowers on the same illegitimate plants were fertilised with their own
+pollen, and these yielded seventeen capsules, containing on an average
+thirty-two seeds. This is a high degree of fertility; higher, I believe,
+than that which generally obtains with illegitimately fertilised
+long-styled plants growing out of doors, and higher than that of the
+previous illegitimate generations, although their flowers were
+fertilised with pollen taken from a distinct plant of the same form.
+
+These two lots of seeds were sown (for they will not germinate well when
+placed on bare sand) on the opposite sides of four pots, and the
+seedlings were thinned, so that an equal number were left on the two
+sides. For some time there was no marked difference in height between
+the two lots; and in Pot 3, Table 6/93, the self-fertilised plants were
+rather the tallest. But by the time that they had thrown up young
+flower-stems, the legitimately crossed plants revealed much the finest,
+and had greener and larger leaves. The breadth of the largest leaf on
+each plant was measured, and those on the crossed plants were on an
+average a quarter of an inch (exactly .28 of an inch) broader than those
+on the self-fertilised plants. The plants, from being too much crowded,
+produced poor and short flower-stems. The two finest on each side were
+measured; the eight on the legitimately crossed plants averaged 4.08,
+and the eight on the illegitimately self-fertilised plants averaged 2.93
+inches in height; or as 100 to 72.
+
+These plants after they had flowered were turned out of their pots, and
+planted in fairly good soil in the open ground. In the following year
+(1870), when in full flower, the two tallest flower-stems on each side
+were again measured, as shown in Table 6/93, which likewise gives the
+number of flower-stems produced on both sides of all the pots.
+
+TABLE 6/93. Primula veris.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Height: Legitimately crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Number of Flower-stems produced: Legitimately crossed Plants.
+
+Column 4: Height: Illegitimately crossed Plants.
+
+Column 5: Number of Flower-stems produced: Illegitimately crossed
+Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 9 : 16 : 2 1/8 : 3.
+Pot 1 : 8 : : 3 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 7 : 16 : 6 : 3.
+Pot 2 : 6 4/8 : : 5 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 6 : 16 : 3 : 4.
+Pot 3 : 6 2/8 : : 0 4/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 7 3/8 : 14 : 2 5/8 : 5.
+Pot 4 : 6 1/8 : : 2 4/8.
+
+Total : 56.26 : 62 : 25.75 : 15.
+
+The average height of the eight tallest flower-stems on the crossed
+plants is here 7.03 inches, and that of the eight tallest flower-stems
+on the self-fertilised plants 3.21 inches; or as 100 to 46. We see,
+also, that the crossed plants bore sixty-two flower-stems; that is,
+above four times as many as those (namely fifteen) borne by the
+self-fertilised plants. The flowers were left exposed to the visits of
+insects, and as many plants of both forms grew close by, they must have
+been legitimately and naturally fertilised. Under these circumstances
+the crossed plants produced 324 capsules, whilst the self-fertilised
+produced only 16; and these were all produced by a single plant in Pot
+2, which was much finer than any other self-fertilised plant. Judging by
+the number of capsules produced, the fertility of an equal number of
+crossed and self-fertilised plants was as 100 to 5.
+
+In the succeeding year (1871) I did not count all the flower-stems on
+these plants, but only those which produced capsules containing good
+seeds. The season was unfavourable, and the crossed plants produced only
+forty such flower-stems, bearing 168 good capsules, whilst the
+self-fertilised plants produced only two such flower-stems, bearing only
+6 capsules, half of which were very poor ones. So that the fertility of
+the two lots, judging by the number of capsules, was as 100 to 3.5.
+
+In considering the great difference in height and the wonderful
+difference in fertility between the two sets of plants, we should bear
+in mind that this is the result of two distinct agencies. The
+self-fertilised plants were the product of illegitimate fertilisation
+during five successive generations, in all of which, excepting the last,
+the plants had been fertilised with pollen taken from a distinct
+individual belonging to the same form, but which was more or less
+closely related. The plants had also been subjected in each generation
+to closely similar conditions. This treatment alone, as I know from
+other observations, would have greatly reduced the size and fertility of
+the offspring. On the other hand, the crossed plants were the offspring
+of long-styled plants of the fourth illegitimate generation legitimately
+crossed with pollen from a short-styled plant, which, as well as its
+progenitors, had been exposed to very different conditions; and this
+latter circumstance alone would have given great vigour to the
+offspring, as we may infer from the several analogous cases already
+given. How much proportional weight ought to be attributed to these two
+agencies,--the one tending to injure the self-fertilised offspring, and
+the other to benefit the crossed offspring,--cannot be determined. But
+we shall immediately see that the greater part of the benefit, as far as
+increased fertility is concerned, must be attributed to the cross having
+been made with a fresh stock.
+
+Primula veris.
+
+EQUAL-STYLED AND RED-FLOWERED VAR.
+
+I have described in my paper ‘On the Illegitimate Unions of Dimorphic
+and Trimorphic Plants’ this remarkable variety, which was sent to me
+from Edinburgh by Mr. J. Scott. It possessed a pistil proper to the
+long-styled form, and stamens proper to the short-styled form; so that
+it had lost the heterostyled or dimorphic character common to most of
+the species of the genus, and may be compared with an hermaphrodite form
+of a bisexual animal. Consequently the pollen and stigma of the same
+flower are adapted for complete mutual fertilisation, instead of its
+being necessary that pollen should be brought from one form to another,
+as in the common cowslip. From the stigma and anthers standing nearly on
+the same level, the flowers are perfectly self-fertile when insects are
+excluded. Owing to the fortunate existence of this variety, it is
+possible to fertilise its flowers in a legitimate manner with their own
+pollen, and to cross other flowers in a legitimate manner with pollen
+from another variety or fresh stock. Thus the offspring from both unions
+can be compared quite fairly, free from any doubt from the injurious
+effects of an illegitimate union.
+
+The plants on which I experimented had been raised during two successive
+generations from spontaneously self-fertilised seeds produced by plants
+under a net; and as the variety is highly self-fertile, its progenitors
+in Edinburgh may have been self-fertilised during some previous
+generations. Several flowers on two of my plants were legitimately
+crossed with pollen from a short-styled common cowslip growing almost
+wild in my orchard; so that the cross was between plants which had been
+subjected to considerably different conditions. Several other flowers on
+the same two plants were allowed to fertilise themselves under a net;
+and this union, as already explained, is a legitimate one.
+
+The crossed and self-fertilised seeds thus obtained were sown thickly on
+the opposite sides of three pots, and the seedlings thinned, so that an
+equal number were left on the two sides. The seedlings during the first
+year were nearly equal in height, excepting in Pot 3, Table 6/94, in
+which the self-fertilised plants had a decided advantage. In the autumn
+the plants were bedded out, in their pots; owing to this circumstance,
+and to many plants growing in each pot, they did not flourish, and none
+were very productive in seeds. But the conditions were perfectly equal
+and fair for both sides. In the following spring I record in my notes
+that in two of the pots the crossed plants are “incomparably the finest
+in general appearance,” and in all three pots they flowered before the
+self-fertilised. When in full flower the tallest flower-stem on each
+side of each pot was measured, and the number of the flower-stems on
+both sides counted, as shown in Table 6/94. The plants were left
+uncovered, and as other plants were growing close by, the flowers no
+doubt were crossed by insects. When the capsules were ripe they were
+gathered and counted, and the result is likewise shown in Table 6/94.
+
+TABLE 6/94. Primula veris (equal-styled, red-flowered variety).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Height of tallest flower-stem: crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Number of Flower-stems: crossed Plants.
+
+Column 4: Number of good capsules: crossed Plants.
+
+Column 5: Height of tallest flower-stem: self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Column 6: Number of Flower-stems: self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Column 7: Number of good capsules: self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 10 : 14 : 163 : 6 4/8 : 6 : 6.
+
+Pot 2 : 8 4/8 : 12 : * : 5 : 2 : 0.
+ *Several, not counted.
+
+Pot 3 : 7 4/8 : 7 : 43 : 10 4/8 : 5 : 26.
+
+Totals : 26.0 : 33 : 206 : 22.0 : 13 : 32.
+
+The average height of the three tallest flower-stems on the crossed
+plants is 8.66 inches, and that of the three on the self-fertilised
+plants 7.33 inches; or as 100 to 85.
+
+All the crossed plants together produced thirty-three flower-stems,
+whilst the self-fertilised bore only thirteen. The number of the
+capsules were counted only on the plants in Pots 1 and 3, for the
+self-fertilised plants in Pot 2 produced none; therefore those on the
+crossed plants on the opposite side were not counted. Capsules not
+containing any good seeds were rejected. The crossed plants in the above
+two pots produced 206, and the self-fertilised in the same pots only 32
+capsules; or as 100 to 15. Judging from the previous generations, the
+extreme unproductiveness of the self-fertilised plants in this
+experiment was wholly due to their having been subjected to unfavourable
+conditions, and to severe competition with the crossed plants; for had
+they grown separately in good soil, it is almost certain that they would
+have produced a large number of capsules. The seeds were counted in
+twenty capsules from the crossed plants, and they averaged 24.75; whilst
+in twenty capsules from the self-fertilised plants the average was
+17.65; or as 100 to 71. Moreover, the seeds from the self-fertilised
+plants were not nearly so fine as those from the crossed plants. If we
+consider together the number of capsules produced and the average number
+of contained seeds, the fertility of the crossed plants to the
+self-fertilised plants was as 100 to 11. We thus see what a great
+effect, as far as fertility is concerned, was produced by a cross
+between the two varieties, which had been long exposed to different
+conditions, in comparison with self-fertilisation; the fertilisation
+having been in both cases of the legitimate order.
+
+Primula sinensis.
+
+As the Chinese primrose is a heterostyled or dimorphic plant, like the
+common cowslip, it might have been expected that the flowers of both
+forms when illegitimately fertilised with their own pollen or with that
+from flowers on another plant of the same form, would have yielded less
+seed than the legitimately crossed flowers; and that the seedlings
+raised from illegitimately self-fertilised seeds would have been
+somewhat dwarfed and less fertile, in comparison with the seedlings from
+legitimately crossed seeds. This holds good in relation to the fertility
+of the flowers; but to my surprise there was no difference in growth
+between the offspring from a legitimate union between two distinct
+plants, and from an illegitimate union whether between the flowers on
+the same plant, or between distinct plants of the same form. But I have
+shown, in the paper before referred to, that in England this plant is in
+an abnormal condition, such as, judging from analogous cases, would tend
+to render a cross between two individuals of no benefit to the
+offspring. Our plants have been commonly raised from self-fertilised
+seeds; and the seedlings have generally been subjected to nearly uniform
+conditions in pots in greenhouses. Moreover, many of the plants are now
+varying and changing their character, so as to become in a greater or
+less degree equal-styled, and in consequence highly self-fertile. From
+the analogy of Primula veris there can hardly be a doubt that if a plant
+of Primula sinensis could have been procured direct from China, and if
+it had been crossed with one of our English varieties, the offspring
+would have shown wonderful superiority in height and fertility (though
+probably not in the beauty of their flowers) over our ordinary plants.
+
+My first experiment consisted in fertilising many flowers on long-styled
+and short-styled plants with their own pollen, and other flowers on the
+same plants with pollen taken from distinct plants belonging to the same
+form; so that all the unions were illegitimate. There was no uniform and
+marked difference in the number of seeds obtained from these two modes
+of self-fertilisation, both of which were illegitimate. The two lots of
+seeds from both forms were sown thickly on opposite sides of four pots,
+and numerous plants thus raised. But there was no difference in their
+growth, excepting in one pot, in which the offspring from the
+illegitimate union of two long-styled plants exceeded in a decided
+manner in height the offspring of flowers on the same plants fertilised
+with their own pollen. But in all four pots the plants raised from the
+union of distinct plants belonging to the same form, flowered before the
+offspring from the self-fertilised flowers.
+
+Some long-styled and short-styled plants were now raised from purchased
+seeds, and flowers on both forms were legitimately crossed with pollen
+from a distinct plant; and other flowers on both forms were
+illegitimately fertilised with pollen from the flowers on the same
+plant. The seeds were sown on opposite sides of Pots 1 to 4 in Table
+6/95; a single plant being left on each side. Several flowers on the
+illegitimate long-styled and short-styled plants described in the last
+paragraph, were also legitimately and illegitimately fertilised in the
+manner just described, and their seeds were sown in Pots 5 to 8 in the
+same table. As the two sets of seedlings did not differ in any essential
+manner, their measurements are given in a single table. I should add
+that the legitimate unions in both cases yielded, as might have been
+expected, many more seeds than the illegitimate unions. The seedlings
+whilst half-grown presented no difference in height on the two sides of
+the several pots. When fully grown they were measured to the tips of
+their longest leaves, and the result is given in Table 6/95.
+
+TABLE 6/95. Primula sinensis.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Plants from legitimately Crossed seeds.
+
+Column 3: Plants from illegitimately Self-fertilised seeds.
+
+Pot 1 : 8 2/8 : 8.
+From short-styled mother.
+
+Pot 2 : 7 4/8 : 8 5/8.
+From short-styled mother.
+
+Pot 3 : 9 5/8 : 9 3/8.
+From long-styled mother.
+
+Pot 4 : 8 4/8 : 8 2/8.
+From long-styled mother.
+
+Pot 5 : 9 3/8 : 9.
+From illegitimate short-styled mother.
+
+Pot 6 : 9 7/8 : 9 4/8.
+From illegitimate short-styled mother.
+
+Pot 7 : 8 4/8 : 9 4/8.
+From illegitimate long-styled mother.
+
+Pot 8 : 10 4/8 : 10.
+From illegitimate long-styled mother.
+
+Total : 72.13 : 72.25.
+
+In six out of the eight pots the legitimately crossed plants exceeded in
+height by a trifle the illegitimately self-fertilised plants; but the
+latter exceeded the former in two of the pots in a more strongly marked
+manner. The average height of the eight legitimately crossed plants is
+9.01, and that of the eight illegitimately self-fertilised 9.03 inches,
+or as 100 to 100.2. The plants on the opposite sides produced, as far as
+could be judged by the eye, an equal number of flowers. I did not count
+the capsules or the seeds produced by them; but undoubtedly, judging
+from many previous observations, the plants derived from the
+legitimately crossed seeds would have been considerably more fertile
+than those from the illegitimately self-fertilised seeds. The crossed
+plants, as in the previous case, flowered before the self-fertilised
+plants in all the pots except in Pot 2, in which the two sides flowered
+simultaneously; and this early flowering may, perhaps, be considered as
+an advantage.
+
+27. POLYGONEAE.--Fagopyrum esculentum.
+
+This plant was discovered by Hildebrand to be heterostyled, that is, to
+present, like the species of Primula, a long-styled and a short-styled
+form, which are adapted for reciprocal fertilisation. Therefore the
+following comparison of the growth of the crossed and self-fertilised
+seedlings is not fair, for we do not know whether the difference in
+their heights may not be wholly due to the illegitimate fertilisation of
+the self-fertilised flowers.
+
+I obtained seeds by legitimately crossing flowers on long-styled and
+short-styled plants, and by fertilising other flowers on both forms with
+pollen from the same plant. Rather more seeds were obtained by the
+former than by the latter process; and the legitimately crossed seeds
+were heavier than an equal number of the illegitimately self-fertilised
+seeds, in the ratio of 100 to 82. Crossed and self-fertilised seeds from
+the short-styled parents, after germinating on sand, were planted in
+pairs on the opposite sides of a large pot; and two similar lots of
+seeds from long-styled parents were planted in a like manner on the
+opposite sides of two other pots. In all three pots the legitimately
+crossed seedlings, when a few inches in height, were taller than the
+self-fertilised; and in all three pots they flowered before them by one
+or two days. When fully grown they were all cut down close to the
+ground, and as I was pressed for time, they were placed in a long row,
+the cut end of one plant touching the tip of another, and the total
+length of the legitimately crossed plants was 47 feet 7 inches, and of
+the illegitimately self-fertilised plants 32 feet 8 inches. Therefore
+the average height of the fifteen crossed plants in all three pots was
+38.06 inches, and that of the fifteen self-fertilised plants 26.13
+inches; or as 100 to 69.
+
+28. CHENOPODIACEAE.--Beta vulgaris.
+
+A single plant, no others growing in the same garden, was left to
+fertilise itself, and the self-fertilised seeds were collected. Seeds
+were also collected from a plant growing in the midst of a large bed in
+another garden; and as the incoherent pollen is abundant, the seeds of
+this plant will almost certainly have been the product of a crossed
+between distinct plants by means of the wind. Some of the two lots of
+seeds were sown on the opposite sides of two very large pots; and the
+young seedlings were thinned, so that an equal but considerable number
+was left on the two sides. These plants were thus subjected to very
+severe competition, as well as to poor conditions. The remaining seeds
+were sown out of doors in good soil in two long and not closely
+adjoining rows, so that these seedlings were placed under favourable
+conditions, and were not subjected to any mutual competition. The
+self-fertilised seeds in the open ground came up very badly; and on
+removing the soil in two or three places, it was found that many had
+sprouted under ground and had then died. No such case had been observed
+before. Owing to the large number of seedlings which thus perished, the
+surviving self-fertilised plants grew thinly in the row, and thus had an
+advantage over the crossed plants, which grew very thickly in the other
+row. The young plants in the two rows were protected by a little straw
+during the winter, and those in the two large pots were placed in the
+greenhouse.
+
+There was no difference between the two lots in the pots until the
+ensuing spring, when they had grown a little, and then some of the
+crossed plants were finer and taller than any of the self-fertilised.
+When in full flower their stems were measured, and the measurements are
+given in Table 6/96.
+
+TABLE 6/96. Beta vulgaris.
+
+Heights of flower stems measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 34 6/8 : 36.
+Pot 1 : 30 : 20 1/8.
+Pot 1 : 33 6/8 : 32 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 34 4/8 : 32.
+
+Pot 2 : 42 3/8 : 42 1/8.
+Pot 2 : 33 1/8 : 26 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 31 2/8 : 29 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 33 : 20 2/8.
+
+Total : 272.75 : 238.50.
+
+The average height of the eight crossed plants is here 34.09, and that
+of the eight self-fertilised plants 29.81; or as 100 to 87.
+
+With respect to the plants in the open ground, each long row was divided
+into half, so as to diminish the chance of any accidental advantage in
+one part of either row; and the four tallest plants in the two halves of
+the two rows were carefully selected and measured. The eight tallest
+crossed plants averaged 30.92, and the eight tallest self-fertilised
+30.7 inches in height, or as 100 to 99; so that they were practically
+equal. But we should bear in mind that the trial was not quite fair, as
+the self-fertilised plants had a great advantage over the crossed in
+being much less crowded in their own row, owing to the large number of
+seeds which had perished under ground after sprouting. Nor were the lots
+in the two rows subjected to any mutual competition.
+
+29. CANNACEAE.--Canna warscewiczi.
+
+In most or all the species belonging to this genus, the pollen is shed
+before the flower expands, and adheres in a mass to the foliaceous
+pistil close beneath the stigmatic surface. As the edge of this mass
+generally touches the edge of the stigma, and as it was ascertained by
+trials purposely made that a very few pollen-grains suffice for
+fertilisation, the present species and probably all the others of the
+genus are highly self-fertile. Exceptions occasionally occur in which,
+from the stamen being slightly shorter than usual, the pollen is
+deposited a little beneath the stigmatic surface, and such flowers drop
+off unimpregnated unless they are artificially fertilised. Sometimes,
+though rarely, the stamen is a little longer than usual, and then the
+whole stigmatic surface gets thickly covered with pollen. As some pollen
+is generally deposited in contact with the edge of the stigma, certain
+authors have concluded that the flowers are invariably self-fertilised.
+This is an extraordinary conclusion, for it implies that a great amount
+of pollen is produced for no purpose. On this view, also, the large size
+of the stigmatic surface is an unintelligible feature in the structure
+of the flower, as well as the relative position of all the parts, which
+is such that when insects visit the flowers to suck the copious nectar,
+they cannot fail to carry pollen from one flower to another. (6/7.
+Delpino has described ‘Bot. Zeitung’ 1867 page 277 and ‘Scientific
+Opinion’ 1870 page 135, the structure of the flowers in this genus, but
+he was mistaken in thinking that self-fertilisation is impossible, at
+least in the case of the present species. Dr. Dickie and Professor
+Faivre state that the flowers are fertilised in the bud, and that
+self-fertilisation is inevitable. I presume that they were misled by the
+pollen being deposited at a very early period on the pistil: see
+‘Journal of Linnean Society Botany’ volume 10 page 55 and ‘Variabilité
+des Espèces’ 1868 page 158.)
+
+According to Delpino, bees eagerly visit the flowers in North Italy, but
+I have never seen any insect visiting the flowers of the present species
+in my hothouse, although many plants grew there during several years.
+Nevertheless these plants produced plenty of seed, as they likewise did
+when covered by a net; they are therefore fully capable of
+self-fertilisation, and have probably been self-fertilised in this
+country for many generations. As they are cultivated in pots, and are
+not exposed to competition with surrounding plants, they have also been
+subjected for a considerable time to somewhat uniform conditions. This,
+therefore, is a case exactly parallel with that of the common pea, in
+which we have no right to expect much or any good from intercrossing
+plants thus descended and thus treated; and no good did follow,
+excepting that the cross-fertilised flowers yielded rather more seeds
+than the self-fertilised. This species was one of the earlier ones on
+which I experimented, and as I had not then raised any self-fertilised
+plants for several successive generations under uniform conditions, I
+did not know or even suspect that such treatment would interfere with
+the advantages to be gained from a cross. I was therefore much surprised
+at the crossed plants not growing more vigorously than the
+self-fertilised, and a large number of plants were raised,
+notwithstanding that the present species is an extremely troublesome one
+to experiment on. The seeds, even those which have been long soaked in
+water, will not germinate well on bare sand; and those that were sown in
+pots (which plan I was forced to follow) germinated at very unequal
+intervals of time; so that it was difficult to get pairs of the same
+exact age, and many seedlings had to be pulled up and thrown away. My
+experiments were continued during three successive generations; and in
+each generation the self-fertilised plants were again self-fertilised,
+their early progenitors in this country having probably been
+self-fertilised for many previous generations. In each generation, also,
+the crossed plants were fertilised with pollen from another crossed
+plant.
+
+Of the flowers which were crossed in the three generations, taken
+together, a rather larger proportion yielded capsules than did those
+which were self-fertilised. The seeds were counted in forty-seven
+capsules from the crossed flowers, and they contained on an average 9.95
+seeds; whereas forty-eight capsules from the self-fertilised flowers
+contained on an average 8.45 seeds; or as 100 to 85. The seeds from the
+crossed flowers were not heavier, on the contrary a little lighter, than
+those from the self-fertilised flowers, as was thrice ascertained. On
+one occasion I weighed 200 of the crossed and 106 of the self-fertilised
+seeds, and the relative weight of an equal number was as 100 for the
+crossed to 101.5 for the self-fertilised. With other plants, when the
+seeds from the self-fertilised flowers were heavier than those from the
+crossed flowers, this appeared to be due generally to fewer having been
+produced by the self-fertilised flowers, and to their having been in
+consequence better nourished. But in the present instance the seeds from
+the crossed capsules were separated into two lots,--namely, those from
+the capsules containing over fourteen seeds, and those from the capsules
+containing under fourteen seeds, and the seeds from the more productive
+capsules were the heavier of the two; so that the above explanation here
+fails.
+
+As pollen is deposited at a very early age on the pistil, generally in
+contact with the stigma, some flowers whilst still in bud were castrated
+for my first experiment, and were afterwards fertilised with pollen from
+a distinct plant. Other flowers were fertilised with their own pollen.
+From the seeds thus obtained, I succeeded in rearing only three pairs of
+plants of equal age. The three crossed plants averaged 32.79 inches, and
+the three self-fertilised 32.08 inches in height; so that they were
+nearly equal, the crossed having a slight advantage. As the same result
+followed in all three generations, it would be superfluous to give the
+heights of all the plants, and I will give only the averages.
+
+In order to raise crossed and self-fertilised plants of the second
+generation, some flowers on the above crossed plants were crossed within
+twenty-four hours after they had expanded with pollen from a distinct
+plant; and this interval would probably not be too great to allow of
+cross-fertilisation being effectual. Some flowers on the self-fertilised
+plants of the last generation were also self-fertilised. From these two
+lots of seeds, ten crossed and twelve self-fertilised plants of equal
+ages were raised; and these were measured when fully grown. The crossed
+averaged 36.98, and the self-fertilised averaged 37.42 inches in height;
+so that here again the two lots were nearly equal; but the
+self-fertilised had a slight advantage.
+
+In order to raise plants of the third generation, a better plan was
+followed, and flowers on the crossed plants of the second generation
+were selected in which the stamens were too short to reach the stigmas,
+so that they could not possibly have been self-fertilised. These flowers
+were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant. Flowers on the
+self-fertilised plants of the second generation were again
+self-fertilised. From the two lots of seeds thus obtained, twenty-one
+crossed and nineteen self-fertilised plants of equal age, and forming
+the third generation, were raised in fourteen large pots. They were
+measured when fully grown, and by an odd chance the average height of
+the two lots was exactly the same, namely, 35.96 inches; so that neither
+side had the least advantage over the other. To test this result, all
+the plants on both sides in ten out of the above fourteen pots were cut
+down after they had flowered, and in the ensuing year the stems were
+again measured; and now the crossed plants exceeded by a little (namely,
+1.7 inches) the self-fertilised. They were again cut down, and on their
+flowering for the third time, the self-fertilised plants had a slight
+advantage (namely, 1.54 inches) over the crossed. Hence the result
+arrived at with these plants during the previous trials was confirmed,
+namely, that neither lot had any decided advantage over the other. It
+may, however, be worth mentioning that the self-fertilised plants showed
+some tendency to flower before the crossed plants: this occurred with
+all three pairs of the first generation; and with the cut down plants of
+the third generation, a self-fertilised plant flowered first in nine out
+of the twelve pots, whilst in the remaining three pots a crossed plant
+flowered first.
+
+If we consider all the plants of the three generations taken together,
+the thirty-four crossed plants average 35.98, and the thirty-four
+self-fertilised plants 36.39 inches in height; or as 100 to 101. We may
+therefore conclude that the two lots possessed equal powers of growth;
+and this I believe to be the result of long-continued
+self-fertilisation, together with exposure to similar conditions in each
+generation, so that all the individuals had acquired a closely similar
+constitution.
+
+30. GRAMINACEAE.--Zea mays.
+
+This plant is monoecious, and was selected for trial on this account, no
+other such plant having been experimented on. (6/8. Hildebrand remarks
+that this species seems at first sight adapted to be fertilised by
+pollen from the same plant, owing to the male flowers standing above the
+female flowers; but practically it must generally be fertilised by
+pollen from another plant, as the male flowers usually shed their pollen
+before the female flowers are mature: ‘Monatsbericht der K. Akad.’
+Berlin October 1872 page 743.) It is also anemophilous, or is fertilised
+by the wind; and of such plants only the common beet had been tried.
+Some plants were raised in the greenhouse, and were crossed with pollen
+taken from a distinct plant; and a single plant, growing quite
+separately in a different part of the house, was allowed to fertilise
+itself spontaneously. The seeds thus obtained were placed on damp sand,
+and as they germinated in pairs of equal age were planted on the
+opposite sides of four very large pots; nevertheless they were
+considerably crowded. The pots were kept in the hothouse. The plants
+were first measured to the tips of their leaves when only between 1 and
+2 feet in height, as shown in Table 6/97.
+
+TABLE 6/97. Zea mays.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 23 4/8 : 17 3/8.
+Pot 1 : 12 : 20 3/8.
+Pot 1 : 21 : 20.
+
+Pot 2 : 22 : 20.
+Pot 2 : 19 1/8 : 18 3/8.
+Pot 2 : 21 4/8 : 18 5/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 22 1/8 : 18 5/8.
+Pot 3 : 20 3/8 : 15 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 18 2/8 : 16 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 21 5/8 : 18.
+Pot 3 : 23 2/8 : 16 2/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 21 : 18.
+Pot 4 : 22 1/8 : 12 6/8.
+Pot 4 : 23 : 15 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 12 : 18.
+
+Total : 302.88 : 263.63.
+
+The fifteen crossed plants here average 20.19, and the fifteen
+self-fertilised plants 17.57 inches in height; or as 100 to 87. Mr.
+Galton made a graphical representation, in accordance with the method
+described in the introductory chapter, of the above measurements, and
+adds the words “very good” to the curves thus formed.
+
+Shortly afterwards one of the crossed plants in Pot 1 died; another
+became much diseased and stunted; and the third never grew to its full
+height. They seemed to have been all injured, probably by some larva
+gnawing their roots. Therefore all the plants on both sides of this pot
+were rejected in the subsequent measurements. When the plants were fully
+grown they were again measured to the tips of the highest leaves, and
+the eleven crossed plants now averaged 68.1, and the eleven
+self-fertilised plants 62.34 inches in height; or as 100 to 91. In all
+four pots a crossed plant flowered before any one of the
+self-fertilised; but three of the plants did not flower at all. Those
+that flowered were also measured to the summits of the male flowers: the
+ten crossed plants averaged 66.51, and the nine self-fertilised plants
+61.59 inches in height; or as 100 to 93.
+
+A large number of the same crossed and self-fertilised seeds were sown
+in the middle of the summer in the open ground in two long rows. Very
+much fewer of the self-fertilised than of the crossed plants produced
+flowers; but those that did flower, flowered almost simultaneously. When
+fully grown the ten tallest plants in each row were selected and
+measured to the tips of their highest leaves, as well as to the summits
+of their male flowers. The crossed averaged to the tips of their leaves
+54 inches in height, and the self-fertilised 44.65, or as 100 to 83; and
+to the summits of their male flowers, 53.96 and 43.45 inches; or as 100
+to 80.
+
+Phalaris canariensis.
+
+Hildebrand has shown in the paper referred to under the last species,
+that this hermaphrodite grass is better adapted for cross-fertilisation
+than for self-fertilisation. Several plants were raised in the
+greenhouse close together, and their flowers were mutually intercrossed.
+Pollen from a single plant growing quite separately was collected and
+placed on the stigmas of the same plant. The seeds thus produced were
+self-fertilised, for they were fertilised with pollen from the same
+plant, but it will have been a mere chance whether with pollen from the
+same flowers. Both lots of seeds, after germinating on sand, were
+planted in pairs on the opposite sides of four pots, which were kept in
+the greenhouse. When the plants were a little over a foot in height they
+were measured, and the crossed plants averaged 13.38, and the
+self-fertilised 12.29 inches in height; or as 100 to 92.
+
+When in full flower they were again measured to the extremities of their
+culms, as shown in Table 6/98.
+
+TABLE 6/98. Phalaris canariensis.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 42 2/8 : 41 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 39 6/8 : 45 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 37 : 31 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 49 4/8 : 37 2/8.
+Pot 4 : 29 : 42 3/8.
+Pot 2 : 37 : 34 7/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 37 6/8 : 28.
+Pot 3 : 35 4/8 : 28.
+Pot 3 : 43 : 34.
+
+Pot 4 : 40 2/8 : 35 1/8.
+Pot 4 : 37 : 34 4/8.
+
+Total : 428.00 : 392.63.
+
+The eleven crossed plants now averaged 38.9, and the eleven
+self-fertilised plants 35.69 inches in height; or as 100 to 92, which is
+the same ratio as before. Differently to what occurred with the maize,
+the crossed plants did not flower before the self-fertilised; and though
+both lots flowered very poorly from having been kept in pots in the
+greenhouse, yet the self-fertilised plants produced twenty-eight
+flower-heads, whilst the crossed produced only twenty!
+
+Two long rows of the same seeds were sown out of doors, and care was
+taken that they were sown in nearly equal number; but a far greater
+number of the crossed than of the self-fertilised seeds yielded plants.
+The self-fertilised plants were in consequence not so much crowded as
+the crossed, and thus had an advantage over them. When in full flower,
+the twelve tallest plants were carefully selected from both rows and
+measured, as shown in Table 6/99.
+
+TABLE 6/99. Phalaris canariensis (growing in the open ground).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Crossed Plants, twelve tallest.
+
+Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants, twelve tallest.
+
+ 34 1/8 : 35 2/8.
+ 35 7/8 : 31 1/8.
+ 36 : 33.
+ 35 5/8 : 32.
+ 35 5/8 : 31 5/8.
+ 36 1/8 : 36.
+ 36 6/8 : 33.
+ 38 6/8 : 32.
+ 36 2/8 : 35 1/8.
+ 35 5/8 : 33 5/8.
+ 34 1/8 : 34 2/8.
+ 34 5/8 : 35.
+
+Total : 429.5 : 402.0.
+
+The twelve crossed plants here average 35.78, and the twelve
+self-fertilised 33.5 inches in height; or as 100 to 93. In this case the
+crossed plants flowered rather before the self-fertilised, and thus
+differed from those growing in the pots.]
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+SUMMARY OF THE HEIGHTS AND WEIGHTS OF THE CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED
+PLANTS.
+
+Number of species and plants measured.
+Tables given.
+Preliminary remarks on the offspring of plants crossed by a fresh stock.
+Thirteen cases specially considered.
+The effects of crossing a self-fertilised plant either by another
+self-fertilised plant or by an intercrossed plant of the old stock.
+Summary of the results.
+Preliminary remarks on the crossed and self-fertilised plants of the
+same stock.
+The twenty-six exceptional cases considered, in which the crossed plants
+did not exceed greatly in height the self-fertilised.
+Most of these cases shown not to be real exceptions to the rule that
+cross-fertilisation is beneficial.
+Summary of results.
+Relative weights of the crossed and self-fertilised plants.
+
+The details which have been given under the head of each species are so
+numerous and so intricate, that it is necessary to tabulate the results.
+In Table 7/A, the number of plants of each kind which were raised from a
+cross between two individuals of the same stock and from self-fertilised
+seeds, together with their mean or average heights, are given. In the
+right hand column, the mean height of the crossed to that of the
+self-fertilised plants, the former being taken as 100, is shown. To make
+this clear, it may be advisable to give an example. In the first
+generation of Ipomoea, six plants derived from a cross between two
+plants were measured, and their mean height is 86.00 inches; six plants
+derived from flowers on the same parent-plant fertilised with their own
+pollen were measured, and their mean height is 65.66 inches. From this
+it follows, as shown in the right hand column, that if the mean height
+of the crossed plants be taken as 100, that of the self-fertilised
+plants is 76. The same plan is followed with all the other species.
+
+The crossed and self-fertilised plants were generally grown in pots in
+competition with one another, and always under as closely similar
+conditions as could be attained. They were, however, sometimes grown in
+separate rows in the open ground. With several of the species, the
+crossed plants were again crossed, and the self-fertilised plants again
+self-fertilised, and thus successive generations were raised and
+measured, as may be seen in Table 7/A. Owing to this manner of
+proceeding, the crossed plants became in the later generations more or
+less closely inter-related.
+
+In Table 7/B the relative weights of the crossed and self-fertilised
+plants, after they had flowered and had been cut down, are given in the
+few cases in which they were ascertained. The results are, I think, more
+striking and of greater value as evidence of constitutional vigour than
+those deduced from the relative heights of the plants.
+
+The most important table is Table 7/C, as it includes the relative
+heights, weights, and fertility of plants raised from parents crossed by
+a fresh stock (that is, by non-related plants grown under different
+conditions), or by a distinct sub-variety, in comparison with
+self-fertilised plants, or in a few cases with plants of the same old
+stock intercrossed during several generations. The relative fertility of
+the plants in this and the other tables will be more fully considered in
+a future chapter.
+
+TABLE 7/A. Relative heights of plants from parents crossed with pollen
+from other plants of the same stock, and self-fertilised.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Name of Plant.
+
+Column 2: Number of Crossed Plants measured.
+
+Column 3: Average Height of Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 4: Number of Self-fertilised Plants measured.
+
+Column 5: Average Height of Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Column 6: x, where the ratio of the Average Height of the Crossed to the
+Self-fertilised Plants is expressed as 100 to x.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--first generation:
+ 6 : 86.00 : 6 : 65.66 : 76.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--second generation:
+ 6 : 84.16 : 6 : 66.33 : 79.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--third generation:
+ 6 : 77.41 : 6 : 52.83 : 68.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--fourth generation:
+ 7 : 69.78 : 7 : 60.14 : 86.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--fifth generation:
+ 6 : 82.54 : 6 : 62.33 : 75.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--sixth generation:
+ 6 : 87.50 : 6 : 63.16 : 72.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--seventh generation:
+ 9 : 83.94 : 9 : 68.25 : 81.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--eighth generation:
+ 8 : 113.25 : 8 : 96.65 : 85.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--ninth generation:
+ 14 : 81.39 : 14 : 64.07 : 79.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--tenth generation:
+ 5 : 93.70 : 5 : 50.40 : 54.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--Number and average height of all the plants of the ten
+generations:
+ 73 : 85.84 : 73 : 66.02 : 77.
+
+Mimulus luteus--three first generations, before the new and taller
+self-fertilised variety appeared:
+ 10 : 8.19 : 10 : 5.29 : 65.
+
+Digitalis purpurea:
+ 16 : 51.33 : 8 : 35.87 : 70.
+
+Calceolaria--(common greenhouse variety):
+ 1 : 19.50 : 1 : 15.00 : 77.
+
+Linaria vulgaris:
+ 3 : 7.08 : 3 : 5.75 : 81.
+
+Verbascum thapsus:
+ 6 : 65.34 : 6 : 56.50 : 86.
+
+Vandellia nummularifolia--crossed and self-fertilised plants, raised
+from perfect flowers:
+ 20 : 4.30 : 20 : 4.27 : 99.
+
+Vandellia nummularifolia--crossed and self-fertilised plants, raised
+from perfect flowers: second trial, plants crowded:
+ 24 : 3.60 : 24 : 3.38 : 94.
+
+Vandellia nummularifolia--crossed plants raised from perfect flowers,
+and self-fertilised plants from cleistogene flowers:
+ 20 : 4.30 : 20 : 4.06 : 94.
+
+Gesneria pendulina:
+ 8 : 32.06 : 8 : 29.14 : 90.
+
+Salvia coccinea:
+ 6 : 27.85 : 6 : 21.16 : 76.
+
+Origanum vulgare:
+ 4 : 20.00 : 4 : 17.12 : 86.
+
+Thunbergia alata:
+ 6 : 60.00 : 6 : 65.00 : 108.
+
+Brassica oleracea:
+ 9 : 41.08 : 9 : 39.00 : 95.
+
+Iberis umbellata--the self-fertilised plants of the third generation:
+ 7 : 19.12 : 7 : 16.39 : 86.
+
+Papaver vagum:
+ 15 : 21.91 : 15 : 19.54 : 89.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--English stock, first generation:
+ 4 : 29.68 : 4 : 25.56 : 86.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--English stock, second generation:
+ 11 : 32.47 : 11 : 32.81 : 101.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--Brazilian stock, first generation:
+ 14 : 44.64 : 14 : 45.12 : 101.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--Brazilian stock, second generation:
+ 18 : 43.38 : 19 : 50.30 : 116.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--average height and number of all the plants
+of Eschscholtzia:
+ 47 : 40.03 : 48 : 42.72 : 107.
+
+Reseda lutea--grown in pots:
+ 24 : 17.17 : 24 : 14.61 : 85.
+
+Reseda lutea--grown in open ground :
+ 8 : 28.09 : 8 : 23.14 : 82.
+
+Reseda odorata--self-fertilised seeds from a highly self-fertile plant,
+grown in pots:
+ 19 : 27.48 : 19 : 22.55 : 82.
+
+Reseda odorata--self-fertilised seeds from a highly self-fertile plant,
+grown in open ground:
+ 8 : 25.76 : 8 : 27.09 : 105.
+
+Reseda odorata--self-fertilised seeds from a semi-self-fertile plant,
+grown in pots:
+ 20 : 29.98 : 20 : 27.71 : 92.
+
+Reseda odorata--self-fertilised seeds from a semi-self-fertile plant,
+grown in open ground:
+ 8 : 25.92 : 8 : 23.54 : 90.
+
+Viola tricolor:
+ 14 : 5.58 : 14 : 2.37 : 42.
+
+Adonis aestivalis:
+ 4 : 14.25 : 4 : 14.31 : 100.
+
+Delphinium consolida:
+ 6 : 14.95 : 6 : 12.50 : 84.
+
+Viscaria oculata:
+ 15 : 34.50 : 15 : 33.55 : 97.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--open ground, about :
+ 6?: 28? : 6?: 24? : 86.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--second generation, in pots, crowded:
+ 2 : 16.75 : 2 : 9.75 : 58.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--third generation, in pots:
+ 8 : 28.39 : 8 : 28.21 : 99.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--offspring from plants of the third
+self-fertilised generation crossed by intercrossed plants of the third
+generation, compared with plants of fourth self-fertilised generation:
+ 15 : 28.00 : 10 : 26.55 : 95.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--number and average height of all the plants of
+Dianthus:
+ 31 : 27.37 : 26 : 25.18 : 92.
+
+Hibiscus africanus:
+ 4 : 13.25 : 4 : 14.43 : 109.
+
+Pelargonium zonale:
+ 7 : 22.35 : 7 : 16.62 : 74.
+
+Tropaeolum minus:
+ 8 : 58.43 : 8 : 46.00 : 79.
+
+Limnanthes douglasii:
+ 16 : 17.46 : 16 : 13.85 : 79.
+
+Lupinus luteus--second generation:
+ 8 : 30.78 : 8 : 25.21 : 82.
+
+Lupinus pilosus--plants of two generations:
+ 2 : 35.50 : 3 : 30.50 : 86.
+
+Phaseolus multiflorus:
+ 5 : 86.00 : 5 : 82.35 : 96.
+
+Pisum sativum:
+ 4 : 34.62 : 4 : 39.68 : 115.
+
+Sarothamnus scoparius--small seedlings:
+ 6 : 2.91 : 6 : 1.33 : 46.
+
+Sarothamnus scoparius--the three survivors on each side after three
+years’ growth:
+ : 18.91 : : 11.83 : 63.
+
+Ononis minutissima:
+ 2 : 19.81 : 2 : 17.37 : 88.
+
+Clarkia elegans:
+ 4 : 33.50 : 4 : 27.62 : 82.
+
+Bartonia aurea:
+ 8 : 24.62 : 8 : 26.31 : 107.
+
+Passiflora gracilis:
+ 2 : 49.00 : 2 : 51.00 : 104.
+
+Apium petroselinum:
+ * : : * : : 100.
+*not measured.
+
+Scabiosa atro-purpurea:
+ 4 : 17.12 : 4 : 15.37 : 90.
+
+Lactuca sativa--plants of two generations:
+ 7 : 19.43 : 6 : 16.00 : 82.
+
+Specularia speculum:
+ 4 : 19.28 : 4 : 18.93 : 98.
+
+Lobelia ramosa--first generation:
+ 4 : 22.25 : 4 : 18.37 : 82.
+
+Lobelia ramosa--second generation:
+ 3 : 23.33 : 3 : 19.00 : 81.
+
+Lobelia fulgens--first generation:
+ 2 : 34.75 : 2 : 44.25 : 127.
+
+Lobelia fulgens--second generation:
+ 23 : 29.82 : 23 : 27.10 : 91.
+
+Nemophila insignis--half-grown:
+ 12 : 11.10 : 12 : 5.45 : 49.
+
+Nemophila insignis--the same fully-grown:
+ : 33.28 : : 19.90 : 60.
+
+Borago officinalis:
+ 4 : 20.68 : 4 : 21.18 : 102.
+
+Nolana prostrata:
+ 5 : 12.75 : 5 : 13.40 : 105.
+
+Petunia violacea--first generation:
+ 5 : 30.80 : 5 : 26.00 : 84.
+
+Petunia violacea--second generation:
+ 4 : 40.50 : 6 : 26.25 : 65.
+
+Petunia violacea--third generation:
+ 8 : 40.96 : 8 : 53.87 : 131.
+
+Petunia violacea--fourth generation:
+ 15 : 46.79 : 14 : 32.39 : 69.
+
+Petunia violacea--fourth generation, from a distinct parent:
+ 13 : 44.74 : 13 : 26.87 : 60.
+
+Petunia violacea--fifth generation:
+ 22 : 54.11 : 21 : 33.23 : 61.
+
+Petunia violacea--fifth generation, in open ground:
+ 10 : 38.27 : 10 : 23.31 : 61.
+
+Petunia violacea--Number and average height of all the plants in pots of
+Petunia:
+ 67 : 46.53 : 67 : 33.12 : 71.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--first generation:
+ 4 : 18.50 : 4 : 32.75 : 178.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--second generation:
+ 9 : 53.84 : 7 : 51.78 : 96.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--third generation:
+ 7 : 95.25 : 7 : 79.60 : 83.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--third generation but raised from a distinct plant:
+ 7 : 70.78 : 9 : 71.30 : 101.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--Number and average height of all the plants of
+Nicotiana:
+ 27 : 63.73 : 27 : 61.31 : 96.
+
+Cyclamen persicum:
+ 8 : 9.49 : 8?: 7.50 : 79.
+
+Anagallis collina:
+ 6 : 42.20 : 6 : 33.35 : 69.
+
+Primula sinensis--a dimorphic species:
+ 8 : 9.01 : 8 : 9.03 : 100.
+
+Fagopyrum esculentum--a dimorphic species:
+ 15 : 38.06 : 15 : 26.13 : 69.
+
+Beta vulgaris--in pots:
+ 8 : 34.09 : 8 : 29.81 : 87.
+
+Beta vulgaris--in open ground:
+ 8 : 30.92 : 8 : 30.70 : 99.
+
+Canna warscewiczi--plants of three generations:
+ 34 : 35.98 : 34 : 36.39 : 101.
+
+Zea mays--in pots, whilst young, measured to tips of leaves:
+ 15 : 20.19 : 15 : 17.57 : 87.
+
+Zea mays--when full-grown, after the death of some, measured to tips of
+leaves:
+ : 68.10 : : 62.34 : 91.
+
+Zea mays--when full-grown, after the death of some, measured to tips of
+flowers:
+ : 66.51 : : 61.59 : 93.
+
+Zea mays--grown in open ground, measured to tips of leaves:
+ 10 : 54.00 : 10 : 44.55 : 83.
+
+Zea mays--grown in open ground, measured to tips of flowers:
+ : 53.96 : : 43.45 : 80.
+
+Phalaris canariensis--in pots.
+ 11 : 38.90 : 11 : 35.69 : 92.
+
+Phalaris canariensis--in open ground:
+ 12 : 35.78 : 12 : 33.50 : 93.
+
+TABLE 7/B.--Relative weights of plants from parents crossed with pollen
+from distinct plants of the same stock, and self-fertilised.
+
+Column 1: Names of plants.
+
+Column 2: Number of crossed plants.
+
+Column 3: Number of self-fertilised plants.
+
+Column 4: x, where the ratio of the Weight of the Crossed to the
+Self-fertilised Plants is expressed as 100 to x.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--plants of the tenth generation:
+ 6 : 6 : 44.
+
+Vandellia nummularifolia--first generation:
+ 41 : 41 : 97.
+
+Brassica oleracea--first generation:
+ 9 : 9 : 37.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--plants of the second generation:
+ 19 : 19 : 118.
+
+Reseda lutea--first generation, grown in pots:
+ 24 : 24 : 21.
+
+Reseda lutea--first generation, grown in open ground:
+ 8 : 8 : 40.
+
+Reseda odorata--first generation, descended from a highly self-fertile
+plant, grown in pots:
+ 19 : 19 : 67.
+
+Reseda odorata--first generation, descended from a semi-self-fertile
+plant, grown in pots:
+ 20 : 20 : 99.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--plants of the third generation:
+ 8 : 8 : 49.
+
+Petunia violacea--plants of the fifth generation, in pots:
+ 22 : 21 : 22.
+
+Petunia violacea--plants of the fifth generation, in open ground:
+ 10 : 10 : 36.
+
+TABLE 7/C.--Relative heights, weights, and fertility of plants from
+parents crossed by a fresh stock, and from parents either
+self-fertilised or intercrossed with plants of the same stock.
+
+Column 1: Names of the plants and nature of the experiments.
+
+Column 2: Number of plants from a cross with a fresh stock.
+
+Column 3: Average height in inches and weight.
+
+Column 4: Number of the plants from self-fertilised or intercrossed
+parents of the same stock.
+
+Column 5: Average height in inches and weight.
+
+Column 4: x, where the ratio of the Height, Weight and Fertility of the
+plants from the Cross with a fresh stock is expressed as 100 to x.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--offspring of plants intercrossed for nine generations
+and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of the tenth
+intercrossed generation:
+ 19 : 84.03 : 19 : 65.78 : 78.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--offspring of plants intercrossed for nine generations
+and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of the tenth
+intercrossed generation, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 51.
+
+Mimulus luteus--offspring of plants self-fertilised for eight
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the ninth self-fertilised generation:
+ 28 : 21.62 : 19 : 10.44 : 52.
+
+Mimulus luteus--offspring of plants self-fertilised for eight
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the ninth self-fertilised generation, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 3.
+
+Mimulus luteus--offspring of plants self-fertilised for eight
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with the
+offspring of a plant self-fertilised for eight generations, and then
+intercrossed with another self-fertilised plant of the same generation:
+ 28 : 21.62 : 27 : 12.20 : 56.
+
+Mimulus luteus--offspring of plants self-fertilised for eight
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with the
+offspring of a plant self-fertilised for eight generations, and then
+intercrossed with another self-fertilised plant of the same generation,
+in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 4.
+
+Brassica oleracea--offspring of plants self-fertilised for two
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the third self-fertilised generation, by weight:
+ 6 : : 6 : : 22.
+
+Iberis umbellata--offspring from English variety crossed by slightly
+different Algerine variety, compared with the self-fertilised offspring
+of the English variety:
+ 30 : 17.34 : 29 : 15.51 : 89.
+
+Iberis umbellata--offspring from English variety crossed by slightly
+different Algerine variety, compared with the self-fertilised offspring
+of the English variety, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 75.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--offspring of a Brazilian stock crossed by an
+English stock, compared with plants of the Brazilian stock of the second
+self-fertilised generation:
+ 19 : 45.92 : 19 : 50.30 : 109.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--offspring of a Brazilian stock crossed by an
+English stock, compared with plants of the Brazilian stock of the second
+self-fertilised generation, in weight:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 118.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--offspring of a Brazilian stock crossed by an
+English stock, compared with plants of the Brazilian stock of the second
+self-fertilised generation, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 40.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--offspring of a Brazilian stock crossed by an
+English stock, compared with plants of the Brazilian stock of the second
+intercrossed generation, in height:
+ 19 : 45.92 : 18 : 43.38 : 94.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--offspring of a Brazilian stock crossed by an
+English stock, compared with plants of the Brazilian stock of the second
+intercrossed generation, in weight:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 100.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--offspring of a Brazilian stock crossed by an
+English stock, compared with plants of the Brazilian stock of the second
+intercrossed generation, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 45.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fourth self-fertilised generation:
+ 16 : 32.82 : 10 : 26.55 : 81.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fourth self-fertilised generation, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 33.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with the
+offspring of plants self-fertilised for three generations and then
+crossed by plants of the third intercrossed generation:
+ 16 : 32.82 : 15 : 28.00 : 85.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with the
+offspring of plants self-fertilised for three generations and then
+crossed by plants of the third intercrossed generation, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 45.
+
+Pisum sativum--offspring from a cross between two closely allied
+varieties, compared with the self-fertilised offspring of one of the
+varieties, or with intercrossed plants of the same stock:
+ ? : : ? : : 60 to 75.
+
+Lathyrus odoratus--offspring from two varieties, differing only in
+colour of their flowers, compared with the self-fertilised offspring of
+one of the varieties: in first generation:
+ 2 : 79.25 : 2 : 63.75 : 80.
+
+Lathyrus odoratus--offspring from two varieties, differing only in
+colour of their flowers, compared with the self-fertilised offspring of
+one of the varieties: in second generation:
+ 6 : 62.91 : 6 : 55.31 : 88.
+
+Petunia violacea--offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth self-fertilised generation, in height:
+ 21 : 50.05 : 21 : 33.23 : 66.
+
+Petunia violacea--offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth self-fertilised generation, in weight:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 23.
+
+Petunia violacea--offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth self-fertilised generation, grown in open ground, in height:
+ 10 : 36.67 : 10 : 23.31 : 63.
+
+Petunia violacea--offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth self-fertilised generation, grown in open ground, in weight:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 53.
+
+Petunia violacea--offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth self-fertilised generation, grown in open ground, in
+fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 46.
+
+Petunia violacea--offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth intercrossed generation, in height:
+ 21 : 50.05 : 22 : 54.11 : 108.
+
+Petunia violacea--offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth intercrossed generation, in weight:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 101.
+
+Petunia violacea--offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth intercrossed generation, grown in open ground, in height:
+ 10 : 36.67 : 10 : 38.27 : 104.
+
+Petunia violacea--offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth intercrossed generation, grown in open ground, in weight:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 146.
+
+Petunia violacea--offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth intercrossed generation, grown in open ground, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 54.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a slightly different variety, compared
+with plants of the fourth self-fertilised generation, grown not much
+crowded in pots, in height:
+ 26 : 63.29 : 26 : 41.67 : 66.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a slightly different variety, compared
+with plants of the fourth self-fertilised generation, grown much crowded
+in pots, in height:
+ 12 : 31.53 : 12 : 17.21 : 54.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a slightly different variety, compared
+with plants of the fourth self-fertilised generation, grown much crowded
+in pots, in weight:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 37.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a slightly different variety, compared
+with plants of the fourth self-fertilised generation, grown in open
+ground, in height:
+ 20 : 48.74 : 20 : 35.20 : 72.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a slightly different variety, compared
+with plants of the fourth self-fertilised generation, grown in open
+ground, in weight:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 63.
+
+Anagallis collina--offspring from a red variety crossed by a blue
+variety, compared with the self-fertilised offspring of the red variety:
+ 3 : 27.62 : 3 : 18.21 : 66.
+
+Anagallis collina--offspring from a red variety crossed by a blue
+variety, compared with the self-fertilised offspring of the red variety,
+in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 6.
+
+Primula veris--offspring from long-styled plants of the third
+illegitimate generation, crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants
+of the fourth illegitimate and self-fertilised generation:
+ 8 : 7.03 : 8 : 3.21 : 46.
+
+Primula veris--offspring from long-styled plants of the third
+illegitimate generation, crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants
+of the fourth illegitimate and self-fertilised generation, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 5.
+
+Primula veris--offspring from long-styled plants of the third
+illegitimate generation, crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants
+of the fourth illegitimate and self-fertilised generation, in fertility
+in following year:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 3.5.
+
+Primula veris--(equal-styled, red-flowered variety)--offspring from
+plants self-fertilised for two generations and then crossed by a
+different variety, compared with plants of the third self-fertilised
+generation:
+ 3 : 8.66 : 3 : 7.33 : 85.
+
+Primula veris--(equal-styled, red-flowered variety)--offspring from
+plants self-fertilised for two generations and then crossed by a
+different variety, compared with plants of the third self-fertilised
+generation, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 11.
+
+In these three tables the measurements of fifty-seven species, belonging
+to fifty-two genera and to thirty great natural families, are given. The
+species are natives of various parts of the world. The number of crossed
+plants, including those derived from a cross between plants of the same
+stock and of two different stocks, amounts to 1,101; and the number of
+self-fertilised plants (including a few in Table 7/C derived from a
+cross between plants of the same old stock) is 1,076. Their growth was
+observed from the germination of the seeds to maturity; and most of them
+were measured twice and some thrice. The various precautions taken to
+prevent either lot being unduly favoured, have been described in the
+introductory chapter. Bearing all these circumstances in mind, it may be
+admitted that we have a fair basis for judging of the comparative
+effects of cross-fertilisation and of self-fertilisation on the growth
+of the offspring.
+
+It will be the most convenient plan first to consider the results given
+in Table 7/C, as an opportunity will thus be afforded of incidentally
+discussing some important points. If the reader will look down the right
+hand column of this table, he will see at a glance what an extraordinary
+advantage in height, weight, and fertility the plants derived from a
+cross with a fresh stock or with another sub-variety have over the
+self-fertilised plants, as well as over the intercrossed plants of the
+same old stock. There are only two exceptions to this rule, and these
+are hardly real ones. In the case of Eschscholtzia, the advantage is
+confined to fertility. In that of Petunia, though the plants derived
+from a cross with a fresh stock had an immense superiority in height,
+weight, and fertility over the self-fertilised plants, they were
+conquered by the intercrossed plants of the same old stock in height and
+weight, but not in fertility. It has, however, been shown that the
+superiority of these intercrossed plants in height and weight was in all
+probability not real; for if the two sets had been allowed to grow for
+another month, it is almost certain that those from a cross with the
+fresh stock would have been victorious in every way over the
+intercrossed plants.
+
+Before we consider in detail the several cases given in Table 7/C, some
+preliminary remarks must be made. There is the clearest evidence, as we
+shall presently see, that the advantage of a cross depends wholly on the
+plants differing somewhat in constitution; and that the disadvantages of
+self-fertilisation depend on the two parents, which are combined in the
+same hermaphrodite flower, having a closely similar constitution. A
+certain amount of differentiation in the sexual elements seems
+indispensable for the full fertility of the parents, and for the full
+vigour of the offspring. All the individuals of the same species, even
+those produced in a state of nature, differ somewhat, though often very
+slightly, from one another in external characters and probably in
+constitution. This obviously holds good between the varieties of the
+same species, as far as external characters are concerned; and much
+evidence could be advanced with respect to their generally differing
+somewhat in constitution. There can hardly be a doubt that the
+differences of all kinds between the individuals and varieties of the
+same species depend largely, and as I believe exclusively, on their
+progenitors having been subjected to different conditions; though the
+conditions to which the individuals of the same species are exposed in a
+state of nature often falsely appear to us the same. For instance, the
+individuals growing together are necessarily exposed to the same
+climate, and they seem to us at first sight to be subjected to
+identically the same conditions; but this can hardly be the case, except
+under the unusual contingency of each individual being surrounded by
+other kinds of plants in exactly the same proportional numbers. For the
+surrounding plants absorb different amounts of various substances from
+the soil, and thus greatly affect the nourishment and even the life of
+the individuals of any particular species. These will also be shaded and
+otherwise affected by the nature of the surrounding plants. Moreover,
+seeds often lie dormant in the ground, and those which germinate during
+any one year will often have been matured during very different seasons.
+Seeds are widely dispersed by various means, and some will occasionally
+be brought from distant stations, where their parents have grown under
+somewhat different conditions, and the plants produced from such seeds
+will intercross with the old residents, thus mingling their
+constitutional peculiarities in all sorts of proportions.
+
+Plants when first subjected to culture, even in their native country,
+cannot fail to be exposed to greatly changed conditions of life, more
+especially from growing in cleared ground, and from not having to
+compete with many or any surrounding plants. They are thus enabled to
+absorb whatever they require which the soil may contain. Fresh seeds are
+often brought from distant gardens, where the parent-plants have been
+subjected to different conditions. Cultivated plants like those in a
+state of nature frequently intercross, and will thus mingle their
+constitutional peculiarities. On the other hand, as long as the
+individuals of any species are cultivated in the same garden, they will
+apparently be subjected to more uniform conditions than plants in a
+state of nature, as the individuals have not to compete with various
+surrounding species. The seeds sown at the same time in a garden have
+generally been matured during the same season and in the same place; and
+in this respect they differ much from the seeds sown by the hand of
+nature. Some exotic plants are not frequented by the native insects in
+their new home, and therefore are not intercrossed; and this appears to
+be a highly important factor in the individuals acquiring uniformity of
+constitution.
+
+In my experiments the greatest care was taken that in each generation
+all the crossed and self-fertilised plants should be subjected to the
+same conditions. Not that the conditions were absolutely the same, for
+the more vigorous individuals will have robbed the weaker ones of
+nutriment, and likewise of water when the soil in the pots was becoming
+dry; and both lots at one end of the pot will have received a little
+more light than those at the other end. In the successive generations,
+the plants were subjected to somewhat different conditions, for the
+seasons necessarily varied, and they were sometimes raised at different
+periods of the year. But as they were all kept under glass, they were
+exposed to far less abrupt and great changes of temperature and moisture
+than are plants growing out of doors. With respect to the intercrossed
+plants, their first parents, which were not related, would almost
+certainly have differed somewhat in constitution; and such
+constitutional peculiarities would be variously mingled in each
+succeeding intercrossed generation, being sometimes augmented, but more
+commonly neutralised in a greater or less degree, and sometimes revived
+through reversion; just as we know to be the case with the external
+characters of crossed species and varieties. With the plants which were
+self-fertilised during the successive generations, this latter important
+source of some diversity of constitution will have been wholly
+eliminated; and the sexual elements produced by the same flower must
+have been developed under as nearly the same conditions as it is
+possible to conceive.
+
+In Table 7/C the crossed plants are the offspring of a cross with a
+fresh stock, or with a distinct variety; and they were put into
+competition either with self-fertilised plants, or with intercrossed
+plants of the same old stock. By the term fresh stock I mean a
+non-related plant, the progenitors of which have been raised during some
+generations in another garden, and have consequently been exposed to
+somewhat different conditions. In the case of Nicotiana, Iberis, the red
+variety of Primula, the common Pea, and perhaps Anagallis, the plants
+which were crossed may be ranked as distinct varieties or sub-varieties
+of the same species; but with Ipomoea, Mimulus, Dianthus, and Petunia,
+the plants which were crossed differed exclusively in the tint of their
+flowers; and as a large proportion of the plants raised from the same
+lot of purchased seeds thus varied, the differences may be estimated as
+merely individual. Having made these preliminary remarks, we will now
+consider in detail the several cases given in Table 7/C, and they are
+well worthy of full consideration.
+
+1. Ipomoea purpurea.
+
+Plants growing in the same pots, and subjected in each generation to the
+same conditions, were intercrossed for nine consecutive generations.
+These intercrossed plants thus became in the later generations more or
+less closely inter-related. Flowers on the plants of the ninth
+intercrossed generation were fertilised with pollen taken from a fresh
+stock, and seedlings thus raised. Other flowers on the same intercrossed
+plants were fertilised with pollen from another intercrossed plant,
+producing seedlings of the tenth intercrossed generation. These two sets
+of seedlings were grown in competition with one another, and differed
+greatly in height and fertility. For the offspring from the cross with a
+fresh stock exceeded in height the intercrossed plants in the ratio of
+100 to 78; and this is nearly the same excess which the intercrossed had
+over the self-fertilised plants in all ten generations taken together,
+namely, as 100 to 77. The plants raised from the cross with a fresh
+stock were also greatly superior in fertility to the intercrossed,
+namely, in the ratio of 100 to 51, as judged by the relative weight of
+the seed-capsules produced by an equal number of plants of the two sets,
+both having been left to be naturally fertilised. It should be
+especially observed that none of the plants of either lot were the
+product of self-fertilisation. On the contrary, the intercrossed plants
+had certainly been crossed for the last ten generations, and probably,
+during all previous generations, as we may infer from the structure of
+the flowers and from the frequency of the visits of humble-bees. And so
+it will have been with the parent-plants of the fresh stock. The whole
+great difference in height and fertility between the two lots must be
+attributed to the one being the product of a cross with pollen from a
+fresh stock, and the other of a cross between plants of the same old
+stock.
+
+This species offers another interesting case. In the five first
+generations in which intercrossed and self-fertilised plants were put
+into competition with one another, every single intercrossed plant beat
+its self-fertilised antagonist, except in one instance, in which they
+were equal in height. But in the sixth generation a plant appeared,
+named by me the Hero, remarkable for its tallness and increased
+self-fertility, and which transmitted its characters to the next three
+generations. The children of Hero were again self-fertilised, forming
+the eighth self-fertilised generation, and were likewise intercrossed
+one with another; but this cross between plants which had been subjected
+to the same conditions and had been self-fertilised during the seven
+previous generations, did not effect the least good; for the
+intercrossed grandchildren were actually shorter than the
+self-fertilised grandchildren, in the ratio of 100 to 107. We here see
+that the mere act of crossing two distinct plants does not by itself
+benefit the offspring. This case is almost the converse of that in the
+last paragraph, on which the offspring profited so greatly by a cross
+with a fresh stock. A similar trial was made with the descendants of
+Hero in the following generation, and with the same result. But the
+trial cannot be fully trusted, owing to the extremely unhealthy
+condition of the plants. Subject to this same serious cause of doubt,
+even a cross with a fresh stock did not benefit the great-grandchildren
+of Hero; and if this were really the case, it is the greatest anomaly
+observed by me in all my experiments.
+
+2. Mimulus luteus.
+
+During the three first generations the intercrossed plants taken
+together exceeded in height the self-fertilised taken together, in the
+ratio of 100 to 65, and in fertility in a still higher degree. In the
+fourth generation a new variety, which grew taller and had whiter and
+larger flowers than the old varieties, began to prevail, especially
+amongst the self-fertilised plants. This variety transmitted its
+characters with remarkable fidelity, so that all the plants in the later
+self-fertilised generations belonged to it. These consequently exceeded
+the intercrossed plants considerably in height. Thus in the seventh
+generation the intercrossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height
+as 100 to 137. It is a more remarkable fact that the self-fertilised
+plants of the sixth generation had become much more fertile than the
+intercrossed plants, judging by the number of capsules spontaneously
+produced, in the ratio of 147 to 100. This variety, which as we have
+seen appeared amongst the plants of the fourth self-fertilised
+generation, resembles in almost all its constitutional peculiarities the
+variety called Hero which appeared in the sixth self-fertilised
+generation of Ipomoea. No other such case, with the partial exception of
+that of Nicotiana, occurred in my experiments, carried on during eleven
+years.
+
+Two plants of this variety of Mimulus, belonging to the sixth
+self-fertilised generation, and growing in separate pots, were
+intercrossed; and some flowers on the same plants were again
+self-fertilised. From the seeds thus obtained, plants derived from a
+cross between the self-fertilised plants, and others of the seventh
+self-fertilised generation, were raised. But this cross did not do the
+least good, the intercrossed plants being inferior in height to the
+self-fertilised, in the ratio of 100 to 110. This case is exactly
+parallel with that given under Ipomoea, of the grandchildren of Hero,
+and apparently of its great-grandchildren; for the seedlings raised by
+intercrossing these plants were not in any way superior to those of the
+corresponding generation raised from the self-fertilised flowers.
+Therefore in these several cases the crossing of plants, which had been
+self-fertilised for several generations and which had been cultivated
+all the time under as nearly as possible the same conditions, was not in
+the least beneficial.
+
+Another experiment was now tried. Firstly, plants of the eighth
+self-fertilised generation were again self-fertilised, producing plants
+of the ninth self-fertilised generation. Secondly, two of the plants of
+the eighth self-fertilised generation were intercrossed one with
+another, as in the experiment above referred to; but this was now
+effected on plants which had been subjected to two additional
+generations of self-fertilisation. Thirdly, the same plants of the
+eighth self-fertilised generation were crossed with pollen from plants
+of a fresh stock brought from a distant garden. Numerous plants were
+raised from these three sets of seeds, and grown in competition with one
+another. The plants derived from a cross between the self-fertilised
+plants exceeded in height by a little the self-fertilised, namely, as
+100 to 92; and in fertility in a greater degree, namely, as 100 to 73. I
+do not know whether this difference in the result, compared with that in
+the previous case, can be accounted for by the increased deterioration
+of the self-fertilised plants from two additional generations of
+self-fertilisation, and the consequent advantage of any cross whatever,
+along merely between the self-fertilised plants. But however this may
+be, the effects of crossing the self-fertilised plants of the eighth
+generation with a fresh stock were extremely striking; for the seedlings
+thus raised were to the self-fertilised of the ninth generation as 100
+to 52 in height, and as 100 to 3 in fertility! They were also to the
+intercrossed plants (derived from crossing two of the self-fertilised
+plants of the eighth generation) in height as 100 to 56, and in
+fertility as 100 to 4. Better evidence could hardly be desired of the
+potent influence of a cross with a fresh stock on plants which had been
+self-fertilised for eight generations, and had been cultivated all the
+time under nearly uniform conditions, in comparison with plants
+self-fertilised for nine generations continuously, or then once
+intercrossed, namely in the last generation.
+
+3. Brassica oleracea.
+
+Some flowers on cabbage plants of the second self-fertilised generation
+were crossed with pollen from a plant of the same variety brought from a
+distant garden, and other flowers were again self-fertilised. Plants
+derived from a cross with a fresh stock and plants of the third
+self-fertilised generation were thus raised. The former were to the
+self-fertilised in weight as 100 to 22; and this enormous difference
+must be attributed in part to the beneficial effects of a cross with a
+fresh stock, and in part to the deteriorating effects of
+self-fertilisation continued during three generations.
+
+4. Iberis umbellata.
+
+Seedlings from a crimson English variety crossed by a pale-coloured
+variety which had been grown for some generations in Algiers, were to
+the self-fertilised seedlings from the crimson variety in height as 100
+to 89, and as 100 to 75 in fertility. I am surprised that this cross
+with another variety did not produce a still more strongly marked
+beneficial effect; for some intercrossed plants of the crimson English
+variety, put into competition with plants of the same variety
+self-fertilised during three generations, were in height as 100 to 86,
+and in fertility as 100 to 75. The slightly greater difference in height
+in this latter case, may possibly be attributed to the deteriorating
+effects of self-fertilisation carried on for two additional generations.
+
+5. Eschscholtzia californica.
+
+This plant offers an almost unique case, inasmuch as the good effects of
+a cross are confined to the reproductive system. Intercrossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the English stock did not differ in height
+(nor in weight, as far as was ascertained) in any constant manner; the
+self-fertilised plants usually having the advantage. So it was with the
+offspring of plants of the Brazilian stock, tried in the same manner.
+The parent-plants, however, of the English stock produced many more
+seeds when fertilised with pollen from another plant than when
+self-fertilised; and in Brazil the parent-plants were absolutely sterile
+unless they were fertilised with pollen from another plant. Intercrossed
+seedlings, raised in England from the Brazilian stock, compared with
+self-fertilised seedlings of the corresponding second generation,
+yielded seeds in number as 100 to 89; both lots of plants being left
+freely exposed to the visits of insects. If we now turn to the effects
+of crossing plants of the Brazilian stock with pollen from the English
+stock,--so that plants which had been long exposed to very different
+conditions were intercrossed,--we find that the offspring were, as
+before, inferior in height and weight to the plants of the Brazilian
+stock after two generations of self-fertilisation, but were superior to
+them in the most marked manner in the number of seeds produced, namely,
+as 100 to 40; both lots of plants being left freely exposed to the
+visits of insects.
+
+In the case of Ipomoea, we have seen that the plants derived from a
+cross with a fresh stock were superior in height as 100 to 78, and in
+fertility as 100 to 51, to the plants of the old stock, although these
+had been intercrossed during the last ten generations. With
+Eschscholtzia we have a nearly parallel case, but only as far as
+fertility is concerned, for the plants derived from a cross with a fresh
+stock were superior in fertility in the ratio of 100 to 45 to the
+Brazilian plants, which had been artificially intercrossed in England
+for the two last generations, and which must have been naturally
+intercrossed by insects during all previous generations in Brazil, where
+otherwise they are quite sterile.
+
+6. Dianthus caryophyllus.
+
+Plants self-fertilised for three generations were crossed with pollen
+from a fresh stock, and their offspring were grown in competition with
+plants of the fourth self-fertilised generation. The crossed plants thus
+obtained were to the self-fertilised in height as 100 to 81, and in
+fertility (both lots being left to be naturally fertilised by insects)
+as 100 to 33.
+
+These same crossed plants were also to the offspring from the plants of
+the third generation crossed by the intercrossed plants of the
+corresponding generation, in height as 100 to 85, and in fertility as
+100 to 45.
+
+We thus see what a great advantage the offspring from a cross with a
+fresh stock had, not only over the self-fertilised plants of the fourth
+generation, but over the offspring from the self-fertilised plants of
+the third generation, when crossed by the intercrossed plants of the old
+stock.
+
+7. Pisum sativum.
+
+It has been shown under the head of this species, that the several
+varieties in this country almost invariably fertilise themselves, owing
+to insects rarely visiting the flowers; and as the plants have been long
+cultivated under nearly similar conditions, we can understand why a
+cross between two individuals of the same variety does not do the least
+good to the offspring either in height or fertility. This case is almost
+exactly parallel with that of Mimulus, or that of the Ipomoea named
+Hero; for in these two instances, crossing plants which had been
+self-fertilised for seven generations did not at all benefit the
+offspring. On the other hand, a cross between two varieties of the pea
+causes a marked superiority in the growth and vigour of the offspring,
+over the self-fertilised plants of the same varieties, as shown by two
+excellent observers. From my own observations (not made with great care)
+the offspring from crossed varieties were to self-fertilised plants in
+height, in one case as 100 to about 75, and in a second case as 100 to
+60.
+
+8. Lathyrus odoratus.
+
+The sweet-pea is in the same state in regard to self-fertilisation as
+the common pea; and we have seen that seedlings from a cross between two
+varieties, which differed in no respect except in the colour of their
+flowers, were to the self-fertilised seedlings from the same
+mother-plant in height as 100 to 80; and in the second generation as 100
+to 88. Unfortunately I did not ascertain whether crossing two plants of
+the same variety failed to produce any beneficial effect, but I venture
+to predict such would be the result.
+
+9. Petunia violacea.
+
+The intercrossed plants of the same stock in four out of the five
+successive generations plainly exceeded in height the self-fertilised
+plants. The latter in the fourth generation were crossed by a fresh
+stock, and the seedlings thus obtained were put into competition with
+the self-fertilised plants of the fifth generation. The crossed plants
+exceeded the self-fertilised in height in the ratio of 100 to 66, and in
+weight as 100 to 23; but this difference, though so great, is not much
+greater than that between the intercrossed plants of the same stock in
+comparison with the self-fertilised plants of the corresponding
+generation. This case, therefore, seems at first sight opposed to the
+rule that a cross with a fresh stock is much more beneficial than a
+cross between individuals of the same stock. But as with Eschscholtzia,
+the reproductive system was here chiefly benefited; for the plants
+raised from the cross with the fresh stock were to the self-fertilised
+plants in fertility, both lots being naturally fertilised, as 100 to 46,
+whereas the intercrossed plants of the same stock were to the
+self-fertilised plants of the corresponding fifth generation in
+fertility only as 100 to 86.
+
+Although at the time of measurement the plants raised from the cross
+with the fresh stock did not exceed in height or weight the intercrossed
+plants of the old stock (owing to the growth of the former not having
+been completed, as explained under the head of this species), yet they
+exceeded the intercrossed plants in fertility in the ratio of 100 to 54.
+This fact is interesting, as it shows that plants self-fertilised for
+four generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, yielded seedlings
+which were nearly twice as fertile as those from plants of the same
+stock which had been intercrossed for the five previous generations. We
+here see, as with Eschscholtzia and Dianthus, that the mere act of
+crossing, independently of the state of the crossed plants, has little
+efficacy in giving increased fertility to the offspring. The same
+conclusion holds good, as we have already seen, in the analogous cases
+of Ipomoea, Mimulus, and Dianthus, with respect to height.
+
+10. Nicotiana tabacum.
+
+My plants were remarkably self-fertile, and the capsules from the
+self-fertilised flowers apparently yielded more seeds than those which
+were cross-fertilised. No insects were seen to visit the flowers in the
+hothouse, and I suspect that the stock on which I experimented had been
+raised under glass, and had been self-fertilised during several previous
+generations; if so, we can understand why, in the course of three
+generations, the crossed seedlings of the same stock did not uniformly
+exceed in height the self-fertilised seedlings. But the case is
+complicated by individual plants having different constitutions, so that
+some of the crossed and self-fertilised seedlings raised at the same
+time from the same parents behaved differently. However this may be,
+plants raised from self-fertilised plants of the third generation
+crossed by a slightly different sub-variety, exceeded greatly in height
+and weight the self-fertilised plants of the fourth generation; and the
+trial was made on a large scale. They exceeded them in height when grown
+in pots, and not much crowded, in the ratio of 100 to 66; and when much
+crowded, as 100 to 54. These crossed plants, when thus subjected to
+severe competition, also exceeded the self-fertilised in weight in the
+ratio of 100 to 37. So it was, but in a less degree (as may be seen in
+Table 7/C), when the two lots were grown out of doors and not subjected
+to any mutual competition. Nevertheless, strange as is the fact, the
+flowers on the mother-plants of the third self-fertilised generation did
+not yield more seed when they were crossed with pollen from plants of
+the fresh stock than when they were self-fertilised.
+
+11. Anagallis collina.
+
+Plants raised from a red variety crossed by another plant of the same
+variety were in height to the self-fertilised plants from the red
+variety as 100 to 73. When the flowers on the red variety were
+fertilised with pollen from a closely similar blue-flowered variety,
+they yielded double the number of seeds to what they did when crossed by
+pollen from another individual of the same red variety, and the seeds
+were much finer. The plants raised from this cross between the two
+varieties were to the self-fertilised seedlings from the red variety, in
+height as 100 to 66, and in fertility as 100 to 6.
+
+12. Primula veris.
+
+Some flowers on long-styled plants of the third illegitimate generation
+were legitimately crossed with pollen from a fresh stock, and others
+were fertilised with their own pollen. From the seeds thus produced
+crossed plants, and self-fertilised plants of the fourth illegitimate
+generation, were raised. The former were to the latter in height as 100
+to 46, and in fertility during one year as 100 to 5, and as 100 to 3.5
+during the next year. In this case, however, we have no means of
+distinguishing between the evil effects of illegitimate fertilisation
+continued during four generations (that is, by pollen of the same form,
+but taken from a distinct plant) and strict self-fertilisation. But it
+is probable that these two processes do not differ so essentially as at
+first appears to be the case. In the following experiment any doubt
+arising from illegitimate fertilisation was completely eliminated.
+
+13. Primula veris. (Equal-styled, red-flowered variety.)
+
+Flowers on plants of the second self-fertilised generation were crossed
+with pollen from a distinct variety or fresh stock, and others were
+again self-fertilised. Crossed plants and plants of the third
+self-fertilised generation, all of legitimate origin, were thus raised;
+and the former was to the latter in height as 100 to 85, and in
+fertility (as judged by the number of capsules produced, together with
+the average number of seeds) as 100 to 11.
+
+SUMMARY OF THE MEASUREMENTS IN TABLE 7/C.
+
+This table includes the heights and often the weights of 292 plants
+derived from a cross with a fresh stock, and of 305 plants, either of
+self-fertilised origin, or derived from an intercross between plants of
+the same stock. These 597 plants belong to thirteen species and twelve
+genera. The various precautions which were taken to ensure a fair
+comparison have already been stated. If we now look down the right hand
+column, in which the mean height, weight, and fertility of the plants
+derived from a cross with a fresh stock are represented by 100, we shall
+see by the other figures how wonderfully superior they are both to the
+self-fertilised and to the intercrossed plants of the same stock. With
+respect to height and weight, there are only two exceptions to the rule,
+namely, with Eschscholtzia and Petunia, and the latter is probably no
+real exception. Nor do these two species offer an exception in regard to
+fertility, for the plants derived from the cross with a fresh stock were
+much more fertile than the self-fertilised plants. The difference
+between the two sets of plants in the table is generally much greater in
+fertility than in height or weight. On the other hand, with some of the
+species, as with Nicotiana, there was no difference in fertility between
+the two sets, although a great difference in height and weight.
+Considering all the cases in this table, there can be no doubt that
+plants profit immensely, though in different ways, by a cross with a
+fresh stock or with a distinct sub-variety. It cannot be maintained that
+the benefit thus derived is due merely to the plants of the fresh stock
+being perfectly healthy, whilst those which had been long intercrossed
+or self-fertilised had become unhealthy; for in most cases there was no
+appearance of such unhealthiness, and we shall see under Table 7/A that
+the intercrossed plants of the same stock are generally superior to a
+certain extent to the self-fertilised,--both lots having been subjected
+to exactly the same conditions and being equally healthy or unhealthy.
+
+We further learn from Table 7/C, that a cross between plants that have
+been self-fertilised during several successive generations and kept all
+the time under nearly uniform conditions, does not benefit the offspring
+in the least or only in a very slight degree. Mimulus and the
+descendants of Ipomoea named Hero offer instances of this rule. Again,
+plants self-fertilised during several generations profit only to a small
+extent by a cross with intercrossed plants of the same stock (as in the
+case of Dianthus), in comparison with the effects of a cross by a fresh
+stock. Plants of the same stock intercrossed during several generations
+(as with Petunia) were inferior in a marked manner in fertility to those
+derived from the corresponding self-fertilised plants crossed by a fresh
+stock. Lastly, certain plants which are regularly intercrossed by
+insects in a state of nature, and which were artificially crossed in
+each succeeding generation in the course of my experiments, so that they
+can never or most rarely have suffered any evil from self-fertilisation
+(as with Eschscholtzia and Ipomoea), nevertheless profited greatly by a
+cross with a fresh stock. These several cases taken together show us in
+the clearest manner that it is not the mere crossing of any two
+individuals which is beneficial to the offspring. The benefit thus
+derived depends on the plants which are united differing in some manner,
+and there can hardly be a doubt that it is in the constitution or nature
+of the sexual elements. Anyhow, it is certain that the differences are
+not of an external nature, for two plants which resemble each other as
+closely as the individuals of the same species ever do, profit in the
+plainest manner when intercrossed, if their progenitors have been
+exposed during several generations to different conditions. But to this
+latter subject I shall have to recur in a future chapter.
+
+TABLE 7/A.
+
+We will now turn to our first table, which relates to crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the same stock. These consist of fifty-four
+species belonging to thirty natural orders. The total number of crossed
+plants of which measurements are given is 796, and of self-fertilised
+809; that is altogether 1,605 plants. Some of the species were
+experimented on during several successive generations; and it should be
+borne in mind that in such cases the crossed plants in each generation
+were crossed with pollen from another crossed plant, and the flowers on
+the self-fertilised plants were almost always fertilised with their own
+pollen, though sometimes with pollen from other flowers on the same
+plant. The crossed plants thus became more or less closely inter-related
+in the later generations; and both lots were subjected in each
+generation to almost absolutely the same conditions, and to nearly the
+same conditions in the successive generations. It would have been a
+better plan in some respects if I had always crossed some flowers either
+on the self-fertilised or intercrossed plants of each generation with
+pollen from a non-related plant, grown under different conditions, as
+was done with the plants in Table 7/C; for by this procedure I should
+have learnt how much the offspring became deteriorated through continued
+self-fertilisation in the successive generations. As the case stands,
+the self-fertilised plants of the successive generations in Table 7/A
+were put into competition with and compared with intercrossed plants,
+which were probably deteriorated in some degree by being more or less
+inter-related and grown under similar conditions. Nevertheless, had I
+always followed the plan in Table 7/C, I should not have discovered the
+important fact that, although a cross between plants which are rather
+closely related and which had been subjected to closely similar
+conditions, gives during several generations some advantage to the
+offspring, yet that after a time they may be intercrossed with no
+advantage whatever to the offspring. Nor should I have learnt that the
+self-fertilised plants of the later generations might be crossed with
+intercrossed plants of the same stock with little or no advantage,
+although they profited to an extraordinary degree by a cross with a
+fresh stock.
+
+With respect to the greater number of the plants in Table 7/A, nothing
+special need here be said; full particulars may be found under the head
+of each species by the aid of the Index. The figures in the right-hand
+column show the mean height of the self-fertilised plants, that of the
+crossed plants with which they competed being represented by 100. No
+notice is here taken of the few cases in which crossed and
+self-fertilised plants were grown in the open ground, so as not to
+compete together. The table includes, as we have seen, plants belonging
+to fifty-four species, but as some of these were measured during several
+successive generations, there are eighty-three cases in which crossed
+and self-fertilised plants were compared. As in each generation the
+number of plants which were measured (given in the table) was never very
+large and sometimes small, whenever in the right hand column the mean
+height of the crossed and self-fertilised plants is the same within five
+per cent, their heights may be considered as practically equal. Of such
+cases, that is, of self-fertilised plants of which the mean height is
+expressed by figures between 95 and 105, there are eighteen, either in
+some one or all the generations. There are eight cases in which the
+self-fertilised plants exceed the crossed by above five per cent, as
+shown by the figures in the right hand column being above 105. Lastly,
+there are fifty-seven cases in which the crossed plants exceed the
+self-fertilised in a ratio of at least 100 to 95, and generally in a
+much higher degree.
+
+If the relative heights of the crossed and self-fertilised plants had
+been due to mere chance, there would have been about as many cases of
+self-fertilised plants exceeding the crossed in height by above five per
+cent as of the crossed thus exceeding the self-fertilised; but we see
+that of the latter there are fifty-seven cases, and of the former only
+eight cases; so that the cases in which the crossed plants exceed in
+height the self-fertilised in the above proportion are more than seven
+times as numerous as those in which the self-fertilised exceed the
+crossed in the same proportion. For our special purpose of comparing the
+powers of growth of crossed and self-fertilised plants, it may be said
+that in fifty-seven cases the crossed plants exceeded the
+self-fertilised by more than five per cent, and that in twenty-six cases
+(18 + 8) they did not thus exceed them. But we shall now show that in
+several of these twenty-six cases the crossed plants had a decided
+advantage over the self-fertilised in other respects, though not in
+height; that in other cases the mean heights are not trustworthy, owing
+to too few plants having been measured, or to their having grown
+unequally from being unhealthy, or to both causes combined.
+Nevertheless, as these cases are opposed to my general conclusion I have
+felt bound to give them. Lastly, the cause of the crossed plants having
+no advantage over the self-fertilised can be explained in some other
+cases. Thus a very small residue is left in which the self-fertilised
+plants appear, as far as my experiments serve, to be really equal or
+superior to the crossed plants.
+
+We will now consider in some little detail the eighteen cases in which
+the self-fertilised plants equalled in average height the crossed plants
+within five per cent; and the eight cases in which the self-fertilised
+plants exceeded in average height the crossed plants by above five per
+cent; making altogether twenty-six cases in which the crossed plants
+were not taller than the self-fertilised plants in any marked degree.
+
+[1. Dianthus caryophyllus (third generation).
+
+This plant was experimented on during four generations, in three of
+which the crossed plants exceeded in height the self-fertilised
+generally by much more than five per cent; and we have seen under Table
+7/C that the offspring from the plants of the third self-fertilised
+generation crossed by a fresh stock profited in height and fertility to
+an extraordinary degree. But in this third generation the crossed plants
+of the same stock were in height to the self-fertilised only as 100 to
+99, that is, they were practically equal. Nevertheless, when the eight
+crossed and eight self-fertilised plants were cut down and weighed, the
+former were to the latter in weight as 100 to 49! There can therefore be
+not the least doubt that the crossed plants of this species are greatly
+superior in vigour and luxuriance to the self-fertilised; and what was
+the cause of the self-fertilised plants of the third generation, though
+so light and thin, growing up so as almost to equal the crossed in
+height, I cannot explain.
+
+2. Lobelia fulgens (first generation).
+
+The crossed plants of this generation were much inferior in height to
+the self-fertilised, in the proportion of 100 to 127. Although only two
+pairs were measured, which is obviously much too few to be trusted, yet
+from other evidence given under the head of this species, it is certain
+that the self-fertilised plants were very much more vigorous than the
+crossed. As I used pollen of unequal maturity for crossing and
+self-fertilising the parent-plants, it is possible that the great
+difference in the growth of their offspring may have been due to this
+cause. In the next generation this source of error was avoided, and many
+more plants were raised, and now the average height of the twenty-three
+crossed plants was to that of the twenty-three self-fertilised plants as
+100 to 91. We can therefore hardly doubt that a cross is beneficial to
+this species.
+
+3. Petunia violacea (third generation).
+
+Eight crossed plants were to eight self-fertilised of the third
+generation in average height as 100 to 131; and at an early age the
+crossed were inferior even in a still higher degree. But it is a
+remarkable fact that in one pot in which plants of both lots grew
+extremely crowded, the crossed were thrice as tall as the
+self-fertilised. As in the two preceding and two succeeding generations,
+as well as with plants raised by a crossed with a fresh stock, the
+crossed greatly exceeded the self-fertilised in height, weight, and
+fertility (when these two latter points were attended to), the present
+case must be looked at as an anomaly not affecting the general rule. The
+most probable explanation is that the seeds from which the crossed
+plants of the third generation were raised were not well ripened; for I
+have observed an analogous case with Iberis. Self-fertilised seedlings
+of this latter plant, which were known to have been produced from seeds
+not well matured, grew from the first much more quickly than the crossed
+plants, which were raised from better matured seeds; so that having thus
+once got a great start they were enabled ever afterwards to retain their
+advantage. Some of these same seeds of the Iberis were sown on the
+opposite sides of pots filled with burnt earth and pure sand, not
+containing any organic matter; and now the young crossed seedlings grew
+during their short life to double the height of the self-fertilised, in
+the same manner as occurred with the above two sets of seedlings of
+Petunia which were much crowded and thus exposed to very unfavourable
+conditions. We have seen also in the eighth generation of Ipomoea that
+the self-fertilised seedlings raised from unhealthy parents grew at
+first very much more quickly than the crossed seedlings, so that they
+were for a long time much taller, though ultimately beaten by them.
+
+4, 5, 6. Eschscholtzia californica.
+
+Four sets of measurements are given in Table 7/A. In one of these the
+crossed plants exceed the self-fertilised in average height, so that
+this is not one of the exceptions here to be considered. In two other
+cases the crossed equalled the self-fertilised in height within five per
+cent; and in the fourth case the self-fertilised exceeded the crossed by
+above this limit. We have seen in Table 7/C that the whole advantage of
+a cross by a fresh stock is confined to fertility, and so it was with
+the intercrossed plants of the same stock compared with the
+self-fertilised, for the former were in fertility to the latter as 100
+to 89. The intercrossed plants thus have at least one important
+advantage over the self-fertilised. Moreover, the flowers on the
+parent-plants when fertilised with pollen from another individual of the
+same stock yield far more seeds than when self-fertilised; the flowers
+in this latter case being often quite sterile. We may therefore conclude
+that a cross does some good, though it does not give to the crossed
+seedlings increased powers of growth.
+
+7. Viscaria oculata.
+
+The average height of the fifteen intercrossed plants to that of the
+fifteen self-fertilised plants was only as 100 to 97; but the former
+produced many more capsules than the latter, in the ratio of 100 to 77.
+Moreover, the flowers on the parent-plants which were crossed and
+self-fertilised, yielded seeds on one occasion in the proportion of 100
+to 38, and on a second occasion in the proportion of 100 to 58. So that
+there can be no doubt about the beneficial effects of a cross, although
+the mean height of the crossed plants was only three per cent above that
+of the self-fertilised plants.
+
+8. Specularia speculum.
+
+Only the four tallest of the crossed and the four tallest of the
+self-fertilised plants, growing in four pots, were measured; and the
+former were to the latter in height as 100 to 98. In all four pots a
+crossed plant flowered before any one of the self-fertilised plants, and
+this is usually a safe indication of some real superiority in the
+crossed plants. The flowers on the parent-plants which were crossed with
+pollen from another plant yielded seeds compared with the
+self-fertilised flowers in the ratio of 100 to 72. We may therefore draw
+the same conclusion as in the last case with respect to a cross being
+decidedly beneficial.
+
+9. Borago officinalis.
+
+Only four crossed and four self-fertilised plants were raised and
+measured, and the former were to the latter in height as 100 to 102. So
+small a number of measurements ought never to be trusted; and in the
+present instance the advantage of the self-fertilised over the crossed
+plants depended almost entirely on one of the self-fertilised plants
+having grown to an unusual height. All four crossed plants flowered
+before their self-fertilised opponents. The cross-fertilised flowers on
+the parent-plants in comparison with the self-fertilised flowers yielded
+seeds in the proportion of 100 to 60. So that here again we may draw the
+same conclusion as in the two last cases.
+
+10. Passiflora gracilis.
+
+Only two crossed and two self-fertilised plants were raised; and the
+former were to the latter in height as 100 to 104. On the other hand,
+fruits from the cross-fertilised flowers on the parent-plants contained
+seeds in number, compared with those from the self-fertilised flowers,
+in the proportion of 100 to 85.
+
+11. Phaseolus multiflorus.
+
+The five crossed plants were to the five self-fertilised in height as
+100 to 96. Although the crossed plants were thus only four per cent
+taller than the self-fertilised, they flowered in both pots before them.
+It is therefore probable that they had some real advantage over the
+self-fertilised plants.
+
+12. Adonis aestivalis.
+
+The four crossed plants were almost exactly equal in height to the four
+self-fertilised plants, but as so few plants were measured, and as these
+were all “miserably unhealthy,” nothing can be inferred with safety with
+respect to their relative heights.
+
+13. Bartonia aurea.
+
+The eight crossed plants were to the eight self-fertilised in height as
+100 to 107. This number of plants, considering the care with which they
+were raised and compared, ought to have given a trustworthy result. But
+from some unknown cause they grew very unequally, and they became so
+unhealthy that only three of the crossed and three of the
+self-fertilised plants set any seeds, and these few in number. Under
+these circumstances the mean height of neither lot can be trusted, and
+the experiment is valueless. The cross-fertilised flowers on the
+parent-plants yielded rather more seeds than the self-fertilised
+flowers.
+
+14. Thunbergia alata.
+
+The six crossed plants were to the six self-fertilised in height as 100
+to 108. Here the self-fertilised plants seem to have a decided
+advantage; but both lots grew unequally, some of the plants in both
+being more than twice as tall as others. The parent-plants also were in
+an odd semi-sterile condition. Under these circumstances the superiority
+of the self-fertilised plants cannot be fully trusted.
+
+15. Nolana prostrata.
+
+The five crossed plants were to the five self-fertilised in height as
+100 to 105; so that the latter seem here to have a small but decided
+advantage. On the other hand, the flowers on the parent-plants which
+were cross-fertilised produced very many more capsules than the
+self-fertilised flowers, in the ratio of 100 to 21; and the seeds which
+the former contained were heavier than an equal number from the
+self-fertilised capsules in the ratio of 100 to 82.
+
+16. Hibiscus africanus.
+
+Only four pairs were raised, and the crossed were to the self-fertilised
+in height as 100 to 109. Excepting that too few plants were measured, I
+know of nothing else to cause distrust in the result. The
+cross-fertilised flowers on the parent-plants were, on the other hand,
+rather more productive than the self-fertilised flowers.
+
+17. Apium petroselinum.
+
+A few plants (number not recorded) derived from flowers believed to have
+been crossed by insects and a few self-fertilised plants were grown on
+the opposite sides of four pots. They attained to a nearly equal height,
+the crossed having a very slight advantage.
+
+18. Vandellia nummularifolia.
+
+Twenty crossed plants raised from the seeds of perfect flowers were to
+twenty self-fertilised plants, likewise raised from the seeds of perfect
+flowers, in height as 100 to 99. The experiment was repeated, with the
+sole difference that the plants were allowed to grow more crowded; and
+now the twenty-four tallest of the crossed plants were to the
+twenty-four tallest self-fertilised plants in height as 100 to 94, and
+in weight as 100 to 97. Moreover, a larger number of the crossed than of
+the self-fertilised plants grew to a moderate height. The
+above-mentioned twenty crossed plants were also grown in competition
+with twenty self-fertilised plants raised from the closed or cleistogene
+flowers, and their heights were as 100 to 94. Therefore had it not been
+for the first trial, in which the crossed plants were to the
+self-fertilised in height only as 100 to 99, this species might have
+been classed with those in which the crossed plants exceed the
+self-fertilised by above five per cent. On the other hand, the crossed
+plants in the second trial bore fewer capsules; and these contained
+fewer seeds, than did the self-fertilised plants, all the capsules
+having been produced by cleistogene flowers. The whole case therefore
+must be left doubtful.
+
+19. Pisum sativum (common pea).
+
+Four-plants derived from a cross between individuals of the same variety
+were in height to four self-fertilised plants belonging to the same
+variety as 100 to 115. Although this cross did no good, we have seen
+under Table 7/C that a cross between distinct varieties adds greatly to
+the height and vigour of the offspring; and it was there explained that
+the fact of a cross between the individuals of the same variety not
+being beneficial, is almost certainly due to their having been
+self-fertilised for many generations, and in each generation grown under
+nearly similar conditions.
+
+20, 21, 22. Canna warscewiczi.
+
+Plants belonging to three generations were observed, and in all of three
+the crossed were approximately equal to the self-fertilised; the average
+height of the thirty-four crossed plants being to that of the same
+number of self-fertilised plants as 100 to 101. Therefore the crossed
+plants had no advantage over the self-fertilised; and it is probable
+that the same explanation here holds good as in the case of Pisum
+sativum; for the flowers of this Canna are perfectly self-fertile, and
+were never seen to be visited by insects in the hothouse, so as to be
+crossed by them. This plant, moreover, has been cultivated under glass
+for several generations in pots, and therefore under nearly uniform
+conditions. The capsules produced by the cross-fertilised flowers on the
+above thirty-four crossed plants contained more seeds than did the
+capsules produced by the self-fertilised flowers on the self-fertilised
+plants, in the proportion of 100 to 85; so that in this respect crossing
+was beneficial.
+
+23. Primula sinensis.
+
+The offspring of plants, some of which were legitimately and others
+illegitimately fertilised with pollen from a distinct plant, were almost
+exactly of the same height as the offspring of self-fertilised plants;
+but the former with rare exceptions flowered before the latter. I have
+shown in my paper on dimorphic plants that this species is commonly
+raised in England from self-fertilised seed, and the plants from having
+been cultivated in pots have been subjected to nearly uniform
+conditions. Moreover, many of them are now varying and changing their
+character, so as to become in a greater or less degree equal-styled, and
+in consequence highly self-fertile. Therefore I believe that the cause
+of the crossed plants not exceeding in height the self-fertilised is the
+same as in the two previous cases of Pisum sativum and Canna.
+
+24, 25, 26. Nicotiana tabacum.
+
+Four sets of measurements were made; in one, the self-fertilised plants
+greatly exceeded in height the crossed, in two others they were
+approximately equal to the crossed, and in the fourth were beaten by
+them; but this latter case does not here concern us. The individual
+plants differ in constitution, so that the descendants of some profit by
+their parents having been intercrossed, whilst others do not. Taking all
+three generations together, the twenty-seven crossed plants were in
+height to the twenty-seven self-fertilised plants as 100 to 96. This
+excess of height in the crossed plants, is so small compared with that
+displayed by the offspring from the same mother-plants when crossed by a
+slightly different variety, that we may suspect (as explained under
+Table 7/C) that most of the individuals belonging to the variety which
+served as the mother-plants in my experiments, had acquired a nearly
+similar constitution, so as not to profit by being mutually
+intercrossed.]
+
+Reviewing these twenty-six cases, in which the crossed plants either do
+not exceed the self-fertilised by above five per cent in height, or are
+inferior to them, we may conclude that much the greater number of the
+cases do not form real exceptions to the rule,--that a cross between two
+plants, unless these have been self-fertilised and exposed to nearly the
+same conditions for many generations, gives a great advantage of some
+kind to the offspring. Of the twenty-six cases, at least two, namely,
+those of Adonis and Bartonia, may be wholly excluded, as the trials were
+worthless from the extreme unhealthiness of the plants. Inn twelve other
+cases (three trials with Eschscholtzia here included) the crossed plants
+either were superior in height to the self-fertilised in all the other
+generations excepting the one in question, or they showed their
+superiority in some different manner, as in weight, fertility, or in
+flowering first; or again, the cross-fertilised flowers on the
+mother-plant were much more productive of seed than the self-fertilised.
+
+Deducting these fourteen cases, there remain twelve in which the crossed
+plants show no well-marked advantage over the self-fertilised. On the
+other hand, we have seen that there are fifty-seven cases in which the
+crossed plants exceed the self-fertilised in height by at least five per
+cent, and generally in a much higher degree. But even in the twelve
+cases just referred to, the want of any advantage on the crossed side is
+far from certain: with Thunbergia the parent-plants were in an odd
+semi-sterile condition, and the offspring grew very unequally; with
+Hibiscus and Apium much too few plants were raised for the measurements
+to be trusted, and the cross-fertilised flowers of Hibiscus produced
+rather more seed than did the self-fertilised; with Vandellia the
+crossed plants were a little taller and heavier than the
+self-fertilised, but as they were less fertile the case must be left
+doubtful. Lastly, with Pisum, Primula, the three generations of Canna,
+and the three of Nicotiana (which together complete the twelve cases), a
+cross between two plants certainly did no good or very little good to
+the offspring; but we have reason to believe that this is the result of
+these plants having been self-fertilised and cultivated under nearly
+uniform conditions for several generations. The same result followed
+with the experimental plants of Ipomoea and Mimulus, and to a certain
+extent with some other species, which had been intentionally treated by
+me in this manner; yet we know that these species in their normal
+condition profit greatly by being intercrossed. There is, therefore, not
+a single case in Table 7/A which affords decisive evidence against the
+rule that a cross between plants, the progenitors of which have been
+subjected to somewhat diversified conditions, is beneficial to the
+offspring. This is a surprising conclusion, for from the analogy of
+domesticated animals it could not have been anticipated, that the good
+effects of crossing or the evil effects of self-fertilisation would have
+been perceptible until the plants had been thus treated for several
+generations.
+
+The results given in Table 7/A may be looked at under another point of
+view. Hitherto each generation has been considered as a separate case,
+of which there are eighty-three; and this no doubt is the more correct
+method of comparing the crossed and self-fertilised plants.
+
+But in those cases in which plants of the same species were observed
+during several generations, a general average of their heights in all
+the generations together may be made; and such averages are given in
+Table 7/A; for instance, under Ipomoea the general average for the
+plants of all ten generations is as 100 for the crossed, to 77 for the
+self-fertilised plants. This having been done in each case in which more
+than one generation was raised, it is easy to calculate the average of
+the average heights of the crossed and self-fertilised plants of all the
+species included in Table 7/A. It should however be observed that as
+only a few plants of some species, whilst a considerable number of
+others, were measured, the value of the mean or average heights of the
+several species is very different. Subject to this source of error, it
+may be worth while to give the mean of the mean heights of the
+fifty-four species in Table 7/A; and the result is, calling the mean of
+the mean heights of the crossed plants 100, that of the self-fertilised
+plants is 87. But it is a better plan to divide the fifty-four species
+into three groups, as was done with the previously given eighty-three
+cases. The first group consists of species of which the mean heights of
+the self-fertilised plants are within five per cent of 100; so that the
+crossed and self-fertilised plants are approximately equal; and of such
+species there are twelve about which nothing need be said, the mean of
+the mean heights of the self-fertilised being of course very nearly 100,
+or exactly 99.58. The second group consists of the species, thirty-seven
+in number, of which the mean heights of the crossed plants exceed that
+of the self-fertilised plants by more than five per cent; and the mean
+of their mean heights is to that of the self-fertilised plants as 100 to
+78. The third group consists of the species, only five in number, of
+which the mean heights of the self-fertilised plants exceed that of the
+crossed by more than five per cent; and here the mean of the mean
+heights of the crossed plants is to that of the self-fertilised as 100
+to 109. Therefore if we exclude the species which are approximately
+equal, there are thirty-seven species in which the mean of the mean
+heights of the crossed plants exceeds that of the self-fertilised by
+twenty-two per cent; whereas there are only five species in which the
+mean of the mean heights of the self-fertilised plants exceeds that of
+the crossed, and this only by nine per cent.
+
+The truth of the conclusion--that the good effects of a cross depend on
+the plants having been subjected to different conditions or to their
+belonging to different varieties, in both of which cases they would
+almost certainly differ somewhat in constitution--is supported by a
+comparison of the Tables 7/A and 7/C. The latter table gives the results
+of crossing plants with a fresh stock or with a distinct variety; and
+the superiority of the crossed offspring over the self-fertilised is
+here much more general and much more strongly marked than in Table 7/A,
+in which plants of the same stock were crossed. We have just seen that
+the mean of the mean heights of the crossed plants of the whole
+fifty-four species in Table 7/A is to that of the self-fertilised plants
+as 100 to 87; whereas the mean of the mean heights of the plants crossed
+by a fresh stock is to that of the self-fertilised in Table 7/C as 100
+to 74. So that the crossed plants beat the self-fertilised plants by
+thirteen per cent in Table 7/A, and by twenty-six per cent, or double as
+much, in Table 7/C, which includes the results of the cross by a fresh
+stock.
+
+TABLE 7/B.
+
+A few words must be added on the weights of the crossed plants of the
+same stock, in comparison with the self-fertilised. Eleven cases are
+given in Table 7/B, relating to eight species. The number of plants
+which were weighed is shown in the two left columns, and their relative
+weights in the right column, that of the crossed plants being taken as
+100. A few other cases have already been recorded in Table 7/C in
+reference to plants crossed by a fresh stock. I regret that more trials
+of this kind were not made, as the evidence of the superiority of the
+crossed over the self-fertilised plants is thus shown in a more
+conclusive manner than by their relative heights. But this plan was not
+thought of until a rather late period, and there were difficulties
+either way, as the seeds had to be collected when ripe, by which time
+the plants had often begun to wither. In only one out of the eleven
+cases in Table 7/B, that of Eschscholtzia, do the self-fertilised plants
+exceed the crossed in weight; and we have already seen they are likewise
+superior to them in height, though inferior in fertility, the whole
+advantage of a cross being here confined to the reproductive system.
+With Vandellia the crossed plants were a little heavier, as they were
+also a little taller than the self-fertilised; but as a greater number
+of more productive capsules were produced by the cleistogene flowers on
+the self-fertilised plants than by those on the crossed plants, the case
+must be left, as remarked under Table 7/A, altogether doubtful. The
+crossed and self-fertilised offspring from a partially self-sterile
+plant of Reseda odorata were almost equal in weight, though not in
+height. In the remaining eight cases, the crossed plants show a
+wonderful superiority over the self-fertilised, being more than double
+their weight, except in one case, and here the ratio is as high as 100
+to 67. The results thus deduced from the weights of the plants confirm
+in a striking manner the former evidence of the beneficial effects of a
+cross between two plants of the same stock; and in the few cases in
+which plants derived from a cross with a fresh stock were weighed, the
+results are similar or even more striking.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+DIFFERENCE BETWEEN CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS IN CONSTITUTIONAL
+VIGOUR AND IN OTHER RESPECTS.
+
+Greater constitutional vigour of crossed plants.
+The effects of great crowding.
+Competition with other kinds of plants.
+Self-fertilised plants more liable to premature death.
+Crossed plants generally flower before the self-fertilised.
+Negative effects of intercrossing flowers on the same plant.
+Cases described.
+Transmission of the good effects of a cross to later generations.
+Effects of crossing plants of closely related parentage.
+Uniform colour of the flowers on plants self-fertilised during several
+generations and cultivated under similar conditions.
+
+GREATER CONSTITUTIONAL VIGOUR OF CROSSED PLANTS.
+
+As in almost all my experiments an equal number of crossed and
+self-fertilised seeds, or more commonly seedlings just beginning to
+sprout, were planted on the opposite sides of the same pots, they had to
+compete with one another; and the greater height, weight, and fertility
+of the crossed plants may be attributed to their possessing greater
+innate constitutional vigour. Generally the plants of the two lots
+whilst very young were of equal height; but afterwards the crossed
+gained insensibly on their opponents, and this shows that they possessed
+some inherent superiority, though not displayed at a very early period
+in life. There were, however, some conspicuous exceptions to the rule of
+the two lots being at first equal in height; thus the crossed seedlings
+of the broom (Sarothamnus scoparius) when under three inches in height
+were more than twice as tall as the self-fertilised plants.
+
+After the crossed or the self-fertilised plants had once grown decidedly
+taller than their opponents, a still increasing advantage would tend to
+follow from the stronger plants robbing the weaker ones of nourishment
+and overshadowing them. This was evidently the case with the crossed
+plants of Viola tricolor, which ultimately quite overwhelmed the
+self-fertilised. But that the crossed plants have an inherent
+superiority, independently of competition, was sometimes well shown when
+both lots were planted separately, not far distant from one another, in
+good soil in the open ground. This was likewise shown in several cases,
+even with plants growing in close competition with one another, by one
+of the self-fertilised plants exceeding for a time its crossed opponent,
+which had been injured by some accident or was at first sickly, but
+being ultimately conquered by it. The plants of the eighth generation of
+Ipomoea were raised from small seeds produced by unhealthy parents, and
+the self-fertilised plants grew at first very rapidly, so that when the
+plants of both lots were about three feet in height, the mean height of
+the crossed to that of the self-fertilised was as 100 to 122; when they
+were about six feet high the two lots were very nearly equal, but
+ultimately when between eight and nine feet in height, the crossed
+plants asserted their usually superiority, and were to the
+self-fertilised in height as 100 to 85.
+
+The constitutional superiority of the crossed over the self-fertilised
+plants was proved in another way in the third generation of Mimulus, by
+self-fertilised seeds being sown on one side of a pot, and after a
+certain interval of time crossed seeds on the opposite side. The
+self-fertilised seedlings thus had (for I ascertained that the seeds
+germinated simultaneously) a clear advantage over the crossed in the
+start for the race. Nevertheless they were easily beaten (as may be seen
+under the head of Mimulus) when the crossed seeds were sown two whole
+days after the self-fertilised. But when the interval was four days, the
+two lots were nearly equal throughout life. Even in this latter case the
+crossed plants still possessed an inherent advantage, for after both
+lots had grown to their full height they were cut down, and without
+being disturbed were transferred to a larger pot, and when in the
+ensuing year they had again grown to their full height they were
+measured; and now the tallest crossed plants were to the tallest
+self-fertilised plants in height as 100 to 75, and in fertility (i.e.,
+by weight of seeds produced by an equal number of capsules from both
+lots) as 100 to 34.
+
+My usual method of proceeding, namely, to plant several pairs of crossed
+and self-fertilised seeds in an equal state of germination on the
+opposite sides of the same pots, so that the plants were subjected to
+moderately severe mutual competition, was I think the best that could
+have been followed, and was a fair test of what occurs in a state of
+nature. For plants sown by nature generally come up crowded, and are
+almost always exposed to very severe competition with one another and
+with other kinds of plants. This latter consideration led me to make
+some trials, chiefly but not exclusively with Ipomoea and Mimulus, by
+sowing crossed and self-fertilised seeds on the opposite sides of large
+pots in which other plants had long been growing, or in the midst of
+other plants out of doors. The seedlings were thus subjected to very
+severe competition with plants of other kinds; and in all such cases,
+the crossed seedlings exhibited a great superiority in their power of
+growth over the self-fertilised.
+
+After the germinating seedlings had been planted in pairs on the
+opposite sides of several pots, the remaining seeds, whether or not in a
+state of germination, were in most cases sown very thickly on the two
+sides of an additional large pot; so that the seedlings came up
+extremely crowded, and were subjected to extremely severe competition
+and unfavourable conditions. In such cases the crossed plants almost
+invariably showed a greater superiority over the self-fertilised, than
+did the plants which grew in pairs in the pots.
+
+Sometimes crossed and self-fertilised seeds were sown in separate rows
+in the open ground, which was kept clear of weeds; so that the seedlings
+were not subjected to any competition with other kinds of plants. Those
+however in each row had to struggle with the adjoining ones in the same
+row. When fully grown, several of the tallest plants in each row were
+selected, measured, and compared. The result was in several cases (but
+not so invariably as might have been expected) that the crossed plants
+did not exceed in height the self-fertilised in nearly so great a degree
+as when grown in pairs in the pots. Thus with the plants of Digitalis,
+which competed together in pots, the crossed were to the self-fertilised
+in height as 100 to 70; whilst those which were grown separately were
+only as 100 to 85. Nearly the same result was observed with Brassica.
+With Nicotiana the crossed were to the self-fertilised plants in height,
+when grown extremely crowded together in pots, as 100 to 54; when grown
+much less crowded in pots as 100 to 66, and when grow in the open
+ground, so as to be subjected to but little competition, as 100 to 72.
+On the other hand with Zea, there was a greater difference in height
+between the crossed and self-fertilised plants growing out of doors,
+than between the pairs which grew in pots in the hothouse; but this may
+be attributed to the self-fertilised plants being more tender, so that
+they suffered more than the crossed, when both lots were exposed to a
+cold and wet summer. Lastly, with one out of two series of Reseda
+odorata, grown out of doors in rows, as well as with Beta vulgaris, the
+crossed plants did not at all exceed the self-fertilised in height, or
+exceeded them by a mere trifle.
+
+The innate power of the crossed plants to resist unfavourable conditions
+far better than did the self-fertilised plants, was shown on two
+occasions in a curious manner, namely, with Iberis and in the third
+generation of Petunia, by the great superiority in height of the crossed
+over the self-fertilised seedlings, when both sets were grown under
+extremely unfavourable conditions; whereas owing to special
+circumstances exactly the reverse occurred with the plants raised from
+the same seeds and grown in pairs in pots. A nearly analogous case was
+observed on two other occasions with plants of the first generation of
+Nicotiana.
+
+The crossed plants always withstood the injurious effects of being
+suddenly removed into the open air after having been kept in the
+greenhouse better than did the self-fertilised. On several occasions
+they also resisted much better cold and intemperate weather. This was
+manifestly the case with some crossed and self-fertilised plants of
+Ipomoea, which were suddenly moved from the hothouse to the coldest part
+of a cool greenhouse. The offspring of plants of the eighth
+self-fertilised generation of Mimulus crossed by a fresh stock, survived
+a frost which killed every single self-fertilised and intercrossed plant
+of the same old stock. Nearly the same result followed with some crossed
+and self-fertilised plants of Viola tricolor. Even the tips of the
+shoots of the crossed plants of Sarothamnus scoparius were not touched
+by a very severe winter; whereas all the self-fertilised plants were
+killed halfway down to the ground, so that they were not able to flower
+during the next summer. Young crossed seedlings of Nicotiana withstood a
+cold and wet summer much better than the self-fertilised seedlings. I
+have met with only one exception to the rule of crossed plants being
+hardier than the self-fertilised: three long rows of Eschscholtzia
+plants, consisting of crossed seedlings from a fresh stock, of
+intercrossed seedlings of the same stock, and of self-fertilised ones,
+were left unprotected during a severe winter, and all perished except
+two of the self-fertilised. But this case is not so anomalous as it at
+first appears, for it should be remembered that the self-fertilised
+plants of Eschscholtzia always grow taller and are heavier than the
+crossed; the whole benefit of a cross with this species being confined
+to increased fertility.
+
+Independently of any external cause which could be detected, the
+self-fertilised plants were more liable to premature death than were the
+crossed; and this seems to me a curious fact. Whilst the seedlings were
+very young, if one died its antagonist was pulled up and thrown away,
+and I believe that many more of the self-fertilised died at this early
+age than of the crossed; but I neglected to keep any record. With Beta
+vulgaris, however, it is certain that a large number of the
+self-fertilised seeds perished after germinating beneath the ground,
+whereas the crossed seeds sown at the same time did not thus suffer.
+When a plant died at a somewhat more advanced age the fact was recorded;
+and I find in my notes that out of several hundred plants, only seven of
+the crossed died, whilst of the self-fertilised at least twenty-nine
+were thus lost, that is more than four times as many. Mr. Galton, after
+examining some of my tables, remarks: “It is very evident that the
+columns with the self-fertilised plants include the larger number of
+exceptionally small plants;” and the frequent presence of such puny
+plants no doubt stands in close relation with their liability to
+premature death. The self-fertilised plants of Petunia completed their
+growth and began to wither sooner than did the intercrossed plants; and
+these latter considerably before the offspring from a cross with a fresh
+stock.
+
+PERIOD OF FLOWERING.
+
+In some cases, as with Digitalis, Dianthus, and Reseda, a larger number
+of the crossed than of the self-fertilised plants threw up flower-stems;
+but this probably was merely the result of their greater power of
+growth; for in the first generation of Lobelia fulgens, in which the
+self-fertilised plants greatly exceeded in height the crossed plants,
+some of the latter failed to throw up flower-stems. With a large number
+of species, the crossed plants exhibited a well-marked tendency to
+flower before the self-fertilised ones growing in the same pots. It
+should however be remarked that no record was kept of the flowering of
+many of the species; and when a record was kept, the flowering of the
+first plant in each pot was alone observed, although two or more pairs
+grew in the same pot. I will now give three lists,--one of the species
+in which the first plant that flowered was a crossed one,--a second in
+which the first that flowered was a self-fertilised plant,--and a third
+of those which flowered at the same time.
+
+[SPECIES, OF WHICH THE FIRST PLANTS THAT FLOWERED WERE OF CROSSED
+PARENTAGE.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea.
+
+I record in my notes that in all ten generations many of the crossed
+plants flowered before the self-fertilised; but no details were kept.
+
+Mimulus luteus (First Generation).
+
+Ten flowers on the crossed plants were fully expanded before one on the
+self-fertilised.
+
+Mimulus luteus (Second and Third Generation).
+
+In both these generations a crossed plant flowered before one of the
+self-fertilised in all three pots.
+
+Mimulus luteus (Fifth Generation).
+
+In all three pots a crossed plant flowered first; yet the
+self-fertilised plants, which belonged to the new tall variety, were in
+height to the crossed as 126 to 100.
+
+Mimulus luteus.
+
+Plants derived from a cross with a fresh stock as well as the
+intercrossed plants of the old stock, flowered before the
+self-fertilised plants in nine out of the ten pots.
+
+Salvia coccinea.
+
+A crossed plant flowered before any one of the self-fertilised in all
+three pots.
+
+Origanum vulgare.
+
+During two successive seasons several crossed plants flowered before the
+self-fertilised.
+
+Brassica oleracea (First Generation).
+
+All the crossed plants growing in pots and in the open ground flowered
+first.
+
+Brassica oleracea (Second Generation).
+
+A crossed plant in three out of the four pots flowered before any one of
+the self-fertilised.
+
+Iberis umbellata.
+
+In both pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica.
+
+Plants derived from the Brazilian stock crossed by the English stock
+flowered in five out of the nine pots first; in four of them a
+self-fertilised plant flowered first; and not in one pot did an
+intercrossed plant of the old stock flower first.
+
+Viola tricolor.
+
+A crossed plant in five out of the six pots flowered before any one of
+the self-fertilised.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus (First Generation).
+
+In two large beds of plants, four of the crossed plants flowered before
+any one of the self-fertilised.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus (Second Generation).
+
+In both pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus (Third Generation).
+
+In three out of the four pots a crossed plant flowered first; yet the
+crossed were to the self-fertilised in height only as 100 to 99, but in
+weight as 100 to 49.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus.
+
+Plants derived from a cross with a fresh stock, and the intercrossed
+plants of the old stock, both flowered before the self-fertilised in
+nine out of the ten pots.
+
+Hibiscus africanus.
+
+In three out of the four pots a crossed plant flowered before any one of
+the self-fertilised; yet the latter were to the crossed in height as 109
+to 100.
+
+Tropaeolum minus.
+
+A crossed plant flowered before any one of the self-fertilised in three
+out of the four pots, and simultaneously in the fourth pot.
+
+Limnanthes douglasii.
+
+A crossed plant flowered before any one of the self-fertilised in four
+out of the five pots.
+
+Phaseolus multiflorus.
+
+In both pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+
+Specularia speculum.
+
+In all four pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+
+Lobelia ramosa (First Generation).
+
+In all four pots a crossed plant flowered before any one of the
+self-fertilised.
+
+Lobelia ramosa (Second Generation).
+
+In all four pots a crossed plant flowered some days before any one of
+the self-fertilised.
+
+Nemophila insignis.
+
+In four out of the five pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+
+Borago officinalis.
+
+In both pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+
+Petunia violacea (Second Generation).
+
+In all three pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum.
+
+A plant derived from a cross with a fresh stock flowered before any one
+of the self-fertilised plants of the fourth generation, in fifteen out
+of the sixteen pots.
+
+Cyclamen persicum.
+
+During two successive seasons a crossed plant flowered some weeks before
+any one of the self-fertilised in all four pots.
+
+Primula veris (equal-styled var.)
+
+In all three pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+
+Primula sinensis.
+
+In all four pots plants derived from an illegitimate cross between
+distinct plants flowered before any one of the self-fertilised plants.
+
+Primula sinensis.
+
+A legitimately crossed plant flowered before any one of the
+self-fertilised plants in seven out of the eight pots.
+
+Fagopyrum esculentum.
+
+A legitimately crossed plant flowered from one to two days before any
+one of the self-fertilised plants in all three pots.
+
+Zea mays.
+
+In all four pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+
+Phalaris canariensis.
+
+The crossed plants flowered before the self-fertilised in the open
+ground, but simultaneously in the pots.
+
+SPECIES OF WHICH THE FIRST PLANTS THAT FLOWERED WERE OF SELF-FERTILISED
+PARENTAGE.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica (First Generation).
+
+The crossed plants were at first taller than the self-fertilised, but on
+their second growth during the following year the self-fertilised
+exceeded the crossed in height, and now they flowered first in three out
+of the four pots.
+
+Lupinus luteus.
+
+Although the crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height as 100
+to 82; yet in all three pots the self-fertilised plants flowered first.
+
+Clarkia elegans.
+
+Although the crossed plants were, as in the last case, to the
+self-fertilised in height as 100 to 82, yet in the two pots the
+self-fertilised flowered first.
+
+Lobelia fulgens (First Generation).
+
+The crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height only as 100 to
+127, and the latter flowered much before the crossed.
+
+Petunia violacea (Third Generation).
+
+The crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height as 100 to 131,
+and in three out of the four pots a self-fertilised plant flowered
+first; in the fourth pot simultaneously.
+
+Petunia violacea (Fourth generation).
+
+Although the crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height as 100
+to 69, yet in three out of the five pots a self-fertilised plant
+flowered first; in the fourth pot simultaneously, and only in the fifth
+did a crossed plant flower first.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum (First Generation).
+
+The crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height only as 100 to
+178, and a self-fertilised plant flowered first in all four pots.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum (Third Generation).
+
+The crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height as 100 to 101,
+and in four out of the five pots a self-fertilised plant flowered first.
+
+Canna warscewiczi.
+
+In the three generations taken together the crossed were to the
+self-fertilised in height as 100 to 101; in the first generation the
+self-fertilised plants showed some tendency to flower first, and in the
+third generation they flowered first in nine out of the twelve pots.
+
+SPECIES IN WHICH THE CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS FLOWERED ALMOST
+SIMULTANEOUSLY.
+
+Mimulus luteus (Sixth Generation).
+
+The crossed plants were inferior in height and vigour to the
+self-fertilised plants, which all belonged to the new white-flowered
+tall variety, yet in only half the pots did the self-fertilised plants
+flower first, and in the other half the crossed plants.
+
+Viscaria oculata.
+
+The crossed plants were only a little taller than the self-fertilised
+(namely, as 100 to 97), but considerably more fertile, yet both lots
+flowered almost simultaneously.
+
+Lathyrus odoratus (Second Generation).
+
+Although the crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height as 100
+to 88, yet there was no marked difference in their period of flowering.
+
+Lobelia fulgens (Second Generation).
+
+Although the crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height as 100
+to 91, yet they flowered simultaneously.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum (Third Generation).
+
+Although the crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height as 100
+to 83, yet in half the pots a self-fertilised plant flowered first, and
+in the other half a crossed plant.]
+
+These three lists include fifty-eight cases, in which the period of
+flowering of the crossed and self-fertilised plants was recorded. In
+forty-four of them a crossed plant flowered first either in a majority
+of the pots or in all; in nine instances a self-fertilised plant
+flowered first, and in five the two lots flowered simultaneously. One of
+the most striking cases is that of Cyclamen, in which the crossed plants
+flowered some weeks before the self-fertilised in all four pots during
+two seasons. In the second generation of Lobelia ramosa, a crossed plant
+flowered in all four pots some days before any one of the
+self-fertilised. Plants derived from a cross with a fresh stock
+generally showed a very strongly marked tendency to flower before the
+self-fertilised and the intercrossed plants of the old stock; all three
+lots growing in the same pots. Thus with Mimulus and Dianthus, in only
+one pot out of ten, and in Nicotiana in only one pot out of sixteen, did
+a self-fertilised plant flower before the plants of the two crossed
+kinds,--these latter flowering almost simultaneously.
+
+A consideration of the two first lists, especially of the second one,
+shows that a tendency to flower first is generally connected with
+greater power of growth, that is, with greater height. But there are
+some remarkable exceptions to this rule, proving that some other cause
+comes into play. Thus the crossed plants both of Lupinus luteus and
+Clarkia elegans were to the self-fertilised plants in height as 100 to
+82, and yet the latter flowered first. In the third generation of
+Nicotiana, and in all three generations of Canna, the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants were of nearly equal height, yet the
+self-fertilised tended to flower first. On the other hand, with Primula
+sinensis, plants raised from a cross between two distinct individuals,
+whether these were legitimately or illegitimately crossed, flowered
+before the illegitimately self-fertilised plants, although all the
+plants were of nearly equal height in both cases. So it was with respect
+to height and flowering with Phaseolus, Specularia, and Borago. The
+crossed plants of Hibiscus were inferior in height to the
+self-fertilised, in the ratio of 100 to 109, and yet they flowered
+before the self-fertilised in three out of the four pots. On the whole,
+there can be no doubt that the crossed plants exhibit a tendency to
+flower before the self-fertilised, almost though not quite so strongly
+marked as to grow to a greater height, to weigh more, and to be more
+fertile.
+
+A few other cases not included in the above three lists deserve notice.
+In all three pots of Viola tricolor, naturally crossed plants the
+offspring of crossed plants flowered before naturally crossed plants the
+offspring of self-fertilised plants. Flowers on two plants, both of
+self-fertilised parentage, of the sixth generation of Mimulus luteus
+were intercrossed, and other flowers on the same plants were fertilised
+with their own pollen; intercrossed seedlings and seedlings of the
+seventh self-fertilised generation were thus raised, and the latter
+flowered before the intercrossed in three out of the five pots. Flowers
+on a plant both of Mimulus luteus and of Ipomoea purpurea were crossed
+with pollen from other flowers on the same plant, and other flowers were
+fertilised with their own pollen; intercrossed seedlings of this
+peculiar kind, and others strictly self-fertilised being thus raised. In
+the case of the Mimulus the self-fertilised plants flowered first in
+seven out of the eight pots, and in the case of the Ipomoea in eight out
+of the ten pots; so that an intercross between the flowers on the same
+plant was very far from giving to the offspring thus raised, any
+advantage over the strictly self-fertilised plants in their period of
+flowering.
+
+EFFECTS OF CROSSING FLOWERS ON THE SAME PLANT.
+
+In the discussion on the results of a cross with a fresh stock, given
+under Table 7/C in the last chapter, it was shown that the mere act of
+crossing by itself does no good; but that the advantages thus derived
+depend on the plants which are crossed, either consisting of distinct
+varieties which will almost certainly differ somewhat in constitution,
+or on the progenitors of the plants which are crossed, though identical
+in every external character, having been subjected to somewhat different
+conditions and having thus acquired some slight difference in
+constitution. All the flowers produced by the same plant have been
+developed from the same seed; those which expand at the same time have
+been exposed to exactly the same climatic influences; and the stems have
+all been nourished by the same roots. Therefore in accordance with the
+conclusion just referred to, no good ought to result from crossing
+flowers on the same plant. (8/1. It is, however, possible that the
+stamens which differ in length or construction in the same flower may
+produce pollen differing in nature, and in this manner a cross might be
+made effective between the several flowers on the same plant. Mr. Macnab
+states in a communication to M. Verlot ‘La Production des Varietes’ 1865
+page 42, that seedlings raised from the shorter and longer stamens of
+rhododendron differ in character; but the shorter stamens apparently are
+becoming rudimentary, and the seedlings are dwarfs, so that the result
+may be simply due to a want of fertilising power in the pollen, as in
+the case of the dwarfed plants of Mirabilis raised by Naudin by the use
+of too few pollen-grains. Analogous statements have been made with
+respect to the stamens of Pelargonium. With some of the Melastomaceae,
+seedlings raised by me from flowers fertilised by pollen from the
+shorter stamens, certainly differed in appearance from those raised from
+the longer stamens, with differently coloured anthers; but here, again,
+there is some reason for believing that the shorter stamens are tending
+towards abortion. In the very different case of trimorphic heterostyled
+plants, the two sets of stamens in the same flower have widely different
+fertilising powers.) In opposition to this conclusion is the fact that a
+bud is in one sense a distinct individual, and is capable of
+occasionally or even not rarely assuming new external characters, as
+well as new constitutional peculiarities. Plants raised from buds which
+have thus varied may be propagated for a great length of time by grafts,
+cuttings, etc., and sometimes even by seminal generation. (8/2. I have
+given numerous cases of such bud-variations in my ‘Variation of Animals
+and Plants under Domestication’ chapter 11 2nd edition volume 1 page
+448.) There exist also numerous species in which the flowers on the same
+plant differ from one another,--as in the sexual organs of monoecious
+and polygamous plants,--in the structure of the circumferential flowers
+in many Compositae, Umbelliferae, etc.,--in the structure of the central
+flower in some plants,--in the two kinds of flowers produced by
+cleistogene species,--and in several other such cases. These instances
+clearly prove that the flowers on the same plant have often varied
+independently of one another in many important respects, such variations
+having been fixed, like those on distinct plants during the development
+of species.
+
+It was therefore necessary to ascertain by experiment what would be the
+effect of intercrossing flowers on the same plant, in comparison with
+fertilising them with their own pollen or crossing them with pollen from
+a distinct plant. Trials were carefully made on five genera belonging to
+four families; and in only one case, namely, Digitalis, did the
+offspring from a cross between the flowers on the same plant receive any
+benefit, and the benefit here was small compared with that derived from
+a cross between distinct plants. In the chapter on Fertility, when we
+consider the effects of cross-fertilisation and self-fertilisation on
+the productiveness of the parent-plants we shall arrive at nearly the
+same result, namely, that a cross between the flowers on the same plant
+does not at all increase the number of the seeds, or only occasionally
+and to a slight degree. I will now give an abstract of the results of
+the five trials which were made.
+
+1. Digitalis purpurea.
+
+Seedlings raised from intercrossed flowers on the same plant, and others
+from flowers fertilised with their own pollen, were grown in the usual
+manner in competition with one another on the opposite sides of ten
+pots. In this and the four following cases, the details may be found
+under the head of each species. In eight pots, in which the plants did
+not grow much crowded, the flower-stems on sixteen intercrossed plants
+were in height to those on sixteen self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 94.
+In the two other pots on which the plants grew much crowded, the
+flower-stems on nine intercrossed plants were in height to those on nine
+self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 90. That the intercrossed plants in
+these two latter pots had a real advantage over their self-fertilised
+opponents, was well shown by their relative weights when cut down, which
+was as 100 to 78. The mean height of the flower-stems on the twenty-five
+intercrossed plants in the ten pots taken together, was to that of the
+flower-stems on the twenty-five self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 92.
+Thus the intercrossed plants were certainly superior to the
+self-fertilised in some degree; but their superiority was small compared
+with that of the offspring from a cross between distinct plants over the
+self-fertilised, this being in the ratio of 100 to 70 in height. Nor
+does this latter ratio show at all fairly the great superiority of the
+plants derived from a cross between distinct individuals over the
+self-fertilised, as the former produced more than twice as many
+flower-stems as the latter, and were much less liable to premature
+death.
+
+2. Ipomoea purpurea.
+
+Thirty-one intercrossed plants raised from a cross between flowers on
+the same plants were grown in ten pots in competition with the same
+number of self-fertilised plants, and the former were to the latter in
+height as 100 to 105. So that the self-fertilised plants were a little
+taller than the intercrossed; and in eight out of the ten pots a
+self-fertilised plant flowered before any one of the crossed plants in
+the same pots. The plants which were not greatly crowded in nine of the
+pots (and these offer the fairest standard of comparison) were cut down
+and weighed; and the weight of the twenty-seven intercrossed plants was
+to that of the twenty-seven self-fertilised as 100 to 124; so that by
+this test the superiority of the self-fertilised was strongly marked. To
+this subject of the superiority of the self-fertilised plants in certain
+cases, I shall have to recur in a future chapter. If we now turn to the
+offspring from a cross between distinct plants when put into competition
+with self-fertilised plants, we find that the mean height of
+seventy-three such crossed plants, in the course of ten generations, was
+to that of the same number of self-fertilised plants as 100 to 77; and
+in the case of the plants of the tenth generation in weight as 100 to
+44. Thus the contrast between the effects of crossing flowers on the
+same plant, and of crossing flowers on distinct plants, is wonderfully
+great.
+
+3. Mimulus luteus.
+
+Twenty-two plants raised by crossing flowers on the same plant were
+grown in competition with the same number of self-fertilised plants; and
+the former were to the latter in height as 100 to 105, and in weight as
+100 to 103. Moreover, in seven out of the eight pots a self-fertilised
+plant flowered before any of the intercrossed plants. So that here again
+the self-fertilised exhibit a slight superiority over the intercrossed
+plants. For the sake of comparison, I may add that seedlings raised
+during three generations from a cross between distinct plants were to
+the self-fertilised plants in height as 100 to 65.
+
+4. Pelargonium zonale.
+
+Two plants growing in separate pots, which had been propagated by
+cuttings from the same plant, and therefore formed in fact parts of the
+same individual, were intercrossed, and other flowers on one of these
+plants were self-fertilised; but the seedlings obtained by the two
+processes did not differ in height. When, on the other hand, flowers on
+one of the above plants were crossed with pollen taken from a distinct
+seedling, and other flowers were self-fertilised, the crossed offspring
+thus obtained were to the self-fertilised in height as 100 to 74.
+
+5. Origanum vulgare.
+
+A plant which had been long cultivated in my kitchen garden, had spread
+by stolons so as to form a large bed or clump. Seedlings raised by
+intercrossing flowers on these plants, which strictly consisted of the
+same plant, and other seedlings raised from self-fertilised flowers,
+were carefully compared from their earliest youth to maturity; and they
+did not differ at all in height or in constitutional vigour. Some
+flowers on these seedlings were then crossed with pollen taken from a
+distinct seedling, and other flowers were self-fertilised; two fresh
+lots of seedlings being thus raised, which were the grandchildren of the
+plant that had spread by stolons and formed a large clump in my garden.
+These differed much in height, the crossed plants being to the
+self-fertilised as 100 to 86. They differed, also, to a wonderful degree
+in constitutional vigour. The crossed plants flowered first, and
+produced exactly twice as many flower-stems; and they afterwards
+increased by stolons to such an extent as almost to overwhelm the
+self-fertilised plants.
+
+Reviewing these five cases, we see that in four of them, the effect of a
+cross between flowers on the same plant (even on offsets of the same
+plant growing on separate roots, as with the Pelargonium and Origanum)
+does not differ from that of the strictest self-fertilisation. Indeed,
+in two of the cases the self-fertilised plants were superior to such
+intercrossed plants. With Digitalis a cross between the flowers on the
+same plant certainly did do some good, yet very slight compared with
+that from a cross between distinct plants. On the whole the results here
+arrived at, if we bear in mind that the flower-buds are to a certain
+extent distinct individuals and occasionally vary independently of one
+another, agree well with our general conclusion, that the advantages of
+a cross depend on the progenitors of the crossed plants possessing
+somewhat different constitutions, either from having been exposed to
+different conditions, or to their having varied from unknown causes in a
+manner which we in our ignorance are forced to speak of as spontaneous.
+Hereafter I shall have to recur to this subject of the inefficiency of a
+cross between the flowers on the same plant, when we consider the part
+which insects play in the cross-fertilisation of flowers.
+
+ON THE TRANSMISSION OF THE GOOD EFFECTS FROM A CROSS AND OF THE EVIL
+EFFECTS FROM SELF-FERTILISATION.
+
+We have seen that seedlings from a cross between distinct plants almost
+always exceed their self-fertilised opponents in height, weight, and
+constitutional vigour, and, as will hereafter be shown, often in
+fertility. To ascertain whether this superiority would be transmitted
+beyond the first generation, seedlings were raised on three occasions
+from crossed and self-fertilised plants, both sets being fertilised in
+the same manner, and therefore not as in the many cases given in Tables
+7/A, 7/B, 7/C, in which the crossed plants were again crossed and the
+self-fertilised again self-fertilised.
+
+Firstly, seedlings were raised from self-fertilised seeds produced under
+a net by crossed and self-fertilised plants of Nemophila insignis; and
+the latter were to the former in height as 133 to 100. But these
+seedlings became very unhealthy early in life, and grew so unequally
+that some of them in both lots were five times as tall as the others.
+Therefore this experiment was quite worthless; but I have felt bound to
+give it, as opposed to my general conclusion. I should state that in
+this and the two following trials, both sets of plants were grown on the
+opposite sides of the same pots, and treated in all respects alike. The
+details of the experiments may be found under the head of each species.
+
+Secondly, a crossed and a self-fertilised plant of Heartsease (Viola
+tricolor) grew near together in the open ground and near to other plants
+of heartsease; and as both produced an abundance of very fine capsules,
+the flowers on both were certainly cross-fertilised by insects. Seeds
+were collected from both plants, and seedlings raised from them. Those
+from the crossed plants flowered in all three pots before those from the
+self-fertilised plants; and when fully grown the former were to the
+latter in height as 100 to 82. As both sets of plants were the product
+of cross-fertilisation, the difference in their growth and period of
+flowering was clearly due to their parents having been of crossed and
+self-fertilised parentage; and it is equally clear that they transmitted
+different constitutional powers to their offspring, the grandchildren of
+the plants which were originally crossed and self-fertilised.
+
+Thirdly, the Sweet Pea (Lathyrus odoratus) habitually fertilises itself
+in this country. As I possessed plants, the parents and grandparents of
+which had been artificially crossed and other plants descended from the
+same parents which had been self-fertilised for many previous
+generations, these two lots of plants were allowed to fertilise
+themselves under a net, and their self-fertilised seeds saved. The
+seedlings thus raised were grown in competition with each other in the
+usual manner, and differed in their powers of growth. Those from the
+self-fertilised plants which had been crossed during the two previous
+generations were to those from the plants self-fertilised during many
+previous generations in height as 100 to 90. These two lots of seeds
+were likewise tried by being sown under very unfavourable conditions in
+poor exhausted soil, and the plants whose grandparents and
+great-grandparents had been crossed showed in an unmistakable manner
+their superior constitutional vigour. In this case, as in that of the
+heartsease, there could be no doubt that the advantage derived from a
+cross between two plants was not confined to the offspring of the first
+generation. That constitutional vigour due to cross-parentage is
+transmitted for many generations may also be inferred as highly
+probable, from some of Andrew Knight’s varieties of the common pea,
+which were raised by crossing distinct varieties, after which time they
+no doubt fertilised themselves in each succeeding generation. These
+varieties lasted for upwards of sixty years, “but their glory is now
+departed.” (8/3. See the evidence on this head in my ‘Variation under
+Domestication’ chapter 9 volume 1 2nd edition page 397.) On the other
+hand, most of the varieties of the common pea, which there is no reason
+to suppose owe their origin to a cross, have had a much shorter
+existence. Some also of Mr. Laxton’s varieties produced by artificial
+crosses have retained their astonishing vigour and luxuriance for a
+considerable number of generations; but as Mr. Laxton informs me, his
+experience does not extend beyond twelve generations, within which
+period he has never perceived any diminution of vigour in his plants.
+
+An allied point may be here noticed. As the force of inheritance is
+strong with plants (of which abundant evidence could be given), it is
+almost certain that seedlings from the same capsule or from the same
+plant would tend to inherit nearly the same constitution; and as the
+advantage from a cross depends on the plants which are crossed differing
+somewhat in constitution, it may be inferred as probable that under
+similar conditions a cross between the nearest relations would not
+benefit the offspring so much as one between non-related plants. In
+support of this conclusion we have some evidence, as Fritz Muller has
+shown by his valuable experiments on hybrid Abutilons, that the union of
+brothers and sisters, parents and children, and of other near relations
+is highly injurious to the fertility of the offspring. In one case,
+moreover, seedlings from such near relations possessed very weak
+constitutions. (8/4. ‘Jenaische Zeitschrift fur Naturw.’ B. 7 pages 22
+and 45 1872 and 1873 pages 441-450.) This same observer also found three
+plants of a Bignonia growing near together. (8/5. ‘Botanische Zeitung’
+1868 page 626.) He fertilised twenty-nine flowers on one of them with
+their own pollen, and they did not set a single capsule. Thirty flowers
+were then fertilised with pollen from a distinct plant, one of the three
+growing together, and they yielded only two capsules. Lastly, five
+flowers were fertilised with pollen from a fourth plant growing at a
+distance, and all five produced capsules. It seems therefore probable,
+as Fritz Muller suggests, that the three plants growing near together
+were seedlings from the same parent, and that from being closely related
+they had little power of fertilising one another. (8/6. Some remarkable
+cases are given in my ‘Variation under Domestication’ chapter 17 2nd
+edition volume 2 page 121, of hybrids of Gladiolus and Cistus, any one
+of which could be fertilised by pollen from any other, but not by its
+own pollen.)
+
+Lastly, the fact of the intercrossed plants in Table 7/A not exceeding
+in height the self-fertilised plants in a greater and greater degree in
+the later generations, is probably the result of their having become
+more and more closely inter-related.
+
+UNIFORM COLOUR OF THE FLOWERS ON PLANTS, SELF-FERTILISED AND GROWN UNDER
+SIMILAR CONDITIONS FOR SEVERAL GENERATIONS.
+
+At the commencement of my experiments, the parent-plants of Mimulus
+luteus, Ipomoea purpurea, Dianthus caryophyllus, and Petunia violacea,
+raised from purchased seeds, varied greatly in the colour of their
+flowers. This occurs with many plants which have been long cultivated as
+an ornament for the flower-garden, and which have been propagated by
+seeds. The colour of the flowers was a point to which I did not at first
+in the least attend, and no selection whatever was practised.
+Nevertheless, the flowers produced by the self-fertilised plants of the
+above four species became absolutely uniform in tint, or very nearly so,
+after they had been grown for some generations under closely similar
+conditions. The intercrossed plants, which were more or less closely
+inter-related in the later generations, and which had been likewise
+cultivated all the time under similar conditions, became more uniform in
+the colour of their flowers than were the original parent-plants, but
+much less so than the self-fertilised plants. When self-fertilised
+plants of one of the later generations were crossed with a fresh stock,
+and seedlings thus raised, these presented a wonderful contrast in the
+diversified tints of their flowers compared with those of the
+self-fertilised seedlings. As such cases of flowers becoming uniformly
+coloured without any aid from selection seem to me curious, I will give
+a full abstract of my observations.
+
+Mimulus luteus.
+
+A tall variety, bearing large, almost white flowers blotched with
+crimson, appeared amongst the intercrossed and self-fertilised plants of
+the third and fourth generations. This variety increased so rapidly,
+that in the sixth generation of self-fertilised plants every single one
+consisted of it. So it was with all the many plants which were raised,
+up to the last or ninth self-fertilised generation. Although this
+variety first appeared amongst the intercrossed plants, yet from their
+offspring being intercrossed in each succeeding generation, it never
+prevailed amongst them; and the flowers on the several intercrossed
+plants of the ninth generation differed considerably in colour. On the
+other hand, the uniformity in colour of the flowers on the plants of all
+the later self-fertilised generations was quite surprising; on a casual
+inspection they might have been said to be quite alike, but the crimson
+blotches were not of exactly the same shape, or in exactly the same
+position. Both my gardener and myself believe that this variety did not
+appear amongst the parent-plants, raised from purchased seeds, but from
+its appearance amongst both the crossed and self-fertilised plants of
+the third and fourth generations; and from what I have seen of the
+variation of this species on other occasions, it is probable that it
+would occasionally appear under any circumstances. We learn, however,
+from the present case that under the peculiar conditions to which my
+plants were subjected, this particular variety, remarkable for its
+colouring, largeness of the corolla, and increased height of the whole
+plant, prevailed in the sixth and all the succeeding self-fertilised
+generations to the complete exclusion of every other variety.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea.
+
+My attention was first drawn to the present subject by observing that
+the flowers on all the plants of the seventh self-fertilised generation
+were of a uniform, remarkably rich, dark purple tint. The many plants
+which were raised during the three succeeding generations, up to the
+last or tenth, all produced flowers coloured in the same manner. They
+were absolutely uniform in tint, like those of a constant species living
+in a state of nature; and the self-fertilised plants might have been
+distinguished with certainty, as my gardener remarked, without the aid
+of labels, from the intercrossed plants of the later generations. These,
+however, had more uniformly coloured flowers than those which were first
+raised from the purchased seeds. This dark purple variety did not
+appear, as far as my gardener and myself could recollect, before the
+fifth or sixth self-fertilised generation. However this may have been,
+it became, through continued self-fertilisation and the cultivation of
+the plants under uniform conditions, perfectly constant, to the
+exclusion of every other variety.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus.
+
+The self-fertilised plants of the third generation all bore flowers of
+exactly the same pale rose-colour; and in this respect they differed
+quite remarkably from the plants growing in a large bed close by and
+raised from seeds purchased from the same nursery garden. In this case
+it is not improbable that some of the parent-plants which were first
+self-fertilised may have borne flowers thus coloured; but as several
+plants were self-fertilised in the first generation, it is extremely
+improbable that all bore flowers of exactly the same tint as those of
+the self-fertilised plants of the third generation. The intercrossed
+plants of the third generation likewise produced flowers almost, though
+not quite so uniform in tint as those of the self-fertilised plants.
+
+Petunia violacea.
+
+In this case I happened to record in my notes that the flowers on the
+parent-plant which was first self-fertilised were of a “dingy purple
+colour.” In the fifth self-fertilised generation, every one of the
+twenty-one self-fertilised plants growing in pots, and all the many
+plants in a long row out of doors, produced flowers of absolutely the
+same tint, namely, of a dull, rather peculiar and ugly flesh colour;
+therefore, considerably unlike those on the parent-plant. I believe that
+this change of colour supervened quite gradually; but I kept no record,
+as the point did not interest me until I was struck with the uniform
+tint of the flowers on the self-fertilised plants of the fifth
+generation. The flowers on the intercrossed plants of the corresponding
+generation were mostly of the same dull flesh colour, but not nearly so
+uniform as those on the self-fertilised plants, some few being very
+pale, almost white. The self-fertilised plants which grew in a long row
+in the open ground were also remarkable for their uniformity in height,
+as were the intercrossed plants in a less degree, both lots being
+compared with a large number of plants raised at the same time under
+similar conditions from the self-fertilised plants of the fourth
+generation crossed by a fresh stock. I regret that I did not attend to
+the uniformity in height of the self-fertilised seedlings in the later
+generations of the other species.
+
+These few cases seem to me to possess much interest. We learn from them
+that new and slight shades of colour may be quickly and firmly fixed,
+independently of any selection, if the conditions are kept as nearly
+uniform as is possible, and no intercrossing be permitted. With Mimulus,
+not only a grotesque style of colouring, but a larger corolla and
+increased height of the whole plant were thus fixed; whereas with most
+plants which have been long cultivated for the flower-garden, no
+character is more variable than that of colour, excepting perhaps that
+of height. From the consideration of these cases we may infer that the
+variability of cultivated plants in the above respects is due, firstly,
+to their being subjected to somewhat diversified conditions, and,
+secondly, to their being often intercrossed, as would follow from the
+free access of insects. I do not see how this inference can be avoided,
+as when the above plants were cultivated for several generations under
+closely similar conditions, and were intercrossed in each generation,
+the colour of their flowers tended in some degree to change and to
+become uniform. When no intercrossing with other plants of the same
+stock was allowed,--that is, when the flowers were fertilised with their
+own pollen in each generation--their colour in the later generations
+became as uniform as that of plants growing in a state of nature,
+accompanied at least in one instance by much uniformity in the height of
+the plants. But in saying that the diversified tints of the flowers on
+cultivated plants treated in the ordinary manner are due to differences
+in the soil, climate, etc., to which they are exposed, I do not wish to
+imply that such variations are caused by these agencies in any more
+direct manner than that in which the most diversified illnesses, as
+colds, inflammation of the lungs or pleura, rheumatism, etc., may be
+said to be caused by exposure to cold. In both cases the constitution of
+the being which is acted on is of preponderant importance.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE EFFECTS OF CROSS-FERTILISATION AND SELF-FERTILISATION ON THE
+PRODUCTION OF SEEDS.
+
+Fertility of plants of crossed and self-fertilised parentage, both lots
+being fertilised in the same manner.
+Fertility of the parent-plants when first crossed and self-fertilised,
+and of their crossed and self-fertilised offspring when again crossed
+and self-fertilised.
+Comparison of the fertility of flowers fertilised with their own pollen
+and with that from other flowers on the same plant.
+Self-sterile plants.
+Causes of self-sterility.
+The appearance of highly self-fertile varieties.
+Self-fertilisation apparently in some respects beneficial, independently
+of the assured production of seeds.
+Relative weights and rates of germination of seeds from crossed and
+self-fertilised flowers.
+
+The present chapter is devoted to the Fertility of plants, as influenced
+by cross-fertilisation and self-fertilisation. The subject consists of
+two distinct branches; firstly, the relative productiveness or fertility
+of flowers crossed with pollen from a distinct plant and with their own
+pollen, as shown by the proportional number of capsules which they
+produce, together with the number of the contained seeds. Secondly, the
+degree of innate fertility or sterility of the seedlings raised from
+crossed and self-fertilised seeds; such seedlings being of the same age,
+grown under the same conditions, and fertilised in the same manner.
+These two branches of the subject correspond with the two which have to
+be considered by any one treating of hybrid plants; namely, in the first
+place the comparative productiveness of a species when fertilised with
+pollen from a distinct species and with its own pollen; and in the
+second place, the fertility of its hybrid offspring. These two classes
+of cases do not always run parallel; thus some plants, as Gartner has
+shown, can be crossed with great ease, but yield excessively sterile
+hybrids; while others are crossed with extreme difficulty, but yield
+fairly fertile hybrids.
+
+The natural order to follow in this chapter would have been first to
+consider the effects on the fertility of the parent-plants of crossing
+them, and of fertilising them with their own pollen; but as we have
+discussed in the two last chapters the relative height, weight, and
+constitutional vigour of crossed and self-fertilised plants--that is, of
+plants raised from crossed and self-fertilised seeds--it will be
+convenient here first to consider their relative fertility. The cases
+observed by me are given in Table 9/D, in which plants of crossed and
+self-fertilised parentage were left to fertilise themselves, being
+either crossed by insects or spontaneously self-fertilised. It should be
+observed that the results cannot be considered as fully trustworthy, for
+the fertility of a plant is a most variable element, depending on its
+age, health, nature of the soil, amount of water given, and temperature
+to which it is exposed. The number of the capsules produced and the
+number of the contained seeds, ought to have been ascertained on a large
+number of crossed and self-fertilised plants of the same age and treated
+in every respect alike. In these two latter respects my observations may
+be trusted, but a sufficient number of capsules were counted only in a
+few instances. The fertility, or as it may perhaps better be called the
+productiveness, of a plant depends on the number of capsules produced,
+and on the number of seeds which these contain. But from various causes,
+chiefly from the want of time, I was often compelled to rely on the
+number of the capsules alone. Nevertheless, in the more interesting
+cases, the seeds were also counted or weighed. The average number of
+seeds per capsule is a more valuable criterion of fertility than the
+number of capsules produced. This latter circumstance depends partly on
+the size of the plant; and we know that crossed plants are generally
+taller and heavier than the self-fertilised; but the difference in this
+respect is rarely sufficient to account for the difference in the number
+of the capsules produced. It need hardly be added that in Table 9/D the
+same number of crossed and self-fertilised plants are always compared.
+Subject to the foregoing sources of doubt I will now give the table, in
+which the parentage of the plants experimented on, and the manner of
+determining their fertility are explained. Fuller details may be found
+in the previous part of this work, under the head of each species.
+
+TABLE 9/D.--RELATIVE FERTILITY OF PLANTS OF CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED
+PARENTAGE, BOTH SETS BEING FERTILISED IN THE SAME MANNER. FERTILITY
+JUDGED OF BY VARIOUS STANDARDS. THAT OF THE CROSSED PLANTS TAKEN AS 100.
+
+Column 1: Name of plant and feature observed.
+
+Column 2: x, in the expression, as 100 to x.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--first generation: seeds per capsule on crossed and
+self-fertilised plants, not growing much crowded, spontaneously
+self-fertilised under a net, in number: 99.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--seeds per capsule on crossed and self-fertilised
+plants from the same parents as in the last case, but growing much
+crowded, spontaneously self-fertilised under a net, in number: 93.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--productiveness of the same plants, as judged by the
+number of capsules produced, and average number of seeds per capsule:
+45.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--third generation: seeds per capsule on crossed and
+self-fertilised plants, spontaneously self-fertilised under a net, in
+number: 94.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--productiveness of the same plants, as judged by the
+number of capsules produced, and the average number of seeds per
+capsule: 35.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--fifth generation: seeds per capsule on crossed and
+self-fertilised plants, left uncovered in the hothouse, and
+spontaneously fertilised: 89.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--ninth generation: number of capsules on crossed plants
+to those on self-fertilised plants, spontaneously self-fertilised under
+a net: 26.
+
+Mimulus luteus--an equal number of capsules on plants descended from
+self-fertilised plants of the 8th generation crossed by a fresh stock,
+and on plants of the 9th self-fertilised generation, both sets having
+been left uncovered and spontaneously fertilised, contained seeds, by
+weight: 30.
+
+Mimulus luteus--productiveness of the same plants, as judged by the
+number of capsules produced, and the average weight of seeds per
+capsule: 3.
+
+Vandellia nummularifolia--seeds per capsule from cleistogene flowers on
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants, in number: 106.
+
+Salvia coccinea--crossed plants, compared with self-fertilised plants,
+produced flowers, in number: 57.
+
+Iberis umbellata--plants left uncovered in greenhouse; intercrossed
+plants of the 3rd generation, compared with self-fertilised plants of
+the 3rd generation, yielded seeds, in number: 75.
+
+Iberis umbellata--plants from a cross between two varieties, compared
+with self-fertilised plants of the 3rd generation, yielded seeds, by
+weight : 75.
+
+Papaver vagum--crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered,
+produced capsules, in number: 99.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--Brazilian stock; plants left uncovered and
+cross-fertilised by bees; capsules on intercrossed plants of the 2nd
+generation, compared with capsules on self-fertilised plants of 2nd
+generation, contained seeds, in number: 78.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--productiveness of the same plants, as judged
+by the number of capsules produced, and the average number of seeds per
+capsule: 89.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--plants left uncovered and cross-fertilised by
+bees; capsules on plants derived from intercrossed plants of the 2nd
+generation of the Brazilian stock crossed by English stock, compared
+with capsules on self-fertilised plants of 2nd generation, contained
+seeds, in number: 63.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--productiveness of the same plants, as judged
+by the number of capsules produced, and the average number of seeds per
+capsule: 40.
+
+Reseda odorata--crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered and
+cross-fertilised by bees; produced capsules in number (about): 100.
+
+Viola tricolor--crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered and
+cross-fertilised by bees, produced capsules in number: 10.
+
+Delphinium consolida--crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered
+in the greenhouse, produced capsules in number: 56.
+
+Viscaria oculata--crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered in
+the greenhouse, produced capsules in number: 77.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--plants spontaneously self-fertilised under a net;
+capsules on intercrossed and self-fertilised plants of the 3rd
+generation contained seeds in number: 125.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--plants left uncovered and cross-fertilised by
+insects: offspring from plants self-fertilised for three generations and
+then crossed by an intercrossed plant of the same stock, compared with
+plants of the 4th self-fertilised generation, produced seeds by weight:
+73.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--plants left uncovered and cross-fertilised by
+insects: offspring from plants self-fertilised for three generations and
+then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of the 4th
+self-fertilised generation, produced seeds by weight: 33.
+
+Tropaeolum minus--crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered in
+the greenhouse, produced seeds in number: 64.
+
+Limnanthes douglasii--crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered
+in the greenhouse, produced capsules in number (about): 100.
+
+Lupinus luteus--crossed and self-fertilised plants of the 2nd
+generation, left uncovered in the greenhouse, produced seeds in number
+(judged from only a few pods): 88.
+
+Phaseolus multiflorus--crossed and self-fertilised plants, left
+uncovered in the greenhouse, produced seeds in number (about): 100.
+
+Lathyrus odoratus--crossed and self-fertilised plants of the 2nd
+generation, left uncovered in the greenhouse, but certainly
+self-fertilised, produced pods in number: 91.
+
+Clarkia elegans--crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered in
+the greenhouse, produced capsules in number: 60.
+
+Nemophila insignis--crossed and self-fertilised plants, covered by a net
+and spontaneously self-fertilised in the greenhouse, produced capsules
+in number: 29.
+
+Petunia violacea--left uncovered and cross-fertilised by insects: plants
+of the 5th intercrossed and self-fertilised generations produced seeds,
+as judged by the weight of an equal number of capsules: 86.
+
+Petunia violacea--left uncovered as above: offspring of plants
+self-fertilised for four generations and then crossed by a fresh stock,
+compared with plants of the 5th self-fertilised generation, produced
+seeds, as judged by the weight of an equal number of capsules: 46.
+
+Cyclamen persicum--crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered in
+the greenhouse, produced capsules in number: 12.
+
+Anagallis collina--crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered in
+the greenhouse, produced capsules in number: 8.
+
+Primula veris--left uncovered in open ground and cross-fertilised by
+insects: offspring from plants of the 3rd illegitimate generation
+crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of the 4th illegitimate
+and self-fertilised generation, produced capsules in number: 5.
+
+Same plants in the following year: 3.5.
+
+Primula veris--(equal-styled variety): left uncovered in open ground and
+cross-fertilised by insects: offspring from plants self-fertilised for
+two generations and then crossed by another variety, compared with
+plants of the 3rd self-fertilised generation, produced capsules in
+number: 15.
+
+Primula veris--(equal-styled variety) same plants; average number of
+seeds per capsule: 71.
+
+Primula veris--(equal-styled variety) productiveness of the same plants,
+as judged by the number of capsules produced and the average number of
+seeds per capsule: 11.
+
+This table includes thirty-three cases relating to twenty-three species,
+and shows the degree of innate fertility of plants of crossed parentage
+in comparison with those of self-fertilised parentage; both lots being
+fertilised in the same manner. With several of the species, as with
+Eschscholtzia, Reseda, Viola, Dianthus, Petunia, and Primula, both lots
+were certainly cross-fertilised by insects, and so it probably was with
+several of the others; but in some of the species, as with Nemophila,
+and in some of the trials with Ipomoea and Dianthus, the plants were
+covered up, and both lots were spontaneously self-fertilised. This also
+was necessarily the case with the capsules produced by the cleistogene
+flowers of Vandellia.
+
+The fertility of the crossed plants is represented in Table 9/D by 100,
+and that of the self-fertilised by the other figures. There are five
+cases in which the fertility of the self-fertilised plants is
+approximately equal to that of the crossed; nevertheless, in four of
+these cases the crossed plants were plainly taller, and in the fifth
+somewhat taller than the self-fertilised. But I should state that in
+some of these five cases the fertility of the two lots was not strictly
+ascertained, as the capsules were not actually counted, from appearing
+equal in number and from all apparently containing a full complement of
+seeds. In only two instances in the table, namely, with Vandellia and in
+the third generation of Dianthus, the capsules on the self-fertilised
+plants contained more seed than those on the crossed plants. With
+Dianthus the ratio between the number of seeds contained in the
+self-fertilised and crossed capsules was as 125 to 100; both sets of
+plants were left to fertilise themselves under a net; and it is almost
+certain that the greater fertility of the self-fertilised plants was
+here due merely to their having varied and become less strictly
+dichogamous, so as to mature their anthers and stigmas more nearly at
+the same time than is proper to the species. Excluding the seven cases
+now referred to, there remain twenty-six in which the crossed plants
+were manifestly much more fertile, sometimes to an extraordinary degree,
+than the self-fertilised with which they grew in competition. The most
+striking instances are those in which plants derived from a cross with a
+fresh stock are compared with plants of one of the later self-fertilised
+generations; yet there are some striking cases, as that of Viola,
+between the intercrossed plants of the same stock and the
+self-fertilised, even in the first generation. The results most to be
+trusted are those in which the productiveness of the plants was
+ascertained by the number of capsules produced by an equal number of
+plants, together with the actual or average number of seeds in each
+capsule. Of such cases there are twelve in the table, and the mean of
+their mean fertility is as 100 for the crossed plants, to 59 for the
+self-fertilised plants. The Primulaceae seem eminently liable to suffer
+in fertility from self-fertilisation.
+
+The following short table, Table 9/E, includes four cases which have
+already been partly given in the last table.
+
+TABLE 9/E.--INNATE FERTILITY OF PLANTS FROM A CROSS WITH A FRESH STOCK,
+COMPARED WITH THAT OF INTERCROSSED PLANTS OF THE SAME STOCK, AND WITH
+THAT OF SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS, ALL OF THE CORRESPONDING GENERATION.
+FERTILITY JUDGED OF BY THE NUMBER OR WEIGHT OF SEEDS PRODUCED BY AN
+EQUAL NUMBER OF PLANTS.
+
+Column 1: Name of plant and feature observed.
+
+Column 2: Plants from a cross with a fresh stock.
+
+Column 3: Intercrossed plants of the same stock.
+
+Column 4: Self-fertilised plants.
+
+Mimulus luteus--the intercrossed plants are derived from a cross between
+two plants of the 8th self-fertilised generation. The self-fertilised
+plants belong to the 9th generation: 100 : 4 : 3.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--the intercrossed and self-fertilised plants
+belong to the 2nd generation: 100 : 45 : 40.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--the intercrossed plants are derived from
+self-fertilised of the 3rd generation, crossed by intercrossed plants of
+the 3rd generation. The self-fertilised plants belong to the 4th
+generation: 100 : 45 : 33.
+
+Petunia violacea--the intercrossed and self-fertilised plants belong to
+the 5th generation: 100 : 54 : 46.
+
+NB.--In the above cases, excepting in that of Eschscholtzia, the plants
+derived from a cross with a fresh stock belong on the mother-side to the
+same stock with the intercrossed and self-fertilised plants, and to the
+corresponding generation.
+
+These cases show us how greatly superior in innate fertility the
+seedlings from plants self-fertilised or intercrossed for several
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock are, in comparison with
+the seedlings from plants of the old stock, either intercrossed or
+self-fertilised for the same number of generations. The three lots of
+plants in each case were left freely exposed to the visits of insects,
+and their flowers without doubt were cross-fertilised by them.
+
+Table 9/E further shows us that in all four cases the intercrossed
+plants of the same stock still have a decided though small advantage in
+fertility over the self-fertilised plants.
+
+With respect to the state of the reproductive organs in the
+self-fertilised plants of Tables 9/D and 9/E, only a few observations
+were made. In the seventh and eighth generation of Ipomoea, the anthers
+in the flowers of the self-fertilised plants were plainly smaller than
+those in the flowers of the intercrossed plants. The tendency to
+sterility in these same plants was also shown by the first-formed
+flowers, after they had been carefully fertilised, often dropping off,
+in the same manner as frequently occurs with hybrids. The flowers
+likewise tended to be monstrous. In the fourth generation of Petunia,
+the pollen produced by the self-fertilised and intercrossed plants was
+compared, and they were far more empty and shrivelled grains in the
+former.
+
+RELATIVE FERTILITY OF FLOWERS CROSSED WITH POLLEN FROM A DISTINCT PLANT
+AND WITH THEIR OWN POLLEN. THIS HEADING INCLUDES FLOWERS ON THE
+PARENT-PLANTS, AND ON THE CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED SEEDLINGS OF THE
+FIRST OR A SUCCEEDING GENERATION.
+
+I will first treat of the parent-plants, which were raised from seeds
+purchased from nursery-gardens, or taken from plants growing in my
+garden, or growing wild, and surrounded in every case by many
+individuals of the same species. Plants thus circumstanced will commonly
+have been intercrossed by insects; so that the seedlings which were
+first experimented on will generally have been the product of a cross.
+Consequently any difference in the fertility of their flowers, when
+crossed and self-fertilised, will have been caused by the nature of the
+pollen employed; that is, whether it was taken from a distinct plant or
+from the same flower. The degrees of fertility shown in Table 9/F, were
+determined in each case by the average number of seeds per capsule,
+ascertained either by counting or weighing.
+
+Another element ought properly to have been taken into account, namely,
+the proportion of flowers which yielded capsules when they were crossed
+and self-fertilised; and as crossed flowers generally produce a larger
+proportion of capsules, their superiority in fertility, if this element
+had been taken into account, would have been much more strongly marked
+than appears in Table 9/F. But had I thus acted, there would have been
+greater liability to error, as pollen applied to the stigma at the wrong
+time fails to produce any effect, independently of its greater or less
+potency. A good illustration of the great difference in the results
+which sometimes follows, if the number of capsules produced relatively
+to the number of flowers fertilised be included in the calculation, was
+afforded by Nolana prostrata. Thirty flowers on some plants of this
+species were crossed and produced twenty-seven capsules, each containing
+five seeds; thirty-two flowers on the same plants were self-fertilised
+and produced only six capsules, each containing five seeds. As the
+number of seeds per capsule is here the same, the fertility of the
+crossed and self-fertilised flowers is given in Table 9/F as equal, or
+as 100 to 100. But if the flowers which failed to produce capsules be
+included, the crossed flowers yielded on an average 4.50 seeds, whilst
+the self-fertilised flowers yielded only 0.94 seeds, so that their
+relative fertility would have been as 100 to 21. I should here state
+that it has been found convenient to reserve for separate discussion the
+cases of flowers which are usually quite sterile with their own pollen.
+
+TABLE 9/f.--relative fertility of the flowers on the parent-plants used
+in my experiments, when fertilised with pollen from a distinct plant and
+with their own pollen. Fertility judged of by the average number of
+seeds per capsule. Fertility of crossed flowers taken as 100.
+
+Column 1: Name of plant and feature observed.
+
+Column 2: x, in the expression 100 to x.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as
+(about): 100.
+
+Mimulus luteus--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as (by
+weight): 79.
+
+Linaria vulgaris--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as:
+14.
+
+Vandellia nummularifolia--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded
+seeds as: 67?
+
+Gesneria pendulina--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as
+(by weight): 100.
+
+Salvia coccinea--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as
+(about): 100.
+
+Brassica oleracea--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as:
+25.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--(English stock) crossed and self-fertilised
+flowers yielded seeds as (by weight): 71.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--(Brazilian stock grown in England) crossed
+and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds (by weight) as (about): 15.
+
+Delphinium consolida--crossed and self-fertilised flowers
+(self-fertilised capsules spontaneously produced, but result supported
+by other evidence) yielded seeds as: 59.
+
+Viscaria oculata--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as
+(by weight): 38.
+
+Viscaria oculata--crossed and self-fertilised flowers (crossed capsules
+compared on following year with spontaneously self-fertilised capsules)
+yielded seeds as : 58.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+as: 92.
+
+Tropaeolum minus--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as:
+92.
+
+Tropaeolum tricolorum--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+as: 115. (9/1. Tropaeolum tricolorum and Cuphea purpurea have been
+introduced into this table, although seedlings were not raised from
+them; but of the Cuphea only six crossed and six self-fertilised
+capsules, and of the Tropaeolum only six crossed and eleven
+self-fertilised capsules, were compared. A larger proportion of the
+self-fertilised than of the crossed flowers of the Tropaeolum produced
+fruit.)
+
+Limnanthes douglasii--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+as (about): 100.
+
+Sarothamnus scoparius--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+as: 41.
+
+Ononis minutissima--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+as: 65.
+
+Cuphea purpurea--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as:
+113.
+
+Passiflora gracilis--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+as: 85.
+
+Specularia speculum--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+as: 72.
+
+Lobelia fulgens--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as
+(about): 100.
+
+Nemophila insignis--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as
+(by weight): 69.
+
+Borago officinalis--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+as: 60.
+
+Nolana prostrata--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as:
+100.
+
+Petunia violacea--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as
+(by weight): 67.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as
+(by weight): 150.
+
+Cyclamen persicum--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as:
+38.
+
+Anagallis collina--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as:
+96.
+
+Canna warscewiczi--crossed and self-fertilised flowers (on three
+generations of crossed and self-fertilised plants taken all together)
+yielded seeds as: 85.
+
+Table 9/G gives the relative fertility of flowers on crossed plants
+again cross-fertilised, and of flowers on self-fertilised plants again
+self-fertilised, either in the first or in a later generation. Here two
+causes combine to diminish the fertility of the self-fertilised flowers;
+namely, the lesser efficacy of pollen from the same flower, and the
+innate lessened fertility of plants derived from self-fertilised seeds,
+which as we have seen in the previous Table 9/D is strongly marked. The
+fertility was determined in the same manner as in Table 9/F, that is, by
+the average number of seeds per capsule; and the same remarks as before,
+with respect to the different proportion of flowers which set capsules
+when they are cross-fertilised and self-fertilised, are here likewise
+applicable.
+
+TABLE 9/G.--RELATIVE FERTILITY OF FLOWERS ON CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED
+PLANTS OF THE FIRST OR SOME SUCCEEDING GENERATION; THE FORMER BEING
+AGAIN FERTILISED WITH POLLEN FROM A DISTINCT PLANT, AND THE LATTER AGAIN
+WITH THEIR OWN POLLEN. FERTILITY JUDGED OF BY THE AVERAGE NUMBER OF
+SEEDS PER CAPSULE. FERTILITY OF CROSSED FLOWERS TAKEN AS 100.
+
+Column 1: Name of plant and feature observed.
+
+Column 2: x, in the expression, 100 to x.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the first generation yielded seeds as: 93.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the 3rd generation yielded seeds as: 94.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the 4th generation yielded seeds as: 94.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the 5th generation yielded seeds as: 107.
+
+Mimulus luteus--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the 3rd generation yielded seeds as (by
+weight): 65.
+
+Mimulus luteus--same plants of the 3rd generation treated in the same
+manner on the following year yielded seeds as (by weight): 34.
+
+Mimulus luteus--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the 4th generation yielded seeds as (by
+weight): 40.
+
+Viola tricolor--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the 1st generation yielded seeds as: 69.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the
+crossed and self-fertilised plants of the 1st generation yielded seeds
+as: 65.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--flowers on self-fertilised plants of the 3rd
+generation crossed by intercrossed plants, and other flowers again
+self-fertilised yielded seeds as: 97.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--flowers on self-fertilised plants of the 3rd
+generation crossed by a fresh stock, and other flowers again
+self-fertilised yielded seeds as: 127.
+
+Lathytus odoratus--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed
+and self-fertilised plants of the 1st generation yielded seeds as: 65.
+
+Lobelia ramosa--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the 1st generation yielded seeds as (by
+weight): 60.
+
+Petunia violacea--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the 1st generation yielded seeds as (by
+weight): 68.
+
+Petunia violacea--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the 4th generation yielded seeds as (by
+weight): 72.
+
+Petunia violacea--flowers on self-fertilised plants of the 4th
+generation crossed by a fresh stock, and other flowers again
+self-fertilised yielded seeds as (by weight): 48.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed
+and self-fertilised plants of the 1st generation yielded seeds as (by
+weight): 97.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--flowers on self-fertilised plants of the 2nd
+generation crossed by intercrossed plants, and other flowers again
+self-fertilised yielded seeds as (by estimation): 110.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--flowers on self-fertilised plants of the 3rd
+generation crossed by a fresh stock, and other flowers again
+self-fertilised yielded seeds as (by estimation): 110.
+
+Anagallis collina--flowers on red variety crossed by a blue variety, and
+other flowers on the red variety self-fertilised yielded seeds as: 48.
+
+Canna warscewiczi--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed
+and self-fertilised plants of three generations taken together yielded
+seeds as: 85.
+
+As both these tables relate to the fertility of flowers fertilised by
+pollen from another plant and by their own pollen, they may be
+considered together. The difference between them consists in the
+self-fertilised flowers in Table 9/G, being produced by self-fertilised
+parents, and the crossed flowers by crossed parents, which in the later
+generations had become somewhat closely inter-related, and had been
+subjected all the time to nearly the same conditions. These two tables
+include fifty cases relating to thirty-two species. The flowers on many
+other species were crossed and self-fertilised, but as only a few were
+thus treated, the results cannot be trusted, as far as fertility is
+concerned, and are not here given. Some other cases have been rejected,
+as the plants were in an unhealthy condition. If we look to the figures
+in the two tables expressing the ratios between the mean relative
+fertility of the crossed and self-fertilised flowers, we see that in a
+majority of cases (i.e., in thirty-five out of fifty) flowers fertilised
+by pollen from a distinct plant yield more, sometimes many more, seeds
+than flowers fertilised with their own pollen; and they commonly set a
+larger proportion of capsules. The degree of infertility of the
+self-fertilised flowers differs extremely in the different species, and
+even, as we shall see in the section on self-sterile plants, in the
+individuals of the same species, as well as under slightly changed
+conditions of life. Their fertility ranges from zero to fertility
+equalling that of the crossed flowers; and of this fact no explanation
+can be offered. There are fifteen cases in the two tables in which the
+number of seeds per capsule produced by the self-fertilised flowers
+equals or even exceeds that yielded by the crossed flowers. Some few of
+these cases are, I believe, accidental; that is, would not recur on a
+second trial. This was apparently the case with the plants of the fifth
+generation of Ipomoea, and in one of the experiments with Dianthus.
+Nicotiana offers the most anomalous case of any, as the self-fertilised
+flowers on the parent-plants, and on their descendants of the second and
+third generations, produced more seeds than did the crossed flowers; but
+we shall recur to this case when we treat of highly self-fertile
+varieties.
+
+It might have been expected that the difference in fertility between the
+crossed and self-fertilised flowers would have been more strongly marked
+in Table 9/G, in which the plants of one set were derived from
+self-fertilised parents, than in Table 9/F, in which flowers on the
+parent-plants were self-fertilised for the first time. But this is not
+the case, as far as my scanty materials allow of any judgment. There is
+therefore no evidence at present, that the fertility of plants goes on
+diminishing in successive self-fertilised generations, although there is
+some rather weak evidence that this does occur with respect to their
+height or growth. But we should bear in mind that in the later
+generations the crossed plants had become more or less closely
+inter-related, and had been subjected all the time to nearly uniform
+conditions.
+
+It is remarkable that there is no close correspondence, either in the
+parent-plants or in the successive generations, between the relative
+number of seeds produced by the crossed and self-fertilised flowers, and
+the relative powers of growth of the seedlings raised from such seeds.
+Thus, the crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the parent-plants of
+Ipomoea, Gesneria, Salvia, Limnanthes, Lobelia fulgens, and Nolana
+produced a nearly equal number of seeds, yet the plants raised from the
+crossed seeds exceeded considerably in height those raised from the
+self-fertilised seeds. The crossed flowers of Linaria and Viscaria
+yielded far more seeds than the self-fertilised flowers; and although
+the plants raised from the former were taller than those from the
+latter, they were not so in any corresponding degree. With Nicotiana the
+flowers fertilised with their own pollen were more productive than those
+crossed with pollen from a slightly different variety; yet the plants
+raised from the latter seeds were much taller, heavier, and more hardy
+than those raised from the self-fertilised seeds. On the other hand, the
+crossed seedlings of Eschscholtzia were neither taller nor heavier than
+the self-fertilised, although the crossed flowers were far more
+productive than the self-fertilised. But the best evidence of a want of
+correspondence between the number of seeds produced by crossed and
+self-fertilised flowers, and the vigour of the offspring raised from
+them, is afforded by the plants of the Brazilian and European stocks of
+Eschscholtzia, and likewise by certain individual plants of Reseda
+odorata; for it might have been expected that the seedlings from plants,
+the flowers of which were excessively self-sterile, would have profited
+in a greater degree by a cross, than the seedlings from plants which
+were moderately or fully self-fertile, and therefore apparently had no
+need to be crossed. But no such result followed in either case: for
+instance, the crossed and self-fertilised offspring from a highly
+self-fertile plant of Reseda odorata were in average height to each
+other as 100 to 82; whereas the similar offspring from an excessively
+self-sterile plant were as 100 to 92 in average height.
+
+With respect to the innate fertility of the plants of crossed and
+self-fertilised parentage, given in the previous Table 9/D--that is, the
+number of seeds produced by both lots when their flowers were fertilised
+in the same manner,--nearly the same remarks are applicable, in
+reference to the absence of any close correspondence between their
+fertility and powers of growth, as in the case of the plants in the
+Tables 9/F and 9/G, just considered. Thus the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of Ipomoea, Papaver, Reseda odorata, and
+Limnanthes were almost equally fertile, yet the former exceeded
+considerably in height the self-fertilised plants. On the other hand,
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants of Mimulus and Primula differed
+to an extreme degree in innate fertility, but by no means to a
+corresponding degree in height or vigour.
+
+In all the cases of self-fertilised flowers included in Tables 9/E, 9/F,
+and 9/G, these were fertilised with their own pollen; but there is
+another form of self-fertilisation, namely, by pollen from other flowers
+on the same plant; but this latter method made no difference in
+comparison with the former in the number of seeds produced, or only a
+slight difference. Neither with Digitalis nor Dianthus were more seeds
+produced by the one method than by the other, to any trustworthy degree.
+With Ipomoea rather more seeds, in the proportion of 100 to 91, were
+produced from a crossed between flowers on the same plant than from
+strictly self-fertilised flowers; but I have reason to suspect that the
+result was accidental. With Origanum vulgare, however, a cross between
+flowers on plants propagated by stolons from the same stock certainly
+increased slightly their fertility. This likewise occurred, as we shall
+see in the next section, with Eschscholtzia, perhaps with Corydalis cava
+and Oncidium; but not so with Bignonia, Abutilon, Tabernaemontana,
+Senecio, and apparently Reseda odorata.
+
+SELF-STERILE PLANTS.
+
+The cases here to be described might have been introduced in Table 9/F,
+which gives the relative fertility of flowers fertilised with their own
+pollen, and with that from a distinct plant, but it has been found more
+convenient to keep them for separate discussion. The present cases must
+not be confounded with those to be given in the next chapter relatively
+to flowers which are sterile when insects are excluded; for such
+sterility depends not merely on the flowers being incapable of
+fertilisation with their own pollen, but on mechanical causes, by which
+their pollen is prevented from reaching the stigma, or on the pollen and
+stigma of the same flower being matured at different periods.
+
+In the seventeenth chapter of my ‘Variation of Animals and Plants under
+Domestication’ I had occasion to enter fully on the present subject; and
+I will therefore here give only a brief abstract of the cases there
+described, but others must be added, as they have an important bearing
+on the present work. Kolreuter long ago described plants of Verbascum
+phoeniceum which during two years were sterile with their own pollen,
+but were easily fertilised by that of four other species; these plants
+however afterwards became more or less self-fertile in a strangely
+fluctuating manner. Mr. Scott also found that this species, as well as
+two of its varieties, were self-sterile, as did Gartner in the case of
+Verbascum nigrum. So it was, according to this latter author, with two
+plants of Lobelia fulgens, though the pollen and ovules of both were in
+an efficient state in relation to other species. Five species of
+Passiflora and certain individuals of a sixth species have been found
+sterile with their own pollen; but slight changes in their conditions,
+such as being grafted on another stock or a change of temperature,
+rendered them self-fertile. Flowers on a completely self-impotent plant
+of Passiflora alata fertilised with pollen from its own self-impotent
+seedlings were quite fertile. Mr. Scott, and afterwards Mr. Munro, found
+that some species of Oncidium and of Maxillaria cultivated in a hothouse
+in Edinburgh were quite sterile with their own pollen; and Fritz Muller
+found this to be the case with a large number of Orchidaceous genera
+growing in their native home of South Brazil. (9/2. ‘Botanische Zeitung’
+1868 page 114.) He also discovered that the pollen-masses of some
+orchids acted on their own stigmas like a poison; and it appears that
+Gartner formerly observed indications of this extraordinary fact in the
+case of some other plants.
+
+Fritz Muller also states that a species of Bignonia and Tabernaemontana
+echinata are both sterile with their own pollen in their native country
+of Brazil. (9/3. Ibid 1868 page 626 and 1870 page 274.) Several
+Amaryllidaceous and Liliaceous plants are in the same predicament.
+Hildebrand observed with care Corydalis cava, and found it completely
+self-sterile (9/4. ‘Report of the International Horticultural Congress’
+1866.); but according to Caspary a few self-fertilised seeds are
+occasionally produced: Corydalis halleri is only slightly self-sterile,
+and C. intermedia not at all so. (9/5. ‘Botanische Zeitung’ June 27,
+1873.) In another Fumariaceous genus, Hypecoum, Hildebrand observed that
+H. grandiflorum was highly self-sterile, whilst H. procumbens was fairly
+self-fertile. (9/6. ‘Jahrb. fur wiss. Botanik’ B. 7 page 464.)
+Thunbergia alata kept by me in a warm greenhouse was self-sterile early
+in the season, but at a later period produced many spontaneously
+self-fertilised fruits. So it was with Papaver vagum: another species,
+P. alpinum, was found by Professor H. Hoffmann to be quite self-sterile
+excepting on one occasion (9/7. ‘Zur Speciesfrage’ 1875 page 47.);
+whilst P. somniferum has been with me always completely self-sterile.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica.
+
+This species deserves a fuller consideration. A plant cultivated by
+Fritz Muller in South Brazil happened to flower a month before any of
+the others, and it did not produce a single capsule. This led him to
+make further observations during the next six generations, and he found
+that all his plants were completely sterile, unless they were crossed by
+insects or were artificially fertilised with pollen from a distinct
+plant, in which case they were completely fertile. (9/8. ‘Botanische
+Zeitung’ 1868 page 115 and 1869 page 223.) I was much surprised at this
+fact, as I had found that English plants, when covered by a net, set a
+considerable number of capsules; and that these contained seeds by
+weight, compared with those on plants intercrossed by the bees, as 71 to
+100. Professor Hildebrand, however, found this species much more
+self-sterile in Germany than it was with me in England, for the capsules
+produced by self-fertilised flowers, compared with those from
+intercrossed flowers, contained seeds in the ratio of only 11 to 100. At
+my request Fritz Muller sent me from Brazil seeds of his self-sterile
+plants, from which I raised seedlings. Two of these were covered with a
+net, and one produced spontaneously only a single capsule containing no
+good seeds, but yet, when artificially fertilised with its own pollen,
+produced a few capsules. The other plant produced spontaneously under
+the net eight capsules, one of which contained no less than thirty
+seeds, and on an average about ten seeds per capsule. Eight flowers on
+these two plants were artificially self-fertilised, and produced seven
+capsules, containing on an average twelve seeds; eight other flowers
+were fertilised with pollen from a distinct plant of the Brazilian
+stock, and produced eight capsules, containing on an average about
+eighty seeds: this gives a ratio of 15 seeds for the self-fertilised
+capsules to 100 for the crossed capsules. Later in the season twelve
+other flowers on these two plants were artificially self-fertilised; but
+they yielded only two capsules, containing three and six seeds. It
+appears therefore that a lower temperature than that of Brazil favours
+the self-fertility of this plant, whilst a still lower temperature
+lessens it. As soon as the two plants which had been covered by the net
+were uncovered, they were visited by many bees,and it was interesting to
+observe how quickly they became, even the more sterile plant of the two,
+covered with young capsules. On the following year eight flowers on
+plants of the Brazilian stock of self-fertilised parentage (i.e.,
+grandchildren of the plants which grew in Brazil) were again
+self-fertilised, and produced five capsules, containing on an average
+27.4 seeds, with a maximum in one of forty-two seeds; so that their
+self-fertility had evidently increased greatly by being reared for two
+generations in England. On the whole we may conclude that plants of the
+Brazilian stock are much more self-fertile in this country than in
+Brazil, and less so than plants of the English stock in England; so that
+the plants of Brazilian parentage retained by inheritance some of their
+former sexual constitution. Conversely, seeds from English plants sent
+by me to Fritz Muller and grown in Brazil, were much more self-fertile
+than his plants which had been cultivated there for several generations;
+but he informs me that one of the plants of English parentage which did
+not flower the first year, and was thus exposed for two seasons to the
+climate of Brazil, proved quite self-sterile, like a Brazilian plant,
+showing how quickly the climate had acted on its sexual constitution.
+
+Abutilon darwinii.
+
+Seeds of this plant were sent me by Fritz Muller, who found it, as well
+as some other species of the same genus, quite sterile in its native
+home of South Brazil, unless fertilised with pollen from a distinct
+plant, either artificially or naturally by humming-birds. (9/9.
+‘Jenaische Zeitschr. fur Naturwiss’ B. 7 1872 page 22 and 1873 page
+441.) Several plants were raised from these seeds and kept in the
+hothouse. They produced flowers very early in the spring, and twenty of
+them were fertilised, some with pollen from the same flower, and some
+with pollen from other flowers on the same plants; but not a single
+capsule was thus produced, yet the stigmas twenty-seven hours after the
+application of the pollen were penetrated by the pollen-tubes. At the
+same time nineteen flowers were crossed with pollen from a distinct
+plant, and these produced thirteen capsules, all abounding with fine
+seeds. A greater number of capsules would have been produced by the
+cross, had not some of the nineteen flowers been on a plant which was
+afterwards proved to be from some unknown cause completely sterile with
+pollen of any kind. Thus far these plants behaved exactly like those in
+Brazil; but later in the season, in the latter part of May and in June,
+they began to produce under a net a few spontaneously self-fertilised
+capsules. As soon as this occurred, sixteen flowers were fertilised with
+their own pollen, and these produced five capsules, containing on an
+average 3.4 seeds. At the same time I selected by chance four capsules
+from the uncovered plants growing close by, the flowers of which I had
+seen visited by humble-bees, and these contained on an average 21.5
+seeds; so that the seeds in the naturally intercrossed capsules to those
+in the self-fertilised capsules were as 100 to 16. The interesting point
+in this case is that these plants, which were unnaturally treated by
+being grown in pots in a hothouse, under another hemisphere, with a
+complete reversal of the seasons, were thus rendered slightly
+self-fertile, whereas they seem always to be completely self-sterile in
+their native home.
+
+Senecio cruentus (greenhouse varieties, commonly called Cinerarias,
+probably derived from several fruticose or herbaceous species much
+intercrossed (9/10. I am much obliged to Mr. Moore and to Mr. Thiselton
+Dyer for giving me information with respect to the varieties on which I
+experimented. Mr. Moore believes that Senecio cruentas, tussilaginis,
+and perhaps heritieri, maderensis and populifolius have all been more or
+less blended together in our Cinerarias.))
+
+Two purple-flowered varieties were placed under a net in the greenhouse,
+and four corymbs on each were repeatedly brushed with flowers from the
+other plant, so that their stigmas were well covered with each other’s
+pollen. Two of the eight corymbs thus treated produced very few seeds,
+but the other six produced on an average 41.3 seeds per corymb, and
+these germinated well. The stigmas on four other corymbs on both plants
+were well smeared with pollen from the flowers on their own corymbs;
+these eight corymbs produced altogether ten extremely poor seeds, which
+proved incapable of germinating. I examined many flowers on both plants,
+and found the stigmas spontaneously covered with pollen; but they
+produced not a single seed. These plants were afterwards left uncovered
+in the same house where many other Cinerarias were in flower; and the
+flowers were frequently visited by bees. They then produced plenty of
+seed, but one of the two plants less than the other, as this species
+shows some tendency to be dioecious.
+
+The trial was repeated on another variety with white petals tipped with
+red. Many stigmas on two corymbs were covered with pollen from the
+foregoing purple variety, and these produced eleven and twenty-two
+seeds, which germinated well. A large number of the stigmas on several
+of the other corymbs were repeatedly smeared with pollen from their own
+corymb; but they yielded only five very poor seeds, which were incapable
+of germination. Therefore the above three plants belonging to two
+varieties, though growing vigorously and fertile with pollen from either
+of the other two plants, were utterly sterile with pollen from other
+flowers on the same plant.
+
+Reseda odorata.
+
+Having observed that certain individuals were self-sterile, I covered
+during the summer of 1868 seven plants under separate nets, and will
+call these plants A, B, C, D, E, F, G. They all appeared to be quite
+sterile with their own pollen, but fertile with that of any other plant.
+
+Fourteen flowers on A were crossed with pollen from B or C, and produced
+thirteen fine capsules. Sixteen flowers were fertilised with pollen from
+other flowers on the same plant, but yielded not a single capsule.
+
+Fourteen flowers on B were crossed with pollen from A, C or D, and all
+produced capsules; some of these were not very fine, yet they contained
+plenty of seeds. Eighteen flowers were fertilised with pollen from other
+flowers on the same plant, and produced not one capsule.
+
+Ten flowers on C were crossed with pollen from A, B, D or E, and
+produced nine fine capsules. Nineteen flowers were fertilised with
+pollen from other flowers on the same plant, and produced no capsules.
+
+Ten flowers on D were crossed with pollen from A, B, C or E, and
+produced nine fine capsules. Eighteen flowers were fertilised with
+pollen from other flowers on the same plant, and produced no capsules.
+
+Seven flowers on E were crossed with pollen from A, C, or D, and all
+produced fine capsules. Eight flowers were fertilised with pollen from
+other flowers on the same plant, and produced no capsules.
+
+On the plants F and G no flowers were crossed, but very many (number not
+recorded) were fertilised with pollen from other flowers on the same
+plants, and these did not produce a single capsule.
+
+We thus see that fifty-five flowers on five of the above plants were
+reciprocally crossed in various ways; several flowers on each of these
+plants being fertilised with pollen from several of the other plants.
+These fifty-five flowers produced fifty-two capsules, almost all of
+which were of full size and contained an abundance of seeds. On the
+other hand, seventy-nine flowers (besides many others not recorded) were
+fertilised with pollen from other flowers on the same plants, and these
+did not produce a single capsule. In one case in which I examined the
+stigmas of the flowers fertilised with their own pollen, these were
+penetrated by the pollen-tubes, although such penetration produced no
+effect. Pollen falls generally, and I believe always, from the anthers
+on the stigmas of the same flower; yet only three out of the above seven
+protected plants produced spontaneously any capsules, and these it might
+have been thought must have been self-fertilised. There were altogether
+seven such capsules; but as they were all seated close to the
+artificially crossed flowers, I can hardly doubt that a few grains of
+foreign pollen had accidentally fallen on their stigmas. Besides the
+above seven plants, four others were kept covered under the SAME large
+net; and some of these produced here and there in the most capricious
+manner little groups of capsules; and this makes me believe that a bee,
+many of which settled on the outside of the net, being attracted by the
+odour, had on some one occasion found an entrance, and had intercrossed
+a few of the flowers.
+
+In the spring of 1869 four plants raised from fresh seeds were carefully
+protected under separate nets; and now the result was widely different
+to what it was before. Three of these protected plants became actually
+loaded with capsules, especially during the early part of the summer;
+and this fact indicates that temperature produces some effect, but the
+experiment given in the following paragraph shows that the innate
+constitution of the plant is a far more important element. The fourth
+plant produced only a few capsules, many of them of small size; yet it
+was far more self-fertile than any of the seven plants tried during the
+previous year. The flowers on four small branches of this
+semi-self-sterile plant were smeared with pollen from one of the other
+plants, and they all produced fine capsules.
+
+As I was much surprised at the difference in the results of the trials
+made during the two previous years, six fresh plants were protected by
+separate nets in the year 1870. Two of these proved almost completely
+self-sterile, for on carefully searching them I found only three small
+capsules, each containing either one or two seeds of small size, which,
+however, germinated. A few flowers on both these plants were
+reciprocally fertilised with each other’s pollen, and a few with pollen
+from one of the following self-fertile plants, and all these flowers
+produced fine capsules. The four other plants whilst still remaining
+protected beneath the nets presented a wonderful contrast (though one of
+them in a somewhat less degree than the others), for they became
+actually covered with spontaneously self-fertilised capsules, as
+numerous as, or very nearly so, and as fine as those on the unprotected
+plants growing near.
+
+The above three spontaneously self-fertilised capsules produced by the
+two almost completely self-sterile plants, contained altogether five
+seeds; and from these I raised in the following year (1871) five plants,
+which were kept under separate nets. They grew to an extraordinarily
+large size, and on August 29th were examined. At first sight they
+appeared entirely destitute of capsules; but on carefully searching
+their many branches, two or three capsules were found on three of the
+plants, half-a-dozen on the fourth, and about eighteen on the fifth
+plant. But all these capsules were small, some being empty; the greater
+number contained only a single seed, and very rarely more than one.
+After this examination the nets were taken off, and the bees immediately
+carried pollen from one of these almost self-sterile plants to the
+other, for no other plants grew near. After a few weeks the ends of the
+branches on all five plants became covered with capsules, presenting a
+curious contrast with the lower and naked parts of the same long
+branches. These five plants therefore inherited almost exactly the same
+sexual constitution as their parents; and without doubt a self-sterile
+race of Mignonette could have been easily established.
+
+Reseda lutea.
+
+Plants of this species were raised from seeds gathered from a group of
+wild plants growing at no great distance from my garden. After casually
+observing that some of these plants were self-sterile, two plants taken
+by hazard were protected under separate nets. One of these soon became
+covered with spontaneously self-fertilised capsules, as numerous as
+those on the surrounding unprotected plants; so that it was evidently
+quite self-fertile. The other plant was partially self-sterile,
+producing very few capsules, many of which were of small size. When,
+however, this plant had grown tall, the uppermost branches became
+pressed against the net and grew crooked, and in this position the bees
+were able to suck the flowers through the meshes, and brought pollen to
+them from the neighbouring plants. These branches then became loaded
+with capsules; the other and lower branches remaining almost bare. The
+sexual constitution of this species is therefore similar to that of
+Reseda odorata.
+
+CONCLUDING REMARKS ON SELF-STERILE PLANTS.
+
+In order to favour as far as possible the self-fertilisation of some of
+the foregoing plants, all the flowers on Reseda odorata and some of
+those on the Abutilon were fertilised with pollen from other flowers on
+the same plant, instead of with their own pollen, and in the case of the
+Senecio with pollen from other flowers on the same corymb; but this made
+no difference in the result. Fritz Muller tried both kinds of
+self-fertilisation in the case of Bignonia, Tabernaemontana and
+Abutilon, likewise with no difference in the result. With Eschscholtzia,
+however, he found that pollen from other flowers on the same plant was a
+little more effective than pollen from the same flower. So did
+Hildebrand in Germany; as thirteen out of fourteen flowers of
+Eschscholtzia thus fertilised set capsules, these containing on an
+average 9.5 seeds; whereas only fourteen flowers out of twenty-one
+fertilised with their own pollen set capsules, these containing on an
+average 9.0 seeds. (9/11. ‘Pringsheim’s Jahrbuch fur wiss. Botanik’ 7
+page 467.) Hildebrand found a trace of a similar difference with
+Corydalis cava, as did Fritz Muller with an Oncidium. (9/12. ‘Variation
+under Domestication’ chapter 17 2nd edition volume 2 pages 113-115.)
+
+In considering the several cases above given of complete or almost
+complete self-sterility, we are first struck with their wide
+distribution throughout the vegetable kingdom. Their number is not at
+present large, for they can be discovered only by protecting plants from
+insects and then fertilising them with pollen from another plant of the
+same species and with their own pollen; and the latter must be proved to
+be in an efficient state by other trials. Unless all this be done, it is
+impossible to know whether their self-sterility may not be due to the
+male or female reproductive organs, or to both, having been affected by
+changed conditions of life. As in the course of my experiments I have
+found three new cases, and as Fritz Muller has observed indications of
+several others, it is probable that they will hereafter be proved to be
+far from rare. (9/13. Mr. Wilder, the editor of a horticultural journal
+in the United States quoted in ‘Gardeners’ Chronicle’ 1868 page 1286,
+states that Lilium auratum, Impatiens pallida and fulva, and Forsythia
+viridissima, cannot be fertilised with their own pollen.)
+
+As with plants of the same species and parentage, some individuals are
+self-sterile and others self-fertile, of which fact Reseda odorata
+offers the most striking instances, it is not at all surprising that
+species of the same genus differ in this same manner. Thus Verbascum
+phoeniceum and nigrum are self-sterile, whilst V. thapsus and lychnitis
+are quite self-fertile, as I know by trial. There is the same difference
+between some of the species of Papaver, Corydalis, and of other genera.
+Nevertheless, the tendency to self-sterility certainly runs to a certain
+extent in groups, as we see in the genus Passiflora, and with the
+Vandeae amongst Orchids.
+
+Self-sterility differs much in degree in different plants. In those
+extraordinary cases in which pollen from the same flower acts on the
+stigma like a poison, it is almost certain that the plants would never
+yield a single self-fertilised seed. Other plants, like Corydalis cava,
+occasionally, though very rarely, produce a few self-fertilised seeds. A
+large number of species, as may be seen in Table 9/F, are less fertile
+with their own pollen than with that from another plant; and lastly,
+some species are perfectly self-fertile. Even with the individuals of
+the same species, as just remarked, some are utterly self-sterile,
+others moderately so, and some perfectly self-fertile. The cause,
+whatever it may be, which renders many plants more or less sterile with
+their own pollen, that is, when they are self-fertilised, must be
+different, at least to a certain extent, from that which determines the
+difference in height, vigour, and fertility of the seedlings raised from
+self-fertilised and crossed seeds; for we have already seen that the two
+classes of cases do not by any means run parallel. This want of
+parallelism would be intelligible, if it could be shown that
+self-sterility depended solely on the incapacity of the pollen-tubes to
+penetrate the stigma of the same flower deeply enough to reach the
+ovules; whilst the greater or less vigorous growth of the seedlings no
+doubt depends on the nature of the contents of the pollen-grains and
+ovules. Now it is certain that with some plants the stigmatic secretion
+does not properly excite the pollen-grains, so that the tubes are not
+properly developed, if the pollen is taken from the same flower. This is
+the case according to Fritz Muller with Eschscholtzia, for he found that
+the pollen-tubes did not penetrate the stigma deeply; and with the
+Orchidaceous genus Notylia they failed altogether to penetrate it.
+(9/14. ‘Botanische Zeitung’ 1868 pages 114, 115.)
+
+With dimorphic and trimorphic species, an illegitimate union between
+plants of the same form presents the closest analogy with
+self-fertilisation, whilst a legitimate union closely resembles
+cross-fertilisation; and here again the lessened fertility or complete
+sterility of an illegitimate union depends, at least in part, on the
+incapacity for interaction between the pollen-grains and stigma. Thus
+with Linum grandiflorum, as I have elsewhere shown, not more than two or
+three out of hundreds of pollen-grains, either of the long-styled or
+short-styled form, when placed on the stigma of their own form, emit
+their tubes, and these do not penetrate deeply; nor does the stigma
+itself change colour, as occurs when it is legitimately fertilised.
+(9/15. ‘Journal of the Linnean Society Botany’ volume 7 1863 pages
+73-75.)
+
+On the other hand the difference in innate fertility, as well as in
+growth between plants raised from crossed and self-fertilised seeds, and
+the difference in fertility and growth between the legitimate and
+illegitimate offspring of dimorphic and trimorphic plants, must depend
+on some incompatibility between the sexual elements contained within the
+pollen-grains and ovules, as it is through their union that new
+organisms are developed.
+
+If we now turn to the more immediate cause of self-sterility, we clearly
+see that in most cases it is determined by the conditions to which the
+plants have been subjected. Thus Eschscholtzia is completely
+self-sterile in the hot climate of Brazil, but is perfectly fertile
+there with the pollen of any other individual. The offspring of
+Brazilian plants became in England in a single generation partially
+self-fertile, and still more so in the second generation. Conversely,
+the offspring of English plants, after growing for two seasons in
+Brazil, became in the first generation quite self-sterile. Again,
+Abutilon darwinii, which is self-sterile in its native home of Brazil,
+became moderately self-fertile in a single generation in an English
+hothouse. Some other plants are self-sterile during the early part of
+the year, and later in the season become self-fertile. Passiflora alata
+lost its self-sterility when grafted on another species. With Reseda,
+however, in which some individuals of the same parentage are
+self-sterile and others are self-fertile, we are forced in our ignorance
+to speak of the cause as due to spontaneous variability; but we should
+remember that the progenitors of these plants, either on the male or
+female side, may have been exposed to somewhat different conditions. The
+power of the environment thus to affect so readily and in so peculiar a
+manner the reproductive organs, is a fact which has many important
+bearings; and I have therefore thought the foregoing details worth
+giving. For instance, the sterility of many animals and plants under
+changed conditions of life, such as confinement, evidently comes within
+the same general principle of the sexual system being easily affected by
+the environment. It has already been proved, that a cross between plants
+which have been self-fertilised or intercrossed during several
+generations, having been kept all the time under closely similar
+conditions, does not benefit the offspring; and on the other hand, that
+a cross between plants that have been subjected to different conditions
+benefits the offspring to an extraordinary degree. We may therefore
+conclude that some degree of differentiation in the sexual system is
+necessary for the full fertility of the parent-plants and for the full
+vigour of their offspring. It seems also probable that with those plants
+which are capable of complete self-fertilisation, the male and female
+elements and organs already differ to an extent sufficient to excite
+their mutual interaction; but that when such plants are taken to another
+country, and become in consequence self-sterile, their sexual elements
+and organs are so acted on as to be rendered too uniform for such
+interaction, like those of a self-fertilised plant long cultivated under
+the same conditions. Conversely, we may further infer that plants which
+are self-sterile in their native country, but become self-fertile under
+changed conditions, have their sexual elements so acted on, that they
+become sufficiently differentiated for mutual interaction.
+
+We know that self-fertilised seedlings are inferior in many respects to
+those from a cross; and as with plants in a state of nature pollen from
+the same flower can hardly fail to be often left by insects or by the
+wind on the stigma, it seems at first sight highly probable that
+self-sterility has been gradually acquired through natural selection in
+order to prevent self-fertilisation. It is no valid objection to this
+belief that the structure of some flowers, and the dichogamous condition
+of many others, suffice to prevent the pollen reaching the stigma of the
+same flower; for we should remember that with most species many flowers
+expand at the same time, and that pollen from the same plant is equally
+injurious or nearly so as that from the same flower. Nevertheless, the
+belief that self-sterility is a quality which has been gradually
+acquired for the special purpose of preventing self-fertilisation must,
+I believe, be rejected. In the first place, there is no close
+correspondence in degree between the sterility of the parent-plants when
+self-fertilised, and the extent to which their offspring suffer in
+vigour by this process; and some such correspondence might have been
+expected if self-sterility had been acquired on account of the injury
+caused by self-fertilisation. The fact of individuals of the same
+parentage differing greatly in their degree of self-sterility is
+likewise opposed to such a belief; unless, indeed, we suppose that
+certain individuals have been rendered self-sterile to favour
+intercrossing, whilst other individuals have been rendered self-fertile
+to ensure the propagation of the species. The fact of self-sterile
+individuals appearing only occasionally, as in the case of Lobelia, does
+not countenance this latter view. But the strongest argument against the
+belief that self-sterility has been acquired to prevent
+self-fertilisation, is the immediate and powerful effect of changed
+conditions in either causing or in removing self-sterility. We are not
+therefore justified in admitting that this peculiar state of the
+reproductive system has been gradually acquired through natural
+selection; but we must look at it as an incidental result, dependent on
+the conditions to which the plants have been subjected, like the
+ordinary sterility caused in the case of animals by confinement, and in
+the case of plants by too much manure, heat, etc. I do not, however,
+wish to maintain that self-sterility may not sometimes be of service to
+a plant in preventing self-fertilisation; but there are so many other
+means by which this result might be prevented or rendered difficult,
+including as we shall see in the next chapter the prepotency of pollen
+from a distinct individual over a plant’s own pollen, that
+self-sterility seems an almost superfluous acquirement for this purpose.
+
+Finally, the most interesting point in regard to self-sterile plants is
+the evidence which they afford of the advantage, or rather of the
+necessity, of some degree or kind of differentiation in the sexual
+elements, in order that they should unite and give birth to a new being.
+It was ascertained that the five plants of Reseda odorata which were
+selected by chance, could be perfectly fertilised by pollen taken from
+any one of them, but not by their own pollen; and a few additional
+trials were made with some other individuals, which I have not thought
+worth recording. So again, Hildebrand and Fritz Muller frequently speak
+of self-sterile plants being fertile with the pollen of any other
+individual; and if there had been any exceptions to the rule, these
+could hardly have escaped their observation and my own. We may therefore
+confidently assert that a self-sterile plant can be fertilised by the
+pollen of any one out of a thousand or ten thousand individuals of the
+same species, but not by its own. Now it is obviously impossible that
+the sexual organs and elements of every individual can have been
+specialised with respect to every other individual. But there is no
+difficulty in believing that the sexual elements of each differ slightly
+in the same diversified manner as do their external characters; and it
+has often been remarked that no two individuals are absolutely alike.
+Therefore we can hardly avoid the conclusion, that differences of an
+analogous and indefinite nature in the reproductive system are
+sufficient to excite the mutual action of the sexual elements, and that
+unless there be such differentiation fertility fails.
+
+THE APPEARANCE OF HIGHLY SELF-FERTILE VARIETIES.
+
+We have just seen that the degree to which flowers are capable of being
+fertilised with their own pollen differs much, both with the species of
+the same genus, and sometimes with the individuals of the same species.
+Some allied cases of the appearance of varieties which, when
+self-fertilised, yield more seed and produce offspring growing taller
+than their self-fertilised parents, or than the intercrossed plants of
+the corresponding generation, will now be considered.
+
+Firstly, in the third and fourth generations of Mimulus luteus, a tall
+variety, often alluded to, having large white flowers blotched with
+crimson, appeared amongst both the intercrossed and self-fertilised
+plants. It prevailed in all the later self-fertilised generations to the
+exclusion of every other variety, and transmitted its characters
+faithfully, but disappeared from the intercrossed plants, owing no doubt
+to their characters being repeatedly blended by crossing. The
+self-fertilised plants belonging to this variety were not only taller,
+but more fertile than the intercrossed plants; though these latter in
+the earlier generations were much taller and more fertile than the
+self-fertilised plants. Thus in the fifth generation the self-fertilised
+plants were to the intercrossed in height as 126 to 100. In the sixth
+generation they were likewise much taller and finer plants, but were not
+actually measured; they produced capsules compared with those on the
+intercrossed plants, in number, as 147 to 100; and the self-fertilised
+capsules contained a greater number of seeds. In the seventh generation
+the self-fertilised plants were to the crossed in height as 137 to 100;
+and twenty flowers on these self-fertilised plants fertilised with their
+own pollen yielded nineteen very fine capsules,--a degree of
+self-sterility which I have not seen equalled in any other case. This
+variety seems to have become specially adapted to profit in every way by
+self-fertilisation, although this process was so injurious to the
+parent-plants during the first four generations. It should however be
+remembered that seedlings raised from this variety, when crossed by a
+fresh stock, were wonderfully superior in height and fertility to the
+self-fertilised plants of the corresponding generation.
+
+Secondly, in the sixth self-fertilised generation of Ipomoea a single
+plant named the Hero appeared, which exceeded by a little in height its
+intercrossed opponent,--a case which had not occurred in any previous
+generation. Hero transmitted the peculiar colour of its flowers, as well
+as its increased tallness and a high degree of self-fertility, to its
+children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren. The self-fertilised
+children of Hero were in height to other self-fertilised plants of the
+same stock as 100 to 85. Ten self-fertilised capsules produced by the
+grandchildren contained on an average 5.2 seeds; and this is a higher
+average than was yielded in any other generation by the capsules of
+self-fertilised flowers. The great-grandchildren of Hero derived from a
+cross with a fresh stock were so unhealthy, from having been grown at an
+unfavourable season, that their average height in comparison with that
+of the self-fertilised plants cannot be judged of with any safety; but
+it did not appear that they had profited even by a cross of this kind.
+
+Thirdly, the plants of Nicotiana on which I experimented appear to come
+under the present class of cases; for they varied in their sexual
+constitution and were more or less highly self-fertile. They were
+probably the offspring of plants which had been spontaneously
+self-fertilised under glass for several generations in this country. The
+flowers on the parent-plants which were first fertilised by me with
+their own pollen yielded half again as many seeds as did those which
+were crossed; and the seedlings raised from these self-fertilised seeds
+exceeded in height those raised from the crossed seeds to an
+extraordinary degree. In the second and third generations, although the
+self-fertilised plants did not exceed the crossed in height, yet their
+self-fertilised flowers yielded on two occasions considerably more seeds
+than the crossed flowers, even than those which were crossed with pollen
+from a distinct stock or variety.
+
+Lastly, as certain individual plants of Reseda odorata and lutea are
+incomparably more self-fertile than other individuals, the former might
+be included under the present heading of the appearance of new and
+highly self-fertile varieties. But in this case we should have to look
+at these two species as normally self-sterile; and this, judging by my
+experience, appears to be the correct view.
+
+We may therefore conclude from the facts now given, that varieties
+sometimes arise which when self-fertilised possess an increased power of
+producing seeds and of growing to a greater height, than the
+intercrossed or self-fertilised plants of the corresponding
+generation--all the plants being of course subjected to the same
+conditions. The appearance of such varieties is interesting, as it bears
+on the existence under nature of plants which regularly fertilise
+themselves, such as Ophrys apifera and a few other orchids, or as
+Leersia oryzoides, which produces an abundance of cleistogene flowers,
+but most rarely flowers capable of cross-fertilisation.
+
+Some observations made on other plants lead me to suspect that
+self-fertilisation is in some respects beneficial; although the benefit
+thus derived is as a rule very small compared with that from a cross
+with a distinct plant. Thus we have seen in the last chapter that
+seedlings of Ipomoea and Mimulus raised from flowers fertilised with
+their own pollen, which is the strictest possible form of
+self-fertilisation, were superior in height, weight, and in early
+flowering to the seedlings raised from flowers crossed with pollen from
+other flowers on the same plant; and this superiority apparently was too
+strongly marked to be accidental. Again, the cultivated varieties of the
+common pea are highly self-fertile, although they have been
+self-fertilised for many generations; and they exceeded in height
+seedlings from a cross between two plants belonging to the same variety
+in the ratio of 115 to 100; but then only four pairs of plants were
+measured and compared. The self-fertility of Primula veris increased
+after several generations of illegitimate fertilisation, which is a
+process closely analogous to self-fertilisation, but only as long as the
+plants were cultivated under the same favourable conditions. I have also
+elsewhere shown that with Primula veris and sinensis, equal-styled
+varieties occasionally appear which possess the sexual organs of the two
+forms combined in the same flower. (9/16. ‘Journal of the Linnean
+Society Botany’ volume 10 1867 pages 417, 419.) Consequently they
+fertilise themselves in a legitimate manner and are highly self-fertile;
+but the remarkable fact is that they are rather more fertile than
+ordinary plants of the same species legitimately fertilised by pollen
+from a distinct individual. Formerly it appeared to me probable, that
+the increased fertility of these dimorphic plants might be accounted for
+by the stigma lying so close to the anthers that it was impregnated at
+the most favourable age and time of the day; but this explanation is not
+applicable to the above given cases, in which the flowers were
+artificially fertilised with their own pollen.
+
+Considering the facts now adduced, including the appearance of those
+varieties which are more fertile and taller than their parents and than
+the intercrossed plants of the corresponding generation, it is difficult
+to avoid the suspicion that self-fertilisation is in some respects
+advantageous; though if this be really the case, any such advantage is
+as a rule quite insignificant compared with that from a cross with a
+distinct plant, and especially with one of a fresh stock. Should this
+suspicion be hereafter verified, it would throw light, as we shall see
+in the next chapter, on the existence of plants bearing small and
+inconspicuous flowers which are rarely visited by insects, and therefore
+are rarely intercrossed.
+
+RELATIVE WEIGHT AND PERIOD OF GERMINATION OF SEEDS FROM CROSSED AND
+SELF-FERTILISED FLOWERS.
+
+An equal number of seeds from flowers fertilised with pollen from
+another plant, and from flowers fertilised with their own pollen, were
+weighed, but only in sixteen cases. Their relative weights are given in
+the following list; that of the seeds from the crossed flowers being
+taken as 100.
+
+Column 1: Name of Plant.
+
+Column 2: x, in the expression, 100 to x.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea (parent plants): 127.
+Ipomoea purpurea (third generation): 87.
+Salvia coccinea: 100.
+Brassica oleracea: 103.
+Iberis umbellata (second generation): 136.
+Delphinium consolida: 45.
+Hibiscus africanus: 105.
+Tropaeolum minus: 115.
+Lathyrus odoratus (about): 100.
+Sarothamnus scoparius: 88.
+Specularia speculum: 86.
+Nemophila insignis: 105.
+Borago officinalis: 111.
+Cyclamen persicum (about): 50.
+Fagopyrum esculentum: 82.
+Canna warscewiczi (3 generations): 102.
+
+It is remarkable that in ten out of these sixteen cases the
+self-fertilised seeds were either superior or equal to the crossed in
+weight; nevertheless, in six out of the ten cases (namely, with Ipomoea,
+Salvia, Brassica, Tropaeolum, Lathyrus, and Nemophila) the plants raised
+from these self-fertilised seeds were very inferior in height and in
+other respects to those raised from the crossed seeds. The superiority
+in weight of the self-fertilised seeds in at least six out of the ten
+cases, namely, with Brassica, Hibiscus, Tropaeolum, Nemophila, Borago,
+and Canna, may be accounted for in part by the self-fertilised capsules
+containing fewer seeds; for when a capsule contains only a few seeds,
+these will be apt to be better nourished, so as to be heavier, than when
+many are contained in the same capsule. It should, however, be observed
+that in some of the above cases, in which the crossed seeds were the
+heaviest, as with Sarothamnus and Cyclamen, the crossed capsules
+contained a larger number of seeds. Whatever may be the explanation of
+the self-fertilised seeds being often the heaviest, it is remarkable in
+the case of Brassica, Tropaeolum, Nemophila, and of the first generation
+of Ipomoea, that the seedlings raised from them were inferior in height
+and in other respects to the seedlings raised from the crossed seeds.
+This fact shows how superior in constitutional vigour the crossed
+seedlings must have been, for it cannot be doubted that heavy and fine
+seeds tend to yield the finest plants. Mr. Galton has shown that this
+holds good with Lathyrus odoratus; as has Mr. A.J. Wilson with the
+Swedish turnip, Brassica campestris ruta baga. Mr. Wilson separated the
+largest and smallest seeds of this latter plant, the ratio between the
+weights of the two lots being as 100 to 59, and he found that the
+seedlings “from the larger seeds took the lead and maintained their
+superiority to the last, both in height and thickness of stem.” (9/17.
+‘Gardeners’ Chronicle’ 1867 page 107. Loiseleur-Deslongchamp ‘Les
+Cereales’ 1842 pages 208-219, was led by his observations to the
+extraordinary conclusion that the smaller grains of cereals produce as
+fine plants as the large. This conclusion is, however, contradicted by
+Major Hallet’s great success in improving wheat by the selection of the
+finest grains. It is possible, however, that man, by long-continued
+selection, may have given to the grains of the cereals a greater amount
+of starch or other matter, than the seedlings can utilise for their
+growth. There can be little doubt, as Humboldt long ago remarked, that
+the grains of cereals have been rendered attractive to birds in a degree
+which is highly injurious to the species.) Nor can this difference in
+the growth of the seedling turnips be attributed to the heavier seeds
+having been of crossed, and the lighter of self-fertilised origin, for
+it is known that plants belonging to this genus are habitually
+intercrossed by insects.
+
+With respect to the relative period of germination of crossed and
+self-fertilised seeds, a record was kept in only twenty-one cases; and
+the results are very perplexing. Neglecting one case in which the two
+lots germinated simultaneously, in ten cases or exactly one-half many of
+the self-fertilised seeds germinated before the crossed, and in the
+other half many of the crossed before the self-fertilised. In four out
+of these twenty cases, seeds derived from a cross with a fresh stock
+were compared with self-fertilised seeds from one of the later
+self-fertilised generations; and here again in half the cases the
+crossed seeds, and in the other half the self-fertilised seeds,
+germinated first. Yet the seedlings of Mimulus raised from such
+self-fertilised seeds were inferior in all respects to the crossed
+seedlings, and in the case of Eschscholtzia they were inferior in
+fertility. Unfortunately the relative weight of the two lots of seeds
+was ascertained in only a few instances in which their germination was
+observed; but with Ipomoea and I believe with some of the other species,
+the relative lightness of the self-fertilised seeds apparently
+determined their early germination, probably owing to the smaller mass
+being favourable to the more rapid completion of the chemical and
+morphological changes necessary for germination. On the other hand, Mr.
+Galton gave me seeds (no doubt all self-fertilised) of Lathyrus
+odoratus, which were divided into two lots of heavier and lighter seeds;
+and several of the former germinated first. It is evident that many more
+observations are necessary before anything can be decided with respect
+to the relative period of germination of crossed and self-fertilised
+seeds.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+MEANS OF FERTILISATION.
+
+Sterility and fertility of plants when insects are excluded.
+The means by which flowers are cross-fertilised.
+Structures favourable to self-fertilisation.
+Relation between the structure and conspicuousness of flowers, the
+visits of insects, and the advantages of cross-fertilisation.
+The means by which flowers are fertilised with pollen from a distinct
+plant.
+Greater fertilising power of such pollen.
+Anemophilous species.
+Conversion of anemophilous species into entomophilous.
+Origin of nectar.
+Anemophilous plants generally have their sexes separated.
+Conversion of diclinous into hermaphrodite flowers.
+Trees often have their sexes separated.
+
+In the introductory chapter I briefly specified the various means by
+which cross-fertilisation is favoured or ensured, namely, the separation
+of the sexes,--the maturity of the male and female sexual elements at
+different periods,--the heterostyled or dimorphic and trimorphic
+condition of certain plants,--many mechanical contrivances,--the more or
+less complete inefficiency of a flower’s own pollen on the stigma,--and
+the prepotency of pollen from any other individual over that from the
+same plant. Some of these points require further consideration; but for
+full details I must refer the reader to the several excellent works
+mentioned in the introduction. I will in the first place give two lists:
+the first, of plants which are either quite sterile or produce less than
+about half the full complement of seeds, when insects are excluded; and
+a second list of plants which, when thus treated, are fully fertile or
+produce at least half the full complement of seeds. These lists have
+been compiled from the several previous tables, with some additional
+cases from my own observations and those of others. The species are
+arranged nearly in the order followed by Lindley in his ‘Vegetable
+Kingdom.’ The reader should observe that the sterility or fertility of
+the plants in these two lists depends on two wholly distinct causes;
+namely, the absence or presence of the proper means by which pollen is
+applied to the stigma, and its less or greater efficiency when thus
+applied. As it is obvious that with plants in which the sexes are
+separate, pollen must be carried by some means from flower to flower,
+such species are excluded from the lists; as are likewise dimorphic and
+trimorphic plants, in which the same necessity occurs to a limited
+extent. Experience has proved to me that, independently of the exclusion
+of insects, the seed-bearing power of a plant is not lessened by
+covering it while in flower under a thin net supported on a frame; and
+this might indeed have been inferred from the consideration of the two
+following lists, as they include a considerable number of species
+belonging to the same genera, some of which are quite sterile and others
+quite fertile when protected by a net from the access of insects.
+
+[LIST OF PLANTS WHICH, WHEN INSECTS ARE EXCLUDED, ARE EITHER QUITE
+STERILE, OR PRODUCE, AS FAR AS I COULD JUDGE, LESS THAN HALF THE NUMBER
+OF SEEDS PRODUCED BY UNPROTECTED PLANTS.
+
+Passiflora alata, racemosa, coerulea, edulis, laurifolia, and some
+individuals of P. quadrangularis (Passifloraceae), are quite sterile
+under these conditions: see ‘Variation of Animals and Plants under
+Domestication’ chapter 17 2nd edition volume 2 page 118.
+
+Viola canina (Violaceae).--Perfect flowers quite sterile unless
+fertilised by bees, or artificially fertilised.
+
+Viola tricolor.--Sets very few and poor capsules.
+
+Reseda odorata (Resedaceae).--Some individuals quite sterile.
+
+Reseda lutea.--Some individuals produce very few and poor capsules.
+
+Abutilon darwinii (Malvaceae).--Quite sterile in Brazil: see previous
+discussion on self-sterile plants.
+
+Nymphaea (Nymphaeaceae).--Professor Caspary informs me that some of the
+species are quite sterile if insects are excluded.
+
+Euryale amazonica (Nymphaeaceae).--Mr. J. Smith, of Kew, informs me that
+capsules from flowers left to themselves, and probably not visited by
+insects, contained from eight to fifteen seeds; those from flowers
+artificially fertilised with pollen from other flowers on the same plant
+contained from fifteen to thirty seeds; and that two flowers fertilised
+with pollen brought from another plant at Chatsworth contained
+respectively sixty and seventy-five seeds. I have given these statements
+because Professor Caspary advances this plant as a case opposed to the
+doctrine of the necessity or advantage of cross-fertilisation: see
+Sitzungsberichte der Phys.-okon. Gesell.zu Konigsberg, B.6 page 20.)
+
+Delphinium consolida (Ranunculaceae).--Produces many capsules, but these
+contain only about half the number of seeds compared with capsules from
+flowers naturally fertilised by bees.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica (Papaveraceae).--Brazilian plants quite
+sterile: English plants produce a few capsules.
+
+Papaver vagum (Papaveraceae).--In the early part of the summer produced
+very few capsules, and these contained very few seeds.
+
+Papaver alpinum.--H. Hoffmann (‘Speciesfrage’ 1875 page 47) states that
+this species produced seeds capable of germination only on one occasion.
+
+Corydalis cava (Fumariaceae).--Sterile: see the previous discussion on
+self-sterile plants.
+
+Corydalis solida.--I had a single plant in my garden (1863), and saw
+many hive-bees sucking the flowers, but not a single seed was produced.
+I was much surprised at this fact, as Professor Hildebrand’s discovery
+that C. cava is sterile with its own pollen had not then been made. He
+likewise concludes from the few experiments which he made on the present
+species that it is self-sterile. The two foregoing cases are
+interesting, because botanists formerly thought (see, for instance,
+Lecoq, ‘De la Fecondation et de l’Hybridation’ 1845 page 61 and Lindley
+‘Vegetable Kingdom’ 1853 page 436) that all the species of the
+Fumariaceae were specially adapted for self-fertilisation.
+
+Corydalis lutea.--A covered-up plant produced (1861) exactly half as
+many capsules as an exposed plant of the same size growing close
+alongside. When humble-bees visit the flowers (and I repeatedly saw them
+thus acting) the lower petals suddenly spring downwards and the pistil
+upwards; this is due to the elasticity of the parts, which takes effect,
+as soon as the coherent edges of the hood are separated by the entrance
+of an insect. Unless insects visit the flowers the parts do not move.
+Nevertheless, many of the flowers on the plants which I had protected
+produced capsules, notwithstanding that their petals and pistils still
+retained their original position; and I found to my surprise that these
+capsules contained more seeds than those from flowers, the petals of
+which had been artificially separated and allowed to spring apart. Thus,
+nine capsules produced by undisturbed flowers contained fifty-three
+seeds; whilst nine capsules from flowers, the petals of which had been
+artificially separated, contained only thirty-two seeds. But we should
+remember that if bees had been permitted to visit these flowers, they
+would have visited them at the best time for fertilisation. The flowers,
+the petals of which had been artificially separated, set their capsules
+before those which were left undisturbed under the net. To show with
+what certainty the flowers are visited by bees, I may add that on one
+occasion all the flowers on some unprotected plants were examined, and
+every single one had its petals separated; and, on a second occasion,
+forty-one out of forty-three flowers were in this state. Hildebrand
+states (Pring. Jahr. f. wiss. Botanik, B. 7 page 450) that the mechanism
+of the parts in this species is nearly the same as in C. ochroleuca,
+which he has fully described.
+
+Hypecoum grandiflorum (Fumariaceae).--Highly self-sterile (Hildebrand,
+ibid.).
+
+Kalmia latifolia (Ericaceae).--Mr. W.J. Beal says (‘American Naturalist’
+1867) that flowers protected from insects wither and drop off, with
+“most of the anthers still remaining in the pockets.”
+
+Pelargonium zonale (Geraniaceae).--Almost sterile; one plant produced
+two fruits. It is probable that different varieties would differ in this
+respect, as some are only feebly dichogamous.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus (Caryophyllaceae).--Produces very few capsules
+which contain any good seeds.
+
+Phaseolus multiflorus (Leguminosae).--Plants protected from insects
+produced on two occasions about one-third and one-eighth of the full
+number of seeds: see my article in ‘Gardeners’ Chronicle’ 1857 page 225
+and 1858 page 828; also ‘Annals and Magazine of Natural History’ 3rd
+series volume 2 1858 page 462. Dr. Ogle (‘Popular Science Review’ 1870
+page 168) found that a plant was quite sterile when covered up. The
+flowers are not visited by insects in Nicaragua, and, according to Mr.
+Belt, the species is there quite sterile: ‘The Naturalist in Nicaragua’
+page 70.
+
+Vicia faba (Leguminosae).--Seventeen covered-up plants yielded 40 beans,
+whilst seventeen plants left unprotected and growing close alongside
+produced 135 beans; these latter plants were, therefore, between three
+and four times more fertile than the protected plants: see ‘Gardeners’
+Chronicle’ for fuller details, 1858 page 828.
+
+Erythrina (sp.?) (Leguminosae).--Sir W. MacArthur informed me that in
+New South Wales the flowers do not set, unless the petals are moved in
+the same manner as is done by insects.
+
+Lathyrus grandiflorus (Leguminosae).--Is in this country more or less
+sterile. It never sets pods unless the flowers are visited by
+humble-bees (and this happens only rarely), or unless they are
+artificially fertilised: see my article in ‘Gardeners’ Chronicle’ 1858
+page 828.
+
+Sarothamnus scoparius (Leguminosae).--Extremely sterile when the flowers
+are neither visited by bees, nor disturbed by being beaten by the wind
+against the surrounding net.
+
+Melilotus officinalis (Leguminosae).--An unprotected plant visited by
+bees produced at least thirty times more seeds than a protected one. On
+this latter plant many scores of racemes did not produce a single pod;
+several racemes produced each one or two pods; five produced three; six
+produced four; and one produced six pods. On the unprotected plant each
+of several racemes produced fifteen pods; nine produced between sixteen
+and twenty-two pods, and one produced thirty pods.
+
+Lotus corniculatus (Leguminosae).--Several covered-up plants produced
+only two empty pods, and not a single good seed.
+
+Trifolium repens (Leguminosae).--Several plants were protected from
+insects, and the seeds from ten flowers-heads on these plants, and from
+ten heads on other plants growing outside the net (which I saw visited
+by bees), were counted; and the seeds from the latter plants were very
+nearly ten times as numerous as those from the protected plants. The
+experiment was repeated on the following year; and twenty protected
+heads now yielded only a single aborted seed, whilst twenty heads on the
+plants outside the net (which I saw visited by bees) yielded 2290 seeds,
+as calculated by weighing all the seed, and counting the number in a
+weight of two grains.
+
+Trifolium pratense.--One hundred flower-heads on plants protected by a
+net did not produce a single seed, whilst 100 heads on plants growing
+outside, which were visited by bees, yielded 68 grains weight of seeds;
+and as eighty seeds weighed two grains, the 100 heads must have yielded
+2720 seeds. I have often watched this plant, and have never seen
+hive-bees sucking the flowers, except from the outside through holes
+bitten by humble-bees, or deep down between the flowers, as if in search
+of some secretion from the calyx, almost in the same manner as described
+by Mr. Farrer, in the case of Coronilla (‘Nature’ 1874 July 2 page 169).
+I must, however, except one occasion, when an adjoining field of
+sainfoin (Hedysarum onobrychis) had just been cut down, and when the
+bees seemed driven to desperation. On this occasion most of the flowers
+of the clover were somewhat withered, and contained an extraordinary
+quantity of nectar, which the bees were able to suck. An experienced
+apiarian, Mr. Miner, says that in the United States hive-bees never suck
+the red clover; and Mr. R. Colgate informs me that he has observed the
+same fact in New Zealand after the introduction of the hive-bee into
+that island. On the other hand, H. Muller (‘Befruchtung’ page 224) has
+often seen hive-bees visiting this plant in Germany, for the sake both
+of pollen and nectar, which latter they obtained by breaking apart the
+petals. It is at least certain that humble-bees are the chief
+fertilisers of the common red clover.
+
+Trifolium incarnatum.--The flower-heads containing ripe seeds, on some
+covered and uncovered plants, appeared equally fine, but this was a
+false appearance; 60 heads on the latter yielded 349 grains weight of
+seeds, whereas 60 on the covered-up plants yielded only 63 grains, and
+many of the seeds in the latter lot were poor and aborted. Therefore the
+flowers which were visited by bees produced between five and six times
+as many seeds as those which were protected. The covered-up plants not
+having been much exhausted by seed-bearing, bore a second considerable
+crop of flower-stems, whilst the exposed plants did not do so.
+
+Cytisus laburnum (Leguminosae).--Seven flower-racemes ready to expand
+were enclosed in a large bag made of net, and they did not seem in the
+least injured by this treatment. Only three of them produced any pods,
+each a single one; and these three pods contained one, four, and five
+seeds. So that only a single pod from the seven racemes included a fair
+complement of seeds.
+
+Cuphea purpurea (Lythraceae).--Produced no seeds. Other flowers on the
+same plant artificially fertilised under the net yielded seeds.
+
+Vinca major (Apocynaceae).--Is generally quite sterile, but sometimes
+sets seeds when artificially cross-fertilised: see my notice ‘Gardeners’
+Chronicle’ 1861 page 552.
+
+Vinca rosea.--Behaves in the same manner as the last species:
+‘Gardeners’ Chronicle’ 1861 page 699, 736, 831.
+
+Tabernaemontana echinata (Apocynaceae).--Quite sterile.
+
+Petunia violacea (Solanaceae).--Quite sterile, as far as I have
+observed.
+
+Solanum tuberosum (Solanaceae).--Tinzmann says (‘Gardeners’ Chronicle’
+1846 page 183) that some varieties are quite sterile unless fertilised
+by pollen from another variety.
+
+Primula scotica (Primulaceae).--A non-dimorphic species, which is
+fertile with its own pollen, but is extremely sterile if insects are
+excluded. J. Scott in ‘Journal of the Linnean Society Botany’ volume 8
+1864 page 119.
+
+Cortusa matthioli (Primulaceae).--Protected plants completely sterile;
+artificially self-fertilised flowers perfectly fertile. J. Scott ibid.
+page 84.
+
+Cyclamen persicum (Primulaceae).--During one season several covered-up
+plants did not produce a single seed.
+
+Borago officinalis (Boraginaceae).--Protected plants produced about half
+as many seeds as the unprotected.
+
+Salvia tenori (Labiatae).--Quite sterile; but two or three flowers on
+the summits of three of the spikes, which touched the net when the wind
+blew, produced a few seeds. This sterility was not due to the injurious
+effects of the net, for I fertilised five flowers with pollen from an
+adjoining plant, and these all yielded fine seeds. I removed the net,
+whilst one little branch still bore a few not completely faded flowers,
+and these were visited by bees and yielded seeds.
+
+Salvia coccinea.--Some covered-up plants produced a good many fruits,
+but not, I think, half as many as did the uncovered plants; twenty-eight
+of the fruits spontaneously produced by the protected plant contained on
+an average only 1.45 seeds, whilst some artificially self-fertilised
+fruits on the same plant contained more than twice as many, namely 3.3
+seeds.
+
+Bignonia (unnamed species) (Bignoniaceae).--Quite sterile: see my
+account of self-sterile plants.
+
+Digitalis purpurea (Scrophulariaceae).--Extremely sterile, only a few
+poor capsules being produced.
+
+Linaria vulgaris (Scrophulariaceae).--Extremely sterile.
+
+Antirrhinum majus, red var. (Scrophulariaceae).--Fifty pods gathered
+from a large plant under a net contained 9.8 grains weight of seeds; but
+many (unfortunately not counted) of the fifty pods contained no seeds.
+Fifty pods on a plant fully exposed to the visits of humble-bees
+contained 23.1 grains weight of seed, that is, more than twice the
+weight; but in this case again, several of the fifty pods contained no
+seeds.
+
+Antirrhinum majus (white var., with a pink mouth to the corolla).--Fifty
+pods, of which only a very few were empty, on a covered-up plant
+contained 20 grains weight of seed; so that this variety seems to be
+much more self-fertile than the previous one. With Dr. W. Ogle (‘Popular
+Science Review’ January 1870 page 52) a plant of this species was much
+more sterile when protected from insects than with me, for it produced
+only two small capsules. As showing the efficiency of bees, I may add
+that Mr. Crocker castrated some young flowers and left them uncovered;
+and these produced as many seeds as the unmutilated flowers.
+
+Antirrhinum majus (peloric var.).--This variety is quite fertile when
+artificially fertilised with its own pollen, but is utterly sterile when
+left to itself and uncovered, as humble-bees cannot crawl into the
+narrow tubular flowers.
+
+Verbascum phoeniceum (Scrophulariaceae).--Quite sterile. See my account
+of self-sterile plants.
+
+Verbascum nigrum.--Quite sterile. See my account of self-sterile plants.
+
+Campanula carpathica (Lobeliaceae).--Quite sterile.
+
+Lobelia ramosa (Lobeliaceae).--Quite sterile.
+
+Lobelia fulgens.--This plant is never visited in my garden by bees, and
+is quite sterile; but in a nursery-garden at a few miles’ distance I saw
+humble-bees visiting the flowers, and they produced some capsules.
+
+Isotoma (a white-flowered var.) (Lobeliaceae).--Five plants left
+unprotected in my greenhouse produced twenty-four fine capsules,
+containing altogether 12.2 grains weight of seed, and thirteen other
+very poor capsules, which were rejected. Five plants protected from
+insects, but otherwise exposed to the same conditions as the above
+plants, produced sixteen fine capsules, and twenty other very poor and
+rejected ones. The sixteen fine capsules contained seeds by weight in
+such proportion that twenty-four would have yielded 4.66 grains. So that
+the unprotected plants produced nearly thrice as many seeds by weight as
+the protected plants.
+
+Leschenaultia formosa (Goodeniaceae).--Quite sterile. My experiments on
+this plant, showing the necessity of insect aid, are given in the
+‘Gardeners’ Chronicle’ 1871 page 1166.
+
+Senecio cruentus (Compositae).--Quite sterile: see my account of
+self-sterile plants.
+
+Heterocentron mexicanum (Malastomaceae).--Quite sterile; but this
+species and the following members of the group produce plenty of seed
+when artificially self-fertilised.
+
+Rhexia glandulosa (Melastomaceae).--Set spontaneously only two or three
+capsules.
+
+Centradenia floribunda (Melastomaceae).--During some years produced
+spontaneously two or three capsules, sometimes none.
+
+Pleroma (unnamed species from Kew) (Melastomaceae).--During some years
+produced spontaneously two or three capsules, sometimes none.
+
+Monochaetum ensiferum (Melastomaceae).--During some years produced
+spontaneously two or three capsules, sometimes none.
+
+Hedychium (unnamed species) (Marantaceae).--Almost self-sterile without
+aid.
+
+Orchideae.--An immense proportion of the species sterile, if insects are
+excluded.
+
+LIST OF PLANTS, WHICH WHEN PROTECTED FROM INSECTS ARE EITHER QUITE
+FERTILE, OR YIELD MORE THAN HALF THE NUMBER OF SEEDS PRODUCED BY
+UNPROTECTED PLANTS.
+
+Passiflora gracilis (Passifloraceae).--Produces many fruits, but these
+contain fewer seeds than fruits from intercrossed flowers.
+
+Brassica oleracea (Cruciferae).--Produces many capsules, but these
+generally not so rich in seed as those on uncovered plants.
+
+Raphanus sativus (Cruciferae).--Half of a large branching plant was
+covered by a net, and was as thickly covered with capsules as the other
+and unprotected half; but twenty of the capsules on the latter contained
+on an average 3.5 seeds, whilst twenty of the protected capsules
+contained only 1.85 seeds, that is, only a little more than half the
+number. This plant might perhaps have been more properly included in the
+former list.
+
+Iberis umbellata (Cruciferae).--Highly fertile.
+
+Iberis amara.--Highly fertile.
+
+Reseda odorata and lutea (Resedaceae).--Certain individuals completely
+self-fertile.
+
+Euryale ferox (Nymphaeaceae).--Professor Caspary informs me that this
+plant is highly self-fertile when insects are excluded. He remarks in
+the paper before referred to, that his plants (as well as those of the
+Victoria regia) produce only one flower at a time; and that as this
+species is an annual, and was introduced in 1809, it must have been
+self-fertilised for the last fifty-six generations; but Dr. Hooker
+assures me that to his knowledge it has been repeatedly introduced, and
+that at Kew the same plant both of the Euryale and of the Victoria
+produce several flowers at the same time.
+
+Nymphaea (Nymphaeaceae).--Some species, as I am informed by Professor
+Caspary, are quite self-fertile when insects are excluded.
+
+Adonis aestivalis (Ranunculaceae).--Produces, according to Professor H.
+Hoffmann (‘Speciesfrage’ page 11), plenty of seeds when protected from
+insects.
+
+Ranunculus acris (Ranunculaceae).--Produces plenty of seeds under a net.
+
+Papaver somniferum (Papaveraceae).--Thirty capsules from uncovered
+plants yielded 15.6 grains weight of seed, and thirty capsules from
+covered-up plants, growing in the same bed, yielded 16.5 grains weight;
+so that the latter plants were more productive than the uncovered.
+Professor H. Hoffmann (‘Speciesfrage’ 1875 page 53) also found this
+species self-fertile when protected from insects.
+
+Papaver vagum.--Produced late in the summer plenty of seeds, which
+germinated well.
+
+Papaver argemonoides.--According to Hildebrand (‘Jahrbuch fur w. Bot.’
+B.7 page 466), spontaneously self-fertilised flowers are by no means
+sterile.
+
+Glaucium luteum (Papaveraceae).--According to Hildebrand (‘Jahrbuch fur
+w. Bot.’ B.7 page 466), spontaneously self-fertilised flowers are by no
+means sterile.
+
+Argemone ochroleuca (Papaveraceae).--According to Hildebrand (‘Jahrbuch
+fur w. Bot.’ B.7 page 466), spontaneously self-fertilised flowers are by
+no means sterile.
+
+Adlumia cirrhosa (Fumariaceae).--Sets an abundance of capsules.
+
+Hypecoum procumbens (Fumariaceae).--Hildebrand says (idem), with respect
+to protected flowers, that “eine gute Fruchtbildung eintrete.”
+
+Fumaria officinalis (Fumariaceae).--Covered-up and unprotected plants
+apparently produced an equal number of capsules, and the seeds of the
+former seemed to the eye equally good. I have often watched this plant,
+and so has Hildebrand, and we have never seen an insect visit the
+flowers. Hermann Muller has likewise been struck with the rarity of the
+visits of insects to it, though he has sometimes seen hive-bees at work.
+The flowers may perhaps be visited by small moths, as is probably the
+case with the following species.
+
+Fumaria capreolata.--Several large beds of this plant growing wild were
+watched by me during many days, but the flowers were never visited by
+any insects, though a humble-bee was once seen closely to inspect them.
+Nevertheless, as the nectary contains much nectar, especially in the
+evening, I felt convinced that they were visited, probably by moths. The
+petals do not naturally separate or open in the least; but they had been
+opened by some means in a certain proportion of the flowers, in the same
+manner as follows when a thick bristle is pushed into the nectary; so
+that in this respect they resemble the flowers of Corydalis lutea.
+Thirty-four heads, each including many flowers, were examined, and
+twenty of them had from one to four flowers, whilst fourteen had not a
+single flower thus opened. It is therefore clear that some of the
+flowers had been visited by insects, while the majority had not; yet
+almost all produced capsules.
+
+Linum usitatissimum (Linaceae).--Appears to be quite fertile. H.
+Hoffmann ‘Botanische Zeitung’ 1876 page 566.
+
+Impatiens barbigerum (Balsaminaceae).--The flowers, though excellently
+adapted for cross-fertilisation by the bees which freely visit them, set
+abundantly under a net.
+
+Impatiens noli-me-tangere (Balsaminaceae).--This species produces
+cleistogene and perfect flowers. A plant was covered with a net, and
+some perfect flowers, marked with threads, produced eleven spontaneously
+self-fertilised capsules, which contained on an average 3.45 seeds. I
+neglected to ascertain the number of seeds produced by perfect flowers
+exposed to the visits of insects, but I believe it is not greatly in
+excess of the above average. Mr. A.W. Bennett has carefully described
+the structure of the flowers of I. fulva in ‘Journal of the Linnean
+Society’ volume 13 Bot. 1872 page 147. This latter species is said to be
+sterile with its own pollen (‘Gardeners’ Chronicle’ 1868 page 1286), and
+if so, it presents a remarkable contrast with I. barbigerum and
+noli-me-tangere.
+
+Limnanthes douglasii (Geraniaceae).--Highly fertile.
+
+Viscaria oculata (Caryophyllaceae).--Produces plenty of capsules with
+good seeds.
+
+Stellaria media (Caryophyllaceae).--Covered-up and uncovered plants
+produced an equal number of capsules, and the seeds in both appeared
+equally numerous and good.
+
+Beta vulgaris (Chenopodiaceae).--Highly self-fertile.
+
+Vicia sativa (Leguminosae).--Protected and unprotected plants produced
+an equal number of pods and equally fine seeds. If there was any
+difference between the two lots, the covered-up plants were the most
+productive.
+
+Vicia hirsuta.--This species bears the smallest flowers of any British
+leguminous plant. The result of covering up plants was exactly the same
+as in the last species.
+
+Pisum sativum (Leguminosae).--Fully fertile.
+
+Lathyrus odoratus (Leguminosae).--Fully fertile.
+
+Lathyrus nissolia.--Fully fertile.
+
+Lupinus luteus (Leguminosae).--Fairly productive.
+
+Lupinus pilosus.--Produced plenty of pods.
+
+Ononis minutissima (Leguminosae).--Twelve perfect flowers on a plant
+under a net were marked by threads, and produced eight pods, containing
+on an average 2.38 seeds. Pods produced by flowers visited by insects
+would probably have contained on an average 3.66 seeds, judging from the
+effects of artificial cross-fertilisation.
+
+Phaseolus vulgaris (Leguminosae).--Quite fertile.
+
+Trifolium arvense (Leguminosae).--The excessively small flowers are
+incessantly visited by hive and humble-bees. When insects were excluded
+the flower-heads seemed to produce as many and as fine seeds as the
+exposed heads.
+
+Trifolium procumbens.--On one occasion covered-up plants seemed to yield
+as many seeds as the uncovered. On a second occasion sixty uncovered
+flower-heads yielded 9.1 grains weight of seeds, whilst sixty heads on
+protected plants yielded no less than 17.7 grains; so that these latter
+plants were much more productive; but this result I suppose was
+accidental. I have often watched this plant, and have never seen the
+flowers visited by insects; but I suspect that the flowers of this
+species, and more especially of Trifolium minus, are frequented by small
+nocturnal moths which, as I hear from Mr. Bond, haunt the smaller
+clovers.
+
+Medicago lupulina (Leguminosae).--On account of the danger of losing the
+seeds, I was forced to gather the pods before they were quite ripe; 150
+flower-heads on plants visited by bees yielded pods weighing 101 grains;
+whilst 150 heads on protected plants yielded pods weighing 77 grains.
+The inequality would probably have been greater if the mature seeds
+could have been all safely collected and compared. Ig. Urban (Keimung,
+Bluthen, etc., bei Medicago 1873) has described the means of
+fertilisation in this genus, as has the Reverend G. Henslow in the
+‘Journal of the Linnean Society Botany’ volume 9 1866 pages 327 and 355.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum (Solanaceae).--Fully self-fertile.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea (Convolvulaceae).--Highly self-fertile.
+
+Leptosiphon androsaceus (Polemoniacae).--Plants under a net produced a
+good many capsules.
+
+Primula mollis (Primulaceae).--A non-dimorphic species, self-fertile: J.
+Scott, in ‘Journal of the Linnean Society Botany’ volume 8 1864 page
+120.
+
+Nolana prostrata (Nolanaceae).--Plants covered up in the greenhouse,
+yielded seeds by weight compared with uncovered plants, the flowers of
+which were visited by many bees, in the ratio of 100 to 61.
+
+Ajuga reptans (Labiatae).--Set a good many seeds; but none of the stems
+under a net produced so many as several uncovered stems growing closely
+by.
+
+Euphrasia officinalis (Scrophulariaceae).--Covered-up plants produced
+plenty of seed; whether less than the exposed plants I cannot say. I saw
+two small Dipterous insects (Dolichopos nigripennis and Empis chioptera)
+repeatedly sucking the flowers; as they crawled into them, they rubbed
+against the bristles which project from the anthers, and became dusted
+with pollen.
+
+Veronica agrestis (Scrophulariaceae).--Covered-up plants produced an
+abundance of seeds. I do not know whether any insects visit the flowers;
+but I have observed Syrphidae repeatedly covered with pollen visiting
+the flowers of V. hederaefolia and chamoedrys.
+
+Mimulus luteus (Scrophulariaceae).--Highly self-fertile.
+
+Calceolaria (greenhouse variety) (Scrophulariaceae).--Highly
+self-fertile.
+
+Verbascum thapsus (Scrophulariaceae).--Highly self-fertile.
+
+Verbascum lychnitis.--Highly self-fertile.
+
+Vandellia nummularifolia (Scrophulariaceae).--Perfect flowers produce a
+good many capsules.
+
+Bartsia odontites (Scrophulariaceae).--Covered-up plants produced a good
+many seeds; but several of these were shrivelled, nor were they so
+numerous as those produced by unprotected plants, which were incessantly
+visited by hive and humble-bees.
+
+Specularia speculum (Lobeliaceae).--Covered plants produced almost as
+many capsules as the uncovered.
+
+Lactuca sativa (Compositae).--Covered plants produced some seeds, but
+the summer was wet and unfavourable.
+
+Galium aparine (Rubiaceae).--Covered plants produced quite as many seeds
+as the uncovered.
+
+Apium petroselinum (Umbelliferae).--Covered plants apparently were as
+productive as the uncovered.
+
+Zea mays (Gramineae).--A single plant in the greenhouse produced a good
+many grains.
+
+Canna warscewiczi (Marantaceae).--Highly self-fertile.
+
+Orchidaceae.--In Europe Ophrys apifera is as regularly self-fertilised
+as is any cleistogene flower. In the United States, South Africa, and
+Australia there are a few species which are perfectly self-fertile.
+These several cases are given in the second edition of my work on the
+Fertilisation of Orchids.
+
+Allium cepa (blood red var.) (Liliaceae).--Four flower-heads were
+covered with a net, and they produced somewhat fewer and smaller
+capsules than those on the uncovered heads. The capsules were counted on
+one uncovered head, and were 289 in number; whilst those on a fine head
+from under the net were only 199.]
+
+Each of these lists contains by a mere accident the same number of
+genera, namely, forty-nine. The genera in the first list include
+sixty-five species, and those in the second sixty species; the Orchideae
+in both being excluded. If the genera in this latter order, as well as
+in the Asclepiadae and Apocynaceae, had been included, the number of
+species which are sterile if insects are excluded would have been
+greatly increased; but the lists are confined to species which were
+actually experimented on. The results can be considered as only
+approximately accurate, for fertility is so variable a character, that
+each species ought to have been tried many times. The above number of
+species, namely, 125, is as nothing to the host of living plants; but
+the mere fact of more than half of them being sterile within the
+specified degree, when insects are excluded, is a striking one; for
+whenever pollen has to be carried from the anthers to the stigma in
+order to ensure full fertility, there is at least a good chance of
+cross-fertilisation. I do not, however, believe that if all known plants
+were tried in the same manner, half would be found to be sterile within
+the specified limits; for many flowers were selected for experiment
+which presented some remarkable structure; and such flowers often
+require insect-aid. Thus out of the forty-nine genera in the first list,
+about thirty-two have flowers which are asymmetrical or present some
+remarkable peculiarity; whilst in the second list, including species
+which are fully or moderately fertile when insects were excluded, only
+about twenty-one out of the forty-nine are asymmetrical or present any
+remarkable peculiarity.
+
+MEANS OF CROSS-FERTILISATION.
+
+The most important of all the means by which pollen is carried from the
+anthers to the stigma of the same flower, or from flower to flower, are
+insects, belonging to the orders of Hymenoptera, Lepidoptera, and
+Diptera; and in some parts of the world, birds. (10/1. I will here give
+all the cases known to me of birds fertilising flowers. In South Brazil,
+humming-birds certainly fertilise the various species of Abutilon, which
+are sterile without their aid (Fritz Muller ‘Jenaische Zeitschrift f.
+Naturwiss.’ B. 7 1872 page 24.) Long-beaked humming-birds visit the
+flowers of Brugmansia, whilst some of the short-beaked species often
+penetrate its large corolla in order to obtain the nectar in an
+illegitimate manner, in the same manner as do bees in all parts of the
+world. It appears, indeed, that the beaks of humming-birds are specially
+adapted to the various kinds of flowers which they visit: on the
+Cordillera they suck the Salviae, and lacerate the flowers of the
+Tacsoniae; in Nicaragua, Mr. Belt saw them sucking the flowers of
+Marcgravia and Erythina, and thus they carried pollen from flower to
+flower. In North America they are said to frequent the flowers of
+Impatiens: (Gould ‘Introduction to the Trochilidae’ 1861 pages 15, 120;
+‘Gardeners’ Chronicle’ 1869 page 389; ‘The Naturalist in Nicaragua’ page
+129; ‘Journal of the Linnean Society Botany’ volume 13 1872 page 151.) I
+may add that I often saw in Chile a Mimus with its head yellow with
+pollen from, as I believe, a Cassia. I have been assured that at the
+Cape of Good Hope, Strelitzia is fertilised by the Nectarinidae. There
+can hardly be a doubt that many Australian flowers are fertilised by the
+many honey-sucking birds of that country. Mr. Wallace remarks (address
+to the Biological Section, British Association 1876) that he has “often
+observed the beaks and faces of the brush-tongued lories of the Moluccas
+covered with pollen.” In New Zealand, many specimens of the Anthornis
+melanura had their heads coloured with pollen from the flowers of an
+endemic species of Fuchsia (Potts ‘Transactions of the New Zealand
+Institute’ volume 3 1870 page 72.) Next in importance, but in a quite
+subordinate degree, is the wind; and with some aquatic plants, according
+to Delpino, currents of water. The simple fact of the necessity in many
+cases of extraneous aid for the transport of the pollen, and the many
+contrivances for this purpose, render it highly probable that some great
+benefit is thus gained; and this conclusion has now been firmly
+established by the proved superiority in growth, vigour, and fertility
+of plants of crossed parentage over those of self-fertilised parentage.
+But we should always keep in mind that two somewhat opposed ends have to
+be gained; the first and more important one being the production of
+seeds by any means, and the second, cross-fertilisation.
+
+The advantages derived from cross-fertilisation throw a flood of light
+on most of the chief characters of flowers. We can thus understand their
+large size and bright colours, and in some cases the bright tints of the
+adjoining parts, such as the peduncles, bracteae, etc. By this means
+they are rendered conspicuous to insects, on the same principle that
+almost every fruit which is devoured by birds presents a strong contrast
+in colour with the green foliage, in order that it may be seen, and its
+seeds freely disseminated. With some flowers conspicuousness is gained
+at the expense even of the reproductive organs, as with the ray-florets
+of many Compositae, the exterior flowers of Hydrangea, and the terminal
+flowers of the Feather-hyacinth or Muscari. There is also reason to
+believe, and this was the opinion of Sprengel, that flowers differ in
+colour in accordance with the kinds of insects which frequent them.
+
+Not only do the bright colours of flowers serve to attract insects, but
+dark-coloured streaks and marks are often present, which Sprengel long
+ago maintained served as guides to the nectary. These marks follow the
+veins in the petals, or lie between them. They may occur on only one, or
+on all excepting one or more of the upper or lower petals; or they may
+form a dark ring round the tubular part of the corolla, or be confined
+to the lips of an irregular flower. In the white varieties of many
+flowers, such as of Digitalis purpurea, Antirrhinum majus, several
+species of Dianthus, Phlox, Myosotis, Rhododendron, Pelargonium, Primula
+and Petunia, the marks generally persist, whilst the rest of the corolla
+has become of a pure white; but this may be due merely to their colour
+being more intense and thus less readily obliterated. Sprengel’s notion
+of the use of these marks as guides appeared to me for a long time
+fanciful; for insects, without such aid, readily discover and bite holes
+through the nectary from the outside. They also discover the minute
+nectar-secreting glands on the stipules and leaves of certain plants.
+Moreover, some few plants, such as certain poppies, which are not
+nectariferous, have guiding marks; but we might perhaps expect that some
+few plants would retain traces of a former nectariferous condition. On
+the other hand, these marks are much more common on asymmetrical
+flowers, the entrance into which would be apt to puzzle insects, than on
+regular flowers. Sir J. Lubbock has also proved that bees readily
+distinguish colours, and that they lose much time if the position of
+honey which they have once visited be in the least changed. (10/2.
+‘British Wild Flowers in relation to Insects’ 1875 page 44.) The
+following case affords, I think, the best evidence that these marks have
+really been developed in correlation with the nectary. The two upper
+petals of the common Pelargonium are thus marked near their bases; and I
+have repeatedly observed that when the flowers vary so as to become
+peloric or regular, they lose their nectaries and at the same time the
+dark marks. When the nectary is only partially aborted, only one of the
+upper petals loses its mark. Therefore the nectary and these marks
+clearly stand in some sort of close relation to one another; and the
+simplest view is that they were developed together for a special
+purpose; the only conceivable one being that the marks serve as a guide
+to the nectary. It is, however, evident from what has been already said,
+that insects could discover the nectar without the aid of guiding marks.
+They are of service to the plant, only by aiding insects to visit and
+suck a greater number of flowers within a given time than would
+otherwise be possible; and thus there will be a better chance of
+fertilisation by pollen brought from a distinct plant, and this we know
+is of paramount importance.
+
+The odours emitted by flowers attract insects, as I have observed in the
+case of plants covered by a muslin net. Nageli affixed artificial
+flowers to branches, scenting some with essential oils and leaving
+others unscented; and insects were attracted to the former in an
+unmistakable manner. (10/3. ‘Enstehung etc. der Naturhist. Art.’ 1865
+page 23.) Not a few flowers are both conspicuous and odoriferous. Of all
+colours, white is the prevailing one; and of white flowers a
+considerably larger proportion smell sweetly than of any other colour,
+namely, 14.6 per cent; of red, only 8.2 per cent are odoriferous. (10/4.
+The colours and odours of the flowers of 4200 species have been
+tabulated by Landgrabe and by Schubler and Kohler. I have not seen their
+original works, but a very full abstract is given in Loudon’s
+‘Gardeners’ Magazine’ volume 13 1837 page 367.) The fact of a larger
+proportion of white flowers smelling sweetly may depend in part on those
+which are fertilised by moths requiring the double aid of
+conspicuousness in the dusk and of odour. So great is the economy of
+nature, that most flowers which are fertilised by crepuscular or
+nocturnal insects emit their odour chiefly or exclusively in the
+evening. Some flowers, however, which are highly odoriferous depend
+solely on this quality for their fertilisation, such as the
+night-flowering stock (Hesperis) and some species of Daphne; and these
+present the rare case of flowers which are fertilised by insects being
+obscurely coloured.
+
+The storage of a supply of nectar in a protected place is manifestly
+connected with the visits of insects. So is the position which the
+stamens and pistils occupy, either permanently or at the proper period
+through their own movements; for when mature they invariably stand in
+the pathway leading to the nectary. The shape of the nectary and of the
+adjoining parts are likewise related to the particular kinds of insects
+which habitually visit the flowers; this has been well shown by Hermann
+Muller by his comparison of lowland species which are chiefly visited by
+bees, with alpine species belonging to the same genera which are visited
+by butterflies. (10/5. ‘Nature’ 1874 page 110, 1875 page 190, 1876 pages
+210, 289.) Flowers may also be adapted to certain kinds of insects, by
+secreting nectar particularly attractive to them, and unattractive to
+other kinds; of which fact Epipactis latifolia offers the most striking
+instance known to me, as it is visited exclusively by wasps. Structures
+also exist, such as the hairs within the corolla of the fox glove
+(Digitalis), which apparently serve to exclude insects that are not well
+fitted to bring pollen from one flower to another. (10/6. Belt ‘The
+Naturalist in Nicaragua’ 1874 page 132.) I need say nothing here of the
+endless contrivances, such as the viscid glands attached to the
+pollen-masses of the Orchideae and Asclepiadae, or the viscid or
+roughened state of the pollen-grains of many plants, or the irritability
+of their stamens which move when touched by insects etc.--as all these
+contrivances evidently favour or ensure cross-fertilisation.
+
+All ordinary flowers are so far open that insects can force an entrance
+into them, notwithstanding that some, like the Snapdragon (Antirrhinum),
+various Papilionaceous and Fumariaceous flowers, are in appearance
+closed. It cannot be maintained that their openness is necessary for
+fertility, as cleistogene flowers which are permanently closed yield a
+full complement of seeds. Pollen contains much nitrogen and
+phosphorus--the two most precious of all the elements for the growth of
+plants--but in the case of most open flowers, a large quantity of pollen
+is consumed by pollen-devouring insects, and a large quantity is
+destroyed during long-continued rain. With many plants this latter evil
+is guarded against, as far as is possible, by the anthers opening only
+during dry weather (10/7. Mr. Blackley observed that the ripe anthers of
+rye did not dehisce whilst kept under a bell-glass in a damp atmosphere,
+whilst other anthers exposed to the same temperature in the open air
+dehisced freely. He also found much more pollen adhering to the sticky
+slides, which were attached to kites and sent high up in the atmosphere,
+during the first fine and dry days after wet weather, than at other
+times: ‘Experimental Researches on Hay Fever’ 1873 page 127.)--by the
+position and form of some or all of the petals,--by the presence of
+hairs, etc., and as Kerner has shown in his interesting essay, by the
+movements of the petals or of the whole flower during cold and wet
+weather. (10/8. ‘Die Schutzmittel des Pollens’ 1873.) In order to
+compensate the loss of pollen in so many ways, the anthers produce a far
+larger amount than is necessary for the fertilisation of the same
+flower. I know this from my own experiments on Ipomoea, given in the
+Introduction; and it is still more plainly shown by the astonishingly
+small quantity produced by cleistogene flowers, which lose none of their
+pollen, in comparison with that produced by the open flowers borne by
+the same plants; and yet this small quantity suffices for the
+fertilisation of all their numerous seeds. Mr. Hassall took pains in
+estimating the number of pollen-grains produced by a flower of the
+Dandelion (Leontodon), and found the number to be 243,600, and in a
+Paeony 3,654,000 grains. (10/9. ‘Annals and Magazine of Natural History’
+volume 8 1842 page 108.) The editor of the ‘Botanical Register’ counted
+the ovules in the flowers of Wistaria sinensis, and carefully estimated
+the number of pollen-grains, and he found that for each ovule there were
+7000 grains. (10/10. Quoted in ‘Gardeners’ Chronicle’ 1846 page 771.)
+With Mirabilis, three or four of the very large pollen-grains are
+sufficient to fertilise an ovule; but I do not know how many grains a
+flower produces. With Hibiscus, Kolreuter found that sixty grains were
+necessary to fertilise all the ovules of a flower, and he calculated
+that 4863 grains were produced by a single flower, or eighty-one times
+too many. With Geum urbanum, however, according to Gartner, the pollen
+is only ten times too much. (10/11. Kolreuter ‘Vorlaufige Nachricht’
+1761 page 9. Gartner ‘Beitrage zur Kenntniss’ etc. page 346.) As we thus
+see that the open state of all ordinary flowers, and the consequent loss
+of much pollen, necessitate the development of so prodigious an excess
+of this precious substance, why, it may be asked, are flowers always
+left open? As many plants exist throughout the vegetable kingdom which
+bear cleistogene flowers, there can hardly be a doubt that all open
+flowers might easily have been converted into closed ones. The graduated
+steps by which this process could have been effected may be seen at the
+present time in Lathyrus nissolia, Biophytum sensitivum, and several
+other plants. The answer to the above question obviously is, that with
+permanently closed flowers there could be no cross-fertilisation.
+
+The frequency, almost regularity, with which pollen is transported by
+insects from flower to flower, often from a considerable distance, well
+deserves attention. (10/12. An experiment made by Kolreuter ‘Forsetsung’
+etc. 1763 page 69, affords good evidence on this head. Hibiscus
+vesicarius is strongly dichogamous, its pollen being shed before the
+stigmas are mature. Kolreuter marked 310 flowers, and put pollen from
+other flowers on their stigmas every day, so that they were thoroughly
+fertilised; and he left the same number of other flowers to the agency
+of insects. Afterwards he counted the seeds of both lots: the flowers
+which he had fertilised with such astonishing care produced 11,237
+seeds, whilst those left to the insects produced 10,886; that is, a less
+number by only 351; and this small inferiority is fully accounted for by
+the insects not having worked during some days, when the weather was
+cold with continued rain.) This is best shown by the impossibility in
+many cases of raising two varieties of the same species pure, if they
+grow at all near together; but to this subject I shall presently return;
+also by the many cases of hybrids which have appeared spontaneously both
+in gardens and a state of nature. With respect to the distance from
+which pollen is often brought, no one who has had any experience would
+expect to obtain pure cabbage-seed, for instance, if a plant of another
+variety grew within two or three hundred yards. An accurate observer,
+the late Mr. Masters of Canterbury, assured me that he once had his
+whole stock of seeds “seriously affected with purple bastards,” by some
+plants of purple kale which flowered in a cottager’s garden at the
+distance of half a mile; no other plant of this variety growing any
+nearer. (10/13. Mr. W.C. Marshall caught no less than seven specimens of
+a moth (Cucullia umbratica) with the pollinia of the butterfly-orchis
+(Habenaria chlorantha) sticking to their eyes, and, therefore, in the
+proper position for fertilising the flowers of this species, on an
+island in Derwentwater, at the distance of half a mile from any place
+where this plant grew: ‘Nature’ 1872 page 393.) But the most striking
+case which has been recorded is that by M. Godron, who shows by the
+nature of the hybrids produced that Primula grandiflora must have been
+crossed with pollen brought by bees from P. officinalis, growing at the
+distance of above two kilometres, or of about one English mile and a
+quarter. (10/14. ‘Revue des Sc. Nat.’ 1875 page 331.)
+
+All those who have long attended to hybridisation, insist in the
+strongest terms on the liability of castrated flowers to be fertilised
+by pollen brought from distant plants of the same species. (10/15. See,
+for instance, the remarks by Herbert ‘Amaryllidaceae’ 1837 page 349.
+Also Gartner’s strong expressions on this subject in his
+‘Bastarderzeugung’ 1849 page 670 and ‘Kenntniss der Befruchtung’ 1844
+pages 510, 573. Also Lecoq ‘De la Fecondation’ etc. 1845 page 27. Some
+statements have been published during late years of the extraordinary
+tendency of hybrid plants to revert to their parent forms; but as it is
+not said how the flowers were protected from insects, it may be
+suspected that they were often fertilised with pollen brought from a
+distance from the parent-species.) The following case shows this in the
+clearest manner: Gartner, before he had gained much experience,
+castrated and fertilised 520 flowers on various species with pollen of
+other genera or other species, but left them unprotected; for, as he
+says, he thought it a laughable idea that pollen should be brought from
+flowers of the same species, none of which grew nearer than between 500
+and 600 yards. (10/16. ‘Kenntniss der Befruchtung’ pages 539, 550, 575,
+576.) The result was that 289 of these 520 flowers yielded no seed, or
+none that germinated; the seed of 29 flowers produced hybrids, such as
+might have been expected from the nature of the pollen employed; and
+lastly, the seed of the remaining 202 flowers produced perfectly pure
+plants, so that these flowers must have been fertilised by pollen
+brought by insects from a distance of between 500 and 600 yards. (10/17.
+Henschel’s experiments quoted by Gartner ‘Kenntniss’ etc. page 574,
+which are worthless in all other respects, likewise show how largely
+flowers are intercrossed by insects. He castrated many flowers on
+thirty-seven species, belonging to twenty-two genera, and put on their
+stigmas either no pollen, or pollen from distinct genera, yet they all
+seeded, and all the seedlings raised from them were of course pure.) It
+is of course possible that some of these 202 flowers might have been
+fertilised by pollen left accidentally in them when they were castrated;
+but to show how improbable this is, I may add that Gartner, during the
+next eighteen years, castrated no less than 8042 flowers and hybridised
+them in a closed room; and the seeds from only seventy of these, that is
+considerably less than 1 per cent, produced pure or unhybridised
+offspring. (10/18. ‘Kenntniss’ etc. pages 555, 576.)
+
+From the various facts now given, it is evident that most flowers are
+adapted in an admirable manner for cross-fertilisation. Nevertheless,
+the greater number likewise present structures which are manifestly
+adapted, though not in so striking a manner, for self-fertilisation. The
+chief of these is their hermaphrodite condition; that is, their
+including within the same corolla both the male and female reproductive
+organs. These often stand close together and are mature at the same
+time; so that pollen from the same flower cannot fail to be deposited at
+the proper period on the stigma. There are also various details of
+structure adapted for self-fertilisation. (10/19. Hermann Muller ‘Die
+Befruchtung’ etc. page 448.) Such structures are best shown in those
+curious cases discovered by Hermann Muller, in which a species exists
+under two forms,--one bearing conspicuous flowers fitted for
+cross-fertilisation, and the other smaller flowers fitted for
+self-fertilisation, with many parts in the latter slightly modified for
+this special purpose. (10/20. ‘Nature’ 1873 pages 44, 433.)
+
+As two objects in most respects opposed, namely, cross-fertilisation and
+self-fertilisation, have in many cases to be gained, we can understand
+the co-existence in so many flowers of structures which appear at first
+sight unnecessarily complex and of an opposed nature. We can thus
+understand the great contrast in structure between cleistogene flowers,
+which are adapted exclusively for self-fertilisation, and ordinary
+flowers on the same plant, which are adapted so as to allow of at least
+occasional cross-fertilisation. (10/21. Fritz Muller has discovered in
+the animal kingdom ‘Jenaische Zeitschr.’ B. 4 page 451, a case curiously
+analogous to that of the plants which bear cleistogene and perfect
+flowers. He finds in the nests of termites in Brazil, males and females
+with imperfect wings, which do not leave the nests and propagate the
+species in a cleistogene manner, but only if a fully-developed queen
+after swarming does not enter the old nest. The fully-developed males
+and females are winged, and individuals from distinct nests can hardly
+fail often to intercross. In the act of swarming they are destroyed in
+almost infinite numbers by a host of enemies, so that a queen may often
+fail to enter an old nest; and then the imperfectly developed males and
+females propagate and keep up the stock.) The former are always minute,
+completely closed, with their petals more or less rudimentary and never
+brightly coloured; they never secrete nectar, never are odoriferous,
+have very small anthers which produce only a few grains of pollen, and
+their stigmas are but little developed. Bearing in mind that some
+flowers are cross-fertilised by the wind (called anemophilous by
+Delpino), and others by insects (called entomophilous), we can further
+understand, as was pointed out by me several years ago, the great
+contrast in appearance between these two classes of flowers. (10/22.
+‘Journal of the Linnean Society’ volume 7 Botany 1863 page 77.)
+Anemophilous flowers resemble in many respects cleistogene flowers, but
+differ widely in not being closed, in producing an extraordinary amount
+of pollen which is always incoherent, and in the stigma often being
+largely developed or plumose. We certainly owe the beauty and odour of
+our flowers and the storage of a large supply of honey to the existence
+of insects.
+
+ON THE RELATION BETWEEN THE STRUCTURE AND CONSPICUOUSNESS OF FLOWERS,
+THE VISITS OF INSECTS, AND THE ADVANTAGES OF CROSS-FERTILISATION.
+
+It has already been shown that there is no close relation between the
+number of seeds produced by flowers when crossed and self-fertilised,
+and the degree to which their offspring are aaffected by the two
+processes. I have also given reasons for believing that the inefficiency
+of a plant’s own pollen is in most cases an incidental result, or has
+not been specially acquired for the sake of preventing
+self-fertilisation. On the other hand, there can hardly be a doubt that
+dichogamy, which prevails according to Hildebrand in the greater number
+of species (10/23. ‘Die Geschlecter Vertheiling’ etc. page 32.),--that
+the heterostyled condition of certain plants,--and that many mechanical
+structures--have all been acquired so as both to check
+self-fertilisation and to favour cross-fertilisation. The means for
+favouring cross-fertilisation must have been acquired before those which
+prevent self-fertilisation; as it would manifestly be injurious to a
+plant that its stigma should fail to receive its own pollen, unless it
+had already become well adapted for receiving pollen from another
+individual. It should be observed that many plants still possess a high
+power of self-fertilisation, although their flowers are excellently
+constructed for cross-fertilisation--for instance, those of many
+papilionaceous species.
+
+It may be admitted as almost certain that some structures, such as a
+narrow elongated nectary, or a long tubular corolla, have been developed
+in order that certain kinds of insects alone should obtain the nectar.
+These insects would thus find a store of nectar preserved from the
+attacks of other insects; and they would thus be led to visit frequently
+such flowers and to carry pollen from one to the other. (10/24. See the
+interesting discussion on this subject by Hermann Muller, ‘Die
+Befruchtung’ etc. page 431.) It might perhaps have been expected that
+plants having their flowers thus peculiarly constructed would profit in
+a greater degree by being crossed, than ordinary or simple flowers; but
+this does not seem to hold good. Thus Tropaeolum minus has a long
+nectary and an irregular corolla, whilst Limnanthes douglasii has a
+regular flower and no proper nectary, yet the crossed seedlings of both
+species are to the self-fertilised in height as 100 to 79. Salvia
+coccinea has an irregular corolla, with a curious apparatus by which
+insects depress the stamens, while the flowers of Ipomoea are regular;
+and the crossed seedlings of the former are in height to the
+self-fertilised as 100 to 76, whilst those of the Ipomoea are as 100 to
+77. Fagopyrum is dimorphic, and Anagallis collina is non-dimorphic, and
+the crossed seedlings of both are in height to the self-fertilised as
+100 to 69.
+
+With all European plants, excepting the comparatively rare anemophilous
+kinds, the possibility of distinct individuals intercrossing depends on
+the visits of insects; and Hermann Muller has proved by his valuable
+observations, that large conspicuous flowers are visited much more
+frequently and by many more kinds of insects, than are small
+inconspicuous flowers. He further remarks that the flowers which are
+rarely visited must be capable of self-fertilisation, otherwise they
+would quickly become extinct. (10/25. ‘Die Befruchtung’ etc. page 426.
+‘Nature’ 1873 page 433.) There is, however, some liability to error in
+forming a judgment on this head, from the extreme difficulty of
+ascertaining whether flowers which are rarely or never visited during
+the day (as in the above given case of Fumaria capreolata) are not
+visited by small nocturnal Lepidoptera, which are known to be strongly
+attracted by sugar. (10/26. In answer to a question by me, the editor of
+an entomological journal writes--“The Depressariae, as is notorious to
+every collector of Noctuae, come very freely to sugar, and no doubt
+naturally visit flowers:” the ‘Entomologists’ Weekly Intelligencer’ 1860
+page 103.) The two lists given in the early part of this chapter support
+Muller’s conclusion that small and inconspicuous flowers are completely
+self-fertile: for only eight or nine out of the 125 species in the two
+lists come under this head, and all of these were proved to be highly
+fertile when insects were excluded. The singularly inconspicuous flowers
+of the Fly Ophrys (O. muscifera), as I have elsewhere shown, are rarely
+visited by insects; and it is a strange instance of imperfection, in
+contradiction to the above rule, that these flowers are not
+self-fertile, so that a large proportion of them do not produce seeds.
+The converse of the rule that plants bearing small and inconspicuous
+flowers are self-fertile, namely, that plants with large and conspicuous
+flowers are self-sterile, is far from true, as may be seen in our second
+list of spontaneously self-fertile species; for this list includes such
+species as Ipomoea purpurea, Adonis aestivalis, Verbascum thapsus, Pisum
+sativum, Lathyrus odoratus, some species of Papaver and of Nymphaea, and
+others.
+
+The rarity of the visits of insects to small flowers, does not depend
+altogether on their inconspicuousness, but likewise on the absence of
+some sufficient attraction; for the flowers of Trifolium arvense are
+extremely small, yet are incessantly visited by hive and humble-bees, as
+are the small and dingy flowers of the asparagus. The flowers of Linaria
+cymbalaria are small and not very conspicuous, yet at the proper time
+they are freely visited by hive-bees. I may add that, according to Mr.
+Bennett, there is another and quite distinct class of plants which
+cannot be much frequented by insects, as they flower either exclusively
+or often during the winter, and these seem adapted for
+self-fertilisation, as they shed their pollen before the flowers expand.
+(10/27. ‘Nature’ 1869 page 11.)
+
+That many flowers have been rendered conspicuous for the sake of guiding
+insects to them is highly probable or almost certain; but it may be
+asked, have other flowers been rendered inconspicuous so that they may
+not be frequently visited, or have they merely retained a former and
+primitive condition? If a plant were much reduced in size, so probably
+would be the flowers through correlated growth, and this may possibly
+account for some cases; but the size and colour of the corolla are both
+extremely variable characters, and it can hardly be doubted that if
+large and brightly-coloured flowers were advantageous to any species,
+these could be acquired through natural selection within a moderate
+lapse of time, as indeed we see with most alpine plants. Papilionaceous
+flowers are manifestly constructed in relation to the visits of insects,
+and it seems improbable, from the usual character of the group, that the
+progenitors of the genera Vicia and Trifolium produced such minute and
+unattractive flowers as those of V. hirsuta and T. procumbens. We are
+thus led to infer that some plants either have not had their flowers
+increased in size, or have actually had them reduced and purposely
+rendered inconspicuous, so that they are now but little visited by
+insects. In either case they must also have acquired or retained a high
+degree of self-fertility.
+
+If it became from any cause advantageous to a species to have its
+capacity for self-fertilisation increased, there is little difficulty in
+believing that this could readily be effected; for three cases of plants
+varying in such a manner as to be more fertile with their own pollen
+than they originally were, occurred in the course of my few experiments,
+namely, with Mimulus, Ipomoea, and Nicotiana. Nor is there any reason to
+doubt that many kinds of plants are capable under favourable
+circumstances of propagating themselves for very many generations by
+self-fertilisation. This is the case with the varieties of Pisum sativum
+and of Lathyrus odoratus which are cultivated in England, and with
+Ophrys apifera and some other plants in a state of nature. Nevertheless,
+most or all of these plants retain structures in an efficient state
+which cannot be of the least use excepting for cross-fertilisation. We
+have also seen reason to suspect that self-fertilisation is in some
+peculiar manner beneficial to certain plants; but if this be really the
+case, the benefit thus derived is far more than counter-balanced by a
+cross with a fresh stock or with a slightly different variety.
+
+Notwithstanding the several considerations just advanced, it seems to me
+highly improbable that plants bearing small and inconspicuous flowers
+have been or should continue to be subjected to self-fertilisation for a
+long series of generations. I think so, not from the evil which
+manifestly follows from self-fertilisation, in many cases even in the
+first generation, as with Viola tricolor, Sarothamnus, Nemophila,
+Cyclamen, etc.; nor from the probability of the evil increasing after
+several generations, for on this latter head I have not sufficient
+evidence, owing to the manner in which my experiments were conducted.
+But if plants bearing small and inconspicuous flowers were not
+occasionally intercrossed, and did not profit by the process, all their
+flowers would probably have been rendered cleistogene, as they would
+thus have largely benefited by having to produce only a small quantity
+of safely-protected pollen. In coming to this conclusion, I have been
+guided by the frequency with which plants belonging to distinct orders
+have been rendered cleistogene. But I can hear of no instance of a
+species with all its flowers rendered permanently cleistogene. Leersia
+makes the nearest approach to this state; but as already stated, it has
+been known to produce perfect flowers in one part of Germany. Some other
+plants of the cleistogene class, for instance Aspicarpa, have failed to
+produce perfect flowers during several years in a hothouse; but it does
+not follow that they would fail to do so in their native country, any
+more than with Vandellia, which with me produced only cleistogene
+flowers during certain years. Plants belonging to this class commonly
+bear both kinds of flowers every season, and the perfect flowers of
+Viola canina yield fine capsules, but only when visited by bees. We have
+also seen that the seedlings of Ononis minutissima, raised from the
+perfect flowers fertilised with pollen from another plant, were finer
+than those from self-fertilised flowers; and this was likewise the case
+to a certain extent with Vandellia. As therefore no species which at one
+time bore small and inconspicuous flowers has had all its flowers
+rendered cleistogene, I must believe that plants now bearing small and
+inconspicuous flowers profit by their still remaining open, so as to be
+occasionally intercrossed by insects. It has been one of the greatest
+oversights in my work that I did not experimentise on such flowers,
+owing to the difficulty of fertilising them, and to my not having seen
+the importance of the subject. (10/28. Some of the species of Solanum
+would be good ones for such experiments, for they are said by Hermann
+Muller ‘Befruchtung’ page 434, to be unattractive to insects from not
+secreting nectar, not producing much pollen, and not being very
+conspicuous. Hence probably it is that, according to Verlot ‘Production
+des Varieties’ 1865 page 72, the varieties of “les aubergines et les
+tomates” (species of Solanum) do not intercross when they are cultivated
+near together; but it should be remembered that these are not endemic
+species. On the other hand, the flowers of the common potato (S.
+tuberosum), though they do not secrete nectar Kurr ‘Bedeutung der
+Nektarien’ 1833 page 40, yet cannot be considered as inconspicuous, and
+they are sometimes visited by diptera (Muller), and, as I have seen, by
+humble-bees. Tinzmann (as quoted in ‘Gardeners’ Chronicle’ 1846 page
+183, found that some of the varieties did not bear seed when fertilised
+with pollen from the same variety, but were fertile with that from
+another variety.)
+
+It should be remembered that in two of the cases in which highly
+self-fertile varieties appeared amongst my experimental plants, namely,
+with Mimulus and Nicotiana, such varieties were greatly benefited by a
+cross with a fresh stock or with a slightly different variety; and this
+likewise was the case with the cultivated varieties of Pisum sativum and
+Lathyrus odoratus, which have been long propagated by
+self-fertilisation. Therefore until the contrary is distinctly proved, I
+must believe that as a general rule small and inconspicuous flowers are
+occasionally intercrossed by insects; and that after long-continued
+self-fertilisation, if they are crossed with pollen brought from a plant
+growing under somewhat different conditions, or descended from one thus
+growing, their offspring would profit greatly. It cannot be admitted,
+under our present state of knowledge, that self-fertilisation continued
+during many successive generations is ever the most beneficial method of
+reproduction.
+
+THE MEANS WHICH FAVOUR OR ENSURE FLOWERS BEING FERTILISED WITH POLLEN
+FROM A DISTINCT PLANT.
+
+We have seen in four cases that seedlings raised from a cross between
+flowers on the same plant, even on plants appearing distinct from having
+been propagated by stolons or cuttings, were not superior to seedlings
+from self-fertilised flowers; and in a fifth case (Digitalis) superior
+only in a slight degree. Therefore we might expect that with plants
+growing in a state of nature a cross between the flowers on distinct
+individuals, and not merely between the flowers on the same plant, would
+generally or often be effected by some means. The fact of bees and of
+some Diptera visiting the flowers of the same species as long as they
+can, instead of promiscuously visiting various species, favours the
+intercrossing of distinct plants. On the other hand, insects usually
+search a large number of flowers on the same plant before they fly to
+another, and this is opposed to cross-fertilisation. The extraordinary
+number of flowers which bees are able to search within a very short
+space of time, as will be shown in a future chapter, increases the
+chance of cross-fertilisation; as does the fact that they are not able
+to perceive without entering a flower whether other bees have exhausted
+the nectar. For instance, Hermann Muller found that four-fifths of the
+flowers of Lamium album which a humble-bee visited had been already
+exhausted of their nectar. (10/29. ‘Die Befruchtung’ etc. page 311.) In
+order that distinct plants should be intercrossed, it is of course
+indispensable that two or more individuals should grow near one another;
+and this is generally the case. Thus A. de Candolle remarks that in
+ascending a mountain the individuals of the same species do not commonly
+disappear near its upper limit quite gradually, but rather abruptly.
+This fact can hardly be explained by the nature of the conditions, as
+these graduate away in an insensible manner, and it probably depends in
+large part on vigorous seedlings being produced only as high up the
+mountain as many individuals can subsist together.
+
+With respect to dioecious plants, distinct individuals must always
+fertilise each other. With monoecious plants, as pollen has to be
+carried from flower to flower, there will always be a good chance of its
+being carried from plant to plant. Delpino has also observed the curious
+fact that certain individuals of the monoecious walnut (Juglans regia)
+are proterandrous, and others proterogynous, and these will reciprocally
+fertilise each other. (10/30. ‘Ult. Osservazioni’ etc. part 2 fasc 2
+page 337.) So it is with the common nut (Corylus avellana) (10/31.
+‘Nature’ 1875 page 26.), and, what is more surprising, with some few
+hermaphrodite plants, as observed by Hermann Muller. (10/32. ‘Die
+Befruchtung’ etc. pages 285, 339.) These latter plants cannot fail to
+act on each other like dimorphic or trimorphic species, in which the
+union of two individuals is necessary for full and normal fertility.
+With ordinary hermaphrodite species, the expansion of only a few flowers
+at the same time is one of the simplest means for favouring the
+intercrossing of distinct individuals; but this would render the plants
+less conspicuous to insects, unless the flowers were of large size, as
+in the case of several bulbous plants. Kerner thinks that it is for this
+object that the Australian Villarsia parnassifolia produces daily only a
+single flower. (10/33. ‘Die Schutzmittel’ etc page 23.) Mr. Cheeseman
+also remarks, that as certain Orchids in New Zealand which require
+insect-aid for their fertilisation bear only a single flower, distinct
+plants cannot fail to intercross. (10/34. ‘Transactions of the New
+Zealand Institute’ volume 5 1873 page 356.)
+
+Dichogamy, which prevails so extensively throughout the vegetable
+kingdom, much increases the chance of distinct individuals
+intercrossing. With proterandrous species, which are far more ccommon
+than proterogynous, the young flowers are exclusively male in function,
+and the older ones exclusively female; and as bees habitually alight low
+down on the spikes of flowers in order to crawl upwards, they get dusted
+with pollen from the uppermost flowers, which they carry to the stigmas
+of the lower and older flowers on the next spike which they visit. The
+degree to which distinct plants will thus be intercrossed depends on the
+number of spikes in full flower at the same time on the same plant. With
+proterogynous flowers and with depending racemes, the manner in which
+insects visit the flowers ought to be reversed in order that distinct
+plants should be intercrossed. But this whole subject requires further
+investigation, as the great importance of crosses between distinct
+individuals, instead of merely between distinct flowers, has hitherto
+been hardly recognised.
+
+In some few cases the special movements of certain organs almost ensure
+pollen being carried from plant to plant. Thus with many orchids, the
+pollen-masses after becoming attached to the head or proboscis of an
+insect do not move into the proper position for striking the stigma,
+until ample time has elapsed for the insect to fly to another plant.
+With Spiranthes autumnalis, the pollen-masses cannot be applied to the
+stigma until the labellum and rostellum have moved apart, and this
+movement is very slow. (10/35. ‘The Various Contrivances by which
+British and Foreign Orchids are fertilised’ first edition page 128.)
+With Posoqueria fragrans (one of the Rubiaceae) the same end is gained
+by the movement of a specially constructed stamen, as described by Fritz
+Muller.
+
+We now come to a far more general and therefore more important means by
+which the mutual fertilisation of distinct plants is effected, namely,
+the fertilising power of pollen from another variety or individual being
+greater than that of a plant’s own pollen. The simplest and best known
+case of prepotent action in pollen, though it does not bear directly on
+our present subject, is that of a plant’s own pollen over that from a
+distinct species. If pollen from a distinct species be placed on the
+stigma of a castrated flower, and then after the interval of several
+hours, pollen from the same species be placed on the stigma, the effects
+of the former are wholly obliterated, excepting in some rare cases. If
+two varieties are treated in the same manner, the result is analogous,
+though of directly opposite nature; for pollen from any other variety is
+often or generally prepotent over that from the same flower. I will give
+some instances: the pollen of Mimulus luteus regularly falls on the
+stigma of its own flower, for the plant is highly fertile when insects
+are excluded. Now several flowers on a remarkably constant whitish
+variety were fertilised without being castrated with pollen from a
+yellowish variety; and of the twenty-eight seedlings thus raised, every
+one bore yellowish flowers, so that the pollen of the yellow variety
+completely overwhelmed that of the mother-plant. Again, Iberis umbellata
+is spontaneously self-fertile, and I saw an abundance of pollen from
+their own flowers on the stigmas; nevertheless, of thirty seedlings
+raised from non-castrated flowers of a crimson variety crossed with
+pollen from a pink variety, twenty-four bore pink flowers, like those of
+the male or pollen-bearing parent.
+
+In these two cases flowers were fertilised with pollen from a distinct
+variety, and this was shown to be prepotent by the character of the
+offspring. Nearly similar results often follow when two or more
+self-fertile varieties are allowed to grow near one another and are
+visited by insects. The common cabbage produces a large number of
+flowers on the same stalk, and when insects are excluded these set many
+capsules, moderately rich in seeds. I planted a white Kohl-rabi, a
+purple Kohl-rabi, a Portsmouth broccoli, a Brussels sprout, and a
+Sugar-loaf cabbage near together and left them uncovered. Seeds
+collected from each kind were sown in separate beds; and the majority of
+the seedlings in all five beds were mongrelised in the most complicated
+manner, some taking more after one variety, and some after another. The
+effects of the Kohl-rabi were particularly plain in the enlarged stems
+of many of the seedlings. Altogether 233 plants were raised, of which
+155 were mongrelised in the plainest manner, and of the remaining 78 not
+half were absolutely pure. I repeated the experiment by planting near
+together two varieties of cabbage with purple-green and white-green
+lacinated leaves; and of the 325 seedlings raised from the purple-green
+variety, 165 had white-green and 160 purple-green leaves. Of the 466
+seedlings raised from the white-green variety, 220 had purple-green and
+246 white-green leaves. These cases show how largely pollen from a
+neighbouring variety of the cabbage effaces the action of the plant’s
+own pollen. We should bear in mind that pollen must be carried by the
+bees from flower to flower on the same large branching stem much more
+abundantly than from plant to plant; and in the case of plants the
+flowers of which are in some degree dichogamous, those on the same stem
+would be of different ages, and would thus be as ready for mutual
+fertilisation as the flowers on distinct plants, were it not for the
+prepotency of pollen from another variety. (10/36. A writer in the
+‘Gardeners’ Chronicle’ 1855 page 730, says that he planted a bed of
+turnips (Brassica rapa) and of rape (B. napus) close together, and sowed
+the seeds of the former. The result was that scarcely one seedling was
+true to its kind, and several closely resembled rape.)
+
+Several varieties of the radish (Raphanus sativus), which is moderately
+self-fertile when insects are excluded, were in flower at the same time
+in my garden. Seed was collected from one of them, and out of twenty-two
+seedlings thus raised only twelve were true to their kind. (10/37.
+Duhamel as quoted by Godron ‘De l’Espece’ tome 2 page 50, makes an
+analogous statement with respect to this plant.)
+
+The onion produces a large number of flowers, all crowded together into
+a large globular head, each flower having six stamens; so that the
+stigmas receive plenty of pollen from their own and the adjoining
+anthers. Consequently the plant is fairly self-fertile when protected
+from insects. A blood-red, silver, globe and Spanish onion were planted
+near together; and seedlings were raised from each kind in four separate
+beds. In all the beds mongrels of various kinds were numerous, except
+amongst the ten seedlings from the blood-red onion, which included only
+two. Altogether forty-six seedlings were raised, of which thirty-one had
+been plainly crossed.
+
+A similar result is known to follow with the varieties of many other
+plants, if allowed to flower near together: I refer here only to species
+which are capable of fertilising themselves, for if this be not the
+case, they would of course be liable to be crossed by any other variety
+growing near. Horticulturists do not commonly distinguish between the
+effects of variability and intercrossing; but I have collected evidence
+on the natural crossing of varieties of the tulip, hyacinth, anemone,
+ranunculus, strawberry, Leptosiphon androsaceus, orange, rhododendron
+and rhubarb, all of which plants I believe to be self-fertile. (10/38.
+With respect to tulips and some other flowers, see Godron ‘De l’Espece’
+tome 1 page 252. For anemones ‘Gardeners’ Chronicle’ 1859 page 98. For
+strawberries see Herbert in ‘Transactions of the Horticultural Society’
+volume 4 page 17. The same observer elsewhere speaks of the spontaneous
+crossing of rhododendrons. Gallesio makes the same statement with
+respect to oranges. I have myself known extensive crossing to occur with
+the common rhubarb. For Leptosiphon, Verlot ‘Des Varieties’ 1865 page
+20. I have not included in my list the Carnation, Nemophila, or
+Antirrhinum, the varieties of which are known to cross freely, because
+these plants are not always self-fertile. I know nothing about the
+self-fertility of Trollius Lecoq ‘De la Fecondation’ 1862 page 93,
+Mahonia, and Crinum, in which genera the species intercross largely.
+With respect to Mahonia it is now scarcely possible to procure in this
+country pure specimens of M. aquifolium or repens; and the various
+species of Crinum sent by Herbert ‘Amaryllidaceae’ page 32, to Calcutta,
+crossed there so freely that pure seed could not be saved.) Much other
+indirect evidence could be given with respect to the extent to which
+varieties of the same species spontaneously intercross.
+
+Gardeners who raise seed for sale are compelled by dearly bought
+experience to take extraordinary precautions against intercrossing. Thus
+Messrs. Sharp “have land engaged in the growth of seed in no less than
+eight parishes.” The mere fact of a vast number of plants belonging to
+the same variety growing together is a considerable protection, as the
+chances are strong in favour of plants of the same variety
+intercrossing; and it is in chief part owing to this circumstance, that
+certain villages have become famous for pure seed of particular
+varieties. (10/39. With respect to Messrs. Sharp see ‘Gardeners’
+Chronicle’ 1856 page 823. Lindley’s ‘Theory of Horticulture’ page 319.)
+Only two trials were made by me to ascertain after how long an interval
+of time, pollen from a distinct variety would obliterate more or less
+completely the action of a plant’s own pollen. The stigmas in two lately
+expanded flowers on a variety of cabbage, called Ragged Jack, were well
+covered with pollen from the same plant. After an interval of
+twenty-three hours, pollen from the Early Barnes Cabbage growing at a
+distance was placed on both stigmas; and as the plant was left
+uncovered, pollen from other flowers on the Ragged Jack would certainly
+have been left by the bees during the next two or three days on the same
+two stigmas. Under these circumstances it seemed very unlikely that the
+pollen of the Barnes cabbage would produce any effect; but three out of
+the fifteen plants raised from the two capsules thus produced were
+plainly mongrelised: and I have no doubt that the twelve other plants
+were affected, for they grew much more vigorously than the
+self-fertilised seedlings from the Ragged Jack planted at the same time
+and under the same conditions. Secondly, I placed on several stigmas of
+a long-styled cowslip (Primula veris) plenty of pollen from the same
+plant, and after twenty-four hours added some from a short-styled
+dark-red Polyanthus, which is a variety of the cowslip. From the flowers
+thus treated thirty seedlings were raised, and all these without
+exception bore reddish flowers; so that the effect of the plant’s own
+pollen, though placed on the stigmas twenty-four hours previously, was
+quite destroyed by that of the red variety. It should, however, be
+observed that these plants are dimorphic, and that the second union was
+a legitimate one, whilst the first was illegitimate; but flowers
+illegitimately fertilised with their own pollen yield a moderately fair
+supply of seeds.
+
+We have hitherto considered only the prepotent fertilising power of
+pollen from a distinct variety over a plants’ own pollen,--both kinds of
+pollen being placed on the same stigma. It is a much more remarkable
+fact that pollen from another individual of the same variety is
+prepotent over a plant’s own pollen, as shown by the superiority of the
+seedlings raised from a cross of this kind over seedlings from
+self-fertilised flowers. Thus in Tables 7/A, B, and C, there are at
+least fifteen species which are self-fertile when insects are excluded;
+and this implies that their stigmas must receive their own pollen;
+nevertheless, most of the seedlings which were raised by fertilising the
+non-castrated flowers of these fifteen species with pollen from another
+plant were greatly superior, in height, weight, and fertility, to the
+self-fertilised offspring. (10/40. These fifteen species consist of
+Brassica oleracea, Reseda odorata and lutea, Limnanthes douglasii,
+Papaver vagum, Viscaria oculata, Beta vulgaris, Lupinus luteus, Ipomoea
+purpurea, Mimulus luteus, Calceolaria, Verbascum thapsus, Vandellia
+nummularifolia, Lactuca sativa, and Zea mays.) For instance, with
+Ipomoea purpurea every single intercrossed plant exceeded in height its
+self-fertilised opponent until the sixth generation; and so it was with
+Mimulus luteus until the fourth generation. Out of six pairs of crossed
+and self-fertilised cabbages, every one of the former was much heavier
+than the latter. With Papaver vagum, out of fifteen pairs, all but two
+of the crossed plants were taller than their self-fertilised opponents.
+Of eight pairs of Lupinus luteus, all but two of the crossed were
+taller; of eight pairs of Beta vulgaris all but one; and of fifteen
+pairs of Zea mays all but two were taller. Of fifteen pairs of
+Limnanthes douglasii, and of seven pairs of Lactuca sativa, every single
+crossed plant was taller than its self-fertilised opponent. It should
+also be observed that in these experiments no particular care was taken
+to cross-fertilise the flowers immediately after their expansion; it is
+therefore almost certain that in many of these cases some pollen from
+the same flower will have already fallen on and acted on the stigma.
+
+There can hardly be a doubt that several other species of which the
+crossed seedlings are more vigorous than the self-fertilised, as shown
+in Tables 7/A, 7/B and 7/C, besides the above fifteen, must have
+received their own pollen and that from another plant at nearly the same
+time; and if so, the same remarks as those just given are applicable to
+them. Scarcely any result from my experiments has surprised me so much
+as this of the prepotency of pollen from a distinct individual over each
+plant’s own pollen, as proved by the greater constitutional vigour of
+the crossed seedlings. The evidence of prepotency is here deduced from
+the comparative growth of the two lots of seedlings; but we have similar
+evidence in many cases from the much greater fertility of the
+non-castrated flowers on the mother-plant, when these received at the
+same time their own pollen and that from a distinct plant, in comparison
+with the flowers which received only their own pollen.
+
+From the various facts now given on the spontaneous intercrossing of
+varieties growing near together, and on the effects of cross-fertilising
+flowers which are self-fertile and have not been castrated, we may
+conclude that pollen brought by insects or by the wind from a distinct
+plant will generally prevent the action of pollen from the same flower,
+even though it may have been applied some time before; and thus the
+intercrossing of plants in a state of nature will be greatly favoured or
+ensured.
+
+The case of a great tree covered with innumerable hermaphrodite flowers
+seems at first sight strongly opposed to the belief in the frequency of
+intercrosses between distinct individuals. The flowers which grow on the
+opposite sides of such a tree will have been exposed to somewhat
+different conditions, and a cross between them may perhaps be in some
+degree beneficial; but it is not probable that it would be nearly so
+beneficial as a cross between flowers on distinct trees, as we may infer
+from the inefficiency of pollen taken from plants which have been
+propagated from the same stock, though growing on separate roots. The
+number of bees which frequent certain kinds of trees when in full flower
+is very great, and they may be seen flying from tree to tree more
+frequently than might have been expected. Nevertheless, if we consider
+how numerous are the flowers, for instance, on a horse-chestnut or
+lime-tree, an incomparably larger number of flowers must be fertilised
+by pollen brought from other flowers on the same tree, than from flowers
+on a distinct tree. But we should bear in mind that with the
+horse-chestnut, for instance, only one or two of the several flowers on
+the same peduncle produce a seed; and that this seed is the product of
+only one out of several ovules within the same ovarium. Now we know from
+the experiments of Herbert and others that if one flower is fertilised
+with pollen which is more efficient than that applied to the other
+flowers on the same peduncle, the latter often drop off (10/41.
+‘Variation under Domestication’ chapter 17 2nd edition volume 2 page
+120.); and it is probable that this would occur with many of the
+self-fertilised flowers on a large tree, if other and adjoining flowers
+were cross-fertilised. Of the flowers annually produced by a great tree,
+it is almost certain that a large number would be self-fertilised; and
+if we assume that the tree produced only 500 flowers, and that this
+number of seeds were requisite to keep up the stock, so that at least
+one seedling should hereafter struggle to maturity, then a large
+proportion of the seedlings would necessarily be derived from
+self-fertilised seeds. But if the tree annually produced 50,000 flowers,
+of which the self-fertilised dropped off without yielding seeds, then
+the cross-fertilised flowers might yield seeds in sufficient number to
+keep up the stock, and most of the seedlings would be vigorous from
+being the product of a cross between distinct individuals. In this
+manner the production of a vast number of flowers, besides serving to
+entice numerous insects and to compensate for the accidental destruction
+of many flowers by spring-frosts or otherwise, would be a very great
+advantage to the species; and when we behold our orchard-trees covered
+with a white sheet of bloom in the spring, we should not falsely accuse
+nature of wasteful expenditure, though comparatively little fruit is
+produced in the autumn.
+
+ANEMOPHILOUS PLANTS.
+
+The nature and relations of plants which are fertilised by the wind have
+been admirably discussed by Delpino and Hermann Muller; and I have
+already made some remarks on the structure of their flowers in contrast
+with those of entomophilous species. (10/42. Delpino ‘Ult. Osservazioni
+sulla Dicogamia’ part 2 fasc. 1 1870 and ‘Studi sopra un Lignaggio
+anemofilo’ etc. 1871. Hermann Muller ‘Die Befruchtung’ etc. pages 412,
+442. Both these authors remark that plants must have been anemophilous
+before they were entomophilous. Hermann Muller further discusses in a
+very interesting manner the steps by which entomophilous flowers became
+nectariferous and gradually acquired their present structure through
+successive beneficial changes.) There is good reason to believe that the
+first plants which appeared on this earth were cryptogamic; and judging
+from what now occurs, the male fertilising element must either have
+possessed the power of spontaneous movement through the water or over
+damp surfaces, or have been carried by currents of water to the female
+organs. That some of the most ancient plants, such as ferns, possessed
+true sexual organs there can hardly be a doubt; and this shows, as
+Hildebrand remarks, at how early a period the sexes were separated.
+(10/43. ‘Die Geschlechter-Vertheilung’ 1867 pages 84-90.) As soon as
+plants became phanerogamic and grew on the dry ground, if they were ever
+to intercross, it would be indispensable that the male fertilising
+element should be transported by some means through the air; and the
+wind is the simplest means of transport. There must also have been a
+period when winged insects did not exist, and plants would not then have
+been rendered entomophilous. Even at a somewhat later period the more
+specialised orders of the Hymenoptera, Lepidoptera, and Diptera, which
+are now chiefly concerned with the transport of pollen, did not exist.
+Therefore the earliest terrestrial plants known to us, namely, the
+Coniferae and Cycadiae, no doubt were anemophilous, like the existing
+species of these same groups. A vestige of this early state of things is
+likewise shown by some other groups of plants which are anemophilous, as
+these on the whole stand lower in the scale than entomophilous species.
+
+There is no great difficulty in understanding how an anemophilous plant
+might have been rendered entomophilous. Pollen is a nutritious
+substance, and would soon have been discovered and devoured by insects;
+and if any adhered to their bodies it would have been carried from the
+anthers to the stigma of the same flower, or from one flower to another.
+One of the chief characteristics of the pollen of anemophilous plants is
+its incoherence; but pollen in this state can adhere to the hairy bodies
+of insects, as we see with some Leguminosae, Ericaceae, and
+Melastomaceae. We have, however, better evidence of the possibility of a
+transition of the above kind in certain plants being now fertilised
+partly by the wind and partly by insects. The common rhubarb (Rheum
+rhaponticum) is so far in an intermediate condition, that I have seen
+many Diptera sucking the flowers, with much pollen adhering to their
+bodies; and yet the pollen is so incoherent, that clouds of it are
+emitted if the plant be gently shaken on a sunny day, some of which
+could hardly fail to fall on the large stigmas of the neighbouring
+flowers. According to Delpino and Hermann Muller, some species of
+Plantago are in a similar intermediate condition. (10/44. ‘Die
+Befruchtung’ etc. page 342.)
+
+Although it is probable that pollen was aboriginally the sole attraction
+to insects, and although many plants now exist whose flowers are
+frequented exclusively by pollen-devouring insects, yet the great
+majority secrete nectar as the chief attraction. Many years ago I
+suggested that primarily the saccharine matter in nectar was excreted as
+a waste product of chemical changes in the sap; and that when the
+excretion happened to occur within the envelopes of a flower, it was
+utilised for the important object of cross-fertilisation, being
+subsequently much increased in quantity and stored in various ways.
+(10/45. Nectar was regarded by De Candolle and Dunal as an excretion, as
+stated by Martinet in ‘Annal des Sc. Nat.’ 1872 tome 14 page 211.) This
+view is rendered probable by the leaves of some trees excreting, under
+certain climatic conditions, without the aid of special glands, a
+saccharine fluid, often called honey-dew. This is the case with the
+leaves of the lime; for although some authors have disputed the fact, a
+most capable judge, Dr. Maxwell Masters, informs me that, after having
+heard the discussions on this subject before the Horticultural Society,
+he feels no doubt on this head. The leaves, as well as the cut stems, of
+the manna ash (Fraxinus ornus) secrete in a like manner saccharine
+matter. (10/46. ‘Gardeners’ Chronicle’ 1876 page 242.) According to
+Treviranus, so do the upper surfaces of the leaves of Carduus arctioides
+during hot weather. Many analogous facts could be given. (10/47. Kurr
+‘Untersuchungen uber die Bedeutung der Nektarien’ 1833 page 115.) There
+are, however, a considerable number of plants which bear small glands on
+their leaves, petioles, phyllodia, stipules, bracteae, or flower
+peduncles, or on the outside of their calyx, and these glands secrete
+minute drops of a sweet fluid, which is eagerly sought by sugar-loving
+insects, such as ants, hive-bees, and wasps. (10/48. A large number of
+cases are given by Delpino in the ‘Bulletino Entomologico’ Anno 6 1874.
+To these may be added those given in my text, as well as the excretion
+of saccharine matter from the calyx of two species of Iris, and from the
+bracteae of certain Orchideae: see Kurr ‘Bedeutung der Nektarien’ 1833
+pages 25, 28. Belt ‘Nicaragua’ page 224, also refers to a similar
+excretion by many epiphytal orchids and passion-flowers. Mr. Rodgers has
+seen much nectar secreted from the bases of the flower-peduncles of
+Vanilla. Link says that the only example of a hypopetalous nectary known
+to him is externally at the base of the flowers of Chironia decussata:
+see ‘Reports on Botany, Ray Society’ 1846 page 355. An important memoir
+bearing on this subject has lately appeared by Reinke ‘Gottingen
+Nachrichten’ 1873 page 825, who shows that in many plants the tips of
+the serrations on the leaves in the bud bear glands which secrete only
+at a very early age, and which have the same morphological structure as
+true nectar-secreting glands. He further shows that the nectar-secreting
+glands on the petioles of Prunus avium are not developed at a very early
+age, yet wither away on the old leaves. They are homologous with those
+on the serrations of the blades of the same leaves, as shown by their
+structure and by transition-forms; for the lowest serrations on the
+blades of most of the leaves secrete nectar instead of resin (harz).) In
+the case of the glands on the stipules of Vicia sativa, the excretion
+manifestly depends on changes in the sap, consequent on the sun shining
+brightly; for I repeatedly observed that as soon as the sun was hidden
+behind clouds the secretion ceased, and the hive-bees left the field;
+but as soon as the sun broke out again, they returned to their feast.
+(10/49. I published a brief notice of this case in the ‘Gardeners’
+Chronicle’ 1855 July 21 page 487, and afterwards made further
+observations. Besides the hive-bee, another species of bee, a moth,
+ants, and two kinds of flies sucked the drops of fluid on the stipules.
+The larger drops tasted sweet. The hive-bees never even looked at the
+flowers which were open at the same time; whilst two species of
+humble-bees neglected the stipules and visited only the flowers.) I have
+observed an analogous fact with the secretion of true nectar in the
+flowers of Lobelia erinus.
+
+Delpino, however, maintains that the power of secreting a sweet fluid by
+any extra-floral organ has been in every case specially gained, for the
+sake of attracting ants and wasps as defenders of the plant against
+their enemies; but I have never seen any reason to believe that this is
+so with the three species observed by me, namely, Prunus laurocerasus,
+Vicia sativa, and V. faba. No plant is so little attacked by enemies of
+any kind as the common bracken-fern (Pteris aquilina); and yet, as my
+son Francis has discovered, the large glands at the bases of the fronds,
+but only whilst young, excrete much sweetish fluid, which is eagerly
+sought by innumerable ants, chiefly belonging to Myrmica; and these ants
+certainly do not serve as a protection against any enemy. Delpino argues
+that such glands ought not to be considered as excretory, because if
+they were so, they would be present in every species; but I cannot see
+much force in this argument, as the leaves of some plants excrete sugar
+only during certain states of the weather. That in some cases the
+secretion serves to attract insects as defenders of the plant, and may
+have been developed to a high degree for this special purpose, I have
+not the least doubt, from the observations of Delpino, and more
+especially from those of Mr. Belt on Acacia sphaerocephala, and on
+passion-flowers. This acacia likewise produces, as an additional
+attraction to ants, small bodies containing much oil and protoplasm, and
+analogous bodies are developed by a Cecropia for the same purpose, as
+described by Fritz Muller. (10/50. Mr. Belt ‘The Naturalist in
+Nicaragua’ 1874 page 218, has given a most interesting account of the
+paramount importance of ants as defenders of the above Acacia. With
+respect to the Cecropia see ‘Nature’ 1876 page 304. My son Francis has
+described the microscopical structure and development of these wonderful
+food-bodies in a paper read before the Linnean Society.)
+
+The excretion of a sweet fluid by glands seated outside of a flower is
+rarely utilised as a means for cross-fertilisation by the aid of
+insects; but this occurs with the bracteae of the Marcgraviaceae, as the
+late Dr. Cruger informed me from actual observation in the West Indies,
+and as Delpino infers with much acuteness from the relative position of
+the several parts of their flowers. (10/51. ‘Ult. Osservaz. Dicogamia’
+1868-69 page 188.) Mr. Farrer has also shown that the flowers of
+Coronilla are curiously modified, so that bees may fertilise them whilst
+sucking the fluid secreted from the outside of the calyx. (10/52.
+‘Nature’ 1874 page 169.) It further appears probable from the
+observations of the Reverend W.A. Leighton, that the fluid so abundantly
+secreted by glands on the phyllodia of the Australian Acacia magnifica,
+which stand near the flowers, is connected with their fertilisation.
+(10/53. ‘Annals and Magazine of Natural History’ volume 16 1865 page 14.
+In my work on the ‘Fertilisation of Orchids’ and in a paper subsequently
+published in the ‘Annals and Magazine of Natural History’ it has been
+shown that although certain kinds of orchids possess a nectary, no
+nectar is actually secreted by it; but that insects penetrate the inner
+walls and suck the fluid contained in the intercellular spaces. I
+further suggested, in the case of some other orchids which do not
+secrete nectar, that insects gnawed the labellum; and this suggestion
+has since been proved true. Hermann Muller and Delpino have now shown
+that some other plants have thickened petals which are sucked or gnawed
+by insects, their fertilisation being thus aided. All the known facts on
+this head have been collected by Delpino in his ‘Ult. Osserv.’ part 2
+fasc. 2 1875 pages 59-63.)
+
+The amount of pollen produced by anemophilous plants, and the distance
+to which it is often transported by the wind, are both surprisingly
+great. Mr. Hassall found that the weight of pollen produced by a single
+plant of the Bulrush (Typha) was 144 grains. Bucketfuls of pollen,
+chiefly of Coniferae and Gramineae, have been swept off the decks of
+vessels near the North American shore; and Mr. Riley has seen the ground
+near St. Louis, in Missouri, covered with pollen, as if sprinkled with
+sulphur; and there was good reason to believe that this had been
+transported from the pine-forests at least 400 miles to the south.
+Kerner has seen the snow-fields on the higher Alps similarly dusted; and
+Mr. Blackley found numerous pollen-grains, in one instance 1200,
+adhering to sticky slides, which were sent up to a height of from 500 to
+1000 feet by means of a kite, and then uncovered by a special mechanism.
+It is remarkable that in these experiments there were on an average
+nineteen times as many pollen-grains in the atmosphere at the higher
+than at the lower levels. (10/54. For Mr. Hassall’s observations see
+‘Annals and Magazine of Natural History’ volume 8 1842 page 108. In the
+‘North American Journal of Science’ January 1842, there is an account of
+the pollen swept off the decks of a vessel. Riley ‘Fifth Report on the
+Noxious Insects of Missouri’ 1873 page 86. Kerner ‘Die Schutzmittel des
+Pollens’ 1873 page 6. This author has also seen a lake in the Tyrol so
+covered with pollen, that the water no longer appeared blue. Mr.
+Blackley ‘Experimental Researches on Hay-fever’ 1873 pages 132,
+141-152.) Considering these facts, it is not so surprising as it at
+first appears that all, or nearly all, the stigmas of anemophilous
+plants should receive pollen brought to them by mere chance by the wind.
+During the early part of summer every object is thus dusted with pollen;
+for instance, I examined for another purpose the labella of a large
+number of flowers of the Fly Ophrys (which is rarely visited by
+insects), and found on all very many pollen-grains of other plants,
+which had been caught by their velvety surfaces.
+
+The extraordinary quantity and lightness of the pollen of anemophilous
+plants are no doubt both necessary, as their pollen has generally to be
+carried to the stigmas of other and often distant flowers; for, as we
+shall soon see, most anemophilous plants have their sexes separated. The
+fertilisation of these plants is generally aided by the stigmas being of
+large size or plumose; and in the case of the Coniferae, by the naked
+ovules secreting a drop of fluid, as shown by Delpino. Although the
+number of anemophilous species is small, as the author just quoted
+remarks, the number of individuals is large in comparison with that of
+entomophilous species. This holds good especially in cold and temperate
+regions, where insects are not so numerous as under a warmer climate,
+and where consequently entomophilous plants are less favourably
+situated. We see this in our forests of Coniferae and other trees, such
+as oaks, beeches, birches, ashes, etc.; and in the Gramineae,
+Cyperaceae, and Juncaceae, which clothe our meadows and swamps; all
+these trees and plants being fertilised by the wind. As a large quantity
+of pollen is wasted by anemophilous plants, it is surprising that so
+many vigorous species of this kind abounding with individuals should
+still exist in any part of the world; for if they had been rendered
+entomophilous, their pollen would have been transported by the aid of
+the senses and appetites of insects with incomparably greater safety
+than by the wind. That such a conversion is possible can hardly be
+doubted, from the remarks lately made on the existence of intermediate
+forms; and apparently it has been effected in the group of willows, as
+we may infer from the nature of their nearest allies. (10/55. Hermann
+Muller ‘Die Befruchtung’ etc. page 149.)
+
+It seems at first sight a still more surprising fact that plants, after
+having been once rendered entomophilous, should ever again have become
+anemophilous; but this has occasionally though rarely occurred, for
+instance, with the common Poterium sanguisorba, as may be inferred from
+its belonging to the Rosaceae. Such cases are, however, intelligible, as
+almost all plants require to be occasionally intercrossed; and if any
+entomiphilous species ceased to be visited by insects, it would probably
+perish unless it were rendered anemophilous. A plant would be neglected
+by insects if nectar failed to be secreted, unless indeed a large supply
+of attractive pollen was present; and from what we have seen of the
+excretion of saccharine fluid from leaves and glands being largely
+governed in several cases by climatic influences, and from some few
+flowers which do not now secrete nectar still retaining coloured
+guiding-marks, the failure of the secretion cannot be considered as a
+very improbable event. The same result would follow to a certainty, if
+winged insects ceased to exist in any district, or became very rare. Now
+there is only a single plant in the great order of the Cruciferae,
+namely, Pringlea, which is anemophilous, and this plant is an inhabitant
+of Kerguelen Land, where there are hardly any winged insects, owing
+probably, as was suggested by me in the case of Madeira, to the risk
+which they run of being blown out to sea and destroyed. (10/56. The
+Reverend A.E. Eaton in ‘Proceedings of the Royal Society’ volume 23 1875
+page 351.)
+
+A remarkable fact with respect to anemophilous plants is that they are
+often diclinous, that is, they are either monoecious with their sexes
+separated on the same plant, or dioecious with their sexes on distinct
+plants. In the class Monoecia of Linnaeus, Delpino shows that the
+species of twenty-eight genera are anemophilous, and of seventeen genera
+entomophilous. (10/57. ‘Studi sopra un Lignaggio anemofilo delle
+Compositae’ 1871.) The larger proportion of entomophilous genera in this
+latter class is probably the indirect result of insects having the power
+of carrying pollen to another and sometimes distant plant much more
+securely than the wind. In the above two classes taken together there
+are thirty-eight anemophilous and thirty-six entomophilous genera;
+whereas in the great mass of hermaphrodite plants the proportion of
+anemophilous to entomophilous genera is extremely small. The cause of
+this remarkable difference may be attributed to anemophilous plants
+having retained in a greater degree than the entomophilous a primordial
+condition, in which the sexes were separated and their mutual
+fertilisation effected by means of the wind. That the earliest and
+lowest members of the vegetable kingdom had their sexes separated, as is
+still the case to a large extent, is the opinion of a high authority,
+Nageli. (10/58. ‘Entstehung und Begriff der Naturhist. Art’ 1865 page
+22.) It is indeed difficult to avoid this conclusion, if we admit the
+view, which seems highly probable, that the conjugation of the Algae and
+of some of the simplest animals is the first step towards sexual
+reproduction; and if we further bear in mind that a greater and greater
+degree of differentiation between the cells which conjugate can be
+traced, thus leading apparently to the development of the two sexual
+forms. (10/59. See the interesting discussion on this whole subject by
+O. Butschli in his ‘Studien uber die ersten Entwickelungsvorgange der
+Eizelle; etc. 1876 pages 207-219. Also Engelmann “Ueber Entwickelung von
+Infusorien” ‘Morphol. Jahrbuch’ B. 1 page 573. Also Dr. A. Dodel “Die
+Kraushaar-Algae” ‘Pringsheims Jahrbuch f. Wiss. Bot.’ B. 10.) We have
+also seen that as plants became more highly developed and affixed to the
+ground, they would be compelled to be anemophilous in order to
+intercross. Therefore all plants which have not since been greatly
+modified, would tend still to be both diclinous and anemophilous; and we
+can thus understand the connection between these two states, although
+they appear at first sight quite disconnected. If this view is correct,
+plants must have been rendered hermaphrodites at a later though still
+very early period, and entomophilous at a yet later period, namely,
+after the development of winged insects. So that the relationship
+between hermaphroditism and fertilisation by means of insects is
+likewise to a certain extent intelligible.
+
+Why the descendants of plants which were originally dioecious, and which
+therefore profited by always intercrossing with another individual,
+should have been converted into hermaphrodites, may perhaps be explained
+by the risk which they ran, especially as long as they were
+anemophilous, of not being always fertilised, and consequently of not
+leaving offspring. This latter evil, the greatest of all to any
+organism, would have been much lessened by their becoming
+hermaphrodites, though with the contingent disadvantage of frequent
+self-fertilisation. By what graduated steps an hermaphrodite condition
+was acquired we do not know. But we can see that if a lowly organised
+form, in which the two sexes were represented by somewhat different
+individuals, were to increase by budding either before or after
+conjugation, the two incipient sexes would be capable of appearing by
+buds on the same stock, as occasionally occurs with various characters
+at the present day. The organism would then be in a monoecious
+condition, and this is probably the first step towards hermaphroditism;
+for if very simple male and female flowers on the same stock, each
+consisting of a single stamen or pistil, were brought close together and
+surrounded by a common envelope, in nearly the same manner as with the
+florets of the Compositae, we should have an hermaphrodite flower.
+
+There seems to be no limit to the changes which organisms undergo under
+changing conditions of life; and some hermaphrodite plants, descended as
+we must believe from aboriginally diclinous plants, have had their sexes
+again separated. That this has occurred, we may infer from the presence
+of rudimentary stamens in the flowers of some individuals, and of
+rudimentary pistils in the flowers of other individuals, for example in
+Lychnis dioica. But a conversion of this kind will not have occurred
+unless cross-fertilisation was already assured, generally by the agency
+of insects; but why the production of male and female flowers on
+distinct plants should have been advantageous to the species,
+cross-fertilisation having been previously assured, is far from obvious.
+A plant might indeed produce twice as many seeds as were necessary to
+keep up its numbers under new or changed conditions of life; and if it
+did not vary by bearing fewer flowers, and did vary in the state of its
+reproductive organs (as often occurs under cultivation), a wasteful
+expenditure of seeds and pollen would be saved by the flowers becoming
+diclinous.
+
+A related point is worth notice. I remarked in my Origin of Species that
+in Britain a much larger proportion of trees and bushes than of
+herbaceous plants have their sexes separated; and so it is, according to
+Asa Gray and Hooker, in North America and New Zealand. (10/60. I find in
+the ‘London Catalogue of British Plants’ that there are thirty-two
+indigenous trees and bushes in Great Britain, classed under nine
+families; but to err on the safe side, I have counted only six species
+of willows. Of the thirty-two trees and bushes, nineteen, or more than
+half, have their sexes separated; and this is an enormous proportion
+compared with other British plants. New Zealand abounds with diclinous
+plants and trees; and Dr. Hooker calculates that out of about 756
+phanerogamic plants inhabiting the islands, no less than 108 are trees,
+belonging to thirty-five families. Of these 108 trees, fifty-two, or
+very nearly half, have their sexes more or less separated. Of bushes
+there are 149, of which sixty-one have their sexes in the same state;
+whilst of the remaining 500 herbaceous plants only 121, or less than a
+fourth, have their sexes separated. Lastly, Professor Asa Gray informs
+me that in the United States there are 132 native trees (belonging to
+twenty-five families) of which ninety-five (belonging to seventeen
+families) “have their sexes more or less separated, for the greater part
+decidedly separated.”) It is, however, doubtful how far this rule holds
+good generally, and it certainly does not do so in Australia. But I have
+been assured that the flowers of the prevailing Australian trees,
+namely, the Myrtaceae, swarm with insects, and if they are dichogamous
+they would be practically diclinous. (10/61. With respect to the
+Proteaceae of Australia, Mr. Bentham ‘Journal of the Linnean Society
+Botany’ volume 13 1871 pages 58, 64, remarks on the various contrivances
+by which the stigma in the several genera is screened from the action of
+the pollen from the same flower. For instance, in Synaphea “the stigma
+is held by the eunuch (i.e., one of the stamens which is barren) safe
+from all pollution from her brother anthers, and is preserved intact for
+any pollen that may be inserted by insects and other agencies.”) As far
+as anemophilous plants are concerned, we know that they are apt to have
+their sexes separated, and we can see that it would be an unfavourable
+circumstance for them to bear their flowers very close to the ground, as
+their pollen is liable to be blown high up in the air (10/62. Kerner
+‘Schutzmittel des Pollens’ 1873 page 4.); but as the culms of grasses
+give sufficient elevation, we cannot thus account for so many trees and
+bushes being diclinous. We may infer from our previous discussion that a
+tree bearing numerous hermaphrodite flowers would rarely intercross with
+another tree, except by means of the pollen of a distinct individual
+being prepotent over the plants’ own pollen. Now the separation of the
+sexes, whether the plant were anemophilous are entomophilous, would most
+effectually bar self-fertilisation, and this may be the cause of so many
+trees and bushes being diclinous. Or to put the case in another way, a
+plant would be better fitted for development into a tree, if the sexes
+were separated, than if it were hermaphrodite; for in the former case
+its numerous flowers would be less liable to continued
+self-fertilisation. But it should also be observed that the long life of
+a tree or bush permits of the separation of the sexes, with much less
+risk of evil from impregnation occasionally failing and seeds not being
+produced, than in the case of short-lived plants. Hence it probably is,
+as Lecoq has remarked, that annual plants are rarely dioecious.
+
+Finally, we have seen reason to believe that the higher plants are
+descended from extremely low forms which conjugated, and that the
+conjugating individuals differed somewhat from one another,--the one
+representing the male and the other the female--so that plants were
+aboriginally dioecious. At a very early period such lowly organised
+dioecious plants probably gave rise by budding to monoecious plants with
+the two sexes borne by the same individual; and by a still closer union
+of the sexes to hermaphrodite plants, which are now much the commonest
+form. (10/63. There is a considerable amount of evidence that all the
+higher animals are the descendants of hermaphrodites; and it is a
+curious problem whether such hermaphroditism may not have been the
+result of the conjugation of two slightly different individuals, which
+represented the two incipient sexes. On this view, the higher animals
+may now owe their bilateral structure, with all their organs double at
+an early embryonic period, to the fusion or conjugation of two
+primordial individuals.) As soon as plants became affixed to the ground,
+their pollen must have been carried by some means from flower to flower,
+at first almost certainly by the wind, then by pollen-devouring, and
+afterwards by nectar-seeking insects. During subsequent ages some few
+entomophilous plants have been again rendered anemophilous, and some
+hermaphrodite plants have had their sexes again separated; and we can
+vaguely see the advantages of such recurrent changes under certain
+conditions.
+
+Dioecious plants, however fertilised, have a great advantage over other
+plants in their cross-fertilisation being assured. But this advantage is
+gained in the case of anemophilous species at the expense of the
+production of an enormous superfluity of pollen, with some risk to them
+and to entomophilous species of their fertilisation occasionally
+failing. Half the individuals, moreover, namely, the males, produce no
+seed, and this might possibly be a disadvantage. Delpino remarks that
+dioecious plants cannot spread so easily as monoecious and hermaphrodite
+species, for a single individual which happened to reach some new site
+could not propagate its kind; but it may be doubted whether this is a
+serious evil. Monoecious plants can hardly fail to be to a large extent
+dioecious in function, owing to the lightness of their pollen and to the
+wind blowing laterally, with the great additional advantage of
+occasionally or often producing some self-fertilised seeds. When they
+are also dichogamous, they are necessarily dioecious in function.
+Lastly, hermaphrodite plants can generally produce at least some
+self-fertilised seeds, and they are at the same time capable, through
+the various means specified in this chapter, of cross-fertilisation.
+When their structure absolutely prevents self-fertilisation, they are in
+the same relative position to one another as monoecious and dioecious
+plants, with what may be an advantage, namely, that every flower is
+capable of yielding seeds.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE HABITS OF INSECTS IN RELATION TO THE FERTILISATION OF FLOWERS.
+
+Insects visit the flowers of the same species as long as they can.
+Cause of this habit.
+Means by which bees recognise the flowers of the same species.
+Sudden secretion of nectar.
+Nectar of certain flowers unattractive to certain insects.
+Industry of bees, and the number of flowers visited within a short time.
+Perforation of the corolla by bees.
+Skill shown in the operation.
+Hive-bees profit by the holes made by humble-bees.
+Effects of habit.
+The motive for perforating flowers to save time.
+Flowers growing in crowded masses chiefly perforated.
+
+Bees and various other insects must be directed by instinct to search
+flowers for nectar and pollen, as they act in this manner without
+instruction as soon as they emerge from the pupa state. Their instincts,
+however, are not of a specialised nature, for they visit many exotic
+flowers as readily as the endemic kinds, and they often search for
+nectar in flowers which do not secrete any; and they may be seen
+attempting to suck it out of nectaries of such length that it cannot be
+reached by them. (11/1. See, on this subject Hermann Muller
+‘Befruchtung’ etc. page 427; and Sir J. Lubbock’s ‘British Wild Flowers’
+etc. page 20. Muller ‘Bienen Zeitung’ June 1876 page 119, assigns good
+reasons for his belief that bees and many other Hymenoptera have
+inherited from some early nectar-sucking progenitor greater skill in
+robbing flowers than that which is displayed by insects belonging to the
+other Orders.) All kinds of bees and certain other insects usually visit
+the flowers of the same species as long as they can, before going to
+another species. This fact was observed by Aristotle with respect to the
+hive-bee more than 2000 years ago, and was noticed by Dobbs in a paper
+published in 1736 in the Philosophical Transactions. It may be observed
+by any one, both with hive and humble-bees, in every flower-garden; not
+that the habit is invariably followed. Mr. Bennett watched for several
+hours many plants of Lamium album, L. purpureum, and another Labiate
+plant, Nepeta glechoma, all growing mingled together on a bank near some
+hives; and he found that each bee confined its visits to the same
+species. (11/2. ‘Nature’ 1874 June 4 page 92.) The pollen of these three
+plants differs in colour, so that he was able to test his observations
+by examining that which adhered to the bodies of the captured bees, and
+he found one kind on each bee.
+
+Humble and hive-bees are good botanists, for they know that varieties
+may differ widely in the colour of their flowers and yet belong to the
+same species. I have repeatedly seen humble-bees flying straight from a
+plant of the ordinary red Dictamnus fraxinella to a white variety; from
+one to another very differently coloured variety of Delphinium consolida
+and of Primula veris; from a dark purple to a bright yellow variety of
+Viola tricolor; and with two species of Papaver, from one variety to
+another which differed much in colour; but in this latter case some of
+the bees flew indifferently to either species, although passing by other
+genera, and thus acted as if the two species were merely varieties.
+Hermann Muller also has seen hive-bees flying from flower to flower of
+Ranunculus bulbosus and arvensis, and of Trifolium fragiferum and
+repens; and even from blue hyacinths to blue violets. (11/3. ‘Bienen
+Zeitung’ July 1876 page 183.)
+
+Some species of Diptera or flies keep to the flowers of the same species
+with almost as much regularity as do bees; and when captured they are
+found covered with pollen. I have seen Rhingia rostrata acting in this
+manner with the flowers of Lychnis dioica, Ajuga reptans, and Vici
+sepium. Volucella plumosa and Empis cheiroptera flew straight from
+flower to flower of Myosotis sylvatica. Dolichopus nigripennis behaved
+in the same manner with Potentilla tormentilla; and other Diptera with
+Stellaria holostea, Helianthemum vulgare, Bellis perennis, Veronica
+hederaefolia and chamoedrys; but some flies visited indifferently the
+flowers of these two latter species. I have seen more than once a minute
+Thrips, with pollen adhering to its body, fly from one flower to another
+of the same kind; and one was observed by me crawling about within a
+convolvulus with four grains of pollen adhering to its head, which were
+deposited on the stigma.
+
+Fabricius and Sprengel state that when flies have once entered the
+flowers of Aristolochia they never escape,--a statement which I could
+not believe, as in this case the insects would not aid in the
+cross-fertilisation of the plant; and this statement has now been shown
+by Hildebrand to be erroneous. As the spathes of Arum maculatum are
+furnished with filaments apparently adapted to prevent the exit of
+insects, they resemble in this respect the flowers of Aristolochia; and
+on examining several spathes, from thirty to sixty minute Diptera
+belonging to three species were found in some of them; and many of these
+insects were lying dead at the bottom, as if they had been permanently
+entrapped. In order to discover whether the living ones could escape and
+carry pollen to another plant, I tied in the spring of 1842 a fine
+muslin bag tightly round a spathe; and on returning in an hour’s time
+several little flies were crawling about on the inner surface of the
+bag. I then gathered a spathe and breathed hard into it; several flies
+soon crawled out, and all without exception were dusted with arum
+pollen. These flies quickly flew away, and I distinctly saw three of
+them fly to another plant about a yard off; they alighted on the inner
+or concave surface of the spathe, and suddenly flew down into the
+flower. I then opened this flower, and although not a single anther had
+burst, several grains of pollen were lying at the bottom, which must
+have been brought from another plant by one of these flies or by some
+other insect. In another flower little flies were crawling about, and I
+saw them leave pollen on the stigmas.
+
+I do not know whether Lepidoptera generally keep to the flowers of the
+same species; but I once observed many minute moths (I believe Lampronia
+(Tinea) calthella) apparently eating the pollen of Mercurialis annua,
+and they had the whole front of their bodies covered with pollen. I then
+went to a female plant some yards off, and saw in the course of fifteen
+minutes three of these moths alight on the stigmas. Lepidoptera are
+probably often induced to frequent the flowers of the same species,
+whenever these are provided with a long and narrow nectary, as in this
+case other insects cannot suck the nectar, which will thus be preserved
+for those having an elongated proboscis. No doubt the Yucca moth visits
+only the flowers whence its name is derived, for a most wonderful
+instinct guides this moth to place pollen on the stigma, so that the
+ovules may be developed on which the larvae feed. (11/4. Described by
+Mr. Riley in the ‘American Naturalist’ volume 7 October 1873.)With
+respect to Coleoptera, I have seen Meligethes covered with pollen flying
+from flower to flower of the same species; and this must often occur,
+as, according to M. Brisout, “many of the species affect only one kind
+of plant.” (11/5. As quoted in ‘American Nat.’ May 1873 page 270.)
+
+It must not be supposed from these several statements that insects
+strictly confine their visits to the same species. They often visit
+other species when only a few plants of the same kind grow near
+together. In a flower-garden containing some plants of Œnothera, the
+pollen of which can easily be recognised, I found not only single grains
+but masses of it within many flowers of Mimulus, Digitalis, Antirrhinum,
+and Linaria. Other kinds of pollen were likewise detected in these same
+flowers. A large number of the stigmas of a plant of Thyme, in which the
+anthers were completely aborted, were examined; and these stigmas,
+though scarcely larger than a split needle, were covered not only with
+pollen of Thyme brought from other plants by the bees, but with several
+other kinds of pollen.
+
+That insects should visit the flowers of the same species as long as
+they can, is of great importance to the plant, as it favours the
+cross-fertilisation of distinct individuals of the same species; but no
+one will suppose that insects act in this manner for the good of the
+plant. The cause probably lies in insects being thus enabled to work
+quicker; they have just learnt how to stand in the best position on the
+flower, and how far and in what direction to insert their proboscides.
+(11/6. Since these remarks were written, I find that Hermann Muller has
+come to almost exactly the same conclusion with respect to the cause of
+insects frequenting as long as they can the flowers of the same species:
+‘Bienen Zeitung’ July 1876 page 182.) They act on the same principle as
+does an artificer who has to make half-a-dozen engines, and who saves
+time by making consecutively each wheel and part for all of them.
+Insects, or at least bees, seem much influenced by habit in all their
+manifold operations; and we shall presently see that this holds good in
+their felonious practice of biting holes through the corolla.
+
+It is a curious question how bees recognise the flowers of the same
+species. That the coloured corolla is the chief guide cannot be doubted.
+On a fine day, when hive-bees were incessantly visiting the little blue
+flowers of Lobelia erinus, I cut off all the petals of some, and only
+the lower striped petals of others, and these flowers were not once
+again sucked by the bees, although some actually crawled over them. The
+removal of the two little upper petals alone made no difference in their
+visits. Mr. J. Anderson likewise states that when he removed the
+corollas of the Calceolaria, bees never visited the flowers. (11/7.
+‘Gardeners’ Chronicle’ 1853 page 534. Kurr cut off the nectaries from a
+large number of flowers of several species, and found that the greater
+number yielded seeds; but insects probably would not perceive the loss
+of the nectary until they had inserted their proboscides into the holes
+thus formed, and in doing so would fertilise the flowers. He also
+removed the whole corolla from a considerable number of flowers, and
+these likewise yielded seeds. Flowers which are self-fertile would
+naturally produce seeds under these circumstances; but I am greatly
+surprised that Delphinium consolida, as well as another species of
+Delphinium, and Viola tricolor, should have produced a fair supply of
+seeds when thus treated; but it does not appear that he compared the
+number of the seeds thus produced with those yielded by unmutilated
+flowers left to the free access of insects: ‘Bedeutung der Nektarien’
+1833 pages 123-135.) On the other hand, in some large masses of Geranium
+phaeum which had escaped out of a garden, I observed the unusual fact of
+the flowers continuing to secrete an abundance of nectar after all the
+petals had fallen off; and the flowers in this state were still visited
+by humble-bees. But the bees might have learnt that these flowers with
+all their petals lost were still worth visiting, by finding nectar in
+those with only one or two lost. The colour alone of the corolla serves
+as an approximate guide: thus I watched for some time humble-bees which
+were visiting exclusively plants of the white-flowered Spiranthes
+autumnalis, growing on short turf at a considerable distance apart; and
+these bees often flew within a few inches of several other plants with
+white flowers, and then without further examination passed onwards in
+search of the Spiranthes. Again, many hive-bees which confined their
+visits to the common ling (Calluna vulgaris), repeatedly flew towards
+Erica tetralix, evidently attracted by the nearly similar tint of their
+flowers, and then instantly passed on in search of the Calluna.
+
+That the colour of the flower is not the sole guide, is clearly shown by
+the six cases above given of bees which repeatedly passed in a direct
+line from one variety to another of the same species, although they bore
+very differently coloured flowers. I observed also bees flying in a
+straight line from one clump of a yellow-flowered Œnothera to every
+other clump of the same plant in the garden, without turning an inch
+from their course to plants of Eschscholtzia and others with yellow
+flowers which lay only a foot or two on either side. In these cases the
+bees knew the position of each plant in the garden perfectly well, as we
+may infer by the directness of their flight; so that they were guided by
+experience and memory. But how did they discover at first that the above
+varieties with differently coloured flowers belonged to the same
+species? Improbable as it may appear, they seem, at least sometimes, to
+recognise plants even from a distance by their general aspect, in the
+same manner as we should do. On three occasions I observed humble-bees
+flying in a perfectly straight line from a tall larkspur (Delphinium)
+which was in full flower to another plant of the same species at the
+distance of fifteen yards which had not as yet a single flower open, and
+on which the buds showed only a faint tinge of blue. Here neither odour
+nor the memory of former visits could have come into play, and the tinge
+of blue was so faint that it could hardly have served as a guide. (11/8.
+A fact mentioned by Hermann Muller ‘Die Befruchtung’ etc. page 347,
+shows that bees possess acute powers of vision and discrimination; for
+those engaged in collecting pollen from Primula elatior invariably
+passed by the flowers of the long-styled form, in which the anthers are
+seated low down in the tubular corolla. Yet the difference in aspect
+between the long-styled and short-styled forms is extremely slight.)
+
+The conspicuousness of the corolla does not suffice to induce repeated
+visits from insects, unless nectar is at the same time secreted,
+together perhaps with some odour emitted. I watched for a fortnight many
+times daily a wall covered with Linaria cymbalaria in full flower, and
+never saw a bee even looking at one. There was then a very hot day, and
+suddenly many bees were industriously at work on the flowers. It appears
+that a certain degree of heat is necessary for the secretion of nectar;
+for I observed with Lobelia erinus that if the sun ceased to shine for
+only half an hour, the visits of the bees slackened and soon ceased. An
+analogous fact with respect to the sweet excretion from the stipules of
+Vicia sativa has been already given. As in the case of the Linaria, so
+with Pedicularis sylvatica, Polygala vulgaris, Viola tricolor, and some
+species of Trifolium, I have watched the flowers day after day without
+seeing a bee at work, and then suddenly all the flowers were visited by
+many bees. Now how did so many bees discover at once that the flowers
+were secreting nectar? I presume that it must have been by their odour;
+and that as soon as a few bees began to suck the flowers, others of the
+same and of different kinds observed the fact and profited by it. We
+shall presently see, when we treat of the perforation of the corolla,
+that bees are fully capable of profiting by the labour of other species.
+Memory also comes into play, for, as already remarked, bees know the
+position of each clump of flowers in a garden. I have repeatedly seen
+them passing round a corner, but otherwise in as straight a line as
+possible, from one plant of Fraxinella and of Linaria to another and
+distant one of the same species; although, owing to the intervention of
+other plants, the two were not in sight of each other.
+
+It would appear that either the taste or the odour of the nectar of
+certain flowers is unattractive to hive or to humble-bees, or to both;
+for there seems no other reason why certain open flowers which secrete
+nectar are not visited by them. The small quantity of nectar secreted by
+some of these flowers can hardly be the cause of their neglect, as
+hive-bees search eagerly for the minute drops on the glands on the
+leaves of the Prunus laurocerasus. Even the bees from different hives
+sometimes visit different kinds of flowers, as is said to be the case by
+Mr. Grant with respect to the Polyanthus and Viola tricolor. (11/9.
+‘Gardeners’ Chronicle’ 1844 page 374.) I have known humble-bees to visit
+the flowers of Lobelia fulgens in one garden and not in another at the
+distance of only a few miles. The cupful of nectar in the labellum of
+Epipactis latifolia is never touched by hive- or humble-bees, although I
+have seen them flying close by; and yet the nectar has a pleasant taste
+to us, and is habitually consumed by the common wasp. As far as I have
+seen, wasps seek for nectar in this country only from the flowers of
+this Epipactis, Scrophularia aquatica, Symphoricarpus racemosa (11/10.
+The same fact apparently holds good in Italy, for Delpino says that the
+flowers of these three plants are alone visited by wasps: ‘Nettarii
+Estranuziali, Bulletino Entomologico’ anno 6.), and Tritoma; the two
+former plants being endemic, and the two latter exotic. As wasps are so
+fond of sugar and of any sweet fluid, and as they do not disdain the
+minute drops on the glands of Prunus laurocerasus, it is a strange fact
+that they do not suck the nectar of many open flowers, which they could
+do without the aid of a proboscis. Hive-bees visit the flowers of the
+Symphoricarpus and Tritoma, and this makes it all the stranger that they
+do not visit the flowers of the Epipactis, or, as far as I have seen,
+those of the Scrophularia aquatica; although they do visit the flowers
+of Scrophularia nodosa, at least in North America. (11/11. ‘Silliman’s
+American Journal of Science’ August 1871.)
+
+The extraordinary industry of bees and the number of flowers which they
+visit within a short time, so that each flower is visited repeatedly,
+must greatly increase the chance of each receiving pollen from a
+distinct plant. When the nectar is in any way hidden, bees cannot tell
+without inserting their proboscides whether it has lately been exhausted
+by other bees, and this, as remarked in a former chapter, forces them to
+visit many more flowers than they otherwise would. But they endeavour to
+lose as little time as they can; thus in flowers having several
+nectaries, if they find one dry they do not try the others, but as I
+have often observed, pass on to another flower. They work so
+industriously and effectually, that even in the case of social plants,
+of which hundreds of thousands grow together, as with the several kinds
+of heath, every single flower is visited, of which evidence will
+presently be given. They lose no time and fly very quickly from plant to
+plant, but I do not know the rate at which hive-bees fly. Humble-bees
+fly at the rate of ten miles an hour, as I was able to ascertain in the
+case of the males from their curious habit of calling at certain fixed
+points, which made it easy to measure the time taken in passing from one
+place to another.
+
+With respect to the number of flowers which bees visit in a given time,
+I observed that in exactly one minute a humble-bee visited twenty-four
+of the closed flowers of the Linaria cymbalaria; another bee visited in
+the same time twenty-two flowers of the Symphoricarpus racemosa; and
+another seventeen flowers on two plants of a Delphinium. In the course
+of fifteen minutes a single flower on the summit of a plant of Œnothera
+was visited eight times by several humble-bees, and I followed the last
+of these bees, whilst it visited in the course of a few additional
+minutes every plant of the same species in a large flower-garden. In
+nineteen minutes every flower on a small plant of Nemophila insignis was
+visited twice. In one minute six flowers of a Campanula were entered by
+a pollen-collecting hive-bee; and bees when thus employed work slower
+than when sucking nectar. Lastly, seven flower-stalks on a plant of
+Dictamnus fraxinella were observed on the 15th of June 1841 during ten
+minutes; they were visited by thirteen humble-bees each of which entered
+many flowers. On the 22nd the same flower-stalks were visited within the
+same time by eleven humble-bees. This plant bore altogether 280 flowers,
+and from the above data, taking into consideration how late in the
+evening humble-bees work, each flower must have been visited at least
+thirty times daily, and the same flower keeps open during several days.
+The frequency of the visits of bees is also sometimes shown by the
+manner in which the petals are scratched by their hooked tarsi; I have
+seen large beds of Mimulus, Stachys, and Lathyrus with the beauty of
+their flowers thus sadly defaced.
+
+PERFORATION OF THE COROLLA BY BEES.
+
+I have already alluded to bees biting holes in flowers for the sake of
+obtaining the nectar. They often act in this manner, both with endemic
+and exotic species, in many parts of Europe, in the United States, and
+in the Himalaya; and therefore probably in all parts of the world. The
+plants, the fertilisation of which actually depends on insects entering
+the flowers, will fail to produce seed when their nectar is stolen from
+the outside; and even with those species which are capable of
+fertilising themselves without any aid, there can be no
+cross-fertilisation, and this, as we know, is a serious evil in most
+cases. The extent to which humble-bees carry on the practice of biting
+holes is surprising: a remarkable case was observed by me near
+Bournemouth, where there were formerly extensive heaths. I took a long
+walk, and every now and then gathered a twig of Erica tetralix, and when
+I had got a handful all the flowers were examined through a lens. This
+process was repeated many times; but though many hundreds were examined,
+I did not succeed in finding a single flower which had not been
+perforated. Humble-bees were at the time sucking the flowers through
+these perforations. On the following day a large number of flowers were
+examined on another heath with the same result, but here hive-bees were
+sucking through the holes. This case is all the more remarkable, as the
+innumerable holes had been made within a fortnight, for before that time
+I saw the bees everywhere sucking in the proper manner at the mouths of
+the corolla. In an extensive flower-garden some large beds of Salvia
+grahami, Stachys coccinea, and Pentstemon argutus (?) had every flower
+perforated, and many scores were examined. I have seen whole fields of
+red clover (Trifolium pratense) in the same state. Dr. Ogle found that
+90 per cent of the flowers of Salvia glutinosa had been bitten. In the
+United States Mr. Bailey says it is difficult to find a blossom of the
+native Gerardia pedicularia without a hole in it; and Mr. Gentry, in
+speaking of the introduced Wistaria sinensis, says “that nearly every
+flower had been perforated.” (11/12. Dr. Ogle ‘Pop. Science Review’ July
+1869 page 267. Bailey ‘American Naturalist’ November 1873 page 690.
+Gentry ibid May 1875 page 264.)
+
+As far as I have seen, it is always humble-bees which first bite the
+holes, and they are well fitted for the work by possessing powerful
+mandibles; but hive-bees afterwards profit by the holes thus made. Dr.
+Hermann Muller, however, writes to me that hive-bees sometimes bite
+holes through the flowers of Erica tetralix. No insects except bees,
+with the single exception of wasps in the case of Tritoma, have sense
+enough, as far as I have observed, to profit by the holes already made.
+Even humble-bees do not always discover that it would be advantageous to
+them to perforate certain flowers. There is an abundant supply of nectar
+in the nectary of Tropaeolum tricolor, yet I have found this plant
+untouched in more than one garden, while the flowers of other plants had
+been extensively perforated; but a few years ago Sir J. Lubbock’s
+gardener assured me that he had seen humble-bees boring through the
+nectary of this Tropaeolum. Muller has observed humble-bees trying to
+suck at the mouths of the flowers of Primula elatior and of an
+Aquilegia, and, failing in their attempts, they made holes through the
+corolla; but they often bite holes, although they could with very little
+more trouble obtain the nectar in a legitimate manner by the mouth of
+the corolla.
+
+Dr. W. Ogle has communicated to me a curious case. He gathered in
+Switzerland 100 flower-stems of the common blue variety of the monkshood
+(Aconitum napellus), and not a single flower was perforated; he then
+gathered 100 stems of a white variety growing close by, and every one of
+the open flowers had been perforated. (11/13. Dr. Ogle ‘Popular Science
+Review’ July 1869 page 267. Bailey ‘American Naturalist’ November 1873
+page 690. Gentry ibid May 1875 page 264.) This surprising difference in
+the state of the flowers may be attributed with much probability to the
+blue variety being distasteful to bees, from the presence of the acrid
+matter which is so general in the Ranunculaceae, and to its absence in
+the white variety in correlation with the loss of the blue tint.
+According to Sprengel, this plant is strongly proterandrous (11/14. ‘Das
+Entdeckte’ etc. page 278.); it would therefore be more or less sterile
+unless bees carried pollen from the younger to the older flowers.
+Consequently the white variety, the flowers of which were always bitten
+instead of being properly entered by the bees, would fail to yield the
+full number of seeds and would be a comparatively rare plant, as Dr.
+Ogle informs me was the case.
+
+Bees show much skill in their manner of working, for they always make
+their holes from the outside close to the spot where the nectar lies
+hidden within the corolla. All the flowers in a large bed of Stachys
+coccinea had either one or two slits made on the upper side of the
+corolla near the base. The flowers of a Mirabilis and of Salvia coccinea
+were perforated in the same manner; whilst those of Salvia grahami, in
+which the calyx is much elongated, had both the calyx and the corolla
+invariably perforated. The flowers of Pentstemon argutus are broader
+than those of the plants just named, and two holes alongside each other
+had here always been made just above the calyx. In these several cases
+the perforations were on the upper side, but in Antirrhinum majus one or
+two holes had been made on the lower side, close to the little
+protuberance which represents the nectary, and therefore directly in
+front of and close to the spot where the nectar is secreted.
+
+But the most remarkable case of skill and judgment known to me, is that
+of the perforation of the flowers of Lathyrus sylvestris, as described
+by my son Francis. (11/15. ‘Nature’ January 8, 1874 page 189.) The
+nectar in this plant is enclosed within a tube, formed by the united
+stamens, which surround the pistil so closely that a bee is forced to
+insert its proboscis outside the tube; but two natural rounded passages
+or orifices are left in the tube near the base, in order that the nectar
+may be reached by the bees. Now my son found in sixteen out of
+twenty-four flowers on this plant, and in eleven out of sixteen of those
+on the cultivated everlasting pea, which is either a variety of the same
+species or a closely allied one, that the left passage was larger than
+the right one. And here comes the remarkable point,--the humble-bees
+bite holes through the standard-petal, and they always operated on the
+left side over the passage, which is generally the larger of the two. My
+son remarks: “It is difficult to say how the bees could have acquired
+this habit. Whether they discovered the inequality in the size of the
+nectar-holes in sucking the flowers in the proper way, and then utilised
+this knowledge in determining where to gnaw the hole; or whether they
+found out the best situation by biting through the standard at various
+points, and afterwards remembered its situation in visiting other
+flowers. But in either case they show a remarkable power of making use
+of what they have learnt by experience.” It seems probable that bees owe
+their skill in biting holes through flowers of all kinds to their having
+long practised the instinct of moulding cells and pots of wax, or of
+enlarging their old cocoons with tubes of wax; for they are thus
+compelled to work on the inside and outside of the same object.
+
+In the early part of the summer of 1857 I was led to observe during some
+weeks several rows of the scarlet kidney-bean (Phaseolus multiflorus),
+whilst attending to the fertilisation of this plant, and daily saw
+humble- and hive-bees sucking at the mouths of the flowers. But one day
+I found several humble-bees employed in cutting holes in flower after
+flower; and on the next day every single hive-bee, without exception,
+instead of alighting on the left wing-petal and sucking the flower in
+the proper manner, flew straight without the least hesitation to the
+calyx, and sucked through the holes which had been made only the day
+before by the humble-bees; and they continued this habit for many
+following days. (11/16. ‘Gardeners’ Chronicle’ 1857 page 725.) Mr. Belt
+has communicated to me (July 28th, 1874) a similar case, with the sole
+difference that less than half of the flowers had been perforated by the
+humble-bees; nevertheless, all the hive-bees gave up sucking at the
+mouths of the flowers and visited exclusively the bitten ones. Now how
+did the hive-bees find out so quickly that holes had been made? Instinct
+seems to be out of the question, as the plant is an exotic. The holes
+cannot be seen by bees whilst standing on the wing-petals, where they
+had always previously alighted. From the ease with which bees were
+deceived when the petals of Lobelia erinus were cut off, it was clear
+that in this case they were not guided to the nectar by its smell; and
+it may be doubted whether they were attracted to the holes in the
+flowers of the Phaseolus by the odour emitted from them. Did they
+perceive the holes by the sense of touch in their proboscides, whilst
+sucking the flowers in the proper manner, and then reason that it would
+save them time to alight on the outside of the flowers and use the
+holes? This seems almost too abstruse an act of reason for bees; and it
+is more probable that they saw the humble-bees at work, and
+understanding what they were about, imitated them and took advantage of
+the shorter path to the nectar. Even with animals high in the scale,
+such as monkeys, we should be surprised at hearing that all the
+individuals of one species within the space of twenty-four hours
+understood an act performed by a distinct species, and profited by it.
+
+I have repeatedly observed with various kinds of flowers that all the
+hive and humble-bees which were sucking through the perforations, flew
+to them, whether on the upper or under side of the corolla, without the
+least hesitation; and this shows how quickly all the individuals within
+the district had acquired the same knowledge. Yet habit comes into play
+to a certain extent, as in so many of the other operations of bees. Dr.
+Ogle, Messrs. Farrer and Belt have observed in the case of Phaseolus
+multiflorus that certain individuals went exclusively to the
+perforations, while others of the same species visited only the mouths
+of the flowers. (11/17. Dr. Ogle ‘Pop. Science Review’ April 1870 page
+167. Mr. Farrer ‘Annals and Magazine of Natural History’ 4th series
+volume 2 1868 page 258. Mr. Belt in a letter to me.) I noticed in 1861
+exactly the same fact with Trifolium pratense. So persistent is the
+force of habit, that when a bee which is visiting perforated flowers
+comes to one which has not been bitten, it does not go to the mouth, but
+instantly flies away in search of another bitten flower. Nevertheless, I
+once saw a humble-bee visiting the hybrid Rhododendron azaloides, and it
+entered the mouths of some flowers and cut holes into the others. Dr.
+Hermann Muller informs me that in the same district he has seen some
+individuals of Bombus mastrucatus boring through the calyx and corolla
+of Rhinanthus alecterolophus, and others through the corolla alone.
+Different species of bees may, however, sometimes be observed acting
+differently at the same time on the same plant. I have seen hive-bees
+sucking at the mouths of the flowers of the common bean; humble-bees of
+one kind sucking through holes bitten in the calyx, and humble-bees of
+another kind sucking the little drops of fluid excreted by the stipules.
+Mr. Beal of Michigan informs me that the flowers of the Missouri currant
+(Ribes aureum) abound with nectar, so that children often suck them; and
+he saw hive-bees sucking through holes made by a bird, the oriole, and
+at the same time humble-bees sucking in the proper manner at the mouths
+of the flowers. (11/18. The flowers of the Ribes are however sometimes
+perforated by humble-bees, and Mr. Bundy says that they were able to
+bite through and rob seven flowers of their honey in a minute: ‘American
+Naturalist’ 1876 page 238.) This statement about the oriole calls to
+mind what I have before said of certain species of humming-birds boring
+holes through the flowers of the Brugmansia, whilst other species
+entered by the mouth.
+
+The motive which impels bees to gnaw holes through the corolla seems to
+be the saving of time, for they lose much time in climbing into and out
+of large flowers, and in forcing their heads into closed ones. They were
+able to visit nearly twice as many flowers, as far as I could judge, of
+a Stachys and Pentstemon by alighting on the upper surface of the
+corolla and sucking through the cut holes, than by entering in the
+proper way. Nevertheless each bee before it has had much practice, must
+lose some time in making each new perforation, especially when the
+perforation has to be made through both calyx and corolla. This action
+therefore implies foresight, of which faculty we have abundant evidence
+in their building operations; and may we not further believe that some
+trace of their social instinct, that is, of working for the good of
+other members of the community, may here likewise play a part?
+
+Many years ago I was struck with the fact that humble-bees as a general
+rule perforate flowers only when these grow in large numbers near
+together. In a garden where there were some very large beds of Stachys
+coccinea and of Pentstemon argutus, every single flower was perforated,
+but I found two plants of the former species growing quite separate with
+their petals much scratched, showing that they had been frequently
+visited by bees, and yet not a single flower was perforated. I found
+also a separate plant of the Pentstemon, and saw bees entering the mouth
+of the corolla, and not a single flower had been perforated. In the
+following year (1842) I visited the same garden several times: on the
+19th of July humble-bees were sucking the flowers of Stachys coccinea
+and Salvia grahami in the proper manner, and none of the corollas were
+perforated. On the 7th of August all the flowers were perforated, even
+those on some few plants of the Salvia which grew at a little distance
+from the great bed. On the 21st of August only a few flowers on the
+summits of the spikes of both species remained fresh, and not one of
+these was now bored. Again, in my own garden every plant in several rows
+of the common bean had many flowers perforated; but I found three plants
+in separate parts of the garden which had sprung up accidentally, and
+these had not a single flower perforated. General Strachey formerly saw
+many perforated flowers in a garden in the Himalaya, and he wrote to the
+owner to inquire whether this relation between the plants growing
+crowded and their perforation by the bees there held good, and was
+answered in the affirmative. Hence it follows that the red clover
+(Trifolium pratense) and the common bean when cultivated in great masses
+in fields,--that Erica tetralix growing in large numbers on
+heaths,--rows of the scarlet kidney-bean in the kitchen-garden,--and
+masses of any species in the flower-garden,--are all eminently liable to
+be perforated.
+
+The explanation of this fact is not difficult. Flowers growing in large
+numbers afford a rich booty to the bees, and are conspicuous from a
+distance. They are consequently visited by crowds of these insects, and
+I once counted between twenty and thirty bees flying about a bed of
+Pentstemon. They are thus stimulated to work quickly by rivalry, and,
+what is much more important, they find a large proportion of the
+flowers, as suggested by my son, with their nectaries sucked dry.
+(11/19. ‘Nature’ January 8, 1874 page 189.) They thus waste much time in
+searching many empty flowers, and are led to bite the holes, so as to
+find out as quickly as possible whether there is any nectar present, and
+if so, to obtain it.
+
+Flowers which are partially or wholly sterile unless visited by insects
+in the proper manner, such as those of most species of Salvia, of
+Trifolium pratense, Phaseolus multiflorus, etc., will fail more or less
+completely to produce seeds if the bees confine their visits to the
+perforations. The perforated flowers of those species, which are capable
+of fertilising themselves, will yield only self-fertilised seeds, and
+the seedlings will in consequence be less vigorous. Therefore all plants
+must suffer in some degree when bees obtain their nectar in a felonious
+manner by biting holes through the corolla; and many species, it might
+be thought, would thus be exterminated. But here, as is so general
+throughout nature, there is a tendency towards a restored equilibrium.
+If a plant suffers from being perforated, fewer individuals will be
+reared, and if its nectar is highly important to the bees, these in
+their turn will suffer and decrease in number; but, what is much more
+effective, as soon as the plant becomes somewhat rare so as not to grow
+in crowded masses, the bees will no longer be stimulated to gnaw holes
+in the flowers, but will enter them in a legitimate manner. More seed
+will then be produced, and the seedlings being the product of
+cross-fertilisation will be vigorous, so that the species will tend to
+increase in number, to be again checked, as soon as the plant again
+grows in crowded masses.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+GENERAL RESULTS.
+
+Cross-fertilisation proved to be beneficial, and self-fertilisation
+injurious.
+Allied species differ greatly in the means by which cross-fertilisation
+is favoured and self-fertilisation avoided.
+The benefits and evils of the two processes depend on the degree of
+differentiation in the sexual elements.
+The evil effects not due to the combination of morbid tendencies in the
+parents.
+Nature of the conditions to which plants are subjected when growing near
+together in a state of nature or under culture, and the effects of such
+conditions.
+Theoretical considerations with respect to the interaction of
+differentiated sexual elements.
+Practical lessons.
+Genesis of the two sexes.
+Close correspondence between the effects of cross-fertilisation and
+self-fertilisation, and of the legitimate and illegitimate unions of
+heterostyled plants, in comparison with hybrid unions.
+
+The first and most important of the conclusions which may be drawn from
+the observations given in this volume, is that cross-fertilisation is
+generally beneficial, and self-fertilisation injurious. This is shown by
+the difference in height, weight, constitutional vigour, and fertility
+of the offspring from crossed and self-fertilised flowers, and in the
+number of seeds produced by the parent-plants. With respect to the
+second of these two propositions, namely, that self-fertilisation is
+generally injurious, we have abundant evidence. The structure of the
+flowers in such plants as Lobelia ramosa, Digitalis purpurea, etc.,
+renders the aid of insects almost indispensable for their fertilisation;
+and bearing in mind the prepotency of pollen from a distinct individual
+over that from the same individual, such plants will almost certainly
+have been crossed during many or all previous generations. So it must
+be, owing merely to the prepotency of foreign pollen, with cabbages and
+various other plants, the varieties of which almost invariably
+intercross when grown together. The same inference may be drawn still
+more surely with respect to those plants, such as Reseda and
+Eschscholtzia, which are sterile with their own pollen, but fertile with
+that from any other individual. These several plants must therefore have
+been crossed during a long series of previous generations, and the
+artificial crosses in my experiments cannot have increased the vigour of
+the offspring beyond that of their progenitors. Therefore the difference
+between the self-fertilised and crossed plants raised by me cannot be
+attributed to the superiority of the crossed, but to the inferiority of
+the self-fertilised seedlings, due to the injurious effects of
+self-fertilisation.
+
+With respect to the first proposition, namely, that cross-fertilisation
+is generally beneficial, we likewise have excellent evidence. Plants of
+Ipomoea were intercrossed for nine successive generations; they were
+then again intercrossed, and at the same time crossed with a plant of a
+fresh stock, that is, one brought from another garden; and the offspring
+of this latter cross were to the intercrossed plants in height as 100 to
+78, and in fertility as 100 to 51. An analogous experiment with
+Eschscholtzia gave a similar result, as far as fertility was concerned.
+In neither of these cases were any of the plants the product of
+self-fertilisation. Plants of Dianthus were self-fertilised for three
+generations, and this no doubt was injurious; but when these plants were
+fertilised by a fresh stock and by intercrossed plants of the same
+stock, there was a great difference in fertility between the two sets of
+seedlings, and some difference in their height. Petunia offers a nearly
+parallel case. With various other plants, the wonderful effects of a
+cross with a fresh stock may be seen in Table 7/C. Several accounts have
+also been published of the extraordinary growth of seedlings from a
+cross between two varieties of the same species, some of which are known
+never to fertilise themselves; so that here neither self-fertilisation
+nor relationship even in a remote degree can have come into play. (12/1.
+See ‘Variation under Domestication’ chapter 19 2nd edition volume 2 page
+159.) We may therefore conclude that the above two propositions are
+true,--that cross-fertilisation is generally beneficial and
+self-fertilisation injurious to the offspring.
+
+That certain plants, for instance, Viola tricolor, Digitalis purpurea,
+Sarothamnus scoparius, Cyclamen persicum, etc., which have been
+naturally cross-fertilised for many or all previous generations, should
+suffer to an extreme degree from a single act of self-fertilisation is a
+most surprising fact. Nothing of the kkind has been observed in our
+domestic animals; but then we must remember that the closest possible
+interbreeding with such animals, that is, between brothers and sisters,
+cannot be considered as nearly so close a union as that between the
+pollen and ovules of the same flower. Whether the evil from
+self-fertilisation goes on increasing during successive generations is
+not as yet known; but we may infer from my experiments that the increase
+if any is far from rapid. After plants have been propagated by
+self-fertilisation for several generations, a single cross with a fresh
+stock restores their pristine vigour; and we have a strictly analogous
+result with our domestic animals. (12/2. Ibid chapter 19 2nd edition
+volume 2 page 159.) The good effects of cross-fertilisation are
+transmitted by plants to the next generation; and judging from the
+varieties of the common pea, to many succeeding generations. But this
+may merely be that crossed plants of the first generation are extremely
+vigorous, and transmit their vigour, like any other character, to their
+successors.
+
+Notwithstanding the evil which many plants suffer from
+self-fertilisation, they can be thus propagated under favourable
+conditions for many generations, as shown by some of my experiments, and
+more especially by the survival during at least half a century of the
+same varieties of the common pea and sweet-pea. The same conclusion
+probably holds good with several other exotic plants, which are never or
+most rarely cross-fertilised in this country. But all these plants, as
+far as they have been tried, profit greatly by a cross with a fresh
+stock. Some few plants, for instance, Ophrys apifera, have almost
+certainly been propagated in a state of nature for thousands of
+generations without having been once intercrossed; and whether they
+would profit by a cross with a fresh stock is not known. But such cases
+ought not to make us doubt that as a general rule crossing is
+beneficial, any more than the existence of plants which, in a state of
+nature, are propagated exclusively by rhizomes, stolons, etc. (their
+flowers never producing seeds), (12/3. I have given several cases in my
+‘Variation under Domestication’ chapter 18 2nd edition volume 2 page
+152.) (their flowers never producing seeds), should make us doubt that
+seminal generation must have some great advantage, as it is the common
+plan followed by nature. Whether any species has been reproduced
+asexually from a very remote period cannot, of course, be ascertained.
+Our sole means for forming any judgment on this head is the duration of
+the varieties of our fruit trees which have been long propagated by
+grafts or buds. Andrew Knight formerly maintained that under these
+circumstances they always become weakly, but this conclusion has been
+warmly disputed by others. A recent and competent judge, Professor Asa
+Gray, leans to the side of Andrew Knight, which seems to me, from such
+evidence as I have been able to collect, the more probable view,
+notwithstanding many opposed facts. (12/4. ‘Darwiniana: Essays and
+Reviews pertaining to Darwinism’ 1876 page 338.)
+
+The means for favouring cross-fertilisation and preventing
+self-fertilisation, or conversely for favouring self-fertilisation and
+preventing to a certain extent cross-fertilisation, are wonderfully
+diversified; and it is remarkable that these differ widely in closely
+allied plants,--in the species of the same genus, and sometimes in the
+individuals of the same species. (12/5. Hildebrand has insisted strongly
+to this effect in his valuable observations on the fertilisation of the
+Gramineae: ‘Monatsbericht K. Akad. Berlin’ October 1872 page 763.) It is
+not rare to find hermaphrodite plants and others with separated sexes
+within the same genus; and it is common to find some of the species
+dichogamous and others maturing their sexual elements simultaneously.
+The dichogamous genus Saxifraga contains proterandrous and proterogynous
+species. (12/6. Dr. Engler ‘Botanische Zeitung’ 1868 page 833.) Several
+genera include both heterostyled (dimorphic or trimorphic forms) and
+homostyled species. Ophrys offers a remarkable instance of one species
+having its structure manifestly adapted for self-fertilisation, and
+other species as manifestly adapted for cross-fertilisation. Some
+con-generic species are quite sterile and others quite fertile with
+their own pollen. From these several causes we often find within the
+same genus species which do not produce seeds, while others produce an
+abundance, when insects are excluded. Some species bear cleistogene
+flowers which cannot be crossed, as well as perfect flowers, whilst
+others in the same genus never produce cleistogene flowers. Some species
+exist under two forms, the one bearing conspicuous flowers adapted for
+cross-fertilisation, the other bearing inconspicuous flowers adapted for
+self-fertilisation, whilst other species in the same genus present only
+a single form. Even with the individuals of the same species, the degree
+of self-sterility varies greatly, as in Reseda. With polygamous plants,
+the distribution of the sexes differs in the individuals of the same
+species. The relative period at which the sexual elements in the same
+flower are mature, differs in the varieties of Pelargonium; and Carriere
+gives several cases, showing that the period varies according to the
+temperature to which the plants are exposed. (12/7. ‘Des Varieties’ 1865
+page 30.)
+
+This extraordinary diversity in the means for favouring or preventing
+cross- and self-fertilisation in closely allied forms, probably depends
+on the results of both processes being highly beneficial to the species,
+but directly opposed in many ways to one another and dependent on
+variable conditions. Self-fertilisation assures the production of a
+large supply of seeds; and the necessity or advantage of this will be
+determined by the average length of life of the plant, which largely
+depends on the amount of destruction suffered by the seeds and
+seedlings. This destruction follows from the most various and variable
+causes, such as the presence of animals of several kinds, and the growth
+of surrounding plants. The possibility of cross-fertilisation depends
+mainly on the presence and number of certain insects, often of insects
+belonging to special groups, and on the degree to which they are
+attracted to the flowers of any particular species in preference to
+other flowers,--all circumstances likely to change. Moreover, the
+advantages which follow from cross-fertilisation differ much in
+different plants, so that it is probable that allied plants would often
+profit in different degrees by cross-fertilisation. Under these
+extremely complex and fluctuating conditions, with two somewhat opposed
+ends to be gained, namely, the safe propagation of the species and the
+production of cross-fertilised, vigorous offspring, it is not surprising
+that allied forms should exhibit an extreme diversity in the means which
+favour either end. If, as there is reason to suspect, self-fertilisation
+is in some respects beneficial, although more than counterbalanced by
+the advantages derived from a cross with a fresh stock, the problem
+becomes still more complicated.
+
+As I only twice experimented on more than a single species in a genus, I
+cannot say whether the crossed offspring of the several species within
+the same genus differ in their degree of superiority over their
+self-fertilised brethren; but I should expect that this would often
+prove to be the case from what was observed with the two species of
+Lobelia and with the individuals of the same species of Nicotiana. The
+species belonging to distinct genera in the same family certainly differ
+in this respect. The effects of cross- and self-fertilisation may be
+confined either to the growth or to the fertility of the offspring, but
+generally extends to both qualities. There does not seem to exist any
+close correspondence between the degree to which their offspring profit
+by this process; but we may easily err on this head, as there are two
+means for ensuring cross-fertilisation which are not externally
+perceptible, namely, self-sterility and the prepotent fertilising
+influence of pollen from another individual. Lastly, it has been shown
+in a former chapter that the effect produced by cross and
+self-fertilisation on the fertility of the parent-plants does not always
+correspond with that produced on the height, vigour, and fertility of
+their offspring. The same remark applies to crossed and self-fertilised
+seedlings when these are used as the parent-plants. This want of
+correspondence probably depends, at least in part, on the number of
+seeds produced being chiefly determined by the number of the
+pollen-tubes which reach the ovules, and this will be governed by the
+reaction between the pollen and the stigmatic secretion or tissues;
+whereas the growth and constitutional vigour of the offspring will be
+chiefly determined, not only by the number of pollen-tubes reaching the
+ovules, but by the nature of the reaction between the contents of the
+pollen-grains and ovules.
+
+There are two other important conclusions which may be deduced from my
+observations: firstly, that the advantages of cross-fertilisation do not
+follow from some mysterious virtue in the mere union of two distinct
+individuals, but from such individuals having been subjected during
+previous generations to different conditions, or to their having varied
+in a manner commonly called spontaneous, so that in either case their
+sexual elements have been in some degree differentiated. And secondly,
+that the injury from self-fertilisation follows from the want of such
+differentiation in the sexual elements. These two propositions are fully
+established by my experiments. Thus, when plants of the Ipomoea and of
+the Mimulus, which had been self-fertilised for the seven previous
+generations and had been kept all the time under the same conditions,
+were intercrossed one with another, the offspring did not profit in the
+least by the cross. Mimulus offers another instructive case, showing
+that the benefit of a cross depends on the previous treatment of the
+progenitors: plants which had been self-fertilised for the eight
+previous generations were crossed with plants which had been
+intercrossed for the same number of generations, all having been kept
+under the same conditions as far as possible; seedlings from this cross
+were grown in competition with others derived from the same
+self-fertilised mother-plant crossed by a fresh stock; and the latter
+seedlings were to the former in height as 100 to 52, and in fertility as
+100 to 4. An exactly parallel experiment was tried on Dianthus, with
+this difference, that the plants had been self-fertilised only for the
+three previous generations, and the result was similar though not so
+strongly marked. The foregoing two cases of the offspring of Ipomoea and
+Eschscholtzia, derived from a cross with a fresh stock, being as much
+superior to the intercrossed plants of the old stock, as these latter
+were to the self-fertilised offspring, strongly supports the same
+conclusion. A cross with a fresh stock or with another variety seems to
+be always highly beneficial, whether or not the mother-plants have been
+intercrossed or self-fertilised for several previous generations. The
+fact that a cross between two flowers on the same plant does no good or
+very little good, is likewise a strong corroboration of our conclusion;
+for the sexual elements in the flowers on the same plant can rarely have
+been differentiated, though this is possible, as flower-buds are in one
+sense distinct individuals, sometimes varying and differing from one
+another in structure or constitution. Thus the proposition that the
+benefit from cross-fertilisation depends on the plants which are crossed
+having been subjected during previous generations to somewhat different
+conditions, or to their having varied from some unknown cause as if they
+had been thus subjected, is securely fortified on all sides.
+
+Before proceeding any further, the view which has been maintained by
+several physiologists must be noticed, namely, that all the evils from
+breeding animals too closely, and no doubt, as they would say, from the
+self-fertilisation of plants, is the result of the increase of some
+morbid tendency or weakness of constitution common to the closely
+related parents, or to the two sexes of hermaphrodite plants.
+Undoubtedly injury has often thus resulted; but it is a vain attempt to
+extend this view to the numerous cases given in my Tables. It should be
+remembered that the same mother-plant was both self-fertilised and
+crossed, so that if she had been unhealthy she would have transmitted
+half her morbid tendencies to her crossed offspring. But plants
+appearing perfectly healthy, some of them growing wild, or the immediate
+offspring of wild plants, or vigorous common garden-plants, were
+selected for experiment. Considering the number of species which were
+tried, it is nothing less than absurd to suppose that in all these cases
+the mother-plants, though not appearing in any way diseased, were weak
+or unhealthy in so peculiar a manner that their self-fertilised
+seedlings, many hundreds in number, were rendered inferior in height,
+weight, constitutional vigour and fertility to their crossed offspring.
+Moreover, this belief cannot be extended to the strongly marked
+advantages which invariably follow, as far as my experience serves, from
+intercrossing the individuals of the same variety or of distinct
+varieties, if these have been subjected during some generations to
+different conditions.
+
+It is obvious that the exposure of two sets of plants during several
+generations to different conditions can lead to no beneficial results,
+as far as crossing is concerned, unless their sexual elements are thus
+affected. That every organism is acted on to a certain extent by a
+change in its environment, will not, I presume, be disputed. It is
+hardly necessary to advance evidence on this head; we can perceive the
+difference between individual plants of the same species which have
+grown in somewhat more shady or sunny, dry or damp places. Plants which
+have been propagated for some generations under different climates or at
+different seasons of the year transmit different constitutions to their
+seedlings. Under such circumstances, the chemical constitution of their
+fluids and the nature of their tissues are often modified. (12/8.
+Numerous cases together with references are given in my ‘Variation under
+Domestication’ chapter 23 2nd edition volume 2 page 264. With respect to
+animals, Mr. Brackenridge ‘A Contribution to the Theory of Diathesis’
+Edinburgh 1869, has well shown that the different organs of animals are
+excited into different degrees of activity by differences of temperature
+and food, and become to a certain extent adapted to them.) Many other
+such facts could be adduced. In short, every alteration in the function
+of a part is probably connected with some corresponding, though often
+quite imperceptible change in structure or composition.
+
+Whatever affects an organism in any way, likewise tends to act on its
+sexual elements. We see this in the inheritance of newly acquired
+modifications, such as those from the increased use or disuse of a part,
+and even from mutilations if followed by disease. (12/9. ‘Variation
+under Domestication’ chapter 12 2nd edition volume 1 page 466.) We have
+abundant evidence how susceptible the reproductive system is to changed
+conditions, in the many instances of animals rendered sterile by
+confinement; so that they will not unite, or if they unite do not
+produce offspring, though the confinement may be far from close; and of
+plants rendered sterile by cultivation. But hardly any cases afford more
+striking evidence how powerfully a change in the conditions of life acts
+on the sexual elements, than those already given, of plants which are
+completely self-sterile in one country, and when brought to another,
+yield, even in the first generation, a fair supply of self-fertilised
+seeds.
+
+But it may be said, granting that changed conditions act on the sexual
+elements, how can two or more plants growing close together, either in
+their native country or in a garden, be differently acted on, inasmuch
+as they appear to be exposed to exactly the same conditions? Although
+this question has been already considered, it deserves further
+consideration under several points of view. In my experiments with
+Digitalis purpurea, some flowers on a wild plant were self-fertilised,
+and others were crossed with pollen from another plant growing within
+two or three feet’s distance. The crossed and self-fertilised plants
+raised from the seeds thus obtained, produced flower-stems in number as
+100 to 47, and in average height as 100 to 70. Therefore the cross
+between these two plants was highly beneficial; but how could their
+sexual elements have been differentiated by exposure to different
+conditions? If the progenitors of the two plants had lived on the same
+spot during the last score of generations, and had never been crossed
+with any plant beyond the distance of a few feet, in all probability
+their offspring would have been reduced to the same state as some of the
+plants in my experiments,--such as the intercrossed plants of the ninth
+generation of Ipomoea,--or the self-fertilised plants of the eighth
+generation of Mimulus,--or the offspring from flowers on the same
+plant,--and in this case a cross between the two plants of Digitalis
+would have done no good. But seeds are often widely dispersed by natural
+means, and one of the above two plants or one of their ancestors may
+have come from a distance, from a more shady or sunny, dry or moist
+place, or from a different kind of soil containing other organic or
+inorganic matter. We know from the admirable researches of Messrs. Lawes
+and Gilbert that different plants require and consume very different
+amounts of inorganic matter. (12/10. ‘Journal of the Royal Agricultural
+Society of England’ volume 24 part 1.) But the amount in the soil would
+probably not make so great a difference to the several individuals of
+any particular species as might at first be expected; for the
+surrounding species with different requirements would tend, from
+existing in greater or lesser numbers, to keep each species in a sort of
+equilibrium, with respect to what it could obtain from the soil. So it
+would be even with respect to moisture during dry seasons; and how
+powerful is the influence of a little more or less moisture in the soil
+on the presence and distribution of plants, is often well shown in old
+pasture fields which still retain traces of former ridges and furrows.
+Nevertheless, as the proportional numbers of the surrounding plants in
+two neighbouring places is rarely exactly the same, the individuals of
+the same species will be subjected to somewhat different conditions with
+respect to what they can absorb from the soil. It is surprising how the
+free growth of one set of plants affects others growing mingled with
+them; I allowed the plants on rather more than a square yard of turf
+which had been closely mown for several years, to grow up; and nine
+species out of twenty were thus exterminated; but whether this was
+altogether due to the kinds which grew up robbing the others of
+nutriment, I do not know.
+
+Seeds often lie dormant for several years in the ground, and germinate
+when brought near the surface by any means, as by burrowing animals.
+They would probably be affected by the mere circumstance of having long
+lain dormant; for gardeners believe that the production of double
+flowers and of fruit is thus influenced. Seeds, moreover, which were
+matured during different seasons, will have been subjected during the
+whole course of their development to different degrees of heat and
+moisture.
+
+It was shown in the last chapter that pollen is often carried by insects
+to a considerable distance from plant to plant. Therefore one of the
+parents or ancestors of our two plants of Digitalis may have been
+crossed by a distant plant growing under somewhat different conditions.
+Plants thus crossed often produce an unusually large number of seeds; a
+striking instance of this fact is afforded by the Bignonia, previously
+mentioned, which was fertilised by Fritz Muller with pollen from some
+adjoining plants and set hardly any seed, but when fertilised with
+pollen from a distant plant, was highly fertile. Seedlings from a cross
+of this kind grow with great vigour, and transmit their vigour to their
+descendants. These, therefore, in the struggle for life, will generally
+beat and exterminate the seedlings from plants which have long grown
+near together under the same conditions, and will thus tend to spread.
+
+When two varieties which present well-marked differences are crossed,
+their descendants in the later generations differ greatly from one
+another in external characters; and this is due to the augmentation or
+obliteration of some of these characters, and to the reappearance of
+former ones through reversion; and so it will be, as we may feel almost
+sure, with any slight differences in the constitution of their sexual
+elements. Anyhow, my experiments indicate that crossing plants which
+have been long subjected to almost though not quite the same conditions,
+is the most powerful of all the means for retaining some degree of
+differentiation in the sexual elements, as shown by the superiority in
+the later generations of the intercrossed over the self-fertilised
+seedlings. Nevertheless, the continued intercrossing of plants thus
+treated does tend to obliterate such differentiation, as may be inferred
+from the lessened benefit derived from intercrossing such plants, in
+comparison with that from a cross with a fresh stock. It seems probable,
+as I may add, that seeds have acquired their endless curious adaptations
+for wide dissemination, not only that the seedlings would thus be
+enabled to find new and fitting homes, but that the individuals which
+have been long subjected to the same conditions should occasionally
+intercross with a fresh stock. (12/11. See Professor Hildebrand’s
+excellent treatise ‘Verbreitungsmittel der Pflanzen’ 1873.)
+
+From the foregoing several considerations we may, I think, conclude that
+in the above case of the Digitalis, and even in that of plants which
+have grown for thousands of generations in the same district, as must
+often have occurred with species having a much restricted range, we are
+apt to over-estimate the degree to which the individuals have been
+subjected to absolutely the same conditions. There is at least no
+difficulty in believing that such plants have been subjected to
+sufficiently distinct conditions to differentiate their sexual elements;
+for we know that a plant propagated for some generations in another
+garden in the same district serves as a fresh stock and has high
+fertilising powers. The curious cases of plants which can fertilise and
+be fertilised by any other individual of the same species, but are
+altogether sterile with their own pollen, become intelligible, if the
+view here propounded is correct, namely, that the individuals of the
+same species growing in a state of nature near together, have not really
+been subjected during several previous generations to quite the same
+conditions.
+
+Some naturalists assume that there is an innate tendency in all beings
+to vary and to advance in organisation, independently of external
+agencies; and they would, I presume, thus explain the slight differences
+which distinguish all the individuals of the same species both in
+external characters and in constitution, as well as the greater
+differences in both respects between nearly allied varieties. No two
+individuals can be found quite alike; thus if we sow a number of seeds
+from the same capsule under as nearly as possible the same conditions,
+they germinate at different rates and grow more or less vigorously. They
+resist cold and other unfavourable conditions differently. They would in
+all probability, as we know to be the case with animals of the same
+species, be somewhat differently acted on by the same poison, or by the
+same disease. They have different powers of transmitting their
+characters to their offspring; and many analogous facts could be given.
+(12/12. Vilmorin as quoted by Verlot ‘Des Varieties’ pages 32, 38, 39.)
+Now, if it were true that plants growing near together in a state of
+nature had been subjected during many previous generations to absolutely
+the same conditions, such differences as those just specified would be
+quite inexplicable; but they are to a certain extent intelligible in
+accordance with the views just advanced.
+
+As most of the plants on which I experimented were grown in my garden or
+in pots under glass, a few words must be added on the conditions to
+which they were exposed, as well as on the effects of cultivation. When
+a species is first brought under culture, it may or may not be subjected
+to a change of climate, but it is always grown in ground broken up, and
+more or less manured; it is also saved from competition with other
+plants. The paramount importance of this latter circumstance is proved
+by the multitude of species which flourish and multiply in a garden, but
+cannot exist unless they are protected from other plants. When thus
+saved from competition they are able to get whatever they require from
+the soil, probably often in excess; and they are thus subjected to a
+great change of conditions. It is probably in chief part owing to this
+cause that all plants with rare exceptions vary after being cultivated
+for some generations. The individuals which have already begun to vary
+will intercross one with another by the aid of insects; and this
+accounts for the extreme diversity of character which many of our long
+cultivated plants exhibit. But it should be observed that the result
+will be largely determined by the degree of their variability and by the
+frequency of the intercrosses; for if a plant varies very little, like
+most species in a state of nature, frequent intercrosses tend to give
+uniformity of character to it.
+
+I have attempted to show that with plants growing naturally in the same
+district, except in the unusual case of each individual being surrounded
+by exactly the same proportional numbers of other species having certain
+powers of absorption, each will be subjected to slightly different
+conditions. This does not apply to the individuals of the same species
+when cultivated in cleared ground in the same garden. But if their
+flowers are visited by insects, they will intercross; and this will give
+to their sexual elements during a considerable number of generations a
+sufficient amount of differentiation for a cross to be beneficial.
+Moreover, seeds are frequently exchanged or procured from other gardens
+having a different kind of soil; and the individuals of the same
+cultivated species will thus be subjected to a change of conditions. If
+the flowers are not visited by our native insects, or very rarely so, as
+in the case of the common and sweet pea, and apparently in that of the
+tobacco when kept in a hothouse, any differentiation in the sexual
+elements caused by intercrosses will tend to disappear. This appears to
+have occurred with the plants just mentioned, for they were not
+benefited by being crossed one with another, though they were greatly
+benefited by a cross with a fresh stock.
+
+I have been led to the views just advanced with respect to the causes of
+the differentiation of the sexual elements and of the variability of our
+garden plants, by the results of my various experiments, and more
+especially by the four cases in which extremely inconstant species,
+after having been self-fertilised and grown under closely similar
+conditions for several generations, produced flowers of a uniform and
+constant tint. These conditions were nearly the same as those to which
+plants, growing in a garden clear of weeds, are subjected, if they are
+propagated by self-fertilised seeds on the same spot. The plants in pots
+were, however, exposed to less severe fluctuations of climate than those
+out of doors; but their conditions, though closely uniform for all the
+individuals of the same generation, differed somewhat in the successive
+generations. Now, under these circumstances, the sexual elements of the
+plants which were intercrossed in each generation retained sufficient
+differentiation during several years for their offspring to be superior
+to the self-fertilised, but this superiority gradually and manifestly
+decreased, as was shown by the difference in the result between a cross
+with one of the intercrossed plants and with a fresh stock. These
+intercrossed plants tended also in a few cases to become somewhat more
+uniform in some of their external characters than they were at first.
+With respect to the plants which were self-fertilised in each
+generation, their sexual elements apparently lost, after some years, all
+differentiation, for a cross between them did no more good than a cross
+between the flowers on the same plant. But it is a still more remarkable
+fact, that although the seedlings of Mimulus, Ipomoea, Dianthus, and
+Petunia which were first raised, varied excessively in the colour of
+their flowers, their offspring, after being self-fertilised and grown
+under uniform conditions for some generations, bore flowers almost as
+uniform in tint as those on a natural species. In one case also the
+plants themselves became remarkably uniform in height.
+
+The conclusion that the advantages of a cross depend altogether on the
+differentiation of the sexual elements, harmonises perfectly with the
+fact that an occasional and slight change in the conditions of life is
+beneficial to all plants and animals. (12/13. I have given sufficient
+evidence on this head in my ‘Variation under Domestication’ chapter 18
+volume 2 2nd edition page 127.) But the offspring from a cross between
+organisms which have been exposed to different conditions, profit in an
+incomparably higher degree than do young or old beings from a mere
+change in the conditions. In this latter case we never see anything like
+the effect which generally follows from a cross with another individual,
+especially from a cross with a fresh stock. This might, perhaps, have
+been expected, for the blending together of the sexual elements of two
+differentiated beings will affect the whole constitution at a very early
+period of life, whilst the organisation is highly flexible. We have,
+moreover, reason to believe that changed conditions generally act
+differently on the several parts or organs of the same individual
+(12/14. See, for instance, Brackenridge ‘Theory of Diathesis’ Edinburgh
+1869.); and if we may further believe that these now slightly
+differentiated parts react on one another, the harmony between the
+beneficial effects on the individual due to changed conditions, and
+those due to the interaction of differentiated sexual elements, becomes
+still closer.
+
+That wonderfully accurate observer, Sprengel, who first showed how
+important a part insects play in the fertilisation of flowers, called
+his book ‘The Secret of Nature Displayed;’ yet he only occasionally saw
+that the object for which so many curious and beautiful adaptations have
+been acquired, was the cross-fertilisation of distinct plants; and he
+knew nothing of the benefits which the offspring thus receive in growth,
+vigour, and fertility. But the veil of secrecy is as yet far from
+lifted; nor will it be, until we can say why it is beneficial that the
+sexual elements should be differentiated to a certain extent, and why,
+if the differentiation be carried still further, injury follows. It is
+an extraordinary fact that with many species, flowers fertilised with
+their own pollen are either absolutely or in some degree sterile; if
+fertilised with pollen from another flower on the same plant, they are
+sometimes, though rarely, a little more fertile; if fertilised with
+pollen from another individual or variety of the same species, they are
+fully fertile; but if with pollen from a distinct species, they are
+sterile in all possible degrees, until utter sterility is reached. We
+thus have a long series with absolute sterility at the two ends;--at one
+end due to the sexual elements not having been sufficiently
+differentiated, and at the other end to their having been differentiated
+in too great a degree, or in some peculiar manner.
+
+The fertilisation of one of the higher plants depends, in the first
+place, on the mutual action of the pollen-grains and the stigmatic
+secretion or tissues, and afterwards on the mutual action of the
+contents of the pollen-grains and ovules. Both actions, judging from the
+increased fertility of the parent-plants and from the increased powers
+of growth in the offspring, are favoured by some degree of
+differentiation in the elements which interact and unite so as to form a
+new being. Here we have some analogy with chemical affinity or
+attraction, which comes into play only between atoms or molecules of a
+different nature. As Professor Miller remarks: “Generally speaking, the
+greater the difference in the properties of two bodies, the more intense
+is their tendency to mutual chemical action...But between bodies of a
+similar character the tendency to unite is feeble.” (12/15. ‘Elements of
+Chemistry’ 4th edition 1867 part 1 page 11. Dr. Frankland informs me
+that similar views with respect to chemical affinity are generally
+accepted by chemists.) This latter proposition accords well with the
+feeble effects of a plant’s own pollen on the fertility of the
+mother-plant and on the growth of the offspring; and the former
+proposition accords well with the powerful influence in both ways of
+pollen from an individual which has been differentiated by exposure to
+changed conditions, or by so-called spontaneous variation. But the
+analogy fails when we turn to the negative or weak effects of pollen
+from one species on a distinct species; for although some substances
+which are extremely dissimilar, for instance, carbon and chlorine, have
+a very feeble affinity for each other, yet it cannot be said that the
+weakness of the affinity depends in such cases on the extent to which
+the substances differ. It is not known why a certain amount of
+differentiation is necessary or favourable for the chemical affinity or
+union of two substances, any more than for the fertilisation or union of
+two organisms.
+
+Mr. Herbert Spencer has discussed this whole subject at great length,
+and after stating that all the forces throughout nature tend towards an
+equilibrium, remarks, “that the need of this union of sperm-cell and
+germ-ccell is the need for overthrowing this equilibrium and
+re-establishing active molecular change in the detached germ--a result
+which is probably effected by mixing the slightly-different
+physiological units of slightly-different individuals.” (12/16.
+‘Principles of Biology’ volume 1 page 274 1864. In my ‘Origin of
+Species’ published in 1859, I spoke of the good effects from slight
+changes in the condition of life and from cross-fertilisation, and of
+the evil effects from great changes in the conditions and from crossing
+widely distinct forms (i.e., species), as a series of facts “connected
+together by some common but unknown bond, which is essentially related
+to the principle of life.”) But we must not allow this highly
+generalised view, or the analogy of chemical affinity, to conceal from
+us our ignorance. We do not know what is the nature or degree of the
+differentiation in the sexual elements which is favourable for union,
+and what is injurious for union, as in the case of distinct species. We
+cannot say why the individuals of certain species profit greatly, and
+others very little by being crossed. There are some few species which
+have been self-fertilised for a vast number of generations, and yet are
+vigorous enough to compete successfully with a host of surrounding
+plants. We can form no conception why the advantage from a cross is
+sometimes directed exclusively to the vegetative system, and sometimes
+to the reproductive system, but commonly to both. It is equally
+inconceivable why some individuals of the same species should be
+sterile, whilst others are fully fertile with their own pollen; why a
+change of climate should either lessen or increase the sterility of
+self-sterile species; and why the individuals of some species should be
+even more fertile with pollen from a distinct species than with their
+own pollen. And so it is with many other facts, which are so obscure
+that we stand in awe before the mystery of life.
+
+Under a practical point of view, agriculturists and horticulturists may
+learn something from the conclusions at which we have arrived. Firstly,
+we see that the injury from the close breeding of animals and from the
+self-fertilisation of plants, does not necessarily depend on any
+tendency to disease or weakness of constitution common to the related
+parents, and only indirectly on their relationship, in so far as they
+are apt to resemble each other in all respects, including their sexual
+nature. And, secondly, that the advantages of cross-fertilisation depend
+on the sexual elements of the parents having become in some degree
+differentiated by the exposure of their progenitors to different
+conditions, or from their having intercrossed with individuals thus
+exposed, or, lastly, from what we call in our ignorance spontaneous
+variation. He therefore who wishes to pair closely related animals ought
+to keep them under conditions as different as possible. Some few
+breeders, guided by their keen powers of observation, have acted on this
+principle, and have kept stocks of the same animals at two or more
+distant and differently situated farms. They have then coupled the
+individuals from these farms with excellent results. (12/17. ‘Variation
+of Animals and Plants under Domestication’ chapter 17 2nd edition volume
+2 pages 98, 105.) This same plan is also unconsciously followed whenever
+the males, reared in one place, are let out for propagation to breeders
+in other places. As some kinds of plants suffer much more from
+self-fertilisation than do others, so it probably is with animals from
+too close interbreeding. The effects of close interbreeding on animals,
+judging again from plants, would be deterioration in general vigour,
+including fertility, with no necessary loss of excellence of form; and
+this seems to be the usual result.
+
+It is a common practice with horticulturists to obtain seeds from
+another place having a very different soil, so as to avoid raising
+plants for a long succession of generations under the same conditions;
+but with all the species which freely intercross by aid of insects or
+the wind, it would be an incomparably better plan to obtain seeds of the
+required variety, which had been raised for some generations under as
+different conditions as possible, and sow them in alternate rows with
+seeds matured in the old garden. The two stocks would then intercross,
+with a thorough blending of their whole organisations, and with no loss
+of purity to the variety; and this would yield far more favourable
+results than a mere exchange of seeds. We have seen in my experiments
+how wonderfully the offspring profited in height, weight, hardiness, and
+fertility, by crosses of this kind. For instance, plants of Ipomoea thus
+crossed were to the intercrossed plants of the same stock, with which
+they grew in competition, as 100 to 78 in height, and as 100 to 51 in
+fertility; and plants of Eschscholtzia similarly compared were as 100 to
+45 in fertility. In comparison with self-fertilised plants the results
+are still more striking; thus cabbages derived from a cross with a fresh
+stock were to the self-fertilised as 100 to 22 in weight.
+
+Florists may learn from the four cases which have been fully described,
+that they have the power of fixing each fleeting variety of colour, if
+they will fertilise the flowers of the desired kind with their own
+pollen for half-a-dozen generations, and grow the seedlings under the
+same conditions. But a cross with any other individual of the same
+variety must be carefully prevented, as each has its own peculiar
+constitution. After a dozen generations of self-fertilisation, it is
+probable that the new variety would remain constant even if grown under
+somewhat different conditions; and there would no longer be any
+necessity to guard against intercrosses between the individuals of the
+same variety.
+
+With respect to mankind, my son George has endeavoured to discover by a
+statistical investigation whether the marriages of first cousins are at
+all injurious, although this is a degree of relationship which would not
+be objected to in our domestic animals; and he has come to the
+conclusion from his own researches and those of Dr. Mitchell that the
+evidence as to any evil thus caused is conflicting, but on the whole
+points to its being very small. From the facts given in this volume we
+may infer that with mankind the marriages of nearly related persons,
+some of whose parents and ancestors had lived under very different
+conditions, would be much less injurious than that of persons who had
+always lived in the same place and followed the same habits of life. Nor
+can I see reason to doubt that the widely different habits of life of
+men and women in civilised nations, especially amongst the upper
+classes, would tend to counterbalance any evil from marriages between
+healthy and somewhat closely related persons.
+
+Under a theoretical point of view it is some gain to science to know
+that numberless structures in hermaphrodite plants, and probably in
+hermaphrodite animals, are special adaptations for securing an
+occasional cross between two individuals; and that the advantages from
+such a cross depend altogether on the beings which are united, or their
+progenitors, having had their sexual elements somewhat differentiated,
+so that the embryo is benefited in the same manner as is a mature plant
+or animal by a slight change in its conditions of life, although in a
+much higher degree.
+
+Another and more important result may be deduced from my observations.
+Eggs and seeds are highly serviceable as a means of dissemination, but
+we now know that fertile eggs can be produced without the aid of the
+male. There are also many other methods by which organisms can be
+propagated asexually. Why then have the two sexes been developed, and
+why do males exist which cannot themselves produce offspring? The answer
+lies, as I can hardly doubt, in the great good which is derived from the
+fusion of two somewhat differentiated individuals; and with the
+exception of the lowest organisms this is possible only by means of the
+sexual elements, these consisting of cells separated from the body,
+containing the germs of every part, and capable of being fused
+completely together.
+
+It has been shown in the present volume that the offspring from the
+union of two distinct individuals, especially if their progenitors have
+been subjected to very different conditions, have an immense advantage
+in height, weight, constitutional vigour and fertility over the
+self-fertilised offspring from one of the same parents. And this fact is
+amply sufficient to account for the development of the sexual elements,
+that is, for the genesis of the two sexes.
+
+It is a different question why the two sexes are sometimes combined in
+the same individual and are sometimes separated. As with many of the
+lowest plants and animals the conjugation of two individuals which are
+either quite similar or in some degree different, is a common
+phenomenon, it seems probable, as remarked in the last chapter, that the
+sexes were primordially separate. The individual which receives the
+contents of the other, may be called the female; and the other, which is
+often smaller and more locomotive, may be called the male; though these
+sexual names ought hardly to be applied as long as the whole contents of
+the two forms are blended into one. The object gained by the two sexes
+becoming united in the same hermaphrodite form probably is to allow of
+occasional or frequent self-fertilisation, so as to ensure the
+propagation of the species, more especially in the case of organisms
+affixed for life to the same spot. There does not seem to be any great
+difficulty in understanding how an organism, formed by the conjugation
+of two individuals which represented the two incipient sexes, might have
+given rise by budding first to a monoecious and then to an hermaphrodite
+form; and in the case of animals even without budding to an
+hermaphrodite form, for the bilateral structure of animals perhaps
+indicates that they were aboriginally formed by the fusion of two
+individuals.
+
+It is a more difficult problem why some plants and apparently all the
+higher animals, after becoming hermaphrodites, have since had their
+sexes re-separated. This separation has been attributed by some
+naturalists to the advantages which follow from a division of
+physiological labour. The principle is intelligible when the same organ
+has to perform at the same time diverse functions; but it is not obvious
+why the male and female glands when placed in different parts of the
+same compound or simple individual, should not perform their functions
+equally well as when placed in two distinct individuals. In some
+instances the sexes may have been re-separated for the sake of
+preventing too frequent self-fertilisation; but this explanation does
+not seem probable, as the same end might have been gained by other and
+simpler means, for instance dichogamy. It may be that the production of
+the male and female reproductive elements and the maturation of the
+ovules was too great a strain and expenditure of vital force for a
+single individual to withstand, if endowed with a highly complex
+organisation; and that at the same time there was no need for all the
+individuals to produce young, and consequently that no injury, on the
+contrary, good resulted from half of them, or the males, failing to
+produce offspring.
+
+There is another subject on which some light is thrown by the facts
+given in this volume, namely, hybridisation. It is notorious that when
+distinct species of plants are crossed, they produce with the rarest
+exceptions fewer seeds than the normal number. This unproductiveness
+varies in different species up to sterility so complete that not even an
+empty capsule is formed; and all experimentalists have found that it is
+much influenced by the conditions to which the crossed species are
+subjected. The pollen of each species is strongly prepotent over that of
+any other species, so that if a plant’s own pollen is placed on the
+stigma some time after foreign pollen has been applied to it, any effect
+from the latter is quite obliterated. It is also notorious that not only
+the parent species, but the hybrids raised from them are more or less
+sterile; and that their pollen is often in a more or less aborted
+condition. The degree of sterility of various hybrids does not always
+strictly correspond with the degree of difficulty in uniting the parent
+forms. When hybrids are capable of breeding inter se, their descendants
+are more or less sterile, and they often become still more sterile in
+the later generations; but then close interbreeding has hitherto been
+practised in all such cases. The more sterile hybrids are sometimes much
+dwarfed in stature, and have a feeble constitution. Other facts could be
+given, but these will suffice for us. Naturalists formerly attributed
+all these results to the difference between species being fundamentally
+distinct from that between the varieties of the same species; and this
+is still the verdict of some naturalists.
+
+The results of my experiments in self-fertilising and cross-fertilising
+the individuals or the varieties of the same species, are strikingly
+analogous with those just given, though in a reversed manner. With the
+majority of species flowers fertilised with their own pollen yield
+fewer, sometimes much fewer seeds, than those fertilised with pollen
+from another individual or variety. Some self-fertilised flowers are
+absolutely sterile; but the degree of their sterility is largely
+determined by the conditions to which the parent plants have been
+exposed, as was well exemplified in the case of Eschscholtzia and
+Abutilon. The effects of pollen from the same plant are obliterated by
+the prepotent influence of pollen from another individual or variety,
+although the latter may have been placed on the stigma some hours
+afterwards. The offspring from self-fertilised flowers are themselves
+more or less sterile, sometimes highly sterile, and their pollen is
+sometimes in an imperfect condition; but I have not met with any case of
+complete sterility in self-fertilised seedlings, as is so common with
+hybrids. The degree of their sterility does not correspond with that of
+the parent-plants when first self-fertilised. The offspring of
+self-fertilised plants suffer in stature, weight, and constitutional
+vigour more frequently and in a greater degree than do the hybrid
+offspring of the greater number of crossed species. Decreased height is
+transmitted to the next generation, but I did not ascertain whether this
+applies to decreased fertility.
+
+I have elsewhere shown that by uniting in various ways dimorphic or
+trimorphic heterostyled plants, which belong to the same undoubted
+species, we get another series of results exactly parallel with those
+from crossing distinct species. (12/18. ‘Journal of the Linnean Society
+Botany’ volume 10 1867 page 393.) Plants illegitimately fertilised with
+pollen from a distinct plant belonging to the same form, yield fewer,
+often much fewer seeds, than they do when legitimately fertilised with
+pollen from a plant belonging to a distinct form. They sometimes yield
+no seed, not even an empty capsule, like a species fertilised with
+pollen from a distinct genus. The degree of sterility is much affected
+by the conditions to which the plants have been subjected. (12/19.
+‘Journal of the Linnean Society Botany’ volume 8 1864 page 180.) The
+pollen from a distinct form is strongly prepotent over that from the
+same form, although the former may have been placed on the stigma many
+hours afterwards. The offspring from a union between plants of the same
+form are more or less sterile, like hybrids, and have their pollen in a
+more or less aborted condition; and some of the seedlings are as barren
+and as dwarfed as the most barren hybrid. They also resemble hybrids in
+several other respects, which need not here be specified in
+detail,--such as their sterility not corresponding in degree with that
+of the parent plants,--the unequal sterility of the latter, when
+reciprocally united,--and the varying sterility of the seedlings raised
+from the same seed-capsule.
+
+We thus have two grand classes of cases giving results which correspond
+in the most striking manner with those which follow from the crossing of
+so-called true and distinct species. With respect to the difference
+between seedlings raised from cross and self-fertilised flowers, there
+is good evidence that this depends altogether on whether the sexual
+elements of the parents have been sufficiently differentiated, by
+exposure to different conditions or by spontaneous variation. It is
+probable that nearly the same conclusion may be extended to heterostyled
+plants; but this is not the proper place for discussing the origin of
+the long-styled, short-styled and mid-styled forms, which all belong to
+the same species as certainly as do the two sexes of the same species.
+We have therefore no right to maintain that the sterility of species
+when first crossed and of their hybrid offspring, is determined by some
+cause fundamentally different from that which determines the sterility
+of the individuals both of ordinary and of heterostyled plants when
+united in various ways. Nevertheless, I am aware that it will take many
+years to remove this prejudice.
+
+There is hardly anything more wonderful in nature than the sensitiveness
+of the sexual elements to external influences, and the delicacy of their
+affinities. We see this in slight changes in the conditions of life
+being favourable to the fertility and vigour of the parents, while
+certain other and not great changes cause them to be quite sterile
+without any apparent injury to their health. We see how sensitive the
+sexual elements of those plants must be, which are completely sterile
+with their own pollen, but are fertile with that of any other individual
+of the same species. Such plants become either more or less self-sterile
+if subjected to changed conditions, although the change may be far from
+great. The ovules of a heterostyled trimorphic plant are affected very
+differently by pollen from the three sets of stamens belonging to the
+same species. With ordinary plants the pollen of another variety or
+merely of another individual of the same variety is often strongly
+prepotent over its own pollen, when both are placed at the same time on
+the same stigma. In those great families of plants containing many
+thousand allied species, the stigma of each distinguishes with unerring
+certainty its own pollen from that of every other species.
+
+There can be no doubt that the sterility of distinct species when first
+crossed, and of their hybrid offspring, depends exclusively on the
+nature or affinities of their sexual elements. We see this in the want
+of any close correspondence between the degree of sterility and the
+amount of external difference in the species which are crossed; and
+still more clearly in the wide difference in the results of crossing
+reciprocally the same two species;--that is, when species A is crossed
+with pollen from B, and then B is crossed with pollen from A. Bearing in
+mind what has just been said on the extreme sensitiveness and delicate
+affinities of the reproductive system, why should we feel any surprise
+at the sexual elements of those forms, which we call species, having
+been differentiated in such a manner that they are incapable or only
+feebly capable of acting on one another? We know that species have
+generally lived under the same conditions, and have retained their own
+proper characters, for a much longer period than varieties.
+Long-continued domestication eliminates, as I have shown in my
+‘Variation under Domestication,’ the mutual sterility which distinct
+species lately taken from a state of nature almost always exhibit when
+intercrossed; and we can thus understand the fact that the most
+different domestic races of animals are not mutually sterile. But
+whether this holds good with cultivated varieties of plants is not
+known, though some facts indicate that it does. The elimination of
+sterility through long-continued domestication may probably be
+attributed to the varying conditions to which our domestic animals have
+been subjected; and no doubt it is owing to this same cause that they
+withstand great and sudden changes in their conditions of life with far
+less loss of fertility than do natural species. From these several
+considerations it appears probable that the difference in the affinities
+of the sexual elements of distinct species, on which their mutual
+incapacity for breeding together depends, is caused by their having been
+habituated for a very long period each to its own conditions, and to the
+sexual elements having thus acquired firmly fixed affinities. However
+this may be, with the two great classes of cases before us, namely,
+those relating to the self-fertilisation and cross-fertilisation of the
+individuals of the same species, and those relating to the illegitimate
+and legitimate unions of heterostyled plants, it is quite unjustifiable
+to assume that the sterility of species when first crossed and of their
+hybrid offspring, indicates that they differ in some fundamental manner
+from the varieties or individuals of the same species.
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+Abutilon darwinii, self-sterile in Brazil.
+moderately self-fertile in England.
+fertilised by birds.
+
+Acacia sphaerocephala.
+
+Acanthaceae.
+
+Aconitum napellus.
+
+Adlumia cirrhosa.
+
+Adonis aestivalis.
+measurements.
+relative heights of crossed and self-fertilised plants.
+self-fertile.
+
+Ajuga reptans.
+
+Allium cepa (blood-red var.)
+
+Anagallis collina (var. grandiflora).
+measurements.
+seeds.
+
+Anderson, J., on the Calceolaria.
+removing the corollas.
+
+Anemone.
+
+Anemophilous plants.
+often diclinous.
+
+Antirrhinum majus (red var.)
+perforated corolla.
+--(white var.).
+--(peloric var.).
+
+Apium petroselinum.
+result of experiments.
+
+Argemone ochroleuca.
+
+Aristolochia.
+
+Aristotle on bees frequenting flowers of the same species.
+
+Arum maculatum.
+
+Bailey, Mr., perforation of corolla.
+
+Bartonia aurea.
+measurements.
+result of experiments.
+
+Bartsia odontites.
+
+Beal, W.J., sterility of Kalmia latifolia.
+on nectar in Ribes aureum.
+
+Bean, the common.
+
+Bees distinguish colours.
+frequent the flowers of the same species.
+guided by coloured corolla.
+powers of vision and discrimination.
+memory.
+unattracted by odour of certain flowers.
+industry.
+profit by the corolla perforated by humble-bees.
+skill in working.
+habit.
+foresight.
+
+Bees, humble, recognise varieties as of one species.
+colour not the sole guide.
+rate of flying.
+number of flowers visited.
+corolla perforated by.
+skill and judgment.
+
+Belt, Mr., the hairs of Digitalis purpurea.
+Phaseolus multiflorus.
+not visited by bees in Nicaragua.
+humming-birds carrying pollen.
+secretion of nectar.
+in Acacia sphaerocephalus and passion-flower.
+perforation of corolla.
+
+Bennett, A.W., on Viola tricolor.
+structure of Impatiens fulva.
+plants flowering in winter.
+bees frequenting flowers of same species.
+
+Bentham, on protection of the stigma in Synaphea.
+
+Beta vulgaris.
+measurements.
+crossed not exceeded by self-fertilised.
+prepotency of other pollen.
+
+Bignonia.
+
+Birds, means of fertilisation.
+
+Blackley, Mr., on anthers of rye.
+pollen carried by wind, experiments with a kite.
+
+Boraginaceae.
+
+Borago officinalis.
+measurements.
+early flowering of crossed.
+seeds.
+partially self-sterile.
+
+Brackenridge, Mr., organism of animals affected by temperature and food.
+different effect of changed conditions.
+
+Brassica oleracea.
+measurements.
+weight.
+remarks on experiments.
+superiority of crossed.
+period of flowering.
+seeds.
+self-fertile.
+--napus.
+--rapa.
+
+Brisout, M., insects frequenting flowers of same species.
+
+Broom.
+
+Brugmansia.
+humming-birds boring the flower.
+
+Bulrush, weight of pollen produced by one plant.
+
+Bundy, Mr., Ribes perforated by bees.
+
+Butschli, O., sexual relations.
+
+Cabbage.
+affected by pollen of purple bastard.
+prepotency of other pollen.
+--, Ragged Jack.
+
+Calceolaria.
+
+Calluna vulgaris.
+
+Campanula carpathica.
+
+Campanulaceae.
+
+Candolle, A. de, on ascending a mountain the flowers of the same species
+disappear abruptly.
+
+Canna warscewiczi.
+result of crossed and self-fertilised.
+period of flowering.
+seeds.
+highly self-fertile.
+
+Cannaceae.
+
+Carduus arctioides.
+
+Carnation.
+
+Carriere, relative period of the maturity of the sexual elements on same
+flower.
+
+Caryophyllaceae.
+
+Caspary, Professor, on Corydalis cava.
+Nymphaeaceae.
+Euryale ferox.
+
+Cecropia, food-bodies of.
+
+Centradenia floribunda.
+
+Cereals, grains of.
+
+Cheeseman, Mr., on Orchids in New Zealand.
+
+Chenopodiaceae.
+
+Cineraria.
+
+Clarkia elegans.
+measurements.
+early flowering of self-fertilised.
+seeds.
+
+Cleistogene flowers.
+
+Coe, Mr., crossing Phaseolus vulgaris.
+
+Colgate, R., red clover never sucked by hive-bees in New Zealand.
+
+Colour, uniform, of flowers on plants self-fertilised and grown under
+similar conditions for several generations.
+
+Colours of flowers attractive to insects.
+not the sole guide to bees.
+
+Compositae.
+
+Coniferae.
+
+Convolvulus major.
+-- tricolor.
+
+Corolla, removal of.
+perforation by bees.
+
+Coronilla.
+
+Corydalis cava.
+-- halleri.
+-- intermedia.
+-- lutea.
+-- ochroleuca.
+-- solida.
+
+Corylus avellana.
+
+Cowslip.
+
+Crinum.
+
+Crossed plants, greater constitutional vigour of.
+
+Cross-fertilisation.
+see Fertilisation.
+
+Crossing flowers on same plant, effects of.
+
+Cruciferae.
+
+Cruger, Dr., secretion of sweet fluid in Marcgraviaceae.
+
+Cuphea purpurea.
+
+Cycadiae.
+
+Cyclamen persicum.
+measurements.
+early flowering of crossed.
+seeds.
+self-sterile.
+-- repandum.
+
+Cytisus laburnum.
+
+Dandelion, number of pollen grains.
+
+Darwin, C., self-fertilisation in Pisum sativum.
+sexual affinities.
+on Primula.
+bud variation.
+constitutional vigour from cross parentage in common pea.
+hybrids of Gladiolus and Cistus.
+Phaseolus multiflorus.
+nectar in Orchids.
+on cross-fertilisation.
+inheritance of acquired modifications.
+change in the conditions of life beneficial to plants and animals.
+
+Darwin, F., structure of Phaseolus multiflorus.
+Pteris aquilina.
+perforation of Lathyrus sylvestris.
+
+Darwin, G., on marriages with first cousins.
+
+Decaisne on Delphinium consolida.
+
+De Candolle, nectar as an excretion.
+
+Delphinium consolida.
+measurements.
+seeds.
+partially sterile.
+corolla removed.
+
+Delpino, Professor, Viola tricolor.
+Phaseolus multiflorus.
+intercrossing of sweet-pea.
+Lobelia ramosa.
+structure of the Cannaceae.
+wind and water carrying pollen.
+Juglans regia.
+anemophilous plants.
+fertilisation of Plantago.
+excretion of nectar.
+secretion of nectar to defend the plant.
+anemophilous and entomophilous plants.
+dioecious plants.
+
+Denny, Pelargonium zonale.
+
+Diagram showing mean height of Ipomoea purpurea.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus.
+crossed and self-fertilised.
+measurements.
+cross with fresh stock.
+weight of seed.
+colour of flowers.
+remarks on experiments.
+early flowering of crossed.
+uniform colour of self-fertilised.
+seeds.
+few capsules.
+
+Dickie, Dr., self-fertilisation in Cannaceae.
+
+Dictamnus fraxinella.
+
+Digitalis purpurea.
+measurements.
+effects of intercrossing.
+superiority of crossed.
+self-sterile.
+
+Dipsaceae.
+
+Dobbs, bees frequenting flowers of same species.
+
+Dodel, Dr. A., sexual reproduction.
+
+Duhamel on Raphanus sativus.
+
+Dunal, nectar as an excretion.
+
+Dyer, Mr., on Lobelia ramosa.
+on Cineraria.
+
+Earley, W., self-fertilisation of Lathyrus odoratus.
+
+Eaton, Reverend A.E., on Pringlea.
+
+Engelmann, development of sexual forms.
+
+Engler, Dr., on dichogamous Saxifraga.
+
+Entomophilous plants.
+
+Epipactis latifolia, attractive only to wasps.
+
+Erica tetralix.
+perforated corolla.
+
+Erythrina.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica.
+measurements.
+plants raised from Brazilian seed.
+weight.
+seeds.
+experiments on.
+superiority of self-fertilised over crossed.
+early flowering.
+artificially self-fertilised.
+pollen from other flowers more effective.
+self-sterile in Brazil.
+
+Euphrasia officinalis.
+
+Euryale amazonica.
+-- ferox.
+
+Fabricius on Aristolochia.
+
+Fagopyrum esculentum.
+early flowering of crossed plant.
+
+Faivre, Professor, self-fertilisation of Cannaceae.
+
+Farrer, T.H., papilionaceous flowers.
+Lupinus luteus.
+Phaseolus multiflorus.
+Pisum sativum.
+cross-fertilisation of Lobelia ramosa.
+on Coronilla.
+
+Fermond, M., Phaseolus multiflorus.
+Phaseolus coccineus hybridus.
+
+Fertilisation, means of.
+plants sterile, or partially so without insect-aid.
+plants fertile without insect-aid.
+means of cross-fertilisation.
+humming-birds.
+Australian flowers fertilised by honey-sucking birds.
+in New Zealand by the Anthornis melanura.
+attraction of bright colours.
+of odours.
+flowers adapted to certain kinds of insects.
+large amount of pollen-grains.
+transport of pollen by insects.
+structure and conspicuousness of flowers.
+pollen from a distinct plant.
+prepotent pollen.
+
+Fertility, heights and weights, relative, of plants crossed by a fresh
+stock, self-fertilised, or intercrossed (Table 7/C).
+
+Fertility of plants as influenced by cross and self-fertilisation (Table
+9/D).
+relative, of crossed and self-fertilised parents (Table 9/E).
+innate, from a cross with fresh stock (Table 9/F).
+relative, of flowers crossed with pollen from a distinct plant and their
+own pollen (Table 9/G).
+of crossed and self-fertilised flowers.
+
+Flowering, period of, superiority of crossed over self-fertilised.
+
+Flowers, white, larger proportion smelling sweetly.
+structure and conspicuousness of.
+conspicuous and inconspicuous.
+papilionaceous.
+fertilised with pollen from a distinct plant.
+
+Forsythia viridissima.
+
+Foxglove.
+Frankland, Dr., chemical affinity.
+
+Fraxinus ornus.
+
+Fumaria capreolata.
+-- officinalis.
+
+Galium aparine.
+
+Gallesio, spontaneous crossing of oranges.
+
+Galton, Mr., Limnanthes douglasii.
+report on the tables of measurements.
+self-fertilised plants.
+superior vigour of crossed seedlings in Lathyrus odoratus.
+
+Gartner, excess of pollen injurious.
+plants fertilising one another at a considerable distance.
+Lobelia fulgens.
+sterility of Verbascum nigrum.
+number of pollen-grains to fertilise Geum urbanum.
+experiments with pollen.
+
+Gentry, Mr., perforation of corolla.
+
+Geraniaceae.
+
+Geranium phaeum.
+
+Gerardia pedicularia.
+
+Germination, period of, and relative weight of seeds from crossed and
+self-fertilised flowers.
+
+Gesneria pendulina.
+measurements.
+seeds.
+
+Gesneriaceae.
+
+Geum urbanum, number of pollen-grains for fertilisation.
+
+Glaucium luteum.
+
+Godron, intercrossing of carrot.
+Primula grandiflora affected by pollen of Primula officinalis.
+tulips.
+
+Gould, humming-birds frequenting Impatiens.
+
+Graminaceae.
+
+Grant, Mr., bees of different hives visiting different kinds of flowers.
+
+Gray, Asa, sexual relations of trees in United States.
+on sexual reproduction.
+
+Hallet, Major, on selection of grains of cereals.
+
+Hassall, Mr., number of pollen-grains in Paeony and Dandelion.
+weight of pollen produced by one plant of Bulrush.
+
+Heartsease.
+
+Hedychium.
+
+Hedysarum onobrychis.
+
+Heights, relative, of crossed and self-fertilised plants (Table 7/A).
+
+Heights, weights, and fertility, summary.
+
+Henschel’s experiments with pollen.
+
+Henslow, Reverend G., cross-fertilisation in Sarothamnus scoparius.
+
+Herbert on cross-fertilisation.
+pollen brought from distant plants.
+spontaneous crossing of rhododendrons.
+
+Hero, descendants of the plant.
+its self-fertilisation.
+
+Heterocentron mexicanum.
+
+Hibiscus africanus.
+measurements.
+result of experiments.
+early flowering of crossed plant.
+number of pollen-grains for fertilisation.
+
+Hildebrand on pollen of Digitalis purpurea.
+Thunbergia alata.
+experiments on Eschscholtzia californica.
+Viola tricolor.
+Lobelia ramosa.
+Fagopyrum esculentum.
+self-fertilisation of Zea mays.
+Corydalis cava.
+Hypecoum grandiflorum.
+and Hypecoum procumbens.
+sterility of Eschscholtzia.
+experiments on self-fertilisation.
+Corydalis lutea.
+spontaneously self-fertilised flowers.
+various mechanical structure to check self-fertilisation.
+early separation of the sexes.
+on Aristolochia.
+fertilisation of the Gramineae.
+wide dissemination of seeds.
+
+Hoffmann, Professor H., self-fertilised capsules of Papaver somniferum.
+Adonis aestivalis.
+spontaneous variability of Phaseolus multiflorus.
+self-fertilisation of kidney-bean.
+Papaver alpinum.
+sterility of Corydalis solida.
+Linum usitatissimum.
+
+Honey-dew.
+
+Hooker, Dr., Euryale ferox and Victoria regia, each producing several
+flowers at once.
+on sexual relation of trees in New Zealand.
+
+Horse-chestnut.
+
+Humble-bees, see Bees.
+
+Humboldt, on the grains of cereals.
+
+Humming-Birds a means of cross-fertilisation.
+
+Hyacinth.
+
+Hybrid plants, tendency to revert to their parent forms.
+
+Hypecoum grandiflorum.
+-- procumbens.
+
+Iberis umbellata (var. kermesiana).
+measurement.
+cross by fresh stocks.
+remarks on experiments.
+superiority of crossed over self-fertilised seedlings.
+early flowering.
+number of seeds.
+highly self-fertile.
+prepotency of other pollen.
+-- amara.
+
+Impatiens frequented by humming-birds.
+-- barbigera.
+-- fulva.
+-- noli-me-tangere.
+-- pallida.
+
+Inheritance, force of, in plants.
+
+Insects, means of cross-fertilisation.
+attracted by bright colours.
+by odours.
+by conspicuous flowers.
+dark streaks and marks as guides for.
+flowers adapted to certain kinds.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea.
+measurements.
+flowers on same plant crossed.
+cross with fresh stock.
+descendants of Hero.
+summary of measurements.
+diagram showing mean heights.
+summary of observations.
+of experiments.
+superiority of crossed.
+early flowering.
+effects of intercrossing.
+uniform colour of self-fertilised.
+seeds.
+highly self-fertile.
+prepotency of other pollen.
+
+Iris, secretion of saccharine matter from calyx.
+
+Isotoma.
+
+Juglans regia.
+
+Kalmia latifolia.
+
+Kerner, on protection of the pollen.
+on the single daily flower of Villarsia parnassifolia.
+pollen carried by wind.
+
+Kidney-bean.
+
+Kitchener, Mr., on the action of the stigma.
+on Viola tricolor.
+
+Knight, A., on the sexual intercourse of plants.
+crossing varieties of peas.
+sexual reproduction.
+
+Kohl-rabi, prepotency of pollen.
+
+Kolreuter on cross-fertilisation.
+number of pollen-grains necessary for fertilisation.
+sexual affinities of Nicotiana.
+Verbascum phoeniceum.
+experiments with pollen of Hibiscus vesicarius.
+
+Kuhn adopts the term cleistogene.
+
+Kurr, on excretion of nectar.
+removal of corolla.
+
+Labiatae.
+
+Lactuca sativa.
+measurement.
+prepotency of other pollen.
+
+Lamium album.
+-- purpureum.
+
+Lathyrus odoratus.
+measurements.
+remarks on experiments.
+period of flowering.
+cross-fertilisation.
+seeds.
+self-fertile.
+-- grandiflorus.
+-- nissolia.
+-- sylvestris, perforation of corolla.
+
+Lawes and Gilbert, Messrs., consumption of inorganic matter by plants.
+
+Laxton, Mr., crossing varieties of peas.
+
+Lecoq, Cyclamen repandum.
+on Fumariaceae.
+annual plants rarely dioecious.
+
+Leersia oryzoides.
+
+Leguminosae.
+summary on the.
+
+Leighton, Reverend W.A., on Phaseolus multiflorus.
+Acacia magnifica.
+
+Leptosiphon androsaceus.
+
+Leschenaultia formosa.
+
+Lettuce.
+
+Lilium auratum.
+
+Limnanthes douglasii.
+measurements.
+early flowering of crossed.
+seeds.
+highly self-fertile.
+prepotency of other pollen.
+
+Linaria vulgaris.
+seeds.
+self-sterile.
+-- cymbalaria.
+
+Lindley on Fumariaceae.
+
+Link, hypopetalous nectary in Chironia decussata.
+
+Linum grandiflorum.
+-- usitatissimum.
+
+Loasaceae.
+
+Lobelia erinus.
+secretion of nectar in sunshine.
+experiments with bees.
+
+Lobelia fulgens.
+measurements.
+summary of experiments.
+early flowering of self-fertilised.
+seeds.
+sterile unless visited by humble-bees.
+-- ramosa.
+measurements.
+early flowering of crossed.
+seeds.
+self-sterile.
+-- tenuior.
+
+Loiseleur-Deslongchamp, on the grains of cereals.
+
+Lotus corniculatus.
+
+Lubbock, Sir J., cross-fertilisation of flowers.
+on Viola tricolor.
+bees distinguishing colours.
+instinct of bees and insects sucking nectar.
+
+Lupinus luteus.
+measurements.
+early flowering of self-fertilised.
+self-fertile.
+prepotency of other pollen.
+-- pilosus.
+self-fertile.
+
+Lychnis dioica.
+
+MacNab, Mr., on the shorter or longer stamens of rhododendrons.
+
+Mahonia aquifolium.
+-- repens.
+
+Malvaceae.
+
+Marcgraviaceae.
+
+Masters, Mr., cross-fertilisation in Pisum sativum.
+cabbages affected by pollen at a distance.
+
+Masters, Dr. Maxwell, on honey-dew.
+
+Measurements, summary of.
+Table 7/A.
+Table 7/B.
+Table 7/C.
+
+Medicago lupulina.
+
+Meehan, Mr., fertilising Petunia violacea by night moth.
+
+Melastomaceae.
+
+Melilotus officinalis.
+
+Mercurialis annua.
+
+Miller, Professor, on chemical affinity.
+
+Mimulus luteus, effects of crossing.
+crossed and self-fertilised plants.
+measurements.
+cross with a distinct stock.
+intercrossed on same plant.
+summary of observations.
+of experiments.
+superiority of crossed plants.
+simultaneous flowering.
+effects of intercrossing.
+uniform colour of self-fertilised.
+seeds.
+highly self-fertile.
+prepotency of other pollen.
+-- roseus.
+
+Miner, Mr., red clover never sucked by hive-bees in the United States.
+
+Mirabilis, dwarfed plants raised by using too few pollen-grains.
+number of grains necessary for fertilisation.
+
+Mitchell, Dr., on first cousins inter-marrying.
+
+Monochaetum ensiferum.
+
+Moore, Mr., on Cinerarias.
+
+Muller, Fritz, on Posoqueria fragrans.
+experiments on hybrid Abutilons and Bignonias.
+large number of Orchidaceous genera sterile in their native home, also
+Bignonia and Tabernaemontana echinata.
+sterility of Eschscholtzia californica.
+Abutilon darwinii.
+experiments in self-fertilisation.
+self-sterile plants.
+incapacity of pollen-tubes to penetrate the stigma.
+cross-fertilisation by means of birds.
+imperfectly developed male and female Termites.
+food-bodies in Cecropia.
+
+Muller, Hermann, fertilisation of flowers by insects.
+on Digitalis purpurea.
+Calceolaria.
+Linaria vulgaris.
+Verbascum nigrum.
+the common cabbage.
+Papaver dubium.
+Viola tricolor.
+structure of Delphinium consolida.
+of Lupinus lutea.
+flowers of Pisum sativum.
+on Sarothamnus scoparius not secreting nectar.
+Apium petroselinum.
+Borago officinalis.
+red clover visited by hive-bees in Germany.
+insects rarely visiting Fumaria officinalis.
+comparison of lowland and alpine species.
+structure of plants adapted to cross and self-fertilisation.
+large conspicuous flowers more frequently visited by insects than small
+inconspicuous ones.
+Solanum generally unattractive to insects.
+Lamium album.
+on anemophilous plants.
+fertilisation of Plantago.
+secretion of nectar.
+instinct of bees sucking nectar.
+bees frequenting flowers of the same species.
+cause of it.
+powers of vision and discrimination of bees.
+
+Muller, Dr. H., hive-bees occasionally perforate the flower of Erica
+tetralix.
+calyx and corolla of Rhinanthus alecterolophus bored by Bombus
+mastrucatus.
+
+Munro, Mr., some species of Oncidium and Maxillaria sterile with own
+pollen.
+
+Myrtaceae.
+
+Nageli on odours attracting insects.
+sexual relations.
+
+Natural selection, effect upon self-sterility and self-fertilisation.
+
+Naudin on number of pollen-grains necessary for fertilisation.
+Petunia violacea.
+
+Nectar regarded as an excretion.
+
+Nemophila insignis.
+measurements.
+early flowering of crossed plant.
+effects of cross and self-fertilisation.
+seeds.
+
+Nepeta glechoma.
+
+Nicotiana glutinosa.
+-- tabacum.
+measurements.
+cross with fresh stock.
+measurements.
+summary of experiments.
+superiority of crossed plants.
+early flowering.
+seeds.
+experiments on.
+self-fertile.
+
+Nolana prostrata.
+measurements.
+crossed and self-fertilised plants.
+number of capsules and seeds.
+self-fertile.
+
+Nolanaceae.
+
+Nymphaea.
+
+Odours emitted by flowers attractive to insects.
+
+Ogle, Dr., on Digitalis purpurea.
+Gesneria.
+Phaseolus multiflorus.
+perforation of corolla.
+case of the Monkshood.
+
+Onagraceae.
+
+Onion, prepotency of other pollen.
+
+Ononis minutissima.
+measurements.
+seeds.
+self-fertile.
+
+Ophrys apifera.
+-- muscifera.
+
+Oranges, spontaneous crossing.
+
+Orchideae.
+excretion of saccharine matter.
+
+Orchis, fly.
+
+Origanum vulgare.
+measurements.
+early flowering of crossed plant.
+effects of intercrossing.
+
+Paeony, number of pollen-grains.
+
+Papaveraceae.
+
+Papaver alpinum.
+-- argemonoides.
+-- bracteatum.
+-- dubium.
+-- orientale.
+-- rhoeas.
+-- somniferum.
+-- vagum.
+measurements.
+number of capsules.
+seeds.
+prepotency of other pollen.
+
+Papillae of the Viola tricolor attractive to insects.
+
+Parsley.
+
+Passiflora alata.
+-- gracilis.
+measurements.
+crossed and self-fertilised.
+seeds.
+self-fertile.
+
+Passifloraceae.
+
+Pea, common.
+
+Pelargonium zonale.
+measurements.
+effects of intercrossing.
+almost self-sterile.
+
+Pentstemon argutus, perforated corolla.
+
+Petunia violacea.
+measurements.
+weight of seed.
+cross with fresh stock.
+relative fertility.
+colour.
+summary of experiments.
+superiority of crossed over self-fertilised.
+early flowering.
+uniform colour of self-fertilised.
+seeds.
+self-sterile.
+
+Phalaris canariensis.
+measurements.
+early flowering of crossed.
+
+Phaseolus coccineus.
+-- multiflorus.
+measurement.
+partially sterile.
+crossed and self-fertilised.
+early flowering of crossed.
+seeds.
+perforated by humble-bees.
+-- vulgaris.
+self-fertile.
+
+Pisum sativum.
+measurements.
+seldom intercross.
+summary of experiments.
+self-fertile.
+
+Plants, crossed, greater constitutional vigour.
+
+Pleroma.
+
+Polemoniaceae.
+
+Pollen, relative fertility of flowers crossed from a distinct plant, or
+with their own.
+difference of results in Nolana prostrata.
+crossed and self-fertilised plants, again crossed from a distinct plant
+and their own pollen.
+sterile with their own.
+semi-self-sterile.
+loss of.
+number of grains in Dandelion, Paeony, and Wistaria sinensis.
+number necessary for fertilisation.
+transported from flower to flower.
+prepotency.
+aboriginally the sole attraction to insects.
+quantity produced by anemophilous plants.
+
+Polyanthus, prepotency over cowslip.
+
+Polygoneae.
+
+Posoqueria fragrans.
+
+Potato.
+
+Poterium sanguisorba.
+
+Potts, heads of Anthornis melanura covered with pollen.
+
+Primrose, Chinese.
+
+Primula elatior.
+-- grandiflora.
+-- mollis.
+-- officinalis.
+-- scotica.
+-- sinensis.
+measurements.
+early flowering of crossed.
+-- veris (var. officinalis).
+measurements.
+result of experiments.
+early flowering of crossed.
+seeds.
+self-fertility.
+prepotency of dark red polyanthus.
+
+Primulaceae.
+
+Pringlea.
+
+Proteaceae of Australia.
+
+Prunus avium.
+-- laurocerasus.
+
+Pteris aquilina.
+
+Radish.
+
+Ranunculaceae.
+
+Ranunculus acris.
+
+Raphanus sativus.
+
+Reinke, nectar-secreting glands of Prunus avium.
+
+Reseda lutea.
+measurements.
+result of experiments.
+self-fertile.
+-- odorata.
+measurements.
+self-fertilised scarcely exceeded by crossed.
+seeds.
+want of correspondence between seeds and vigour of offspring.
+result of experiments.
+sterile and self-fertile.
+
+Resedaceae.
+
+Rheum rhaponticum.
+
+Rhexia glandulosa.
+
+Rhododendron, spontaneous crossing.
+
+Rhododendron azaloides.
+
+Rhubarb.
+
+Ribes aureum.
+
+Riley, Mr., pollen carried by wind.
+Yucca moth.
+
+Rodgers, Mr., secretion of nectar in Vanilla.
+
+Rye, experiment on pollen of.
+
+Salvia coccinea.
+measurements.
+early flowering of crossed.
+seeds.
+partially self-sterile.
+-- glutinosa.
+-- grahami.
+-- tenori.
+
+Sarothamnus scoparius.
+measurements.
+superiority of crossed seedlings.
+seeds.
+self-sterile.
+
+Scabiosa atro-purpurea.
+measurements.
+
+Scarlet-runner.
+
+Scott, J., Papaver somniferum.
+sterility of Verbascum.
+Oncidium and Maxillaria.
+on Primula scotica and Cortusa matthioli.
+
+Scrophulariaceae.
+
+Self-sterile varieties, appearance of.
+
+Self-fertilisation, mechanical structure to check.
+
+Self-sterile plants.
+wide distribution throughout the vegetable kingdom.
+difference in plants.
+cause of self-sterility.
+affected by changed conditions.
+necessity of differentiation in the sexual elements.
+
+Senecio cruentus.
+-- heritieri.
+-- maderensis
+-- populifolius.
+-- tussilaginis.
+
+Sharpe, Messrs., precautions against intercrossing.
+
+Snow-flake.
+
+Solanaceae.
+
+Solanum tuberosum.
+
+Specularia perfoliata.
+-- speculum.
+measurements.
+crossed and self-fertilised.
+early flowering of crossed.
+seeds.
+self-fertile.
+
+Spencer, Herbert, chemical affinity.
+
+Spiranthes autumnalis.
+
+Sprengel, C.K., fertilisation of flowers by insects.
+Viola tricolor.
+colours in flowers attract and guide insects.
+on Aristolochia.
+Aconitum napellus.
+importance of insects in fertilising flowers.
+
+Stachys coccinea.
+
+Stellaria media.
+
+Strachey, General, perforated flowers in the Himalaya.
+
+Strawberry.
+
+Strelitzia fertilised by the Nectarinideae.
+
+Structure of plants adapted to cross and self-fertilisation.
+
+Swale, Mr., garden lupine not visited by bees in New Zealand.
+
+Sweet-pea.
+
+Tabernaemontana echinata.
+
+Tables of measurements of heights, weights, and fertility of plants.
+
+Termites, imperfectly developed males and females.
+
+Thunbergia alata.
+
+Thyme.
+
+Tinzmann, on Solanum tuberosum.
+
+Tobacco.
+
+Transmission of the good effects of a cross to later generations.
+
+Trees, separated sexes.
+
+Trifolium arvense.
+-- incarnatum.
+-- minus.
+-- pratense.
+-- procumbens.
+-- repens.
+
+Tropaeolum minus.
+measurements.
+early flowering of crossed.
+seeds.
+-- tricolor.
+seeds.
+
+Tulips.
+
+Typha.
+
+Umbelliferae.
+
+Urban, Ig., fertilisation of Medicago lupulina.
+
+Vandellia nummularifolia.
+seeds.
+self-fertile.
+
+Vanilla, secretion of nectar.
+
+Verbascum lychnitis.
+-- nigrum.
+-- phoeniceum.
+-- thapsus.
+measurements.
+self-fertile.
+
+Verlot on Convolvulus tricolor.
+intercrossing of Nemophila.
+of Leptosiphon.
+
+Veronica agrestis.
+-- chamaedrys.
+-- hederaefolia.
+
+Vicia faba.
+-- hirsuta.
+-- sativa.
+
+Victoria regia.
+
+Villarsia parnassifolia.
+
+Vilmorin on transmitting character to offspring.
+
+Vinca major.
+-- rosea.
+
+Viola canina.
+-- tricolor.
+measurements.
+superiority of crossed plants.
+period of flowering.
+effects of cross-fertilisation.
+seeds.
+partially sterile.
+corolla removed.
+
+Violaceae.
+
+Viscaria oculata.
+measurement.
+average height of crossed and self-fertilised.
+simultaneous flowering.
+seeds.
+self-fertile.
+
+Wallace, Mr., the beaks and faces of brush-tongued lories covered with
+pollen.
+
+Wasps attracted by Epipactis latifolia.
+
+Weights, relative, of crossed and self-fertilised plants.
+and period of germination of seeds.
+
+Wilder, Mr., fertilisation of flowers with their own pollen.
+
+Wilson, A.J., superior vigour of crossed seedlings in Brassica
+campestris ruta baga.
+
+Wistaria sinensis.
+
+Yucca moth.
+
+Zea mays.
+measurements.
+difference of height between crossed and self-fertilised.
+early flowering of crossed.
+self-fertile.
+prepotency of other pollen.
+
+
+
+
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+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Effects of Cross &amp; Self-Fertilisation in the Vegetable Kingdom</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Charles Darwin</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: January 12, 2002 [eBook #4346]<br />
+[Most recently updated: January 2, 2022]</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Sue Asscher and David Widger</div>
+<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE EFFECTS OF CROSS &amp; SELF-FERTILISATION IN THE VEGETABLE KINGDOM ***</div>
+
+<h1>THE EFFECTS OF CROSS &amp; SELF-FERTILISATION IN THE VEGETABLE KINGDOM.</h1>
+
+<h2 class="no-break">By Charles Darwin</h2>
+
+<hr />
+
+ <p>
+ <b>CONTENTS</b>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> DETAILED TABLE OF CONTENTS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> THE EFFECTS OF CROSS AND SELF-FERTILISATION IN
+ THE VEGETABLE KINGDOM. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTORY REMARKS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. CONVOLVULACEAE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. SCROPHULARIACEAE, GESNERIACEAE,
+ LABIATAE, ETC. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. CRUCIFERAE, PAPAVERACEAE, RESEDACEAE,
+ ETC. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. GERANIACEAE, LEGUMINOSAE, ONAGRACEAE,
+ ETC. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. SOLANACEAE, PRIMULACEAE, POLYGONEAE,
+ ETC. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. A SUMMARY OF THE HEIGHTS AND WEIGHTS
+ OF THE CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. DIFFERENCE BETWEEN CROSSED AND
+ SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS IN CONSTITUTIONAL VIGOUR AND IN OTHER RESPECTS.
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. THE EFFECTS OF CROSS-FERTILISATION
+ AND SELF-FERTILISATION ON THE PRODUCTION OF SEEDS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. MEANS OF FERTILISATION. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. THE HABITS OF INSECTS IN RELATION TO
+ THE FERTILISATION OF FLOWERS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. GENERAL RESULTS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ DETAILED TABLE OF CONTENTS
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ I.
+ </h3>
+ <h3>
+ INTRODUCTORY REMARKS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Various means which favour or determine the cross-fertilisation of plants.&mdash;Benefits
+ derived from cross-fertilisation.&mdash;Self-fertilisation favourable to
+ the propagation of the species.&mdash;Brief history of the subject.&mdash;Object
+ of the experiments, and the manner in which they were tried.&mdash;Statistical
+ value of the measurements.&mdash;The experiments carried on during several
+ successive generations.&mdash;Nature of the relationship of the plants in
+ the later generations.&mdash;Uniformity of the conditions to which the
+ plants were subjected.&mdash;Some apparent and some real causes of error.&mdash;Amount
+ of pollen employed.&mdash;Arrangement of the work.&mdash;Importance of the
+ conclusions.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ II.
+ </h3>
+ <h3>
+ CONVOLVULACEAE.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Ipomoea purpurea, comparison of the height and fertility of the crossed
+ and self-fertilised plants during ten successive generations.&mdash;Greater
+ constitutional vigour of the crossed plants.&mdash;The effects on the
+ offspring of crossing different flowers on the same plant, instead of
+ crossing distinct individuals.&mdash;The effects of a cross with a fresh
+ stock.&mdash;The descendants of the self-fertilised plant named Hero.&mdash;Summary
+ on the growth, vigour, and fertility of the successive crossed and
+ self-fertilised generations.&mdash;Small amount of pollen in the anthers
+ of the self-fertilised plants of the later generations, and the sterility
+ of their first-produced flowers.&mdash;Uniform colour of the flowers
+ produced by the self-fertilised plants.&mdash;The advantage from a cross
+ between two distinct plants depends on their differing in constitution.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ III.
+ </h3>
+ <h3>
+ SCROPHULARIACEAE, GESNERIACEAE, LABIATAE, ETC.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Mimulus luteus; height, vigour, and fertility of the crossed and
+ self-fertilised plants of the first four generations.&mdash;Appearance of
+ a new, tall, and highly self-fertile variety.&mdash;Offspring from a cross
+ between self-fertilised plants.&mdash;Effects of a cross with a fresh
+ stock.&mdash;Effects of crossing flowers on the same plant.&mdash;Summary
+ on Mimulus luteus.&mdash;Digitalis purpurea, superiority of the crossed
+ plants.&mdash;Effects of crossing flowers on the same plant.&mdash;Calceolaria.&mdash;Linaria
+ vulgaris.&mdash;Verbascum thapsus.&mdash;Vandellia nummularifolia.&mdash;Cleistogene
+ flowers.&mdash;Gesneria pendulina.&mdash;Salvia coccinea.&mdash;Origanum
+ vulgare, great increase of the crossed plants by stolons.&mdash;Thunbergia
+ alata.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ IV.
+ </h3>
+ <h3>
+ CRUCIFERAE, PAPAVERACEAE, RESEDACEAE, ETC.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Brassica oleracea, crossed and self-fertilised plants.&mdash;Great effect
+ of a cross with a fresh stock on the weight of the offspring.&mdash;Iberis
+ umbellata.&mdash;Papaver vagum.&mdash;Eschscholtzia californica, seedlings
+ from a cross with a fresh stock not more vigorous, but more fertile than
+ the self-fertilised seedlings.&mdash;Reseda lutea and odorata, many
+ individuals sterile with their own pollen.&mdash;Viola tricolor, wonderful
+ effects of a cross.&mdash;Adonis aestivalis.&mdash;Delphinium consolida.&mdash;Viscaria
+ oculata, crossed plants hardly taller, but more fertile than the
+ self-fertilised.&mdash;Dianthus caryophyllus, crossed and self-fertilised
+ plants compared for four generations.&mdash;Great effects of a cross with
+ a fresh stock.&mdash;Uniform colour of the flowers on the self-fertilised
+ plants.&mdash;Hibiscus africanus.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ V.
+ </h3>
+ <h3>
+ GERANIACEAE, LEGUMINOSAE, ONAGRACEAE, ETC.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Pelargonium zonale, a cross between plants propagated by cuttings does no
+ good.&mdash;Tropaeolum minus.&mdash;Limnanthes douglasii.&mdash;Lupinus
+ luteus and pilosus.&mdash;Phaseolus multiflorus and vulgaris.&mdash;Lathyrus
+ odoratus, varieties of, never naturally intercross in England.&mdash;Pisum
+ sativum, varieties of, rarely intercross, but a cross between them highly
+ beneficial.&mdash;Sarothamnus scoparius, wonderful effects of a cross.&mdash;Ononis
+ minutissima, cleistogene flowers of.&mdash;Summary on the Leguminosae.&mdash;Clarkia
+ elegans.&mdash;Bartonia aurea.&mdash;Passiflora gracilis.&mdash;Apium
+ petroselinum.&mdash;Scabiosa atropurpurea.&mdash;Lactuca sativa.&mdash;Specularia
+ speculum.&mdash;Lobelia ramosa, advantages of a cross during two
+ generations.&mdash;Lobelia fulgens.&mdash;Nemophila insignis, great
+ advantages of a cross.&mdash;Borago officinalis.&mdash;Nolana prostrata.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ VI.
+ </h3>
+ <h3>
+ SOLANACEAE, PRIMULACEAE, POLYGONEAE, ETC.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Petunia violacea, crossed and self-fertilised plants compared for four
+ generations.&mdash;Effects of a cross with a fresh stock.&mdash;Uniform
+ colour of the flowers on the self-fertilised plants of the fourth
+ generation.&mdash;Nicotiana tabacum, crossed and self-fertilised plants of
+ equal height.&mdash;Great effects of a cross with a distinct sub-variety
+ on the height, but not on the fertility, of the offspring.&mdash;Cyclamen
+ persicum, crossed seedlings greatly superior to the self-fertilised.&mdash;Anagallis
+ collina.&mdash;Primula veris.&mdash;Equal-styled variety of Primula veris,
+ fertility of, greatly increased by a cross with a fresh stock.&mdash;Fagopyrum
+ esculentum.&mdash;Beta vulgaris.&mdash;Canna warscewiczi, crossed and
+ self-fertilised plants of equal height.&mdash;Zea mays.&mdash;Phalaris
+ canariensis.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ VII.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ A SUMMARY OF THE HEIGHTS AND WEIGHTS OF THE CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED
+ PLANTS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Number of species and plants measured.&mdash;Tables given.&mdash;Preliminary
+ remarks on the offspring of plants crossed by a fresh stock.&mdash;Thirteen
+ cases specially considered.&mdash;The effects of crossing a
+ self-fertilised plant either by another self-fertilised plant or by an
+ intercrossed plant of the old stock.&mdash;Summary of the results.&mdash;Preliminary
+ remarks on the crossed and self-fertilised plants of the same stock.&mdash;The
+ twenty-six exceptional cases considered, in which the crossed plants did
+ not exceed greatly in height the self-fertilised.&mdash;Most of these
+ cases shown not to be real exceptions to the rule that cross-fertilisation
+ is beneficial.&mdash;Summary of results.&mdash;Relative weights of the
+ crossed and self-fertilised plants.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ VIII.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ DIFFERENCE BETWEEN CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS IN CONSTITUTIONAL
+ VIGOUR AND IN OTHER RESPECTS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Greater constitutional vigour of crossed plants.&mdash;The effects of
+ great crowding.&mdash;Competition with other kinds of plants.&mdash;Self-fertilised
+ plants more liable to premature death.&mdash;Crossed plants generally
+ flower before the self-fertilised.&mdash;Negative effects of intercrossing
+ flowers on the same plant.&mdash;Cases described.&mdash;Transmission of
+ the good effects of a cross to later generations.&mdash;Effects of
+ crossing plants of closely related parentage.&mdash;Uniform colour of the
+ flowers on plants self-fertilised during several generations and
+ cultivated under similar conditions.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ IX.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ THE EFFECTS OF CROSS-FERTILISATION AND SELF-FERTILISATION ON THE
+ PRODUCTION OF SEEDS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fertility of plants of crossed and self-fertilised parentage, both lots
+ being fertilised in the same manner.&mdash;Fertility of the parent-plants
+ when first crossed and self-fertilised, and of their crossed and
+ self-fertilised offspring when again crossed and self-fertilised.&mdash;Comparison
+ of the fertility of flowers fertilised with their own pollen and with that
+ from other flowers on the same plant.&mdash;Self-sterile plants.&mdash;Causes
+ of self-sterility.&mdash;The appearance of highly self-fertile varieties.&mdash;Self-fertilisation
+ apparently in some respects beneficial, independently of the assured
+ production of seeds.&mdash;Relative weights and rates of germination of
+ seeds from crossed and self-fertilised flowers.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ X.
+ </h3>
+ <h3>
+ MEANS OF FERTILISATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Sterility and fertility of plants when insects are excluded.&mdash;The
+ means by which flowers are cross-fertilised.&mdash;Structures favourable
+ to self-fertilisation.&mdash;Relation between the structure and
+ conspicuousness of flowers, the visits of insects, and the advantages of
+ cross-fertilisation.&mdash;The means by which flowers are fertilised with
+ pollen from a distinct plant.&mdash;Greater fertilising power of such
+ pollen.&mdash;Anemophilous species.&mdash;Conversion of anemophilous
+ species into entomophilous.&mdash;Origin of nectar.&mdash;Anemophilous
+ plants generally have their sexes separated.&mdash;Conversion of diclinous
+ into hermaphrodite flowers.&mdash;Trees often have their sexes separated.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ XI.
+ </h3>
+ <h3>
+ THE HABITS OF INSECTS IN RELATION TO THE FERTILISATION OF FLOWERS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Insects visit the flowers of the same species as long as they can.&mdash;Cause
+ of this habit.&mdash;Means by which bees recognise the flowers of the same
+ species.&mdash;Sudden secretion of nectar.&mdash;Nectar of certain flowers
+ unattractive to certain insects.&mdash;Industry of bees, and the number of
+ flowers visited within a short time.&mdash;Perforation of the corolla by
+ bees.&mdash;Skill shown in the operation.&mdash;Hive-bees profit by the
+ holes made by humble-bees.&mdash;Effects of habit.&mdash;The motive for
+ perforating flowers to save time.&mdash;Flowers growing in crowded masses
+ chiefly perforated.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ XII.
+ </h3>
+ <h3>
+ GENERAL RESULTS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Cross-fertilisation proved to be beneficial, and self-fertilisation
+ injurious.&mdash;Allied species differ greatly in the means by which
+ cross-fertilisation is favoured and self-fertilisation avoided.&mdash;The
+ benefits and evils of the two processes depend on the degree of
+ differentiation in the sexual elements.&mdash;The evil effects not due to
+ the combination of morbid tendencies in the parents.&mdash;Nature of the
+ conditions to which plants are subjected when growing near together in a
+ state of nature or under culture, and the effects of such conditions.&mdash;Theoretical
+ considerations with respect to the interaction of differentiated sexual
+ elements.&mdash;Practical lessons.&mdash;Genesis of the two sexes.&mdash;Close
+ correspondence between the effects of cross-fertilisation and
+ self-fertilisation, and of the legitimate and illegitimate unions of
+ heterostyled plants, in comparison with hybrid unions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE EFFECTS OF CROSS AND SELF-FERTILISATION IN THE VEGETABLE KINGDOM.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTORY REMARKS.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Various means which favour or determine the cross-fertilisation of plants.
+ Benefits derived from cross-fertilisation.
+ Self-fertilisation favourable to the propagation of the species.
+ Brief history of the subject.
+ Object of the experiments, and the manner in which they were tried.
+ Statistical value of the measurements.
+ The experiments carried on during several successive generations.
+ Nature of the relationship of the plants in the later generations.
+ Uniformity of the conditions to which the plants were subjected.
+ Some apparent and some real causes of error.
+ Amount of pollen employed.
+ Arrangement of the work.
+ Importance of the conclusions.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There is weighty and abundant evidence that the flowers of most kinds of
+ plants are constructed so as to be occasionally or habitually
+ cross-fertilised by pollen from another flower, produced either by the
+ same plant, or generally, as we shall hereafter see reason to believe, by
+ a distinct plant. Cross-fertilisation is sometimes ensured by the sexes
+ being separated, and in a large number of cases by the pollen and stigma
+ of the same flower being matured at different times. Such plants are
+ called dichogamous, and have been divided into two sub-classes:
+ proterandrous species, in which the pollen is mature before the stigma,
+ and proterogynous species, in which the reverse occurs; this latter form
+ of dichogamy not being nearly so common as the other. Cross-fertilisation
+ is also ensured, in many cases, by mechanical contrivances of wonderful
+ beauty, preventing the impregnation of the flowers by their own pollen.
+ There is a small class of plants, which I have called dimorphic and
+ trimorphic, but to which Hildebrand has given the more appropriate name of
+ heterostyled; this class consists of plants presenting two or three
+ distinct forms, adapted for reciprocal fertilisation, so that, like plants
+ with separate sexes, they can hardly fail to be intercrossed in each
+ generation. The male and female organs of some flowers are irritable, and
+ the insects which touch them get dusted with pollen, which is thus
+ transported to other flowers. Again, there is a class, in which the ovules
+ absolutely refuse to be fertilised by pollen from the same plant, but can
+ be fertilised by pollen from any other individual of the same species.
+ There are also very many species which are partially sterile with their
+ own pollen. Lastly, there is a large class in which the flowers present no
+ apparent obstacle of any kind to self-fertilisation, nevertheless these
+ plants are frequently intercrossed, owing to the prepotency of pollen from
+ another individual or variety over the plant&rsquo;s own pollen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As plants are adapted by such diversified and effective means for
+ cross-fertilisation, it might have been inferred from this fact alone that
+ they derived some great advantage from the process; and it is the object
+ of the present work to show the nature and importance of the benefits thus
+ derived. There are, however, some exceptions to the rule of plants being
+ constructed so as to allow of or to favour cross-fertilisation, for some
+ few plants seem to be invariably self-fertilised; yet even these retain
+ traces of having been formerly adapted for cross-fertilisation. These
+ exceptions need not make us doubt the truth of the above rule, any more
+ than the existence of some few plants which produce flowers, and yet never
+ set seed, should make us doubt that flowers are adapted for the production
+ of seed and the propagation of the species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We should always keep in mind the obvious fact that the production of seed
+ is the chief end of the act of fertilisation; and that this end can be
+ gained by hermaphrodite plants with incomparably greater certainty by
+ self-fertilisation, than by the union of the sexual elements belonging to
+ two distinct flowers or plants. Yet it is as unmistakably plain that
+ innumerable flowers are adapted for cross-fertilisation, as that the teeth
+ and talons of a carnivorous animal are adapted for catching prey; or that
+ the plumes, wings, and hooks of a seed are adapted for its dissemination.
+ Flowers, therefore, are constructed so as to gain two objects which are,
+ to a certain extent, antagonistic, and this explains many apparent
+ anomalies in their structure. The close proximity of the anthers to the
+ stigma in a multitude of species favours, and often leads, to
+ self-fertilisation; but this end could have been gained far more safely if
+ the flowers had been completely closed, for then the pollen would not have
+ been injured by the rain or devoured by insects, as often happens.
+ Moreover, in this case, a very small quantity of pollen would have been
+ sufficient for fertilisation, instead of millions of grains being
+ produced. But the openness of the flower and the production of a great and
+ apparently wasteful amount of pollen are necessary for
+ cross-fertilisation. These remarks are well illustrated by the plants
+ called cleistogene, which bear on the same stock two kinds of flowers. The
+ flowers of the one kind are minute and completely closed, so that they
+ cannot possibly be crossed; but they are abundantly fertile, although
+ producing an extremely small quantity of pollen. The flowers of the other
+ kind produce much pollen and are open; and these can be, and often are,
+ cross-fertilised. Hermann Muller has also made the remarkable discovery
+ that there are some plants which exist under two forms; that is, produce
+ on distinct stocks two kinds of hermaphrodite flowers. The one form bears
+ small flowers constructed for self-fertilisation; whilst the other bears
+ larger and much more conspicuous flowers plainly constructed for
+ cross-fertilisation by the aid of insects; and without their aid these
+ produce no seed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The adaptation of flowers for cross-fertilisation is a subject which has
+ interested me for the last thirty-seven years, and I have collected a
+ large mass of observations, but these are now rendered superfluous by the
+ many excellent works which have been lately published. In the year 1857 I
+ wrote a short paper on the fertilisation of the kidney bean (1/1.
+ &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo; 1857 page 725 and 1858 pages 824 and 844. &lsquo;Annals
+ and Magazine of Natural History&rsquo; 3rd series volume 2 1858 page 462.); and
+ in 1862 my work &lsquo;On the Contrivances by which British and Foreign Orchids
+ are Fertilised by Insects&rsquo; appeared. It seemed to me a better plan to work
+ out one group of plants as carefully as I could, rather than to publish
+ many miscellaneous and imperfect observations. My present work is the
+ complement of that on Orchids, in which it was shown how admirably these
+ plants are constructed so as to permit of, or to favour, or to necessitate
+ cross-fertilisation. The adaptations for cross-fertilisation are perhaps
+ more obvious in the Orchideae than in any other group of plants, but it is
+ an error to speak of them, as some authors have done, as an exceptional
+ case. The lever-like action of the stamens of Salvia (described by
+ Hildebrand, Dr. W. Ogle, and others), by which the anthers are depressed
+ and rubbed on the backs of bees, shows as perfect a structure as can be
+ found in any orchid. Papilionaceous flowers, as described by various
+ authors&mdash;for instance, by Mr. T.H. Farrer&mdash;offer innumerable
+ curious adaptations for cross-fertilisation. The case of Posoqueria
+ fragrans (one of the Rubiaceae), is as wonderful as that of the most
+ wonderful orchid. The stamens, according to Fritz Muller, are irritable,
+ so that as soon as a moth visits a flower, the anthers explode and cover
+ the insect with pollen; one of the filaments which is broader than the
+ others then moves and closes the flower for about twelve hours, after
+ which time it resumes its original position. (1/2. &lsquo;Botanische Zeitung&rsquo;
+ 1866 page 129.) Thus the stigma cannot be fertilised by pollen from the
+ same flower, but only by that brought by a moth from some other flower.
+ Endless other beautiful contrivances for this same purpose could be
+ specified.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Long before I had attended to the fertilisation of flowers, a remarkable
+ book appeared in 1793 in Germany, &lsquo;Das Entdeckte Geheimniss der Natur,&rsquo; by
+ C.K. Sprengel, in which he clearly proved by innumerable observations, how
+ essential a part insects play in the fertilisation of many plants. But he
+ was in advance of his age, and his discoveries were for a long time
+ neglected. Since the appearance of my book on Orchids, many excellent
+ works on the fertilisation of flowers, such as those by Hildebrand,
+ Delpino, Axell and Hermann Muller, and numerous shorter papers, have been
+ published. (1/3. Sir John Lubbock has given an interesting summary of the
+ whole subject in his &lsquo;British Wild Flowers considered in relation to
+ Insects&rsquo; 1875. Hermann Muller&rsquo;s work &lsquo;Die Befruchtung der Blumen durch
+ Insekten&rsquo; 1873, contains an immense number of original observations and
+ generalisations. It is, moreover, invaluable as a repertory with
+ references to almost everything which has been published on the subject.
+ His work differs from that of all others in specifying what kinds of
+ insects, as far as known, visit the flowers of each species. He likewise
+ enters on new ground, by showing not only that flowers are adapted for
+ their own good to the visits of certain insects; but that the insects
+ themselves are excellently adapted for procuring nectar or pollen from
+ certain flowers. The value of H. Muller&rsquo;s work can hardly be
+ over-estimated, and it is much to be desired that it should be translated
+ into English. Severin Axell&rsquo;s work is written in Swedish, so that I have
+ not been able to read it.) A list would occupy several pages, and this is
+ not the proper place to give their titles, as we are not here concerned
+ with the means, but with the results of cross-fertilisation. No one who
+ feels interest in the mechanism by which nature effects her ends, can read
+ these books and memoirs without the most lively interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From my own observations on plants, guided to a certain extent by the
+ experience of the breeders of animals, I became convinced many years ago
+ that it is a general law of nature that flowers are adapted to be crossed,
+ at least occasionally, by pollen from a distinct plant. Sprengel at times
+ foresaw this law, but only partially, for it does not appear that he was
+ aware that there was any difference in power between pollen from the same
+ plant and from a distinct plant. In the introduction to his book (page 4)
+ he says, as the sexes are separated in so many flowers, and as so many
+ other flowers are dichogamous, &ldquo;it appears that nature has not willed that
+ any one flower should be fertilised by its own pollen.&rdquo; Nevertheless, he
+ was far from keeping this conclusion always before his mind, or he did not
+ see its full importance, as may be perceived by anyone who will read his
+ observations carefully; and he consequently mistook the meaning of various
+ structures. But his discoveries are so numerous and his work so excellent,
+ that he can well afford to bear a small amount of blame. A most capable
+ judge, H. Muller, likewise says: &ldquo;It is remarkable in how very many cases
+ Sprengel rightly perceived that pollen is necessarily transported to the
+ stigmas of other flowers of the same species by the insects which visit
+ them, and yet did not imagine that this transportation was of any service
+ to the plants themselves.&rdquo; (1/4. &lsquo;Die Befruchtung der Blumen&rsquo; 1873 page 4.
+ His words are: &ldquo;Es ist merkwurdig, in wie zahlreichen Fallen Sprengel
+ richtig erkannte, dass durch die Besuchenden Insekten der Bluthenstaub mit
+ Nothwendigkeit auf die Narben anderer Bluthen derselben Art ubertragen
+ wird, ohne auf die Vermuthung zu kommen, dass in dieser Wirkung der Nutzen
+ des Insektenbesuches fur die Pflanzen selbst gesucht werden musse.&rdquo;)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Andrew Knight saw the truth much more clearly, for he remarks, &ldquo;Nature
+ intended that a sexual intercourse should take place between neighbouring
+ plants of the same species.&rdquo; (1/5. &lsquo;Philosophical Transactions&rsquo; 1799 page
+ 202.) After alluding to the various means by which pollen is transported
+ from flower to flower, as far as was then imperfectly known, he adds,
+ &ldquo;Nature has something more in view than that its own proper males would
+ fecundate each blossom.&rdquo; In 1811 Kolreuter plainly hinted at the same law,
+ as did afterwards another famous hybridiser of plants, Herbert. (1/6.
+ Kolreuter &lsquo;Mem. de l&rsquo;Acad. de St. Petersbourg&rsquo; tome 3 1809 published 1811
+ page 197. After showing how well the Malvaceae are adapted for
+ cross-fertilisation, he asks, &ldquo;An id aliquid in recessu habeat, quod
+ hujuscemodi flores nunquam proprio suo pulvere, sed semper eo aliarum suae
+ speciei impregnentur, merito quaeritur? Certe natura nil facit frustra.&rdquo;
+ Herbert &lsquo;Amaryllidaceae, with a Treatise on Cross-bred Vegetables&rsquo; 1837.)
+ But none of these distinguished observers appear to have been sufficiently
+ impressed with the truth and generality of the law, so as to insist on it
+ and impress their beliefs on others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1862 I summed up my observations on Orchids by saying that nature
+ &ldquo;abhors perpetual self-fertilisation.&rdquo; If the word perpetual had been
+ omitted, the aphorism would have been false. As it stands, I believe that
+ it is true, though perhaps rather too strongly expressed; and I should
+ have added the self-evident proposition that the propagation of the
+ species, whether by self-fertilisation or by cross-fertilisation, or
+ asexually by buds, stolons, etc. is of paramount importance. Hermann
+ Muller has done excellent service by insisting repeatedly on this latter
+ point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It often occurred to me that it would be advisable to try whether
+ seedlings from cross-fertilised flowers were in any way superior to those
+ from self-fertilised flowers. But as no instance was known with animals of
+ any evil appearing in a single generation from the closest possible
+ interbreeding, that is between brothers and sisters, I thought that the
+ same rule would hold good with plants; and that it would be necessary at
+ the sacrifice of too much time to self-fertilise and intercross plants
+ during several successive generations, in order to arrive at any result. I
+ ought to have reflected that such elaborate provisions favouring
+ cross-fertilisation, as we see in innumerable plants, would not have been
+ acquired for the sake of gaining a distant and slight advantage, or of
+ avoiding a distant and slight evil. Moreover, the fertilisation of a
+ flower by its own pollen corresponds to a closer form of interbreeding
+ than is possible with ordinary bi-sexual animals; so that an earlier
+ result might have been expected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was at last led to make the experiments recorded in the present volume
+ from the following circumstance. For the sake of determining certain
+ points with respect to inheritance, and without any thought of the effects
+ of close interbreeding, I raised close together two large beds of
+ self-fertilised and crossed seedlings from the same plant of Linaria
+ vulgaris. To my surprise, the crossed plants when fully grown were plainly
+ taller and more vigorous than the self-fertilised ones. Bees incessantly
+ visit the flowers of this Linaria and carry pollen from one to the other;
+ and if insects are excluded, the flowers produce extremely few seeds; so
+ that the wild plants from which my seedlings were raised must have been
+ intercrossed during all previous generations. It seemed therefore quite
+ incredible that the difference between the two beds of seedlings could
+ have been due to a single act of self-fertilisation; and I attributed the
+ result to the self-fertilised seeds not having been well ripened,
+ improbable as it was that all should have been in this state, or to some
+ other accidental and inexplicable cause. During the next year, I raised
+ for the same purpose as before two large beds close together of
+ self-fertilised and crossed seedlings from the carnation, Dianthus
+ caryophyllus. This plant, like the Linaria, is almost sterile if insects
+ are excluded; and we may draw the same inference as before, namely, that
+ the parent-plants must have been intercrossed during every or almost every
+ previous generation. Nevertheless, the self-fertilised seedlings were
+ plainly inferior in height and vigour to the crossed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My attention was now thoroughly aroused, for I could hardly doubt that the
+ difference between the two beds was due to the one set being the offspring
+ of crossed, and the other of self-fertilised flowers. Accordingly I
+ selected almost by hazard two other plants, which happened to be in flower
+ in the greenhouse, namely, Mimulus luteus and Ipomoea purpurea, both of
+ which, unlike the Linaria and Dianthus, are highly self-fertile if insects
+ are excluded. Some flowers on a single plant of both species were
+ fertilised with their own pollen, and others were crossed with pollen from
+ a distinct individual; both plants being protected by a net from insects.
+ The crossed and self-fertilised seeds thus produced were sown on opposite
+ sides of the same pots, and treated in all respects alike; and the plants
+ when fully grown were measured and compared. With both species, as in the
+ cases of the Linaria and Dianthus, the crossed seedlings were
+ conspicuously superior in height and in other ways to the self-fertilised.
+ I therefore determined to begin a long series of experiments with various
+ plants, and these were continued for the following eleven years; and we
+ shall see that in a large majority of cases the crossed beat the
+ self-fertilised plants. Several of the exceptional cases, moreover, in
+ which the crossed plants were not victorious, can be explained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It should be observed that I have spoken for the sake of brevity, and
+ shall continue to do so, of crossed and self-fertilised seeds, seedlings,
+ or plants; these terms implying that they are the product of crossed or
+ self-fertilised flowers. Cross-fertilisation always means a cross between
+ distinct plants which were raised from seeds and not from cuttings or
+ buds. Self-fertilisation always implies that the flowers in question were
+ impregnated with their own pollen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My experiments were tried in the following manner. A single plant, if it
+ produced a sufficiency of flowers, or two or three plants were placed
+ under a net stretched on a frame, and large enough to cover the plant
+ (together with the pot, when one was used) without touching it. This
+ latter point is important, for if the flowers touch the net they may be
+ cross-fertilised by bees, as I have known to happen; and when the net is
+ wet the pollen may be injured. I used at first &ldquo;white cotton net,&rdquo; with
+ very fine meshes, but afterwards a kind of net with meshes one-tenth of an
+ inch in diameter; and this I found by experience effectually excluded all
+ insects excepting Thrips, which no net will exclude. On the plants thus
+ protected several flowers were marked, and were fertilised with their own
+ pollen; and an equal number on the same plants, marked in a different
+ manner, were at the same time crossed with pollen from a distinct plant.
+ The crossed flowers were never castrated, in order to make the experiments
+ as like as possible to what occurs under nature with plants fertilised by
+ the aid of insects. Therefore, some of the flowers which were crossed may
+ have failed to be thus fertilised, and afterwards have been
+ self-fertilised. But this and some other sources of error will presently
+ be discussed. In some few cases of spontaneously self-fertile species, the
+ flowers were allowed to fertilise themselves under the net; and in still
+ fewer cases uncovered plants were allowed to be freely crossed by the
+ insects which incessantly visited them. There are some great advantages
+ and some disadvantages in my having occasionally varied my method of
+ proceeding; but when there was any difference in the treatment, it is
+ always so stated under the head of each species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Care was taken that the seeds were thoroughly ripened before being
+ gathered. Afterwards the crossed and self-fertilised seeds were in most
+ cases placed on damp sand on opposite sides of a glass tumbler covered by
+ a glass plate, with a partition between the two lots; and the glass was
+ placed on the chimney-piece in a warm room. I could thus observe the
+ germination of the seeds. Sometimes a few would germinate on one side
+ before any on the other, and these were thrown away. But as often as a
+ pair germinated at the same time, they were planted on opposite sides of a
+ pot, with a superficial partition between the two; and I thus proceeded
+ until from half-a-dozen to a score or more seedlings of exactly the same
+ age were planted on the opposite sides of several pots. If one of the
+ young seedlings became sickly or was in any way injured, it was pulled up
+ and thrown away, as well as its antagonist on the opposite side of the
+ same pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a large number of seeds were placed on the sand to germinate, many
+ remained after the pairs had been selected, some of which were in a state
+ of germination and others not so; and these were sown crowded together on
+ the opposite sides of one or two rather larger pots, or sometimes in two
+ long rows out of doors. In these cases there was the most severe struggle
+ for life among the crossed seedlings on one side of the pot, and the
+ self-fertilised seedlings on the other side, and between the two lots
+ which grew in competition in the same pot. A vast number soon perished,
+ and the tallest of the survivors on both sides when fully grown were
+ measured. Plants treated in this manner, were subjected to nearly the same
+ conditions as those growing in a state of nature, which have to struggle
+ to maturity in the midst of a host of competitors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On other occasions, from the want of time, the seeds, instead of being
+ allowed to germinate on damp sand, were sown on the opposite sides of
+ pots, and the fully grown plants measured. But this plan is less accurate,
+ as the seeds sometimes germinated more quickly on one side than on the
+ other. It was however necessary to act in this manner with some few
+ species, as certain kinds of seeds would not germinate well when exposed
+ to the light; though the glasses containing them were kept on the
+ chimney-piece on one side of a room, and some way from the two windows
+ which faced the north-east. (1/7. This occurred in the plainest manner
+ with the seeds of Papaver vagum and Delphinium consolida, and less plainly
+ with those of Adonis aestivalis and Ononis minutissima. Rarely more than
+ one or two of the seeds of these four species germinated on the bare sand,
+ though left there for some weeks; but when these same seeds were placed on
+ earth in pots, and covered with a thin layer of sand, they germinated
+ immediately in large numbers.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The soil in the pots in which the seedlings were planted, or the seeds
+ sown, was well mixed, so as to be uniform in composition. The plants on
+ the two sides were always watered at the same time and as equally as
+ possible; and even if this had not been done, the water would have spread
+ almost equally to both sides, as the pots were not large. The crossed and
+ self-fertilised plants were separated by a superficial partition, which
+ was always kept directed towards the chief source of the light, so that
+ the plants on both sides were equally illuminated. I do not believe it
+ possible that two sets of plants could have been subjected to more closely
+ similar conditions, than were my crossed and self-fertilised seedlings, as
+ grown in the above described manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In comparing the two sets, the eye alone was never trusted. Generally the
+ height of every plant on both sides was carefully measured, often more
+ than once, namely, whilst young, sometimes again when older, and finally
+ when fully or almost fully grown. But in some cases, which are always
+ specified, owing to the want of time, only one or two of the tallest
+ plants on each side were measured. This plan, which is not a good one, was
+ never followed (except with the crowded plants raised from the seeds
+ remaining after the pairs had been planted) unless the tallest plants on
+ each side seemed fairly to represent the average difference between those
+ on both sides. It has, however, some great advantages, as sickly or
+ accidentally injured plants, or the offspring of ill-ripened seeds, are
+ thus eliminated. When the tallest plants alone on each side were measured,
+ their average height of course exceeds that of all the plants on the same
+ side taken together. But in the case of the much crowded plants raised
+ from the remaining seeds, the average height of the tallest plants was
+ less than that of the plants in pairs, owing to the unfavourable
+ conditions to which they were subjected from being greatly crowded. For
+ our purpose, however, of the comparison of the crossed and self-fertilised
+ plants, their absolute height signifies little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the plants were measured by an ordinary English standard divided into
+ inches and eighths of an inch, I have not thought it worth while to change
+ the fractions into decimals. The average or mean heights were calculated
+ in the ordinary rough method by adding up the measurements of all, and
+ dividing the product by the number of plants measured; the result being
+ here given in inches and decimals. As the different species grow to
+ various heights, I have always for the sake of easy comparison given in
+ addition the average height of the crossed plants of each species taken as
+ 100, and have calculated the average height of the self-fertilised plant
+ in relation to this standard. With respect to the crowded plants raised
+ from the seeds remaining after the pairs had been planted, and of which
+ only some of the tallest on each side were measured, I have not thought it
+ worth while to complicate the results by giving separate averages for them
+ and for the pairs, but have added up all their heights, and thus obtained
+ a single average.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I long doubted whether it was worth while to give the measurements of each
+ separate plant, but have decided to do so, in order that it may be seen
+ that the superiority of the crossed plants over the self-fertilised, does
+ not commonly depend on the presence of two or three extra fine plants on
+ the one side, or of a few very poor plants on the other side. Although
+ several observers have insisted in general terms on the offspring from
+ intercrossed varieties being superior to either parent-form, no precise
+ measurements have been given (1/8. A summary of these statements, with
+ references, may be found in my &lsquo;Variation of Animals and Plants under
+ Domestication&rsquo; chapter 17 2nd edition 1875 volume 2 page 109.); and I have
+ met with no observations on the effects of crossing and self-fertilising
+ the individuals of the same variety. Moreover, experiments of this kind
+ require so much time&mdash;mine having been continued during eleven years&mdash;that
+ they are not likely soon to be repeated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As only a moderate number of crossed and self-fertilised plants were
+ measured, it was of great importance to me to learn how far the averages
+ were trustworthy. I therefore asked Mr. Galton, who has had much
+ experience in statistical researches, to examine some of my tables of
+ measurements, seven in number, namely, those of Ipomoea, Digitalis, Reseda
+ lutea, Viola, Limnanthes, Petunia, and Zea. I may premise that if we took
+ by chance a dozen or score of men belonging to two nations and measured
+ them, it would I presume be very rash to form any judgment from such small
+ numbers on their average heights. But the case is somewhat different with
+ my crossed and self-fertilised plants, as they were of exactly the same
+ age, were subjected from first to last to the same conditions, and were
+ descended from the same parents. When only from two to six pairs of plants
+ were measured, the results are manifestly of little or no value, except in
+ so far as they confirm and are confirmed by experiments made on a larger
+ scale with other species. I will now give the report on the seven tables
+ of measurements, which Mr. Galton has had the great kindness to draw up
+ for me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [&ldquo;I have examined the measurements of the plants with care, and by many
+ statistical methods, to find out how far the means of the several sets
+ represent constant realities, such as would come out the same so long as
+ the general conditions of growth remained unaltered. The principal methods
+ that were adopted are easily explained by selecting one of the shorter
+ series of plants, say of Zea mays, for an example.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 1/1. Zea mays (young plants). (Mr. Galton.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants in inches:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed, as recorded by Mr. Darwin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised, as recorded by Mr. Darwin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 4: Crossed, in Separate Pots, arranged in order of magnitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 5: Self-fertilised, in Separate Pots, arranged in order of
+ magnitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 6: Crossed, in a Single Series, arranged in order of magnitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 7: Self-fertilised, in a Single Series, arranged in order of
+ magnitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 8: Difference, in a Single Series, arranged in order of magnitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 23 4/8 : 17 3/8 :: 23 4/8 : 20 3/8 :: 23 4/8 : 20 3/8 : -3 1/8.
+ Pot 1 : 12 : 20 3/8 :: 21 : 20 :: 23 2/8 : 20 : -3 2/8. Pot 1 : 21 : 20 ::
+ 12 : 17 3/8 :: 23 : 20 : -3. Pot 1 : - : - :: - : - :: 22 1/8 : 18 5/8 :
+ -3 4/8. Pot 1 : 22 : 20 :: 22 : 20 :: 22 1/8 : 18 5/8 : -3 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 19 1/8 : 18 3/8 :: 21 4/8 : 18 5/8 :: 22 : 18 3/8 : -3 5/8. Pot 2
+ : 21 4/8 : 18 5/8 :: 19 1/8 : 18 3/8 :: 21 5/8 : 18 : -3 5/8. Pot 2 : - :
+ - :: - : - :: 21 4/8 : 18 : -3 4/8. Pot 2 : 22 1/8 : 18 5/8 :: 23 2/8 : 18
+ 5/8 :: 21 : 18 : -3. Pot 2 : 20 3/8 : 15 2/8 :: 22 1/8 : 18 :: 21 : 17 3/8
+ : -3 5/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 18 2/8 : 16 4/8 :: 21 5/8 : 16 4/8 :: 20 3/8 : 16 4/8 : -3 7/8.
+ Pot 3 : 21 5/8 : 18 :: 20 3/8 : 16 2/8 :: 19 1/8 : 16 2/8 : -2 7/8. Pot 3
+ : 23 2/8 : 16 2/8 :: 18 2/8 : 15 2/8 :: 18 2/8 : 15 4/8 : -2 6/8. Pot 3 :
+ - : - :: - : - :: 12 : 15 2/8 : +3 2/8. Pot 3 : 21 : 18 :: 23 : 18 :: 12 :
+ 12 6/8 : +0 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 22 1/8 : 12 6/8 :: 22 1/8 : 18. Pot 4 : 23 : 15 4/8 :: 21 : 15
+ 4/8. Pot 4 : 12 : 18 :: 12 : 12 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The observations as I received them are shown in Table 1/1, Columns 2 and
+ 3, where they certainly have no prima facie appearance of regularity. But
+ as soon as we arrange them the in order of their magnitudes, as in columns
+ 4 and 5, the case is materially altered. We now see, with few exceptions,
+ that the largest plant on the crossed side in each pot exceeds the largest
+ plant on the self-fertilised side, that the second exceeds the second, the
+ third the third, and so on. Out of the fifteen cases in the table, there
+ are only two exceptions to this rule. We may therefore confidently affirm
+ that a crossed series will always be found to exceed a self-fertilised
+ series, within the range of the conditions under which the present
+ experiment has been made.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ TABLE 1/2.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 4: Difference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 18 7/8 : 19 2/8 : +0 3/8. Pot 2 : 20 7/8 : 19 : -1 7/8. Pot 3 : 21
+ 1/8 : 16 7/8 : -4 2/8. Pot 4 : 19 6/8 : 16 : -3 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Next as regards the numerical estimate of this excess. The mean values of
+ the several groups are so discordant, as is shown in Table 1/2, that a
+ fairly precise numerical estimate seems impossible. But the consideration
+ arises, whether the difference between pot and pot may not be of much the
+ same order of importance as that of the other conditions upon which the
+ growth of the plants has been modified. If so, and only on that condition,
+ it would follow that when all the measurements, either of the crossed or
+ the self-fertilised plants, were combined into a single series, that
+ series would be statistically regular. The experiment is tried in Table
+ 1/1, columns 7 and 8, where the regularity is abundantly clear, and
+ justifies us in considering its mean as perfectly reliable. I have
+ protracted these measurements, and revised them in the usual way, by
+ drawing a curve through them with a free hand, but the revision barely
+ modifies the means derived from the original observations. In the present,
+ and in nearly all the other cases, the difference between the original and
+ revised means is under 2 per cent of their value. It is a very remarkable
+ coincidence that in the seven kinds of plants, whose measurements I have
+ examined, the ratio between the heights of the crossed and of the
+ self-fertilised ranges in five cases within very narrow limits. In Zea
+ mays it is as 100 to 84, and in the others it ranges between 100 to 76 and
+ 100 to 86.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The determination of the variability (measured by what is technically
+ called the &lsquo;probable error&rsquo;) is a problem of more delicacy than that of
+ determining the means, and I doubt, after making many trials, whether it
+ is possible to derive useful conclusions from these few observations. We
+ ought to have measurements of at least fifty plants in each case, in order
+ to be in a position to deduce fair results. One fact, however, bearing on
+ variability, is very evident in most cases, though not in Zea mays,
+ namely, that the self-fertilised plants include the larger number of
+ exceptionally small specimens, while the crossed are more generally full
+ grown.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Those groups of cases in which measurements have been made of a few of
+ the tallest plants that grew in rows, each of which contained a multitude
+ of plants, show very clearly that the crossed plants exceed the
+ self-fertilised in height, but they do not tell by inference anything
+ about their respective mean values. If it should happen that a series is
+ known to follow the law of error or any other law, and if the number of
+ individuals in the series is known, it would be always possible to
+ reconstruct the whole series when a fragment of it has been given. But I
+ find no such method to be applicable in the present case. The doubt as to
+ the number of plants in each row is of minor importance; the real
+ difficulty lies in our ignorance of the precise law followed by the
+ series. The experience of the plants in pots does not help us to determine
+ that law, because the observations of such plants are too few to enable us
+ to lay down more than the middle terms of the series to which they belong
+ with any sort of accuracy, whereas the cases we are now considering refer
+ to one of its extremities. There are other special difficulties which need
+ not be gone into, as the one already mentioned is a complete bar.&rdquo;]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Galton sent me at the same time graphical representations which he had
+ made of the measurements, and they evidently form fairly regular curves.
+ He appends the words &ldquo;very good&rdquo; to those of Zea and Limnanthes. He also
+ calculated the average height of the crossed and self-fertilised plants in
+ the seven tables by a more correct method than that followed by me,
+ namely, by including the heights, as estimated in accordance with
+ statistical rules, of a few plants which died before they were measured;
+ whereas I merely added up the heights of the survivors, and divided the
+ sum by their number. The difference in our results is in one way highly
+ satisfactory, for the average heights of the self-fertilised plants, as
+ deduced by Mr. Galton, is less than mine in all the cases excepting one,
+ in which our averages are the same; and this shows that I have by no means
+ exaggerated the superiority of the crossed over the self-fertilised
+ plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the heights of the crossed and self-fertilised plants had been
+ taken, they were sometimes cut down close to the ground, and an equal
+ number of both weighed. This method of comparison gives very striking
+ results, and I wish that it had been oftener followed. Finally a record
+ was often kept of any marked difference in the rate of germination of the
+ crossed and self-fertilised seeds,&mdash;of the relative periods of
+ flowering of the plants raised from them,&mdash;and of their
+ productiveness, that is, of the number of seed-capsules which they
+ produced and of the average number of seeds which each capsule contained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I began my experiments I did not intend to raise crossed and
+ self-fertilised plants for more than a single generation; but as soon as
+ the plants of the first generation were in flower I thought that I would
+ raise one more generation, and acted in the following manner. Several
+ flowers on one or more of the self-fertilised plants were again
+ self-fertilised; and several flowers on one or more of the crossed plants
+ were fertilised with pollen from another crossed plant of the same lot.
+ Having thus once begun, the same method was followed for as many as ten
+ successive generations with some of the species. The seeds and seedlings
+ were always treated in exactly the same manner as already described. The
+ self-fertilised plants, whether originally descended from one or two
+ mother-plants, were thus in each generation as closely interbred as was
+ possible; and I could not have improved on my plan. But instead of
+ crossing one of the crossed plants with another crossed plant, I ought to
+ have crossed the self-fertilised plants of each generation with pollen
+ taken from a non-related plant&mdash;that is, one belonging to a distinct
+ family or stock of the same species and variety. This was done in several
+ cases as an additional experiment, and gave very striking results. But the
+ plan usually followed was to put into competition and compare intercrossed
+ plants, which were almost always the offspring of more or less closely
+ related plants, with the self-fertilised plants of each succeeding
+ generation;&mdash;all having been grown under closely similar conditions.
+ I have, however, learnt more by this method of proceeding, which was begun
+ by an oversight and then necessarily followed, than if I had always
+ crossed the self-fertilised plants of each succeeding generation with
+ pollen from a fresh stock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have said that the crossed plants of the successive generations were
+ almost always inter-related. When the flowers on an hermaphrodite plant
+ are crossed with pollen taken from a distinct plant, the seedlings thus
+ raised may be considered as hermaphrodite brothers or sisters; those
+ raised from the same capsule being as close as twins or animals of the
+ same litter. But in one sense the flowers on the same plant are distinct
+ individuals, and as several flowers on the mother-plant were crossed by
+ pollen taken from several flowers on the father-plant, such seedlings
+ would be in one sense half-brothers or sisters, but more closely related
+ than are the half-brothers and sisters of ordinary animals. The flowers on
+ the mother-plant were, however, commonly crossed by pollen taken from two
+ or more distinct plants; and in these cases the seedlings might be called
+ with more truth half-brothers or sisters. When two or three mother-plants
+ were crossed, as often happened, by pollen taken from two or three
+ father-plants (the seeds being all intermingled), some of the seedlings of
+ the first generation would be in no way related, whilst many others would
+ be whole or half-brothers and sisters. In the second generation a large
+ number of the seedlings would be what may be called whole or half
+ first-cousins, mingled with whole and half-brothers and sisters, and with
+ some plants not at all related. So it would be in the succeeding
+ generations, but there would also be many cousins of the second and more
+ remote degrees. The relationship will thus have become more and more
+ inextricably complex in the later generations; with most of the plants in
+ some degree and many of them closely related.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have only one other point to notice, but this is one of the highest
+ importance; namely, that the crossed and self-fertilised plants were
+ subjected in the same generation to as nearly similar and uniform
+ conditions as was possible. In the successive generations they were
+ exposed to slightly different conditions as the seasons varied, and they
+ were raised at different periods. But in other respects all were treated
+ alike, being grown in pots in the same artificially prepared soil, being
+ watered at the same time, and kept close together in the same greenhouse
+ or hothouse. They were therefore not exposed during successive years to
+ such great vicissitudes of climate as are plants growing out of doors.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ ON SOME APPARENT AND REAL CAUSES OF ERROR IN MY EXPERIMENTS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ It has been objected to such experiments as mine, that covering plants
+ with a net, although only for a short time whilst in flower, may affect
+ their health and fertility. I have seen no such effect except in one
+ instance with a Myosotis, and the covering may not then have been the real
+ cause of injury. But even if the net were slightly injurious, and
+ certainly it was not so in any high degree, as I could judge by the
+ appearance of the plants and by comparing their fertility with that of
+ neighbouring uncovered plants, it would not have vitiated my experiments;
+ for in all the more important cases the flowers were crossed as well as
+ self-fertilised under a net, so that they were treated in this respect
+ exactly alike.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As it is impossible to exclude such minute pollen-carrying insects as
+ Thrips, flowers which it was intended to fertilise with their own pollen
+ may sometimes have been afterwards crossed with pollen brought by these
+ insects from another flower on the same plant; but as we shall hereafter
+ see, a cross of this kind does not produce any effect, or at most only a
+ slight one. When two or more plants were placed near one another under the
+ same net, as was often done, there is some real though not great danger of
+ the flowers which were believed to be self-fertilised being afterwards
+ crossed with pollen brought by Thrips from a distinct plant. I have said
+ that the danger is not great because I have often found that plants which
+ are self-sterile, unless aided by insects, remained sterile when several
+ plants of the same species were placed under the same net. If, however,
+ the flowers which had been presumably self-fertilised by me were in any
+ case afterwards crossed by Thrips with pollen brought from a distinct
+ plant, crossed seedlings would have been included amongst the
+ self-fertilised; but it should be especially observed that this occurrence
+ would tend to diminish and not to increase any superiority in average
+ height, fertility, etc., of the crossed over the self-fertilised plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the flowers which were crossed were never castrated, it is probable or
+ even almost certain that I sometimes failed to cross-fertilise them
+ effectually, and that they were afterwards spontaneously self-fertilised.
+ This would have been most likely to occur with dichogamous species, for
+ without much care it is not easy to perceive whether their stigmas are
+ ready to be fertilised when the anthers open. But in all cases, as the
+ flowers were protected from wind, rain, and the access of insects, any
+ pollen placed by me on the stigmatic surface whilst it was immature, would
+ generally have remained there until the stigma was mature; and the flowers
+ would then have been crossed as was intended. Nevertheless, it is highly
+ probable that self-fertilised seedlings have sometimes by this means got
+ included amongst the crossed seedlings. The effect would be, as in the
+ former case, not to exaggerate but to diminish any average superiority of
+ the crossed over the self-fertilised plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Errors arising from the two causes just named, and from others,&mdash;such
+ as some of the seeds not having been thoroughly ripened, though care was
+ taken to avoid this error&mdash;the sickness or unperceived injury of any
+ of the plants,&mdash;will have been to a large extent eliminated, in those
+ cases in which many crossed and self-fertilised plants were measured and
+ an average struck. Some of these causes of error will also have been
+ eliminated by the seeds having been allowed to germinate on bare damp
+ sand, and being planted in pairs; for it is not likely that ill-matured
+ and well-matured, or diseased and healthy seeds, would germinate at
+ exactly the same time. The same result will have been gained in the
+ several cases in which only a few of the tallest, finest, and healthiest
+ plants on each side of the pots were measured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kolreuter and Gartner have proved that with some plants several, even as
+ many as from fifty to sixty, pollen-grains are necessary for the
+ fertilisation of all the ovules in the ovarium. (1/9. &lsquo;Kentniss der
+ Befruchtung&rsquo; 1844 page 345. Naudin &lsquo;Nouvelles Archives du Museum&rsquo; tome 1
+ page 27.) Naudin also found in the case of Mirabilis that if only one or
+ two of its very large pollen-grains were placed on the stigma, the plants
+ raised from such seeds were dwarfed. I was therefore careful to give an
+ amply sufficient supply of pollen, and generally covered the stigma with
+ it; but I did not take any special pains to place exactly the same amount
+ on the stigmas of the self-fertilised and crossed flowers. After having
+ acted in this manner during two seasons, I remembered that Gartner
+ thought, though without any direct evidence, that an excess of pollen was
+ perhaps injurious; and it has been proved by Spallanzani, Quatrefages, and
+ Newport, that with various animals an excess of the seminal fluid entirely
+ prevents fertilisation. (1/10. &lsquo;Transactions of the Philosophical Society&rsquo;
+ 1853 pages 253-258.) It was therefore necessary to ascertain whether the
+ fertility of the flowers was affected by applying a rather small and an
+ extremely large quantity of pollen to the stigma. Accordingly a very small
+ mass of pollen-grains was placed on one side of the large stigma in
+ sixty-four flowers of Ipomoea purpurea, and a great mass of pollen over
+ the whole surface of the stigma in sixty-four other flowers. In order to
+ vary the experiment, half the flowers of both lots were on plants produced
+ from self-fertilised seeds, and the other half on plants from crossed
+ seeds. The sixty-four flowers with an excess of pollen yielded sixty-one
+ capsules; and excluding four capsules, each of which contained only a
+ single poor seed, the remainder contained on an average 5.07 seeds per
+ capsule. The sixty-four flowers with only a little pollen placed on one
+ side of the stigma yielded sixty-three capsules, and excluding one from
+ the same cause as before, the remainder contained on an average 5.129
+ seeds. So that the flowers fertilised with little pollen yielded rather
+ more capsules and seeds than did those fertilised with an excess; but the
+ difference is too slight to be of any significance. On the other hand, the
+ seeds produced by the flowers with an excess of pollen were a little
+ heavier of the two; for 170 of them weighed 79.67 grains, whilst 170 seeds
+ from the flowers with very little pollen weighed 79.20 grains. Both lots
+ of seeds having been placed on damp sand presented no difference in their
+ rate of germination. We may therefore conclude that my experiments were
+ not affected by any slight difference in the amount of pollen used; a
+ sufficiency having been employed in all cases.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The order in which our subject will be treated in the present volume is as
+ follows. A long series of experiments will first be given in Chapters 2 to
+ 6. Tables will afterwards be appended, showing in a condensed form the
+ relative heights, weights, and fertility of the offspring of the various
+ crossed and self-fertilised species. Another table exhibits the striking
+ results from fertilising plants, which during several generations had
+ either been self-fertilised or had been crossed with plants kept all the
+ time under closely similar conditions, with pollen taken from plants of a
+ distinct stock and which had been exposed to different conditions. In the
+ concluding chapters various related points and questions of general
+ interest will be discussed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anyone not specially interested in the subject need not attempt to read
+ all the details (though they possess, I think, some value, and cannot be
+ all summarised. But I would suggest to the reader to take as an example
+ the experiments on Ipomoea in Chapter 2; to which may be added those on
+ Digitalis, Origanum, Viola, or the common cabbage, as in all these cases
+ the crossed plants are superior to the self-fertilised in a marked degree,
+ but not in quite the same manner. As instances of self-fertilised plants
+ being equal or superior to the crossed, the experiments on Bartonia,
+ Canna, and the common pea ought to be read; but in the last case, and
+ probably in that of Canna, the want of any superiority in the crossed
+ plants can be explained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Species were selected for experiment belonging to widely distinct
+ families, inhabiting various countries. In some few cases several genera
+ belonging to the same family were tried, and these are grouped together;
+ but the families themselves have been arranged not in any natural order,
+ but in that which was the most convenient for my purpose. The experiments
+ have been fully given, as the results appear to me of sufficient value to
+ justify the details. Plants bearing hermaphrodite flowers can be interbred
+ more closely than is possible with bisexual animals, and are therefore
+ well-fitted to throw light on the nature and extent of the good effects of
+ crossing, and on the evil effects of close interbreeding or
+ self-fertilisation. The most important conclusion at which I have arrived
+ is that the mere act of crossing by itself does no good. The good depends
+ on the individuals which are crossed differing slightly in constitution,
+ owing to their progenitors having been subjected during several
+ generations to slightly different conditions, or to what we call in our
+ ignorance spontaneous variation. This conclusion, as we shall hereafter
+ see, is closely connected with various important physiological problems,
+ such as the benefit derived from slight changes in the conditions of life,
+ and this stands in the closest connection with life itself. It throws
+ light on the origin of the two sexes and on their separation or union in
+ the same individual, and lastly on the whole subject of hybridism, which
+ is one of the greatest obstacles to the general acceptance and progress of
+ the great principle of evolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to avoid misapprehension, I beg leave to repeat that throughout
+ this volume a crossed plant, seedling, or seed, means one of crossed
+ PARENTAGE, that is, one derived from a flower fertilised with pollen from
+ a distinct plant of the same species. And that a self-fertilised plant,
+ seedling, or seed, means one of self-fertilised PARENTAGE, that is, one
+ derived from a flower fertilised with pollen from the same flower, or
+ sometimes, when thus stated, from another flower on the same plant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II. CONVOLVULACEAE.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Ipomoea purpurea, comparison of the height and fertility of the crossed
+ and self-fertilised plants during ten successive generations.
+ Greater constitutional vigour of the crossed plants.
+ The effects on the offspring of crossing different flowers on the same
+ plant, instead of crossing distinct individuals.
+ The effects of a cross with a fresh stock.
+ The descendants of the self-fertilised plant named Hero.
+ Summary on the growth, vigour, and fertility of the successive crossed
+ and self-fertilised generations.
+ Small amount of pollen in the anthers of the self-fertilised plants of
+ the later generations, and the sterility of their first-produced
+ flowers.
+ Uniform colour of the flowers produced by the self-fertilised plants.
+ The advantage from a cross between two distinct plants depends on their
+ differing in constitution.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ A plant of Ipomoea purpurea, or as it is often called in England the
+ convolvulus major, a native of South America, grew in my greenhouse. Ten
+ flowers on this plant were fertilised with pollen from the same flower;
+ and ten other flowers on the same plant were crossed with pollen from a
+ distinct plant. The fertilisation of the flowers with their own pollen was
+ superfluous, as this convolvulus is highly self-fertile; but I acted in
+ this manner to make the experiments correspond in all respects. Whilst the
+ flowers are young the stigma projects beyond the anthers; and it might
+ have been thought that it could not be fertilised without the aid of
+ humble-bees, which often visit the flowers; but as the flower grows older
+ the stamens increase in length, and their anthers brush against the
+ stigma, which thus receives some pollen. The number of seeds produced by
+ the crossed and self-fertilised flowers differed very little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [Crossed and self-fertilised seeds obtained in the above manner were
+ allowed to germinate on damp sand, and as often as pairs germinated at the
+ same time they were planted in the manner described in the Introduction
+ (Chapter 1), on the opposite sides of two pots. Five pairs were thus
+ planted; and all the remaining seeds, whether or not in a state of
+ germination, were planted on the opposite sides of a third pot, so that
+ the young plants on both sides were here greatly crowded and exposed to
+ very severe competition. Rods of iron or wood of equal diameter were given
+ to all the plants to twine up; and as soon as one of each pair reached the
+ summit both were measured. A single rod was placed on each side of the
+ crowded pot, Number 3, and only the tallest plant on each side was
+ measured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 2/1. Ipomoea purpurea (First Generation.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants in inches:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Seedlings from Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Seedlings from Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 87 4/8 : 69. Pot 1 : 87 4/8 : 66. Pot 1 : 89 : 73.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 88 : 68 4/8. Pot 2 : 87 : 60 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 77 : 57. Plants crowded; the tallest one measured on each side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 516 : 394.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the six crossed plants is here 86 inches, whilst
+ that of the six self-fertilised plants is only 65.66 inches, so that the
+ crossed plants are to the self-fertilised in height as 100 to 76. It
+ should be observed that this difference is not due to a few of the crossed
+ plants being extremely tall, or to a few of the self-fertilised being
+ extremely short, but to all the crossed plants attaining a greater height
+ than their antagonists. The three pairs in Pot 1 were measured at two
+ earlier periods, and the difference was sometimes greater and sometimes
+ less than that at the final measuring. But it is an interesting fact, of
+ which I have seen several other instances, that one of the self-fertilised
+ plants, when nearly a foot in height, was half an inch taller than the
+ crossed plant; and again, when two feet high, it was 1 3/8 of an inch
+ taller, but during the ten subsequent days the crossed plant began to gain
+ on its antagonist, and ever afterward asserted its supremacy, until it
+ exceeded its self-fertilised opponent by 16 inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The five crossed plants in Pots 1 and 2 were covered with a net, and
+ produced 121 capsules; the five self-fertilised plants produced
+ eighty-four capsules, so that the numbers of capsules were as 100 to 69.
+ Of the 121 capsules on the crossed plants sixty-five were the product of
+ flowers crossed with pollen from a distinct plant, and these contained on
+ an average 5.23 seeds per capsule; the remaining fifty-six capsules were
+ spontaneously self-fertilised. Of the eighty-four capsules on the
+ self-fertilised plants, all the product of renewed self-fertilisation,
+ fifty-five (which were alone examined) contained on an average 4.85 seeds
+ per capsule. Therefore the cross-fertilised capsules, compared with the
+ self-fertilised capsules, yielded seeds in the proportion of 100 to 93.
+ The crossed seeds were relatively heavier than the self-fertilised seeds.
+ Combining the above data (i.e., number of capsules and average number of
+ contained seeds), the crossed plants, compared with the self-fertilised,
+ yielded seeds in the ratio of 100 to 64.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These crossed plants produced, as already stated, fifty-six spontaneously
+ self-fertilised capsules, and the self-fertilised plants produced
+ twenty-nine such capsules. The former contained on an average, in
+ comparison with the latter, seeds in the proportion of 100 to 99.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Pot 3, on the opposite sides of which a large number of crossed and
+ self-fertilised seeds had been sown and the seedlings allowed to struggle
+ together, the crossed plants had at first no great advantage. At one time
+ the tallest crossed was 25 1/8 inches high, and the tallest
+ self-fertilised plants 21 3/8. But the difference afterwards became much
+ greater. The plants on both sides, from being so crowded, were poor
+ specimens. The flowers were allowed to fertilise themselves spontaneously
+ under a net; the crossed plants produced thirty-seven capsules, the
+ self-fertilised plants only eighteen, or as 100 to 47. The former
+ contained on an average 3.62 seeds per capsule; and the latter 3.38 seeds,
+ or as 100 to 93. Combining these data (i.e., number of capsules and
+ average number of seeds), the crowded crossed plants produced seeds
+ compared with the self-fertilised as 100 to 45. These latter seeds,
+ however, were decidedly heavier, a hundred weighing 41.64 grains, than
+ those from the capsules on the crossed plants, of which a hundred weighed
+ 36.79 grains; and this probably was due to the fewer capsules borne by the
+ self-fertilised plants having been better nourished. We thus see that the
+ crossed plants in this the first generation, when grown under favourable
+ conditions, and when grown under unfavourable conditions from being much
+ crowded, greatly exceeded in height, and in the number of capsules
+ produced, and slightly in the number of seeds per capsule, the
+ self-fertilised plants.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Flowers on the crossed plants of the last generation (Table 2/1) were
+ crossed by pollen from distinct plants of the same generation; and flowers
+ on the self-fertilised plants were fertilised by pollen from the same
+ flower. The seeds thus produced were treated in every respect as before,
+ and we have in Table 2/2 the result.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 2/2. Ipomoea purpurea (Second Generation.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants in inches:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 87 : 67 4/8. Pot 1 : 83 : 68 4/8. Pot 1 : 83 : 80 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 85 4/8 : 61 4/8. Pot 2 : 89 : 79. Pot 2 : 77 4/8 : 41.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 505 : 398.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here again every single crossed plant is taller than its antagonist. The
+ self-fertilised plant in Pot 1, which ultimately reached the unusual
+ height of 80 4/8 inches, was for a long time taller than the opposed
+ crossed plant, though at last beaten by it. The average height of the six
+ crossed plants is 84.16 inches, whilst that of the six self-fertilised
+ plants is 66.33 inches, or as 100 to 79.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE THIRD GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Seeds from the crossed plants of the last generation (Table 2/2) again
+ crossed, and from the self-fertilised plants again self-fertilised, were
+ treated in all respects exactly as before, with the following result:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 2/3. Ipomoea purpurea (Third Generation.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants in inches:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 74 : 56 4/8. Pot 1 : 72 : 51 4/8. Pot 1 : 73 4/8 : 54.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 82 : 59. Pot 2 : 81 : 30. Pot 2 : 82 : 66.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 464.5 : 317.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again all the crossed plants are higher than their antagonists: their
+ average height is 77.41 inches, whereas that of the self-fertilised is
+ 52.83 inches, or as 100 to 68.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I attended closely to the fertility of the plants of this third
+ generation. Thirty flowers on the crossed plants were crossed with pollen
+ from other crossed plants of the same generation, and the twenty-six
+ capsules thus produced contained, on an average, 4.73 seeds; whilst thirty
+ flowers on the self-fertilised plants, fertilised with the pollen from the
+ same flower, produced twenty-three capsules, each containing 4.43 seeds.
+ Thus the average number of seeds in the crossed capsules was to that in
+ the self-fertilised capsules as 100 to 94. A hundred of the crossed seeds
+ weighed 43.27 grains, whilst a hundred of the self-fertilised seeds
+ weighed only 37.63 grains. Many of these lighter self-fertilised seeds
+ placed on damp sand germinated before the crossed; thus thirty-six of the
+ former germinated whilst only thirteen of the latter or crossed seeds
+ germinated. In Pot 1 the three crossed plants produced spontaneously under
+ the net (besides the twenty-six artificially cross-fertilised capsules)
+ seventy-seven self-fertilised capsules containing on an average 4.41
+ seeds; whilst the three self-fertilised plants produced spontaneously
+ (besides the twenty-three artificially self-fertilised capsules) only
+ twenty-nine self-fertilised capsules, containing on an average 4.14 seeds.
+ Therefore the average number of seeds in the two lots of spontaneously
+ self-fertilised capsules was as 100 to 94. Taking into consideration the
+ number of capsules together with the average number of seeds, the crossed
+ plants (spontaneously self-fertilised) produced seeds in comparison with
+ the self-fertilised plants (spontaneously self-fertilised) in the
+ proportion of 100 to 35. By whatever method the fertility of these plants
+ is compared, the crossed are more fertile than the self-fertilised plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I tried in several ways the comparative vigour and powers of growth of the
+ crossed and self-fertilised plants of this third generation. Thus, four
+ self-fertilised seeds which had just germinated were planted on one side
+ of a pot, and after an interval of forty-eight hours, four crossed seeds
+ in the same state of germination were planted on the opposite side; and
+ the pot was kept in the hothouse. I thought that the advantage thus given
+ to the self-fertilised seedlings would have been so great that they would
+ never have been beaten by the crossed ones. They were not beaten until all
+ had grown to a height of 18 inches; and the degree to which they were
+ finally beaten is shown in Table 2/4. We here see that the average height
+ of the four crossed plants is 76.62, and of the four self-fertilised
+ plants 65.87 inches, or as 100 to 86; therefore less than when both sides
+ started fair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 2/4. Ipomoea purpurea (Third Generation, the self-fertilised plants
+ having had a start of forty-eight hours).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants in inches:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 78 4/8 : 73 4/8. Pot 3 : 77 4/8 : 53. Pot 3 : 73 : 61 4/8. Pot 3 :
+ 77 4/8 : 75 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 306.5 : 263.5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Crossed and self-fertilised seeds of the third generation were also sown
+ out of doors late in the summer, and therefore under unfavourable
+ conditions, and a single stick was given to each lot of plants to twine
+ up. The two lots were sufficiently separate so as not to interfere with
+ each other&rsquo;s growth, and the ground was clear of weeds. As soon as they
+ were killed by the first frost (and there was no difference in their
+ hardiness), the two tallest crossed plants were found to be 24.5 and 22.5
+ inches, whilst the two tallest self-fertilised plants were only 15 and
+ 12.5 inches in height, or as 100 to 59.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I likewise sowed at the same time two lots of the same seeds in a part of
+ the garden which was shady and covered with weeds. The crossed seedlings
+ from the first looked the most healthy, but they twined up a stick only to
+ a height of 7 1/4 inches; whilst the self-fertilised were not able to
+ twine at all; and the tallest of them was only 3 1/2 inches in height.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lastly, two lots of the same seeds were sown in the midst of a bed of
+ candy-tuft (Iberis) growing vigorously. The seedlings came up, but all the
+ self-fertilised ones soon died excepting one, which never twined and grew
+ to a height of only 4 inches. Many of the crossed seedlings, on the other
+ hand, survived; and some twined up the stems of the Iberis to the height
+ of 11 inches. These cases prove that the crossed seedlings have an immense
+ advantage over the self-fertilised, both when growing isolated under very
+ unfavourable conditions, and when put into competition with each other or
+ with other plants, as would happen in a state of nature.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FOURTH GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Seedlings raised as before from the crossed and self-fertilised plants of
+ the third generation in Table 2/3, gave results as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 2/5. Ipomoea purpurea (Fourth Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants in inches:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 84 : 80. Pot 1 : 47 : 44 1/2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 83 : 73 1/2. Pot 2 : 59 : 51 1/2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 82 : 56 1/2. Pot 3 : 65 1/2 : 63. Pot 3 : 68 : 52.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 488.5 : 421.0.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the average height of the seven crossed plants is 69.78 inches, and
+ that of the seven self-fertilised plants 60.14; or as 100 to 86. This
+ smaller difference relatively to that in the former generations, may be
+ attributed to the plants having been raised during the depth of winter,
+ and consequently to their not having grown vigorously, as was shown by
+ their general appearance and from several of them never reaching the
+ summits of the rods. In Pot 2, one of the self-fertilised plants was for a
+ long time taller by two inches than its opponent, but was ultimately
+ beaten by it, so that all the crossed plants exceeded their opponents in
+ height. Of twenty-eight capsules produced by the crossed plants fertilised
+ by pollen from a distinct plant, each contained on an average 4.75 seeds;
+ of twenty-seven self-fertilised capsules on the self-fertilised plants,
+ each contained on an average 4.47 seeds; so that the proportion of seeds
+ in the crossed and self-fertilised capsules was as 100 to 94.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the same seeds, from which the plants in Table 2/5 had been
+ raised, were planted, after they had germinated on damp sand, in a square
+ tub, in which a large Brugmansia had long been growing. The soil was
+ extremely poor and full of roots; six crossed seeds were planted in one
+ corner, and six self-fertilised seeds in the opposite corner. All the
+ seedlings from the latter soon died excepting one, and this grew to the
+ height of only 1 1/2 inches. Of the crossed plants three survived, and
+ they grew to the height of 2 1/2 inches, but were not able to twine round
+ a stick; nevertheless, to my surprise, they produced some small miserable
+ flowers. The crossed plants thus had a decided advantage over the
+ self-fertilised plants under this extremity of bad conditions.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FIFTH GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ These were raised in the same manner as before, and when measured gave the
+ following results:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 2/6. Ipomoea purpurea (Fifth Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants in inches:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 96 : 73. Pot 1 : 86 : 78. Pot 1 : 69 : 29.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 84 : 51. Pot 2 : 84 : 84. Pot 2 : 76 1/4 : 59.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 495.25 : 374.00.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the six crossed plants is 82.54 inches, and that of
+ the six self-fertilised plants 62.33 inches, or as 100 to 75. Every
+ crossed plant exceeded its antagonist in height. In Pot 1 the middle plant
+ on the crossed side was slightly injured whilst young by a blow, and was
+ for a time beaten by its opponent, but ultimately recovered the usual
+ superiority. The crossed plants produced spontaneously a vast number more
+ capsules than did the self-fertilised plants; and the capsules of the
+ former contained on an average 3.37 seeds, whilst those of the latter
+ contained only 3.0 per capsule, or as 100 to 89. But looking only to the
+ artificially fertilised capsules, those on the crossed plants again
+ crossed contained on an average 4.46 seeds, whilst those on the
+ self-fertilised plants again self-fertilised contained 4.77 seeds; so that
+ the self-fertilised capsules were the more fertile of the two, and of this
+ unusual fact I can offer no explanation.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SIXTH GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ These were raised in the usual manner, with the following result. I should
+ state that there were originally eight plants on each side; but as two of
+ the self-fertilised became extremely unhealthy and never grew to near
+ their full height, these as well as their opponents have been struck out
+ of the list. If they had been retained, they would have made the average
+ height of the crossed plants unfairly greater than that of the
+ self-fertilised. I have acted in the same manner in a few other instances,
+ when one of a pair plainly became very unhealthy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 2/7. Ipomoea purpurea (Sixth Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants in inches:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 93 : 50 1/2. Pot 1 : 91 : 65.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 79 : 50. Pot 2 : 86 1/2 : 87. Pot 2 : 88 : 62.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 87 1/2 : 64 1/2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 525 : 379.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the six crossed plants is here 87.5, and of the six
+ self-fertilised plants 63.16, or as 100 to 72. This large difference was
+ chiefly due to most of the plants, especially the self-fertilised ones,
+ having become unhealthy towards the close of their growth, and they were
+ severely attacked by aphides. From this cause nothing can be inferred with
+ respect to their relative fertility. In this generation we have the first
+ instance of a self-fertilised plant in Pot 2 exceeding (though only by
+ half an inch) its crossed opponent. This victory was fairly won after a
+ long struggle. At first the self-fertilised plant was several inches
+ taller than its opponent, but when the latter was 4 1/2 feet high it had
+ grown equal; it then grew a little taller than the self-fertilised plant,
+ but was ultimately beaten by it to the extent of half an inch, as shown in
+ Table 2/7. I was so much surprised at this case that I saved the
+ self-fertilised seeds of this plant, which I will call the &ldquo;Hero,&rdquo; and
+ experimented on its descendants, as will hereafter be described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides the plants included in Table 2/7, nine crossed and nine
+ self-fertilised plants of the same lot were raised in two other pots, 4
+ and 5. These pots had been kept in the hothouse, but from want of room
+ were, whilst the plants were young, suddenly moved during very cold
+ weather into the coldest part of the greenhouse. They all suffered
+ greatly, and never quite recovered. After a fortnight only two of the nine
+ self-fertilised seedlings were alive, whilst seven of the crossed
+ survived. The tallest of these latter plants when measured was 47 inches
+ in height, whilst the tallest of the two surviving self-fertilised plants
+ was only 32 inches. Here again we see how much more vigorous the crossed
+ plants are than the self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SEVENTH GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ These were raised as heretofore with the following result:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 2/8. Ipomoea purpurea (Seventh Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants in inches:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 84 4/8 : 74 6/8. Pot 1 : 84 6/8 : 84. Pot 1 : 76 2/8 : 55 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 84 4/8 : 65. Pot 2 : 90 : 51 2/8. Pot 2 : 82 2/8 : 80 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 83 : 67 6/8. Pot 3 : 86 : 60 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 84 2/8 : 75 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 755.50 : 614.25.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each of these nine crossed plants is higher than its opponent, though in
+ one case only by three-quarters of an inch. Their average height is 83.94
+ inches, and that of the self-fertilised plants 68.25, or as 100 to 81.
+ These plants, after growing to their full height, became very unhealthy
+ and infested with aphides, just when the seeds were setting, so that many
+ of the capsules failed, and nothing can be said on their relative
+ fertility.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE EIGHTH GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ As just stated, the plants of the last generation, from which the present
+ ones were raised, were very unhealthy and their seeds of unusually small
+ size; and this probably accounts for the two lots behaving differently to
+ what they did in any of the previous or succeeding generations. Many of
+ the self-fertilised seeds germinated before the crossed ones, and these
+ were of course rejected. When the crossed seedlings in Table 2/9 had grown
+ to a height of between 1 and 2 feet, they were all, or almost all, shorter
+ than their self-fertilised opponents, but were not then measured. When
+ they had acquired an average height of 32.28 inches, that of the
+ self-fertilised plants was 40.68, or as 100 to 122. Moreover, every one of
+ the self-fertilised plants, with a single exception, exceeded its crossed
+ opponent. When, however, the crossed plants had grown to an average height
+ of 77.56 inches, they just exceeded (namely, by .7 of an inch) the average
+ height of the self-fertilised plants; but two of the latter were still
+ taller than their crossed opponents. I was so much astonished at this
+ whole case, that I tied string to the summits of the rods; the plants
+ being thus allowed to continue climbing upwards. When their growth was
+ complete they were untwined, stretched straight, and measured. The crossed
+ plants had now almost regained their accustomed superiority, as may be
+ seen in Table 2/9.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the eight crossed plants is here 113.25 inches, and
+ that of the self-fertilised plants 96.65, or as 100 to 85. Nevertheless
+ two of the self-fertilised plants, as may be seen in Table 2/9, were still
+ higher than their crossed opponents. The latter manifestly had much
+ thicker stems and many more lateral branches, and looked altogether more
+ vigorous than the self-fertilised plants, and generally flowered before
+ them. The earlier flowers produced by these self-fertilised plants did not
+ set any capsules, and their anthers contained only a small amount of
+ pollen; but to this subject I shall return. Nevertheless capsules produced
+ by two other self-fertilised plants of the same lot, not included in Table
+ 2/9, which had been highly favoured by being grown in separate pots,
+ contained the large average number of 5.1 seeds per capsule.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 2/9. Ipomoea purpurea (Eighth Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants in inches:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 111 6/8 : 96. Pot 1 : 127 : 54. Pot 1 : 130 6/8 : 93 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 97 2/8 : 94. Pot 2 : 89 4/8 : 125 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 103 6/8 : 115 4/8. Pot 3 : 100 6/8 : 84 6/8. Pot 3 : 147 4/8 : 109
+ 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 908.25 : 773.25.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE NINTH GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The plants of this generation were raised in the same manner as before,
+ with the result shown in Table 2/10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fourteen crossed plants average in height 81.39 inches and the
+ fourteen self-fertilised plants 64.07, or as 100 to 79. One
+ self-fertilised plant in Pot 3 exceeded, and one in Pot 4 equalled in
+ height, its opponent. The self-fertilised plants showed no sign of
+ inheriting the precocious growth of their parents; this having been due,
+ as it would appear, to the abnormal state of the seeds from the
+ unhealthiness of their parents. The fourteen self-fertilised plants
+ yielded only forty spontaneously self-fertilised capsules, to which must
+ be added seven, the product of ten flowers artificially self-fertilised.
+ On the other hand, the fourteen crossed plants yielded 152 spontaneously
+ self-fertilised capsules; but thirty-six flowers on these plants were
+ crossed (yielding thirty-three capsules), and these flowers would probably
+ have produced about thirty spontaneously self-fertilised capsules.
+ Therefore an equal number of the crossed and self-fertilised plants would
+ have produced capsules in the proportion of about 182 to 47, or as 100 to
+ 26. Another phenomenon was well pronounced in this generation, but I
+ believe had occurred previously to a slight extent; namely, that most of
+ the flowers on the self-fertilised plants were somewhat monstrous. The
+ monstrosity consisted in the corolla being irregularly split so that it
+ did not open properly, with one or two of the stamens slightly foliaceous,
+ coloured, and firmly coherent to the corolla. I observed this monstrosity
+ in only one flower on the crossed plants. The self-fertilised plants, if
+ well nourished, would almost certainly, in a few more generations, have
+ produced double flowers, for they had already become in some degree
+ sterile. (2/1. See on this subject &lsquo;Variation of Animals and Plants under
+ Domestication&rsquo; chapter 18 2nd edition volume 2 page 152.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 2/10. Ipomoea purpurea (Ninth Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants in inches:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 83 4/8 : 57. Pot 1 : 85 4/8 : 71. Pot 1 : 83 4/8 : 48 3/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 83 2/8 : 45. Pot 2 : 64 2/8 : 43 6/8. Pot 2 : 64 3/8 : 38 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 79 : 63. Pot 3 : 88 1/8 : 71. Pot 3 : 61 : 89 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 82 4/8 : 82 4/8. Pot 4 : 90 : 76 1/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 89 4/8 : 67. Pot 5 : 92 4/8 : 74 2/8. Pot 5 : 92 4/8 : 70. Crowded
+ plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 1139.5 : 897.0.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE TENTH GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Six plants were raised in the usual manner from the crossed plants of the
+ last generation (Table 2/10) again intercrossed, and from the
+ self-fertilised again self-fertilised. As one of the crossed plants in Pot
+ 1 in Table 2/11 became much diseased, having crumpled leaves, and
+ producing hardly any capsules, it and its opponent have been struck out of
+ the table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 2/11. Ipomoea purpurea (Tenth Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants in inches:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 92 3/8 : 47 2/8. Pot 1 : 94 4/8 : 34 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 87 : 54 4/8. Pot 2 : 89 5/8 : 49 2/8. Pot 2 : 105 : 66 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 468.5 : 252.0.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The five crossed plants average 93.7 inches, and the five self-fertilised
+ only 50.4, or as 100 to 54. This difference, however, is so great that it
+ must be looked at as in part accidental. The six crossed plants (the
+ diseased one here included) yielded spontaneously 101 capsules, and the
+ six self-fertilised plants 88, the latter being chiefly produced by one of
+ the plants. But as the diseased plant, which yielded hardly any seed, is
+ here included, the ratio of 101 to 88 does not fairly give the relative
+ fertility of the two lots. The stems of the six crossed plants looked so
+ much finer than those of the six self-fertilised plants, that after the
+ capsules had been gathered and most of the leaves had fallen off, they
+ were weighed. Those of the crossed plants weighed 2,693 grains, whilst
+ those of the self-fertilised plants weighed only 1,173 grains, or as 100
+ to 44; but as the diseased and dwarfed crossed plant is here included, the
+ superiority of the former in weight was really greater.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE EFFECTS ON THE OFFSPRING OF CROSSING DIFFERENT FLOWERS ON THE SAME
+ PLANT, INSTEAD OF CROSSING DISTINCT INDIVIDUALS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all the foregoing experiments, seedlings from flowers crossed by pollen
+ from a distinct plant (though in the later generations more or less
+ closely related) were put into competition with, and almost invariably
+ proved markedly superior in height to the offspring from self-fertilised
+ flowers. I wished, therefore, to ascertain whether a cross between two
+ flowers on the same plant would give to the offspring any superiority over
+ the offspring from flowers fertilised with their own pollen. I procured
+ some fresh seed and raised two plants, which were covered with a net; and
+ several of their flowers were crossed with pollen from a distinct flower
+ on the same plant. Twenty-nine capsules thus produced contained on an
+ average 4.86 seeds per capsule; and 100 of these seeds weighed 36.77
+ grains. Several other flowers were fertilised with their own pollen, and
+ twenty-six capsules thus produced contained on an average 4.42 seeds per
+ capsule; 100 of which weighed 42.61 grains. So that a cross of this kind
+ appears to have increased slightly the number of seeds per capsule, in the
+ ratio of 100 to 91; but these crossed seeds were lighter than the
+ self-fertilised in the ratio of 86 to 100. I doubt, however, from other
+ observations, whether these results are fully trustworthy. The two lots of
+ seeds, after germinating on sand, were planted in pairs on the opposite
+ sides of nine pots, and were treated in every respect like the plants in
+ the previous experiments. The remaining seeds, some in a state of
+ germination and some not so, were sown on the opposite sides of a large
+ pot (Number 10); and the four tallest plants on each side of this pot were
+ measured. The result is shown in Table 2/12.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 2/12. Ipomoea purpurea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants in inches:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 82 : 77 4/8. Pot 1 : 75 : 87. Pot 1 : 65 : 64. Pot 1 : 76 : 87
+ 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 78 4/8 : 84. Pot 2 : 43 : 86 4/8. Pot 2 : 65 4/8 : 90 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 61 2/8 : 86. Pot 3 : 85 : 69 4/8. Pot 3 : 89 : 87 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 83 : 80 4/8. Pot 4 : 73 4/8 : 88 4/8. Pot 4 : 67 : 84 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 78 : 66 4/8. Pot 5 : 76 6/8 : 77 4/8. Pot 5 : 57 : 81 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 6 : 70 4/8 : 80. Pot 6 : 79 : 82 4/8. Pot 6 : 79 6/8 : 55 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 7 : 76 : 77. Pot 7 : 84 4/8 : 83 4/8. Pot 7 : 79 : 73 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 8 : 73 : 76 4/8. Pot 8 : 67 : 82. Pot 8 : 83 : 80 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 9 : 73 2/8 : 78 4/8. Pot 9 : 78 : 67 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 10 : 34 : 82 4/8. Pot 10 : 82 : 36 6/8. Pot 10 : 84 6/8 : 69 4/8. Pot
+ 10 : 71 : 75 2/8. Crowded plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 2270.25 : 2399.75.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the thirty-one crossed plants is 73.23 inches, and
+ that of the thirty-one self-fertilised plants 77.41 inches; or as 100 to
+ 106. Looking to each pair, it may be seen that only thirteen of the
+ crossed plants, whilst eighteen of the self-fertilised plants exceed their
+ opponents. A record was kept with respect to the plant which flowered
+ first in each pot; and only two of the crossed flowered before one of the
+ self-fertilised in the same pot; whilst eight of the self-fertilised
+ flowered first. It thus appears that the crossed plants are slightly
+ inferior in height and in earliness of flowering to the self-fertilised.
+ But the inferiority in height is so small, namely as 100 to 106, that I
+ should have felt very doubtful on this head, had I not cut down all the
+ plants (except those in the crowded pot Number 10) close to the ground and
+ weighed them. The twenty-seven crossed plants weighed 16 1/2 ounces, and
+ the twenty-seven self-fertilised plants 20 1/2 ounces; and this gives a
+ ratio of 100 to 124.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A self-fertilised plant of the same parentage as those in Table 2/12 had
+ been raised in a separate pot for a distinct purpose; and it proved
+ partially sterile, the anthers containing very little pollen. Several
+ flowers on this plant were crossed with the little pollen which could be
+ obtained from the other flowers on the same plant; and other flowers were
+ self-fertilised. From the seeds thus produced four crossed and four
+ self-fertilised plants were raised, which were planted in the usual manner
+ on the opposite sides of two pots. All these four crossed plants were
+ inferior in height to their opponents; they averaged 78.18 inches, whilst
+ the four self-fertilised plants averaged 84.8 inches; or as 100 to 108.
+ (2/2. From one of these self-fertilised plants, spontaneously
+ self-fertilised, I gathered twenty-four capsules, and they contained on an
+ average only 3.2 seeds per capsule; so that this plant had apparently
+ inherited some of the sterility of its parent.) This case, therefore,
+ confirms the last. Taking all the evidence together, we must conclude that
+ these strictly self-fertilised plants grew a little taller, were heavier,
+ and generally flowered before those derived from a cross between two
+ flowers on the same plant. These latter plants thus present a wonderful
+ contrast with those derived from a cross between two distinct individuals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE EFFECTS ON THE OFFSPRING OF A CROSS WITH A DISTINCT OR FRESH STOCK
+ BELONGING TO THE SAME VARIETY.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the two foregoing series of experiments we see, firstly, the good
+ effects during several successive generations of a cross between distinct
+ plants, although these were in some degree inter-related and had been
+ grown under nearly the same conditions; and, secondly, the absence of all
+ such good effects from a cross between flowers on the same plant; the
+ comparison in both cases being made with the offspring of flowers
+ fertilised with their own pollen. The experiments now to be given show how
+ powerfully and beneficially plants, which have been intercrossed during
+ many successive generations, having been kept all the time under nearly
+ uniform conditions, are affected by a cross with another plant belonging
+ to the same variety, but to a distinct family or stock, which had grown
+ under different conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [Several flowers on the crossed plants of the ninth generation in Table
+ 2/10, were crossed with pollen from another crossed plant of the same lot.
+ The seedlings thus raised formed the tenth intercrossed generation, and I
+ will call them the &ldquo;INTERCROSSED PLANTS.&rdquo; Several other flowers on the
+ same crossed plants of the ninth generation were fertilised (not having
+ been castrated) with pollen taken from plants of the same variety, but
+ belonging to a distinct family, which had been grown in a distant garden
+ at Colchester, and therefore under somewhat different conditions. The
+ capsules produced by this cross contained, to my surprise, fewer and
+ lighter seeds than did the capsules of the intercrossed plants; but this,
+ I think, must have been accidental. The seedlings raised from them I will
+ call the &ldquo;COLCHESTER-CROSSED.&rdquo; The two lots of seeds, after germinating on
+ sand, were planted in the usual manner on the opposite sides of five pots,
+ and the remaining seeds, whether or not in a state of germination, were
+ thickly sown on the opposite sides of a very large pot, Number 6 in Table
+ 2/13. In three of the six pots, after the young plants had twined a short
+ way up their sticks, one of the Colchester-crossed plants was much taller
+ than any one of the intercrossed plants on the opposite side of the same
+ pot; and in the three other pots somewhat taller. I should state that two
+ of the Colchester-crossed plants in Pot 4, when about two-thirds grown,
+ became much diseased, and were, together with their intercrossed
+ opponents, rejected. The remaining nineteen plants, when almost fully
+ grown, were measured, with the following result:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 2/13. Ipomoea purpurea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants in inches:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Colchester-Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Intercrossed Plants of the Tenth Generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 87 : 78. Pot 1 : 87 4/8 : 68 4/8. Pot 1 : 85 1/8 : 94 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 93 6/8 : 60. Pot 2 : 85 4/8 : 87 2/8. Pot 2 : 90 5/8 : 45 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 84 2/8 : 70 1/8. Pot 3 : 92 4/8 : 81 6/8. Pot 3 : 85 : 86 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 95 6/8 : 65 1/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 90 4/8 : 85 6/8. Pot 5 : 86 6/8 : 63. Pot 5 : 84 : 62 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 6 : 90 4/8 : 43 4/8. Pot 6 : 75 : 39 6/8. Pot 6 : 71 : 30 2/8. Pot 6 :
+ 83 6/8 : 86. Pot 6 : 63 : 53. Pot 6 : 65 : 48 6/8. Crowded plants in a
+ very large pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 1596.50 : 1249.75.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In sixteen out of these nineteen pairs, the Colchester-crossed plant
+ exceeded in height its intercrossed opponent. The average height of the
+ Colchester-crossed is 84.03 inches, and that of the intercrossed 65.78
+ inches; or as 100 to 78. With respect to the fertility of the two lots, it
+ was too troublesome to collect and count the capsules on all the plants;
+ so I selected two of the best pots, 5 and 6, and in these the
+ Colchester-crossed produced 269 mature and half-mature capsules, whilst an
+ equal number of the intercrossed plants produced only 154 capsules; or as
+ 100 to 57. By weight the capsules from the Colchester-crossed plants were
+ to those from the intercrossed plants as 100 to 51; so that the former
+ probably contained a somewhat larger average number of seeds.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We learn from this important experiment that plants in some degree
+ related, which had been intercrossed during the nine previous generations,
+ when they were fertilised with pollen from a fresh stock, yielded
+ seedlings as superior to the seedlings of the tenth intercrossed
+ generation, as these latter were to the self-fertilised plants of the
+ corresponding generation. For if we look to the plants of the ninth
+ generation in Table 2/10 (and these offer in most respects the fairest
+ standard of comparison) we find that the intercrossed plants were in
+ height to the self-fertilised as 100 to 79, and in fertility as 100 to 26;
+ whilst the Colchester-crossed plants are in height to the intercrossed as
+ 100 to 78, and in fertility as 100 to 51.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [THE DESCENDANTS OF THE SELF-FERTILISED PLANT, NAMED HERO, WHICH APPEARED
+ IN THE SIXTH SELF-FERTILISED GENERATION.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the five generations before the sixth, the crossed plant of each pair
+ was taller than its self-fertilised opponent; but in the sixth generation
+ (Table 2/7, Pot 2) the Hero appeared, which after a long and dubious
+ struggle conquered its crossed opponent, though by only half an inch. I
+ was so much surprised at this fact, that I resolved to ascertain whether
+ this plant would transmit its powers of growth to its seedlings. Several
+ flowers on Hero were therefore fertilised with their own pollen, and the
+ seedlings thus raised were put into competition with self-fertilised and
+ intercrossed plants of the corresponding generation. The three lots of
+ seedlings thus all belong to the seventh generation. Their relative
+ heights are shown in Tables 2/14 and 2/15.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 2/14. Ipomoea purpurea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants in inches:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants of the Seventh Generation, Children of
+ Hero.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants of the Seventh Generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 74 : 89 4/8. Pot 1 : 60 : 61. Pot 1 : 55 2/8 : 49.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 92 : 82. Pot 2 : 91 6/8 : 56. Pot 2 : 74 2/8 : 38.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 447.25 : 375.50.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the six self-fertilised children of Hero is 74.54
+ inches, whilst that of the ordinary self-fertilised plants of the
+ corresponding generation is only 62.58 inches, or as 100 to 84.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 2/15. Ipomoea purpurea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants in inches:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants of the Seventh Generation, Children of
+ Hero.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Intercrossed Plants of the Seventh Generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 92 : 76 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 87 : 89. Pot 4 : 87 6/8 : 86 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 266.75 : 252.50.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the average height of the three self-fertilised children of Hero is
+ 88.91 inches, whilst that of the intercrossed plants is 84.16; or as 100
+ to 95. We thus see that the self-fertilised children of Hero certainly
+ inherit the powers of growth of their parents; for they greatly exceed in
+ height the self-fertilised offspring of the other self-fertilised plants,
+ and even exceed by a trifle the intercrossed plants,&mdash;all of the
+ corresponding generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several flowers on the self-fertilised children of Hero in Table 2/14 were
+ fertilised with pollen from the same flower; and from the seeds thus
+ produced, self-fertilised plants of the eighth generation (grandchildren
+ of Hero) were raised. Several other flowers on the same plants were
+ crossed with pollen from the other children of Hero. The seedlings raised
+ from this cross may be considered as the offspring of the union of
+ brothers and sisters. The result of the competition between these two sets
+ of seedlings (namely self-fertilised and the offspring of brothers and
+ sisters) is given in Table 2/16.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 2/16. Ipomoea purpurea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants in inches:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Self-fertilised Grandchildren of Hero, from the Self-fertilised
+ Children. Eighth Generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Grandchildren from a cross between the self-fertilised children
+ of Hero. Eighth Generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 86 6/8 : 95 6/8. Pot 1 : 90 3/8 : 95 3/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 96 : 85. Pot 2 : 77 2/8 : 93.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 73 : 86 2/8. Pot 3 : 66 : 82 2/8. Pot 3 : 84 4/8 : 70 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 88 1/8 : 66 3/8. Pot 4 : 84 : 15 4/8. Pot 4 : 36 2/8 : 38. Pot 4 :
+ 74 : 78 3/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 90 1/8 : 82 6/8. Pot 5 : 90 5/8 : 83 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 1037.00 : 973.16.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the thirteen self-fertilised grandchildren of Hero
+ is 79.76 inches, and that of the grandchildren from a cross between the
+ self-fertilised children is 74.85; or as 100 to 94. But in Pot 4 one of
+ the crossed plants grew only to a height of 15 1/2 inches; and if this
+ plant and its opponent are struck out, as would be the fairest plan, the
+ average height of the crossed plants exceeds only by a fraction of an inch
+ that of the self-fertilised plants. It is therefore clear that a cross
+ between the self-fertilised children of Hero did not produce any
+ beneficial effect worth notice; and it is very doubtful whether this
+ negative result can be attributed merely to the fact of brothers and
+ sisters having been united, for the ordinary intercrossed plants of the
+ several successive generations must often have been derived from the union
+ of brothers and sisters (as shown in Chapter 1), and yet all of them were
+ greatly superior to the self-fertilised plants. We are therefore driven to
+ the suspicion, which we shall soon see strengthened, that Hero transmitted
+ to its offspring a peculiar constitution adapted for self-fertilisation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would appear that the self-fertilised descendants of Hero have not only
+ inherited from Hero a power of growth equal to that of the ordinary
+ intercrossed plants, but have become more fertile when self-fertilised
+ than is usual with the plants of the present species. The flowers on the
+ self-fertilised grandchildren of Hero in Table 2.16 (the eighth generation
+ of self-fertilised plants) were fertilised with their own pollen and
+ produced plenty of capsules, ten of which (though this is too few a number
+ for a safe average) contained 5.2 seeds per capsule,&mdash;a higher
+ average than was observed in any other case with the self-fertilised
+ plants. The anthers produced by these self-fertilised grandchildren were
+ also as well developed and contained as much pollen as those on the
+ intercrossed plants of the corresponding generation; whereas this was not
+ the case with the ordinary self-fertilised plants of the later
+ generations. Nevertheless some few of the flowers produced by the
+ grandchildren of Hero were slightly monstrous, like those of the ordinary
+ self-fertilised plants of the later generations. In order not to recur to
+ the subject of fertility, I may add that twenty-one self-fertilised
+ capsules, spontaneously produced by the great-grandchildren of Hero
+ (forming the ninth generation of self-fertilised plants), contained on an
+ average 4.47 seeds; and this is as high an average as the self-fertilised
+ flowers of any generation usually yielded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several flowers on the self-fertilised grandchildren of Hero in Table 2/16
+ were fertilised with pollen from the same flower; and the seedlings raised
+ from them (great-grandchildren of Hero) formed the ninth self-fertilised
+ generation. Several other flowers were crossed with pollen from another
+ grandchild, so that they may be considered as the offspring of brothers
+ and sisters, and the seedlings thus raised may be called the INTERCROSSED
+ great-grandchildren. And lastly, other flowers were fertilised with pollen
+ from a distinct stock, and the seedlings thus raised may be called the
+ COLCHESTER-CROSSED great-grandchildren. In my anxiety to see what the
+ result would be, I unfortunately planted the three lots of seeds (after
+ they had germinated on sand) in the hothouse in the middle of winter, and
+ in consequence of this the seedlings (twenty in number of each kind)
+ became very unhealthy, some growing only a few inches in height, and very
+ few to their proper height. The result, therefore, cannot be fully
+ trusted; and it would be useless to give the measurements in detail. In
+ order to strike as fair an average as possible, I first excluded all the
+ plants under 50 inches in height, thus rejecting all the most unhealthy
+ plants. The six self-fertilised thus left were on an average 66.86 inches
+ high; the eight intercrossed plants 63.2 high; and the seven
+ Colchester-crossed 65.37 high; so that there was not much difference
+ between the three sets, the self-fertilised plants having a slight
+ advantage. Nor was there any great difference when only the plants under
+ 36 inches in height were excluded. Nor again when all the plants, however
+ much dwarfed and unhealthy, were included. In this latter case the
+ Colchester-crossed gave the lowest average of all; and if these plants had
+ been in any marked manner superior to the other two lots, as from my
+ former experience I fully expected they would have been, I cannot but
+ think that some vestige of such superiority would have been evident,
+ notwithstanding the very unhealthy condition of most of the plants. No
+ advantage, as far as we can judge, was derived from intercrossing two of
+ the grandchildren of Hero, any more than when two of the children were
+ crossed. It appears therefore that Hero and its descendants have varied
+ from the common type, not only in acquiring great power of growth, and
+ increased fertility when subjected to self-fertilisation, but in not
+ profiting from a cross with a distinct stock; and this latter fact, if
+ trustworthy, is a unique case, as far as I have observed in all my
+ experiments.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A SUMMARY ON THE GROWTH, VIGOUR, AND FERTILITY OF THE SUCCESSIVE
+ GENERATIONS OF THE CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF Ipomoea purpurea,
+ TOGETHER WITH SOME MISCELLANEOUS OBSERVATIONS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Table 2/17, we see the average or mean heights of the ten successive
+ generations of the intercrossed and self-fertilised plants, grown in
+ competition with each other; and in the right hand column we have the
+ ratios of the one to the other, the height of the intercrossed plants
+ being taken at 100. In the bottom line the mean height of the
+ seventy-three intercrossed plants is shown to be 85.84 inches, and that of
+ the seventy-three self-fertilised plants 66.02 inches, or as 100 to 77.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 2/17. Ipomoea purpurea. Summary of measurements of the ten
+ generations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants in inches:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Name of Generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Number of Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Average Height of Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 4: Number of Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 5: Average Height of Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 6: n in Ratio between Average Heights of Crossed and
+ Self-fertilised Plants, expressed as 100 to n.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ First generation Table 2/1 : 6 : 86.00 : 6 : 65.66 : 76.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Second generation Table 2/2 : 6 : 84.16 : 6 : 66.33 : 79.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Third generation Table 2/3 : 6 : 77.41 : 6 : 52.83 : 68.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fourth generation Table 2/5 : 7 : 69.78 : 7 : 60.14 : 86.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fifth generation Table 2/6 : 6 : 82.54 : 6 : 62.33 : 75.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sixth generation Table 2/7 : 6 : 87.50 : 6 : 63.16 : 72.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seventh generation Table 2/8 : 9 : 83.94 : 9 : 68.25 : 81.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eighth generation Table 2/9 : 8 : 113.25 : 8 : 96.65 : 85.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ninth generation Table 2/10 : 14 : 81.39 : 14 : 64.07 : 79.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tenth generation Table 2/11 : 5 : 93.70 : 5 : 50.40 : 54.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All ten generations together : 73 : 85.84 : 73 : 66.02 : 77.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (DIAGRAM 2/1. Diagram showing the mean heights of the crossed and
+ self-fertilised plants of Ipomoea purpurea in the ten generations; the
+ mean height of the crossed plants being taken as 100. On the right hand,
+ the mean heights of the crossed and self-fertilised plants of all the
+ generations taken together are shown (as eleven pairs of unequal vertical
+ lines.))
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mean height of the self-fertilised plants in each of the ten
+ generations is also shown in the diagram 2/1, that of the intercrossed
+ plants being taken at 100, and on the right side we see the relative
+ heights of the seventy-three intercrossed plants, and of the seventy-three
+ self-fertilised plants. The difference in height between the crossed and
+ self-fertilised plants will perhaps be best appreciated by an
+ illustration: If all the men in a country were on an average 6 feet high,
+ and there were some families which had been long and closely interbred,
+ these would be almost dwarfs, their average height during ten generations
+ being only 4 feet 8 1/4 inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It should be especially observed that the average difference between the
+ crossed and self-fertilised plants is not due to a few of the former
+ having grown to an extraordinary height, or to a few of the
+ self-fertilised being extremely short, but to all the crossed plants
+ having surpassed their self-fertilised opponents, with the few following
+ exceptions. The first occurred in the sixth generation, in which the plant
+ named &ldquo;Hero&rdquo; appeared; two in the eighth generation, but the
+ self-fertilised plants in this generation were in an anomalous condition,
+ as they grew at first at an unusual rate and conquered for a time the
+ opposed crossed plants; and two exceptions in the ninth generation, though
+ one of these plants only equalled its crossed opponent. Therefore, of the
+ seventy-three crossed plants, sixty-eight grew to a greater height than
+ the self-fertilised plants, to which they were opposed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the right-hand column of figures, the difference in height between the
+ crossed and self-fertilised plants in the successive generations is seen
+ to fluctuate much, as might indeed have been expected from the small
+ number of plants measured in each generation being insufficient to give a
+ fair average. It should be remembered that the absolute height of the
+ plants goes for nothing, as each pair was measured as soon as one of them
+ had twined up to the summit of its rod. The great difference in the tenth
+ generation, namely, 100 to 54, no doubt was partly accidental, though,
+ when these plants were weighed, the difference was even greater, namely,
+ 100 to 44. The smallest amount of difference occurred in the fourth and
+ the eighth generations, and this was apparently due to both the crossed
+ and self-fertilised plants having become unhealthy, which prevented the
+ former attaining their usual degree of superiority. This was an
+ unfortunate circumstance, but my experiments were not thus vitiated, as
+ both lots of plants were exposed to the same conditions, whether
+ favourable or unfavourable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is reason to believe that the flowers of this Ipomoea, when growing
+ out of doors, are habitually crossed by insects, so that the first
+ seedlings which I raised from purchased seeds were probably the offspring
+ of a cross. I infer that this is the case, firstly from humble-bees often
+ visiting the flowers, and from the quantity of pollen left by them on the
+ stigmas of such flowers; and, secondly, from the plants raised from the
+ same lot of seed varying greatly in the colour of their flowers, for as we
+ shall hereafter see, this indicates much intercrossing. (2/3. Verlot says
+ &lsquo;Sur la Production des Variétés&rsquo; 1865 page 66, that certain varieties of a
+ closely allied plant, the Convolvulus tricolor, cannot be kept pure unless
+ grown at a distance from all other varieties.) It is, therefore,
+ remarkable that the plants raised by me from flowers which were, in all
+ probability, self-fertilised for the first time after many generations of
+ crossing, should have been so markedly inferior in height to the
+ intercrossed plants as they were, namely, as 76 to 100. As the plants
+ which were self-fertilised in each succeeding generation necessarily
+ became much more closely interbred in the later than in the earlier
+ generations, it might have been expected that the difference in height
+ between them and the crossed plants would have gone on increasing; but, so
+ far is this from being the case, that the difference between the two sets
+ of plants in the seventh, eighth, and ninth generations taken together is
+ less than in the first and second generations together. When, however, we
+ remember that the self-fertilised and crossed plants are all descended
+ from the same mother-plant, that many of the crossed plants in each
+ generation were related, often closely related, and that all were exposed
+ to the same conditions, which, as we shall hereafter find, is a very
+ important circumstance, it is not at all surprising that the difference
+ between them should have somewhat decreased in the later generations. It
+ is, on the contrary, an astonishing fact, that the crossed plants should
+ have been victorious, even to a slight degree, over the self-fertilised
+ plants of the later generations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The much greater constitutional vigour of the crossed than of the
+ self-fertilised plants, was proved on five occasions in various ways;
+ namely, by exposing them, while young, to a low temperature or to a sudden
+ change of temperature, or by growing them, under very unfavourable
+ conditions, in competition with full-grown plants of other kinds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to the productiveness of the crossed and self-fertilised
+ plants of the successive generations, my observations unfortunately were
+ not made on any uniform plan, partly from the want of time, and partly
+ from not having at first intended to observe more than a single
+ generation. A summary of the results is here given in a tabulated form,
+ the fertility of the crossed plants being taken as 100.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 2/18. Ratio of productiveness of crossed and self-fertilised plants.
+ Ipomoea purpurea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FIRST GENERATION OF CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS GROWING IN
+ COMPETITION WITH ONE ANOTHER.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sixty-five capsules produced from flowers on five crossed plants
+ fertilised by pollen from a distinct plant, and fifty-five capsules
+ produced from flowers on five self-fertilised plants fertilised by their
+ own pollen, contained seeds in the proportion of : 100 to 93.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fifty-six spontaneously self-fertilised capsules on the above five crossed
+ plants, and twenty-five spontaneously self-fertilised capsules on the
+ above five self-fertilised plants, yielded seeds in the proportion of :
+ 100 to 99.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Combining the total number of capsules produced by these plants, and the
+ average number of seeds in each, the above crossed and self-fertilised
+ plants yielded seeds in the proportion of : 100 to 64.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other plants of this first generation grown under unfavourable conditions
+ and spontaneously self-fertilised, yielded seeds in the proportion of :
+ 100 to 45.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ THIRD GENERATION OF CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Crossed capsules compared with self-fertilised capsules contained seeds in
+ the ratio of : 100 to 94.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An equal number of crossed and self-fertilised plants, both spontaneously
+ self-fertilised, produced capsules in the ratio of : 100 to 38.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And these capsules contained seeds in the ratio of : 100 to 94.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Combining these data, the productiveness of the crossed to the
+ self-fertilised plants, both spontaneously self-fertilised, was as : 100
+ to 35.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ FOURTH GENERATION OF CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Capsules from flowers on the crossed plants fertilised by pollen from
+ another plant, and capsules from flowers on the self-fertilised plants
+ fertilised with their own pollen, contained seeds in the proportion of :
+ 100 to 94.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ FIFTH GENERATION OF CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The crossed plants produced spontaneously a vast number more pods (not
+ actually counted) than the self-fertilised, and these contained seeds in
+ the proportion of : 100 to 89.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ NINTH GENERATION OF CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Fourteen crossed plants, spontaneously self-fertilised, and fourteen
+ self-fertilised plants spontaneously self-fertilised, yielded capsules
+ (the average number of seeds per capsule not having been ascertained) in
+ the proportion of : 100 to 26.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PLANTS DERIVED FROM A CROSSED WITH A FRESH STOCK COMPARED WITH
+ INTERCROSSED PLANTS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The offspring of intercrossed plants of the ninth generation, crossed by a
+ fresh stock, compared with plants of the same stock intercrossed during
+ ten generations, both sets of plants left uncovered and naturally
+ fertilised, produced capsules by weight as : 100 to 51.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We see in this table that the crossed plants are always in some degree
+ more productive than the self-fertilised plants, by whatever standard they
+ are compared. The degree differs greatly; but this depends chiefly on
+ whether an average was taken of the seeds alone, or of the capsules alone,
+ or of both combined. The relative superiority of the crossed plants is
+ chiefly due to their producing a much greater number of capsules, and not
+ to each capsule containing a larger average number of seeds. For instance,
+ in the third generation the crossed and self-fertilised plants produced
+ capsules in the ratio of 100 to 38, whilst the seeds in the capsules on
+ the crossed plants were to those on the self-fertilised plants only as 100
+ to 94. In the eighth generation the capsules on two self-fertilised plants
+ (not included in table 2/18), grown in separate pots and thus not
+ subjected to any competition, yielded the large average of 5.1 seeds. The
+ smaller number of capsules produced by the self-fertilised plants may be
+ in part, but not altogether, attributed to their lessened size or height;
+ this being chiefly due to their lessened constitutional vigour, so that
+ they were not able to compete with the crossed plants growing in the same
+ pots. The seeds produced by the crossed flowers on the crossed plants were
+ not always heavier than the self-fertilised seeds on the self-fertilised
+ plants. The lighter seeds, whether produced from crossed or
+ self-fertilised flowers, generally germinated before the heavier seeds. I
+ may add that the crossed plants, with very few exceptions, flowered before
+ their self-fertilised opponents, as might have been expected from their
+ greater height and vigour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The impaired fertility of the self-fertilised plants was shown in another
+ way, namely, by their anthers being smaller than those in the flowers on
+ the crossed plants. This was first observed in the seventh generation, but
+ may have occurred earlier. Several anthers from flowers on the crossed and
+ self-fertilised plants of the eighth generation were compared under the
+ microscope; and those from the former were generally longer and plainly
+ broader than the anthers of the self-fertilised plants. The quantity of
+ pollen contained in one of the latter was, as far as could be judged by
+ the eye, about half of that contained in one from a crossed plant. The
+ impaired fertility of the self-fertilised plants of the eighth generation
+ was also shown in another manner, which may often be observed in hybrids&mdash;namely,
+ by the first-formed flowers being sterile. For instance, the fifteen first
+ flowers on a self-fertilised plant of one of the later generations were
+ carefully fertilised with their own pollen, and eight of them dropped off;
+ at the same time fifteen flowers on a crossed plant growing in the same
+ pot were self-fertilised, and only one dropped off. On two other crossed
+ plants of the same generation, several of the earliest flowers were
+ observed to fertilise themselves and to produce capsules. In the plants of
+ the ninth, and I believe of some previous generations, very many of the
+ flowers, as already stated, were slightly monstrous; and this probably was
+ connected with their lessened fertility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the self-fertilised plants of the seventh generation, and I believe of
+ one or two previous generations, produced flowers of exactly the same
+ tint, namely, of a rich dark purple. So did all the plants, without any
+ exception, in the three succeeding generations of self-fertilised plants;
+ and very many were raised on account of other experiments in progress not
+ here recorded. My attention was first called to this fact by my gardener
+ remarking that there was no occasion to label the self-fertilised plants,
+ as they could always be known by their colour. The flowers were as uniform
+ in tint as those of a wild species growing in a state of nature; whether
+ the same tint occurred, as is probable, in the earlier generations,
+ neither my gardener nor self could recollect. The flowers on the plants
+ which were first raised from purchased seed, as well as during the first
+ few generations, varied much in the depth of the purple tint; many were
+ more or less pink, and occasionally a white variety appeared. The crossed
+ plants continued to the tenth generation to vary in the same manner as
+ before, but to a much less degree, owing, probably, to their having become
+ more or less closely inter-related. We must therefore attribute the
+ extraordinary uniformity of colour in the flowers on the plants of the
+ seventh and succeeding self-fertilised generations, to inheritance not
+ having been interfered with by crosses during several preceding
+ generations, in combination with the conditions of life having been very
+ uniform.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A plant appeared in the sixth self-fertilised generation, named the Hero,
+ which exceeded by a little in height its crossed antagonist, and which
+ transmitted its powers of growth and increased self-fertility to its
+ children and grandchildren. A cross between the children of Hero did not
+ give to the grandchildren any advantage over the self-fertilised
+ grandchildren raised from the self-fertilised children. And as far as my
+ observations can be trusted, which were made on very unhealthy plants, the
+ great-grandchildren raised from intercrossing the grandchildren had no
+ advantage over the seedlings from the grandchildren the product of
+ continued self-fertilisation; and what is far more remarkable, the
+ great-grandchildren raised by crossing the grandchildren with a fresh
+ stock, had no advantage over either the intercrossed or self-fertilised
+ great-grandchildren. It thus appears that Hero and its descendants
+ differed in constitution in an extraordinary manner from ordinary plants
+ of the present species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although the plants raised during ten successive generations from crosses
+ between distinct yet inter-related plants almost invariably exceeded in
+ height, constitutional vigour, and fertility their self-fertilised
+ opponents, it has been proved that seedlings raised by intercrossing
+ flowers on the same plant are by no means superior, on the contrary are
+ somewhat inferior in height and weight, to seedlings raised from flowers
+ fertilised with their own pollen. This is a remarkable fact, which seems
+ to indicate that self-fertilisation is in some manner more advantageous
+ than crossing, unless the cross brings with it, as is generally the case,
+ some decided and preponderant advantage; but to this subject I shall recur
+ in a future chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The benefits which so generally follow from a cross between two plants
+ apparently depend on the two differing somewhat in constitution or
+ character. This is shown by the seedlings from the intercrossed plants of
+ the ninth generation, when crossed with pollen from a fresh stock, being
+ as superior in height and almost as superior in fertility to the again
+ intercrossed plants, as these latter were to seedlings from
+ self-fertilised plants of the corresponding generation. We thus learn the
+ important fact that the mere act of crossing two distinct plants, which
+ are in some degree inter-related and which have been long subjected to
+ nearly the same conditions, does little good as compared with that from a
+ cross between plants belonging to different stocks or families, and which
+ have been subjected to somewhat different conditions. We may attribute the
+ good derived from the crossing of the intercrossed plants during the ten
+ successive generations to their still differing somewhat in constitution
+ or character, as was indeed proved by their flowers still differing
+ somewhat in colour. But the several conclusions which may be deduced from
+ the experiments on Ipomoea will be more fully considered in the final
+ chapters, after all my other observations have been given.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III. SCROPHULARIACEAE, GESNERIACEAE, LABIATAE, ETC.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Mimulus luteus; height, vigour, and fertility of the crossed and
+ self-fertilised plants of the first four generations.
+ Appearance of a new, tall, and highly self-fertile variety.
+ Offspring from a cross between self-fertilised plants.
+ Effects of a cross with a fresh stock.
+ Effects of crossing flowers on the same plant.
+ Summary on Mimulus luteus.
+ Digitalis purpurea, superiority of the crossed plants.
+ Effects of crossing flowers on the same plant.
+ Calceolaria.
+ Linaria vulgaris.
+ Verbascum thapsus.
+ Vandellia nummularifolia.
+ Cleistogene flowers.
+ Gesneria pendulina.
+ Salvia coccinea.
+ Origanum vulgare, great increase of the crossed plants by stolons.
+ Thunbergia alata.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In the family of the Scrophulariaceae I experimented on species in the six
+ following genera: Mimulus, Digitalis, Calceolaria, Linaria, Verbascum, and
+ Vandellia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [3/2. SCROPHULARIACEAE.&mdash;Mimulus luteus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The plants which I raised from purchased seed varied greatly in the colour
+ of their flowers, so that hardly two individuals were quite alike; the
+ corolla being of all shades of yellow, with the most diversified blotches
+ of purple, crimson, orange, and coppery brown. But these plants differed
+ in no other respect. (3/1. I sent several specimens with variously
+ coloured flowers to Kew, and Dr. Hooker informs me that they all consisted
+ of Mimulus luteus. The flowers with much red have been named by
+ horticulturists as var. Youngiana.) The flowers are evidently well adapted
+ for fertilisation by the agency of insects; and in the case of a closely
+ allied species, Mimulus rosea, I have watched bees entering the flowers,
+ thus getting their backs well dusted with pollen; and when they entered
+ another flower the pollen was licked off their backs by the two-lipped
+ stigma, the lips of which are irritable and close like a forceps on the
+ pollen-grains. If no pollen is enclosed between the lips, these open again
+ after a time. Mr. Kitchener has ingeniously explained the use of these
+ movements, namely, to prevent the self-fertilisation of the flower. (3/2.
+ &lsquo;A Year&rsquo;s Botany&rsquo; 1874 page 118.) If a bee with no pollen on its back
+ enters a flower it touches the stigma, which quickly closes, and when the
+ bee retires dusted with pollen, it can leave none on the stigma of the
+ same flower. But as soon as it enters any other flower, plenty of pollen
+ is left on the stigma, which will be thus cross-fertilised. Nevertheless,
+ if insects are excluded, the flowers fertilise themselves perfectly and
+ produce plenty of seed; but I did not ascertain whether this is effected
+ by the stamens increasing in length with advancing age, or by the bending
+ down of the pistil. The chief interest in my experiments on the present
+ species, lies in the appearance in the fourth self-fertilised generation
+ of a variety which bore large peculiarly-coloured flowers, and grew to a
+ greater height than the other varieties; it likewise became more highly
+ self-fertile, so that this variety resembles the plant named Hero, which
+ appeared in the sixth self-fertilised generation of Ipomoea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some flowers on one of the plants raised from the purchased seeds were
+ fertilised with their own pollen; and others on the same plant were
+ crossed with pollen from a distinct plant. The seeds from twelve capsules
+ thus produced were placed in separate watch-glasses for comparison; and
+ those from the six crossed capsules appeared to the eye hardly more
+ numerous than those from the six self-fertilised capsules. But when the
+ seeds were weighed, those from the crossed capsules amounted to 1.02
+ grain, whilst those from the self-fertilised capsules were only .81 grain;
+ so that the former were either heavier or more numerous than the latter,
+ in the ratio of 100 to 79.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FIRST GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Having ascertained, by leaving crossed and self-fertilised seed on damp
+ sand, that they germinated simultaneously, both kinds were thickly sown on
+ opposite sides of a broad and rather shallow pan; so that the two sets of
+ seedlings, which came up at the same time, were subjected to the same
+ unfavourable conditions. This was a bad method of treatment, but this
+ species was one of the first on which I experimented. When the crossed
+ seedlings were on an average half an inch high, the self-fertilised ones
+ were only a quarter of an inch high. When grown to their full height under
+ the above unfavourable conditions, the four tallest crossed plants
+ averaged 7.62, and the four tallest self-fertilised 5.87 inches in height;
+ or as 100 to 77. Ten flowers on the crossed plants were fully expanded
+ before one on the self-fertilised plants. A few of these plants of both
+ lots were transplanted into a large pot with plenty of good earth, and the
+ self-fertilised plants, not now being subjected to severe competition,
+ grew during the following year as tall as the crossed plants; but from a
+ case which follows it is doubtful whether they would have long continued
+ equal. Some flowers on the crossed plants were crossed with pollen from
+ another plant, and the capsules thus produced contained a rather greater
+ weight of seed than those on the self-fertilised plants again
+ self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Seeds from the foregoing plants, fertilised in the manner just stated,
+ were sown on the opposite sides of a small pot (1) and came up crowded.
+ The four tallest crossed seedlings, at the time of flowering, averaged 8
+ inches in height, whilst the four tallest self-fertilised plants averaged
+ only 4 inches. Crossed seeds were sown by themselves in a second small
+ pot, and self-fertilised seeds were sown by themselves in a third small
+ pot so that there was no competition whatever between these two lots.
+ Nevertheless the crossed plants grew from 1 to 2 inches higher on an
+ average than the self-fertilised. Both lots looked equally vigorous, but
+ the crossed plants flowered earlier and more profusely than the
+ self-fertilised. In Pot 1, in which the two lots competed with each other,
+ the crossed plants flowered first and produced a large number of capsules,
+ whilst the self-fertilised produced only nineteen. The contents of twelve
+ capsules from the crossed flowers on the crossed plants, and of twelve
+ capsules from self-fertilised flowers on the self-fertilised plants, were
+ placed in separate watch-glasses for comparison; and the crossed seeds
+ seemed more numerous by half than the self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The plants on both sides of Pot 1, after they had seeded, were cut down
+ and transplanted into a large pot with plenty of good earth, and on the
+ following spring, when they had grown to a height of between 5 and 6
+ inches, the two lots were equal, as occurred in a similar experiment in
+ the last generation. But after some weeks the crossed plants exceeded the
+ self-fertilised ones on the opposite side of the same pot, though not
+ nearly to so great a degree as before, when they were subjected to very
+ severe competition.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE THIRD GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Crossed seeds from the crossed plants, and self-fertilised seeds from the
+ self-fertilised plants of the last generation, were sown thickly on
+ opposite sides of a small pot, Number 1. The two tallest plants on each
+ side were measured after they had flowered, and the two crossed ones were
+ 12 and 7 1/2 inches, and the two self-fertilised ones 8 and 5 1/2 inches
+ in height; that is, in the ratio of 100 to 69. Twenty flowers on the
+ crossed plants were again crossed and produced twenty capsules; ten of
+ which contained 1.33 grain weight of seeds. Thirty flowers on the
+ self-fertilised plants were again self-fertilised and produced twenty-six
+ capsules; ten of the best of which (many being very poor) contained only
+ .87 grain weight of seeds; that is, in the ratio of 100 to 65 by weight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The superiority of the crossed over the self-fertilised plants was proved
+ in various ways. Self-fertilised seeds were sown on one side of a pot, and
+ two days afterwards crossed seeds on the opposite side. The two lots of
+ seedlings were equal until they were above half an inch high; but when
+ fully grown the two tallest crossed plants attained a height of 12 1/2 and
+ 8 3/4 inches, whilst the two tallest self-fertilised plants were only 8
+ and 5 1/2 inches high.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a third pot, crossed seeds were sown four days after the
+ self-fertilised, and the seedlings from the latter had at first, as might
+ have been expected, an advantage; but when the two lots were between 5 and
+ 6 inches in height, they were equal, and ultimately the three tallest
+ crossed plants were 11, 10, and 8 inches, whilst the three tallest
+ self-fertilised were 12, 8 1/2, and 7 1/2 inches in height. So that there
+ was not much difference between them, the crossed plants having an average
+ advantage of only the third of an inch. The plants were cut down, and
+ without being disturbed were transplanted into a larger pot. Thus the two
+ lots started fair on the following spring, and now the crossed plants
+ showed their inherent superiority, for the two tallest were 13 inches,
+ whilst the two tallest self-fertilised plants were only 11 and 8 1/2
+ inches in height; or as 100 to 75. The two lots were allowed to fertilise
+ themselves spontaneously: the crossed plants produced a large number of
+ capsules, whilst the self-fertilised produced very few and poor ones. The
+ seeds from eight of the capsules on the crossed plants weighed .65 grain,
+ whilst those from eight of the capsules on the self-fertilised plants
+ weighed only .22 grain; or as 100 to 34.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crossed plants in the above three pots, as in almost all the previous
+ experiments, flowered before the self-fertilised. This occurred even in
+ the third pot in which the crossed seeds were sown four days after the
+ self-fertilised seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lastly, seeds of both lots were sown on opposite sides of a large pot in
+ which a Fuchsia had long been growing, so that the earth was full of
+ roots. Both lots grew miserably; but the crossed seedlings had an
+ advantage at all times, and ultimately attained to a height of 3 1/2
+ inches, whilst the self-fertilised seedlings never exceeded 1 inch. The
+ several foregoing experiments prove in a decisive manner the superiority
+ in constitutional vigour of the crossed over the self-fertilised plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the three generations now described and taken together, the average
+ height of the ten tallest crossed plants was 8.19 inches, and that of the
+ ten tallest self-fertilised plants 5.29 inches (the plants having been
+ grown in small pots), or as 100 to 65.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the next or fourth self-fertilised generation, several plants of a new
+ and tall variety appeared, which increased in the later self-fertilised
+ generations, owing to its great self-fertility, to the complete exclusion
+ of the original kinds. The same variety also appeared amongst the crossed
+ plants, but as it was not at first regarded with any particular attention,
+ I know not how far it was used for raising the intercrossed plants; and in
+ the later crossed generations it was rarely present. Owing to the
+ appearance of this tall variety, the comparison of the crossed and
+ self-fertilised plants of the fifth and succeeding generations was
+ rendered unfair, as all the self-fertilised and only a few or none of the
+ crossed plants consisted of it. Nevertheless, the results of the later
+ experiments are in some respects well worth giving.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FOURTH GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Seeds of the two kinds, produced in the usual way from the two sets of
+ plants of the third generation, were sown on opposite sides of two pots (1
+ and 2); but the seedlings were not thinned enough and did not grow well.
+ Many of the self-fertilised plants, especially in one of the pots,
+ consisted of the new and tall variety above referred to, which bore large
+ and almost white flowers marked with crimson blotches. I will call it the
+ WHITE VARIETY. I believe that it first appeared amongst both the crossed
+ and self-fertilised plants of the last generation; but neither my gardener
+ nor myself could remember any such variety in the seedlings raised from
+ the purchased seed. It must therefore have arisen either through ordinary
+ variation, or, judging from its appearance amongst both the crossed and
+ self-fertilised plants, more probably through reversion to a formerly
+ existing variety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Pot 1 the tallest crossed plant was 8 1/2 inches, and the tallest
+ self-fertilised 5 inches in height. In Pot 2, the tallest crossed plant
+ was 6 1/2 inches, and the tallest self-fertilised plant, which consisted
+ of the white variety, 7 inches in height; and this was the first instance
+ in my experiments on Mimulus in which the tallest self-fertilised plant
+ exceeded the tallest crossed. Nevertheless, the two tallest crossed plants
+ taken together were to the two tallest self-fertilised plants in height as
+ 100 to 80. As yet the crossed plants were superior to the self-fertilised
+ in fertility; for twelve flowers on the crossed plants were crossed and
+ yielded ten capsules, the seeds of which weighed 1.71 grain. Twenty
+ flowers on the self-fertilised plants were self-fertilised, and produced
+ fifteen capsules, all appearing poor; and the seeds from ten of them
+ weighed only .68 grain, so that from an equal number of capsules the
+ crossed seeds were to the self-fertilised in weight as 100 to 40.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FIFTH GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Seeds from both lots of the fourth generation, fertilised in the usual
+ manner, were sown on opposite sides of three pots. When the seedlings
+ flowered, most of the self-fertilised plants were found to consist of the
+ tall white variety. Several of the crossed plants in Pot 1 likewise
+ belonged to this variety, as did a very few in Pots 2 and 3. The tallest
+ crossed plant in Pot 1 was 7 inches, and the tallest self-fertilised plant
+ on the opposite side 8 inches; in Pots 2 and 3 the tallest crossed were 4
+ 1/2 and 5 1/2, and the tallest self-fertilised 7 and 6 1/2 inches in
+ height; so that the average height of the tallest plants in the two lots
+ was as 100 for the crossed to 126 for the self-fertilised; and thus we
+ have a complete reversal of what occurred in the four previous
+ generations. Nevertheless, in all three pots the crossed plants retained
+ their habit of flowering before the self-fertilised. The plants were
+ unhealthy from being crowded and from the extreme heat of the season, and
+ were in consequence more or less sterile; but the crossed plants were
+ somewhat less sterile than the self-fertilised plants.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SIXTH GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Seeds from plants of the fifth generation crossed and self-fertilised in
+ the usual manner were sown on opposite sides of several pots. On the
+ self-fertilised side every single plant belonged to the tall white
+ variety. On the crossed side some plants belonged to this variety, but the
+ greater number approached in character to the old and shorter kinds with
+ smaller yellowish flowers blotched with coppery brown. When the plants on
+ both sides were from 2 to 3 inches in height they were equal, but when
+ fully grown the self-fertilised were decidedly the tallest and finest
+ plants, but, from want of time, they were not actually measured. In half
+ the pots the first plant which flowered was a self-fertilised one, and in
+ the other half a crossed one. And now another remarkable change was
+ clearly perceived, namely, that the self-fertilised plants had become more
+ self-fertile than the crossed. The pots were all put under a net to
+ exclude insects, and the crossed plants produced spontaneously only
+ fifty-five capsules, whilst the self-fertilised plants produced eighty-one
+ capsules, or as 100 to 147. The seeds from nine capsules of both lots were
+ placed in separate watch-glasses for comparison, and the self-fertilised
+ appeared rather the more numerous. Besides these spontaneously
+ self-fertilised capsules, twenty flowers on the crossed plants again
+ crossed yielded sixteen capsules; twenty-five flowers on the
+ self-fertilised plants again self-fertilised yielded seventeen capsules,
+ and this is a larger proportional number of capsules than was produced by
+ the self-fertilised flowers on the self-fertilised plants in the previous
+ generations. The contents of ten capsules of both these lots were compared
+ in separate watch-glasses, and the seeds from the self-fertilised appeared
+ decidedly more numerous than those from the crossed plants.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SEVENTH GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Crossed and self-fertilised seeds from the crossed and self-fertilised
+ plants of the sixth generation were sown in the usual manner on opposite
+ sides of three pots, and the seedlings were well and equally thinned.
+ Every one of the self-fertilised plants (and many were raised) in this, as
+ well as in the eighth and ninth generations, belonged to the tall white
+ variety. Their uniformity of character, in comparison with the seedlings
+ first raised from the purchased seed, was quite remarkable. On the other
+ hand, the crossed plants differed much in the tints of their flowers, but
+ not, I think, to so great a degree as those first raised. I determined
+ this time to measure the plants on both sides carefully. The
+ self-fertilised seedlings came up rather before the crossed, but both lots
+ were for a time of equal height. When first measured, the average height
+ of the six tallest crossed plants in the three pots was 7.02, and that of
+ the six tallest self-fertilised plants 8.97 inches, or as 100 to 128. When
+ fully grown the same plants were again measured, with the result shown in
+ Table 3/18.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 3/18. Mimulus luteus (Seventh Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants in inches:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 11 2/8 : 19 1/8. Pot 1 : 11 7/8 : 18.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 12 6/8 : 18 2/8. Pot 2 : 11 2/8 : 14 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 9 6/8 : 12 6/8. Pot 3 : 11 6/8 : 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 68.63 : 93.88.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the six crossed is here 11.43, and that of the six
+ self-fertilised 15.64, or as 100 to 137.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As it is now evident that the tall white variety transmitted its
+ characters faithfully, and as the self-fertilised plants consisted
+ exclusively of this variety, it was manifest that they would always exceed
+ in height the crossed plants which belonged chiefly to the original
+ shorter varieties. This line of experiment was therefore discontinued, and
+ I tried whether intercrossing two self-fertilised plants of the sixth
+ generation, growing in distinct pots, would give their offspring any
+ advantage over the offspring of flowers on one of the same plants
+ fertilised with their own pollen. These latter seedlings formed the
+ seventh generation of self-fertilised plants, like those in the right hand
+ column in Table 3/18; the crossed plants were the product of six previous
+ self-fertilised generations with an intercross in the last generation. The
+ seeds were allowed to germinate on sand, and were planted in pairs on
+ opposite sides of four pots, all the remaining seeds being sown crowded on
+ opposite sides of Pot 5 in Table 3/19; the three tallest on each side in
+ this latter pot being alone measured. All the plants were twice measured&mdash;the
+ first time whilst young, and the average height of the crossed plants to
+ that of the self-fertilised was then as 100 to 122. When fully grown they
+ were again measured, as in Table 3/19.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 3/19. Mimulus luteus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants in inches:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Intercrossed Plants from Self-fertilised Plants of the Sixth
+ Generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants of the Seventh Generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 12 6/8 : 15 2/8. Pot 1 : 10 4/8 : 11 5/8. Pot 1 : 10 : 11. Pot 1 :
+ 14 5/8 : 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 10 2/8 : 11 3/8. Pot 2 : 7 6/8 : 11 4/8. Pot 2 : 12 1/8 : 8 5/8.
+ Pot 2 : 7 : 14 3/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 13 5/8 : 10 3/8. Pot 3 : 12 2/8 : 11 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 7 1/8 : 14 6/8. Pot 4 : 8 2/8 : 7. Pot 4 : 7 2/8 : 8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 8 5/8 : 10 2/8 Pot 5 : 9 : 9 3/8. Pot 5 : 8 2/8 : 9 2/8. Crowded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 159.38 : 175.50.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the sixteen intercrossed plants is here 9.96 inches,
+ and that of the sixteen self-fertilised plants 10.96, or as 100 to 110; so
+ that the intercrossed plants, the progenitors of which had been
+ self-fertilised for the six previous generations, and had been exposed
+ during the whole time to remarkably uniform conditions, were somewhat
+ inferior in height to the plants of the seventh self-fertilised
+ generation. But as we shall presently see that a similar experiment made
+ after two additional generations of self-fertilisation gave a different
+ result, I know not how far to trust the present one. In three of the five
+ pots in Table 3/19 a self-fertilised plant flowered first, and in the
+ other two a crossed plant. These self-fertilised plants were remarkably
+ fertile, for twenty flowers fertilised with their own pollen produced no
+ less than nineteen very fine capsules!
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ THE EFFECTS OF A CROSS WITH A DISTINCT STOCK.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Some flowers on the self-fertilised plants in Pot 4 in Table 3/19 were
+ fertilised with their own pollen, and plants of the eighth self-fertilised
+ generation were thus raised, merely to serve as parents in the following
+ experiment. Several flowers on these plants were allowed to fertilise
+ themselves spontaneously (insects being of course excluded), and the
+ plants raised from these seeds formed the ninth self-fertilised
+ generation; they consisted wholly of the tall white variety with crimson
+ blotches. Other flowers on the same plants of the eighth self-fertilised
+ generation were crossed with pollen taken from another plant of the same
+ lot; so that the seedlings thus raised were the offspring of eight
+ previous generations of self-fertilisation with an intercross in the last
+ generation; these I will call the INTERCROSSED PLANTS. Lastly, other
+ flowers on the same plants of the eighth self-fertilised generation were
+ crossed with pollen taken from plants which had been raised from seed
+ procured from a garden at Chelsea. The Chelsea plants bore yellow flowers
+ blotched with red, but differed in no other respect. They had been grown
+ out of doors, whilst mine had been cultivated in pots in the greenhouse
+ for the last eight generations, and in a different kind of soil. The
+ seedlings raised from this cross with a wholly different stock may be
+ called the CHELSEA-CROSSED. The three lots of seeds thus obtained were
+ allowed to germinate on bare sand; and whenever a seed in all three lots,
+ or in only two, germinated at the same time, they were planted in pots
+ superficially divided into three or two compartments. The remaining seeds,
+ whether or not in a state of germination, were thickly sown in three
+ divisions in a large pot, 10, in Table 3/20. When the plants had grown to
+ their full height they were measured, as shown in Table 3/20; but only the
+ three tallest plants in each of the three divisions in Pot 10 were
+ measured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 3/20. Mimulus luteus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants in inches:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Plants from Self-fertilised Plants of the Eighth Generation
+ crossed by Chelsea Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Plants from an intercross between the Plants of the Eighth
+ Self-fertilised Generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 4: Self-fertilised Plants of the Ninth Generation from Plants of
+ the Eighth Self-fertilised Generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 30 7/8 : 14 : 9 4/8. Pot 1 : 28 3/8 : 13 6/8 : 10 5/8. Pot 1 :
+ &mdash; : 13 7/8 : 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 20 6/8 : 11 4/8 : 11 6/8. Pot 2 : 22 2/8 : 12 : 12 3/8. Pot 2 :
+ &mdash; : 9 1/8 : &mdash;.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 23 6/8 : 12 2/8 : 8 5/8. Pot 3 : 24 1/8 : &mdash; : 11 4/8. Pot 3
+ : 25 6/8 : &mdash; : 6 7/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 22 5/8 : 9 2/8 : 4. Pot 4 : 22 : 8 1/8 : 13 3/8. Pot 4 : 17 :
+ &mdash; : 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 22 3/8 : 9 : 4 4/8. Pot 5 : 19 5/8 : 11 : 13. Pot 5 : 23 4/8 :
+ &mdash; : 13 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 6 : 28 2/8 : 18 6/8 : 12. Pot 6 : 22 : 7 : 16 1/8. Pot 6 : &mdash; :
+ 12 4/8 : &mdash;.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 7 : 12 4/8 : 15 : &mdash;. Pot 7 : 24 3/8 : 12 3/8 : &mdash;. Pot 7 :
+ 20 4/8 : 11 2/8 : &mdash;. Pot 7 : 26 4/8 : 15 2/8 : &mdash;.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 8 : 17 2/8 : 13 3/8 : &mdash;. Pot 8 : 22 6/8 : 14 5/8 : &mdash;. Pot
+ 8 : 27 : 14 3/8 : &mdash;.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 9 : 22 6/8 : 11 6/8 : &mdash;. Pot 9 : 6 : 17 : &mdash;. Pot 9 : 20
+ 2/8 : 14 7/8 : &mdash;.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 10 : 18 1/8 : 9 2/8 : 10 3/8. Pot 10 : 16 5/8 : 8 2/8 : 8 1/8. Pot 10
+ : 17 4/8 : 10 : 11 2/8. Crowded plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 605.38 : 329.50 : 198.50.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this table the average height of the twenty-eight Chelsea-crossed
+ plants is 21.62 inches; that of the twenty-seven intercrossed plants 12.2;
+ and that of the nineteen self-fertilised 10.44. But with respect to the
+ latter it will be the fairest plan to strike out two dwarfed ones (only 4
+ inches in height), so as not to exaggerate the inferiority of the
+ self-fertilised plants; and this will raise the average height of the
+ seventeen remaining self-fertilised plants to 11.2 inches. Therefore the
+ Chelsea-crossed are to the intercrossed in height as 100 to 56; the
+ Chelsea-crossed to the self-fertilised as 100 to 52; and the intercrossed
+ to the self-fertilised as 100 to 92. We thus see how immensely superior in
+ height the Chelsea-crossed are to the intercrossed and to the
+ self-fertilised plants. They began to show their superiority when only one
+ inch high. They were also, when fully grown, much more branched with
+ larger leaves and somewhat larger flowers than the plants of the other two
+ lots, so that if they had been weighed, the ratio would certainly have
+ been much higher than that of 100 to 56 and 52.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The intercrossed plants are here to the self-fertilised in height as 100
+ to 92; whereas in the analogous experiment given in Table 3/19 the
+ intercrossed plants from the self-fertilised plants of the sixth
+ generation were inferior in height to the self-fertilised plants in the
+ ratio of 100 to 110. I doubt whether this discordance in the results of
+ the two experiments can be explained by the self-fertilised plants in the
+ present case having been raised from spontaneously self-fertilised seeds,
+ whereas in the former case they were raised from artificially
+ self-fertilised seeds; nor by the present plants having been
+ self-fertilised during two additional generations, though this is a more
+ probable explanation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to fertility, the twenty-eight Chelsea-crossed plants
+ produced 272 capsules; the twenty-seven intercrossed plants produced 24;
+ and the seventeen self-fertilised plants 17 capsules. All the plants were
+ left uncovered so as to be naturally fertilised, and empty capsules were
+ rejected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therefore 20 Chelsea-crossed plants would have produced 194.29 capsules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therefore 20 Intercrossed plants would have produced 17.77 capsules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therefore 20 Self-fertilised plants would have produced 20.00 capsules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seeds contained in 8 capsules from the Chelsea-crossed plants weighed
+ 1.1 grains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seeds contained in 8 capsules from the Intercrossed plants weighed
+ 0.51 grains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seeds contained in 8 capsules from the Self-fertilised plants weighed
+ 0.33 grains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we combine the number of capsules produced together with the average
+ weight of contained seeds, we get the following extraordinary ratios:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Weight of seed produced by the same number of Chelsea-crossed and
+ intercrossed plants as 100 to 4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Weight of seed produced by the same number of Chelsea-crossed and
+ self-fertilised plants as 100 to 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Weight of seeds produced by the same number of intercrossed and
+ self-fertilised plants as 100 to 73.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is also a remarkable fact that the Chelsea-crossed plants exceeded the
+ two other lots in hardiness, as greatly as they did in height, luxuriance,
+ and fertility. In the early autumn most of the pots were bedded out in the
+ open ground; and this always injures plants which have been long kept in a
+ warm greenhouse. All three lots consequently suffered greatly, but the
+ Chelsea-crossed plants much less than the other two lots. On the 3rd of
+ October the Chelsea-crossed plants began to flower again, and continued to
+ do so for some time; whilst not a single flower was produced by the plants
+ of the other two lots, the stems of which were cut almost down to the
+ ground and seemed half dead. Early in December there was a sharp frost,
+ and the stems of Chelsea-crossed were now cut down; but on the 23rd of
+ December they began to shoot up again from the roots, whilst all the
+ plants of the other two lots were quite dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although several of the self-fertilised seeds, from which the plants in
+ the right hand column in Table 3/20 were raised, germinated (and were of
+ course rejected) before any of those of the other two lots, yet in only
+ one of the ten pots did a self-fertilised plant flower before the
+ Chelsea-crossed or the intercrossed plants growing in the same pots. The
+ plants of these two latter lots flowered at the same time, though the
+ Chelsea-crossed grew so much taller and more vigorously than the
+ intercrossed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As already stated, the flowers of the plants originally raised from the
+ Chelsea seeds were yellow; and it deserves notice that every one of the
+ twenty-eight seedlings raised from the tall white variety fertilised,
+ without being castrated, with pollen from the Chelsea plants, produced
+ yellow flowers; and this shows how prepotent this colour, which is the
+ natural one of the species, is over the white colour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE EFFECTS ON THE OFFSPRING OF INTERCROSSING FLOWERS ON THE SAME PLANT,
+ INSTEAD OF CROSSING DISTINCT INDIVIDUALS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all the foregoing experiments the crossed plants were the product of a
+ cross between distinct plants. I now selected a very vigorous plant in
+ Table 3/20, raised by fertilising a plant of the eighth self-fertilised
+ generation with pollen from the Chelsea stock. Several flowers on this
+ plant were crossed with pollen from other flowers on the same plant, and
+ several other flowers were fertilised with their own pollen. The seed thus
+ produced was allowed to germinate on bare sand; and the seedlings were
+ planted in the usual manner on the opposite sides of six pots. All the
+ remaining seeds, whether or not in a state of germination, were sown
+ thickly in Pot 7; the three tallest plants on each side of this latter pot
+ being alone measured. As I was in a hurry to learn the result, some of
+ these seeds were sown late in the autumn, but the plants grew so
+ irregularly during the winter, that one crossed plant was 28 1/2 inches,
+ and two others only 4, or less than 4 inches in height, as may be seen in
+ Table 3/21. Under such circumstances, as I have observed in many other
+ cases, the result is not in the least trustworthy; nevertheless I feel
+ bound to give the measurements.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 3/21. Mimulus luteus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants in inches:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Plants raised from a Cross between different Flowers on the same
+ Plant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Plants raised from Flowers fertilised with their own Pollen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 17 : 17. Pot 1 : 9 : 3 1/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 28 2/8 : 19 1/8. Pot 2 : 16 4/8 : 6. Pot 2 : 13 5/8 : 2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 4 : 15 6/8. Pot 3 : 2 2/8 : 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 23 4/8 : 6 2/8. Pot 4 : 15 4/8 : 7 1/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 7 : 13 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 6 : 18 3/8 : 1 4/8. Pot 6 : 11 : 2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 7 : 21 : 15 1/8. Pot 7 : 11 6/8 : 11. Pot 7 : 12 1/8 : 11 2/8.
+ Crowded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 210.88 : 140.75.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fifteen crossed plants here average 14.05, and the fifteen
+ self-fertilised plants 9.38 in height, or as 100 to 67. But if all the
+ plants under ten inches in height are struck out, the ratio of the eleven
+ crossed plants to the eight self-fertilised plants is as 100 to 82.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the following spring, some remaining seeds of the two lots were treated
+ in exactly the same manner; and the measurements of the seedlings are
+ given in Table 3/22.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 3/22. Mimulus luteus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants in inches:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Plants raised from a Cross between different Flowers on the same
+ Plant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Plants raised from Flowers fertilised with their own Pollen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 15 1/8 : 19 1/8. Pot 1 : 12 : 20 5/8. Pot 1 : 10 1/8 : 12 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 16 2/8 : 11 2/8. Pot 2 : 13 5/8 : 19 3/8. Pot 2 : 20 1/8 : 17 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 18 7/8 : 12 6/8. Pot 3 : 15 : 15 6/8. Pot 3 : 13 7/8 : 17.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 19 2/8 : 16 2/8. Pot 4 : 19 6/8 : 21 5/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 25 3/8 : 22 5/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 6 : 15 : 19 5/8. Pot 6 : 20 2/8 : 16 2/8. Pot 6 : 27 2/8 : 19 5/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 7 : 7 6/8 : 7 6/8. Pot 7 : 14 : 8. Pot 7 : 13 4/8 : 7.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 8 : 18 2/8 : 20 3/8. Pot 8 : 18 6/8 : 17 6/8. Pot 8 : 18 3/8 : 15 4/8.
+ Pot 8 : 18 3/8 : 15 1/8. Crowded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 370.88 : 353.63.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the average height of the twenty-two crossed plants is 16.85, and
+ that of the twenty-two self-fertilised plants 16.07; or as 100 to 95. But
+ if four of the plants in Pot 7, which are much shorter than any of the
+ others, are struck out (and this would be the fairest plan), the
+ twenty-one crossed are to the nineteen self-fertilised plants in height as
+ 100 to 100.6&mdash;that is, are equal. All the plants, except the crowded
+ ones in Pot 8, after being measured were cut down, and the eighteen
+ crossed plants weighed 10 ounces, whilst the same number of
+ self-fertilised plants weighed 10 1/4 ounces, or as 100 to 102.5; but if
+ the dwarfed plants in Pot 7 had been excluded, the self-fertilised would
+ have exceeded the crossed in weight in a higher ratio. In all the previous
+ experiments in which seedlings were raised from a cross between distinct
+ plants, and were put into competition with self-fertilised plants, the
+ former generally flowered first; but in the present case, in seven out of
+ the eight pots a self-fertilised plant flowered before a crossed one on
+ the opposite side. Considering all the evidence with respect to the plants
+ in Table3/ 22, a cross between two flowers on the same plant seems to give
+ no advantage to the offspring thus produced, the self-fertilised plants
+ being in weight superior. But this conclusion cannot be absolutely
+ trusted, owing to the measurements given in Table 3/21, though these
+ latter, from the cause already assigned, are very much less trustworthy
+ than the present ones.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A SUMMARY OF OBSERVATIONS ON Mimulus luteus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the three first generations of crossed and self-fertilised plants, the
+ tallest plants alone on each side of the several pots were measured; and
+ the average height of the ten crossed to that of the ten self-fertilised
+ plants was as 100 to 64. The crossed were also much more fertile than the
+ self-fertilised, and so much more vigorous that they exceeded them in
+ height, even when sown on the opposite side of the same pot after an
+ interval of four days. The same superiority was likewise shown in a
+ remarkable manner when both kinds of seeds were sown on the opposite sides
+ of a pot with very poor earth full of the roots of another plant. In one
+ instance crossed and self-fertilised seedlings, grown in rich soil and not
+ put into competition with each other, attained to an equal height. When we
+ come to the fourth generation the two tallest crossed plants taken
+ together exceeded by only a little the two tallest self-fertilised plants,
+ and one of the latter beat its crossed opponent,&mdash;a circumstance
+ which had not occurred in the previous generations. This victorious
+ self-fertilised plant consisted of a new white-flowered variety, which
+ grew taller than the old yellowish varieties. From the first it seemed to
+ be rather more fertile, when self-fertilised, than the old varieties, and
+ in the succeeding self-fertilised generations became more and more
+ self-fertile. In the sixth generation the self-fertilised plants of this
+ variety compared with the crossed plants produced capsules in the
+ proportion of 147 to 100, both lots being allowed to fertilise themselves
+ spontaneously. In the seventh generation twenty flowers on one of these
+ plants artificially self-fertilised yielded no less than nineteen very
+ fine capsules!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This variety transmitted its characters so faithfully to all the
+ succeeding self-fertilised generations, up to the last or ninth, that all
+ the many plants which were raised presented a complete uniformity of
+ character; thus offering a remarkable contrast with the seedlings raised
+ from the purchased seeds. Yet this variety retained to the last a latent
+ tendency to produce yellow flowers; for when a plant of the eighth
+ self-fertilised generation was crossed with pollen from a yellow-flowered
+ plant of the Chelsea stock, every single seedling bore yellow flowers. A
+ similar variety, at least in the colour of its flowers, also appeared
+ amongst the crossed plants of the third generation. No attention was at
+ first paid to it, and I know not how far it was at first used either for
+ crossing or self-fertilisation. In the fifth generation most of the
+ self-fertilised plants, and in the sixth and all the succeeding
+ generations every single plant consisted of this variety; and this no
+ doubt was partly due to its great and increasing self-fertility. On the
+ other hand, it disappeared from amongst the crossed plants in the later
+ generations; and this was probably due to the continued intercrossing of
+ the several plants. From the tallness of this variety, the self-fertilised
+ plants exceeded the crossed plants in height in all the generations from
+ the fifth to the seventh inclusive; and no doubt would have done so in the
+ later generations, had they been grown in competition with one another. In
+ the fifth generation the crossed plants were in height to the
+ self-fertilised, as 100 to 126; in the sixth, as 100 to 147; and in the
+ seventh generation, as 100 to 137. This excess of height may be attributed
+ not only to this variety naturally growing taller than the other plants,
+ but to its possessing a peculiar constitution, so that it did not suffer
+ from continued self-fertilisation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This variety presents a strikingly analogous case to that of the plant
+ called the Hero, which appeared in the sixth self-fertilised generation of
+ Ipomoea. If the seeds produced by Hero had been as greatly in excess of
+ those produced by the other plants, as was the case with Mimulus, and if
+ all the seeds had been mingled together, the offspring of Hero would have
+ increased to the entire exclusion of the ordinary plants in the later
+ self-fertilised generations, and from naturally growing taller would have
+ exceeded the crossed plants in height in each succeeding generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the self-fertilised plants of the sixth generation were
+ intercrossed, as were some in the eighth generation; and the seedlings
+ from these crosses were grown in competition with self-fertilised plants
+ of the two corresponding generations. In the first trial the intercrossed
+ plants were less fertile than the self-fertilised, and less tall in the
+ ratio of 100 to 110. In the second trial, the intercrossed plants were
+ more fertile than the self-fertilised in the ratio of 100 to 73, and
+ taller in the ratio of 100 to 92. Notwithstanding that the self-fertilised
+ plants in the second trial were the product of two additional generations
+ of self-fertilisation, I cannot understand this discordance in the results
+ of the two analogous experiments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most important of all the experiments on Mimulus are those in which
+ flowers on plants of the eighth self-fertilised generation were again
+ self-fertilised; other flowers on distinct plants of the same lot were
+ intercrossed; and others were crossed with a new stock of plants from
+ Chelsea. The Chelsea-crossed seedlings were to the intercrossed in height
+ as 100 to 56, and in fertility as 100 to 4; and they were to the
+ self-fertilised plants, in height as 100 to 52, and in fertility as 100 to
+ 3. These Chelsea-crossed plants were also much more hardy than the plants
+ of the other two lots; so that altogether the gain from the cross with a
+ fresh stock was wonderfully great.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lastly, seedlings raised from a cross between flowers on the same plant
+ were not superior to those from flowers fertilised with their own pollen;
+ but this result cannot be absolutely trusted, owing to some previous
+ observations, which, however, were made under very unfavourable
+ circumstances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [Digitalis purpurea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The flowers of the common Foxglove are proterandrous; that is, the pollen
+ is mature and mostly shed before the stigma of the same flower is ready
+ for fertilisation. This is effected by the larger humble-bees, which,
+ whilst in search of nectar, carry pollen from flower to flower. The two
+ upper and longer stamens shed their pollen before the two lower and
+ shorter ones. The meaning of this fact probably is, as Dr. Ogle remarks,
+ that the anthers of the longer stamens stand near to the stigma, so that
+ they would be the most likely to fertilise it (3/3. &lsquo;Popular Science
+ Review&rsquo; January 1870 page 50.); and as it is an advantage to avoid
+ self-fertilisation, they shed their pollen first, thus lessening the
+ chance. There is, however, but little danger of self-fertilisation until
+ the bifid stigma opens; for Hildebrand found that pollen placed on the
+ stigma before it had opened produced no effect. (3/4.
+ &lsquo;Geschlechter-Vertheilung bei den Pflanzen&rsquo; 1867 page 20.) The anthers,
+ which are large, stand at first transversely with respect to the tubular
+ corolla, and if they were to dehisce in this position they would, as Dr.
+ Ogle also remarks, smear with pollen the whole back and sides of an
+ entering humble-bee in a useless manner; but the anthers twist round and
+ place themselves longitudinally before they dehisce. The lower and inner
+ side of the mouth of the corolla is thickly clothed with hairs, and these
+ collect so much of the fallen pollen that I have seen the under surface of
+ a humble-bee thickly dusted with it; but this can never be applied to the
+ stigma, as the bees in retreating do not turn their under surfaces
+ upwards. I was therefore puzzled whether these hairs were of any use; but
+ Mr. Belt has, I think, explained their use: the smaller kinds of bees are
+ not fitted to fertilise the flowers, and if they were allowed to enter
+ easily they would steal much nectar, and fewer large bees would haunt the
+ flowers. Humble-bees can crawl into the dependent flowers with the
+ greatest ease, using the &ldquo;hairs as footholds while sucking the honey; but
+ the smaller bees are impeded by them, and when, having at length struggled
+ through them, they reach the slippery precipice above, they are completely
+ baffled.&rdquo; Mr. Belt says that he watched many flowers during a whole season
+ in North Wales, and &ldquo;only once saw a small bee reach the nectary, though
+ many were seen trying in vain to do so.&rdquo; (3/5. &lsquo;The Naturalist in
+ Nicaragua&rsquo; 1874 page 132. But it appears from H. Muller &lsquo;Die Befruchtung
+ der Blumen&rsquo; 1873 page 285, that small insects sometimes succeed in
+ entering the flowers.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I covered a plant growing in its native soil in North Wales with a net,
+ and fertilised six flowers each with its own pollen, and six others with
+ pollen from a distinct plant growing within the distance of a few feet.
+ The covered plant was occasionally shaken with violence, so as to imitate
+ the effects of a gale of wind, and thus to facilitate as far as possible
+ self-fertilisation. It bore ninety-two flowers (besides the dozen
+ artificially fertilised), and of these only twenty-four produced capsules;
+ whereas almost all the flowers on the surrounding uncovered plants were
+ fruitful. Of the twenty-four spontaneously self-fertilised capsules, only
+ two contained their full complement of seed; six contained a moderate
+ supply; and the remaining sixteen extremely few seeds. A little pollen
+ adhering to the anthers after they had dehisced, and accidentally falling
+ on the stigma when mature, must have been the means by which the above
+ twenty-four flowers were partially self-fertilised; for the margins of the
+ corolla in withering do not curl inwards, nor do the flowers in dropping
+ off turn round on their axes, so as to bring the pollen-covered hairs,
+ with which the lower surface is clothed, into contact with the stigma&mdash;by
+ either of which means self-fertilisation might be effected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeds from the above crossed and self-fertilised capsules, after
+ germinating on bare sand, were planted in pairs on the opposite sides of
+ five moderately-sized pots, which were kept in the greenhouse. The plants
+ after a time appeared starved, and were therefore, without being
+ disturbed, turned out of their pots, and planted in the open ground in two
+ close parallel rows. They were thus subjected to tolerably severe
+ competition with one another; but not nearly so severe as if they had been
+ left in the pots. At the time when they were turned out, their leaves were
+ between 5 and 8 inches in length, and the longest leaf on the finest plant
+ on each side of each pot was measured, with the result that the leaves of
+ the crossed plants exceeded, on an average, those of the self-fertilised
+ plants by .4 of an inch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the following summer the tallest flower-stem on each plant, when fully
+ grown, was measured. There were seventeen crossed plants; but one did not
+ produce a flower-stem. There were also, originally, seventeen
+ self-fertilised plants, but these had such poor constitutions that no less
+ than nine died in the course of the winter and spring, leaving only eight
+ to be measured, as in Table 3/23.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 3/23. Digitalis purpurea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tallest Flower-stem on each Plant measured in inches: 0 means that the
+ Plant died before a Flower-stem was produced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 53 6/8 : 27 4/8. Pot 1 : 57 4/8 : 55 6/8. Pot 1 : 57 6/8 : 0. Pot
+ 1 : 65 : 0.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 34 4/8 : 39. Pot 2 : 52 4/8 : 32. Pot 2 : 63 6/8 : 21.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 57 4/8 : 53 4/8. Pot 3 : 53 4/8 : 0. Pot 3 : 50 6/8 : 0. Pot 3 :
+ 37 2/8 : 0.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 64 4/8 : 34 4/8. Pot 4 : 37 4/8 : 23 6/8. Pot 4 : &mdash; : 0.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 53 : 0. Pot 5 : 47 6/8 : 0. Pot 5 : 34 6/8 : 0.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 821.25 : 287.00.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the flower-stems of the sixteen crossed plants is
+ here 51.33 inches; and that of the eight self-fertilised plants, 35.87; or
+ as 100 to 70. But this difference in height does not give at all a fair
+ idea of the vast superiority of the crossed plants. These latter produced
+ altogether sixty-four flower-stems, each plant producing, on an average,
+ exactly four flower-stems, whereas the eight self-fertilised plants
+ produced only fifteen flower-stems, each producing an average only of 1.87
+ stems, and these had a less luxuriant appearance. We may put the result in
+ another way: the number of flower-stems on the crossed plants was to those
+ on an equal number of self-fertilised plants as 100 to 48.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three crossed seeds in a state of germination were also planted in three
+ separate pots; and three self-fertilised seeds in the same state in three
+ other pots. These plants were therefore at first exposed to no competition
+ with one another, and when turned out of their pots into the open ground
+ they were planted at a moderate distance apart, so that they were exposed
+ to much less severe competition than in the last case. The longest leaves
+ on the three crossed plants, when turned out, exceeded those on the
+ self-fertilised plants by a mere trifle, namely, on an average by .17 of
+ an inch. When fully grown the three crossed plants produced twenty-six
+ flower-stems; the two tallest of which on each plant were on an average
+ 54.04 inches in height. The three self-fertilised plants produced
+ twenty-three flower-stems, the two tallest of which on each plant had an
+ average height of 46.18 inches. So that the difference between these two
+ lots, which hardly competed together, is much less than in the last case
+ when there was moderately severe competition, namely, as 100 to 85,
+ instead of as 100 to 70.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE EFFECTS ON THE OFFSPRING OF INTERCROSSING DIFFERENT FLOWERS ON THE
+ SAME PLANT, INSTEAD OF CROSSING DISTINCT INDIVIDUALS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A fine plant growing in my garden (one of the foregoing seedlings) was
+ covered with a net, and six flowers were crossed with pollen from another
+ flower on the same plant, and six others were fertilised with their own
+ pollen. All produced good capsules. The seeds from each were placed in
+ separate watch-glasses, and no difference could be perceived by the eye
+ between the two lots of seeds; and when they were weighed there was no
+ difference of any significance, as the seeds from the self-fertilised
+ capsules weighed 7.65 grains, whilst those from the crossed capsules
+ weighed 7.7 grains. Therefore the sterility of the present species, when
+ insects are excluded, is not due to the impotence of pollen on the stigma
+ of the same flower. Both lots of seeds and seedlings were treated in
+ exactly the same manner as in Table 3/23, excepting that after the pairs
+ of germinating seeds had been planted on the opposite sides of eight pots,
+ all the remaining seeds were thickly sown on the opposite sides of Pots 9
+ and 10 in Table 3/24. The young plants during the following spring were
+ turned out of their pots, without being disturbed, and planted in the open
+ ground in two rows, not very close together, so that they were subjected
+ to only moderately severe competition with one another. Very differently
+ to what occurred in the first experiment, when the plants were subjected
+ to somewhat severe mutual competition, an equal number on each side either
+ died or did not produce flower-stems. The tallest flower-stems on the
+ surviving plants were measured, as shown in Table 3/24.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 3/24. Digitalis purpurea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tallest Flower-stem on each Plant measured in inches: 0 signifies that
+ the Plant died, or did not produce a Flower-stem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Plants raised from a Cross between different Flowers on the same
+ Plant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Plants raised from Flowers fertilised with their own Pollen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 49 4/8 : 45 5/8. Pot 1 : 46 7/8 : 52. Pot 1 : 43 6/8 : 0.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 38 4/8 : 54 4/8. Pot 2 : 47 4/8 : 47 4/8. Pot 2 : 0 : 32 5/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 54 7/8 : 46 5/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 32 1/8 : 41 3/8. Pot 4 : 0 : 29 7/8. Pot 4 : 43 7/8 : 37 1/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 46 6/8 : 42 1/8. Pot 5 : 40 4/8 : 42 1/8. Pot 5 : 43 : 0.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 6 : 48 2/8 : 47 7/8. Pot 6 : 46 2/8 : 48 3/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 7 : 48 5/8 : 25. Pot 7 : 42 : 40 5/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 8 : 46 7/8 : 39 1/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 9 : 49 : 30 3/8. Pot 9 : 50 3/8 : 15. Pot 9 : 46 3/8 : 36 7/8. Pot 9 :
+ 47 6/8 : 44 1/8. Pot 9 : 0 : 31 6/8. Crowded Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 10 : 46 4/8 : 47 7/8. Pot 10 : 35 2/8 : 0. Pot 10 : 24 5/8 : 34 7/8.
+ Pot 10 : 41 4/8 : 40 7/8. Pot 10 : 17 3/8 : 41 1/8. Crowded Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 1078.00 : 995.38.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the flower-stems on the twenty-five crossed plants
+ in all the pots taken together is 43.12 inches, and that of the
+ twenty-five self-fertilised plants 39.82, or as 100 to 92. In order to
+ test this result, the plants planted in pairs in Pots 1 and 8 were
+ considered by themselves, and the average height of the sixteen crossed
+ plants is here 44.9, and that of the sixteen self-fertilised plants 42.03,
+ or as 100 to 94. Again, the plants raised from the thickly sown seed in
+ Pots 9 and 10, which were subjected to very severe mutual competition,
+ were taken by themselves, and the average height of the nine crossed
+ plants is 39.86, and that of the nine self-fertilised plants 35.88, or as
+ 100 to 90. The plants in these two latter pots (9 and 10), after being
+ measured, were cut down close to the ground and weighed: the nine crossed
+ plants weighed 57.66 ounces, and the nine self-fertilised plants 45.25
+ ounces, or as 100 to 78. On the whole we may conclude, especially from the
+ evidence of weight, that seedlings from a cross between flowers on the
+ same plant have a decided, though not great, advantage over those from
+ flowers fertilised with their own pollen, more especially in the case of
+ the plants subjected to severe mutual competition. But the advantage is
+ much less than that exhibited by the crossed offspring of distinct plants,
+ for these exceeded the self-fertilised plants in height as 100 to 70, and
+ in the number of flower-stems as 100 to 48. Digitalis thus differs from
+ Ipomoea, and almost certainly from Mimulus, as with these two species a
+ cross between flowers on the same plant did no good.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CALCEOLARIA.
+ </h3>
+ <h3>
+ A BUSHY GREENHOUSE VARIETY, WITH YELLOW FLOWERS BLOTCHED WITH PURPLE.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The flowers in this genus are constructed so as to favour or almost ensure
+ cross-fertilisation (3/6. Hildebrand as quoted by H. Muller &lsquo;Die
+ Befruchtung der Blumen&rsquo; 1873 page 277.); and Mr. Anderson remarks that
+ extreme care is necessary to exclude insects in order to preserve any kind
+ true. (3/7. &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo; 1853 page 534.) He adds the interesting
+ statement, that when the corolla is cut quite away, insects, as far as he
+ has seen, never discover or visit the flowers. This plant is, however,
+ self-fertile if insects are excluded. So few experiments were made by me,
+ that they are hardly worth giving. Crossed and self-fertilised seeds were
+ sown on opposite sides of a pot, and after a time the crossed seedlings
+ slightly exceeded the self-fertilised in height. When a little further
+ grown, the longest leaves on the former were very nearly 3 inches in
+ length, whilst those on the self-fertilised plants were only 2 inches.
+ Owing to an accident, and to the pot being too small, only one plant on
+ each side grew up and flowered; the crossed plant was 19 1/2 inches in
+ height, and the self-fertilised one 15 inches; or as 100 to 77.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Linaria vulgaris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has been mentioned in the introductory chapter that two large beds of
+ this plant were raised by me many years ago from crossed and
+ self-fertilised seeds, and that there was a conspicuous difference in
+ height and general appearance between the two lots. The trial was
+ afterwards repeated with more care; but as this was one of the first
+ plants experimented on, my usual method was not followed. Seeds were taken
+ from wild plants growing in this neighbourhood and sown in poor soil in my
+ garden. Five plants were covered with a net, the others being left exposed
+ to the bees, which incessantly visit the flowers of this species, and
+ which, according to H. Muller, are the exclusive fertilisers. This
+ excellent observer remarks that, as the stigma lies between the anthers
+ and is mature at the same time with them, self-fertilisation is possible.
+ (3/8. &lsquo;Die Befruchtung&rsquo; etc. page 279.) But so few seeds are produced by
+ protected plants, that the pollen and stigma of the same flower seem to
+ have little power of mutual interaction. The exposed plants bore numerous
+ capsules forming solid spikes. Five of these capsules were examined and
+ appeared to contain an equal number of seeds; and these being counted in
+ one capsule, were found to be 166. The five protected plants produced
+ altogether only twenty-five capsules, of which five were much finer than
+ all the others, and these contained an average of 23.6 seeds, with a
+ maximum in one capsule of fifty-five. So that the number of seeds in the
+ capsules on the exposed plants to the average number in the finest
+ capsules on the protected plants was as 100 to 14.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the spontaneously self-fertilised seeds from under the net, and
+ some seeds from the uncovered plants naturally fertilised and almost
+ certainly intercrossed by the bees, were sown separately in two large pots
+ of the same size; so that the two lots of seedlings were not subjected to
+ any mutual competition. Three of the crossed plants when in full flower
+ were measured, but no care was taken to select the tallest plants; their
+ heights were 7 4/8, 7 2/8, and 6 4/8 inches; averaging 7.08 in height. The
+ three tallest of all the self-fertilised plants were then carefully
+ selected, and their heights were 6 3/8, 5 5/8, and 5 2/8, averaging 5.75
+ in height. So that the naturally crossed plants were to the spontaneously
+ self-fertilised plants in height, at least as much as 100 to 81.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Verbascum thapsus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The flowers of this plant are frequented by various insects, chiefly by
+ bees, for the sake of the pollen. Hermann Muller, however, has shown (&lsquo;Die
+ Befruchtung&rsquo; etc. page 277) that V. nigrum secretes minute drops of
+ nectar. The arrangement of the reproductive organs, though not at all
+ complex, favours cross-fertilisation; and even distinct species are often
+ crossed, for a greater number of naturally produced hybrids have been
+ observed in this genus than in almost any other. (3/9. I have given a
+ striking case of a large number of such hybrids between Verbascum thapsus
+ and lychnitis found growing wild: &lsquo;Journal of Linnean Society Botany&rsquo;
+ volume 10 page 451.) Nevertheless the present species is perfectly
+ self-fertile, if insects are excluded; for a plant protected by a net was
+ as thickly loaded with fine capsules as the surrounding uncovered plants.
+ Verbascum lychnitis is rather less self-fertile, for some protected plants
+ did not yield quite so many capsules as the adjoining uncovered plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Plants of Verbascum thapsus had been raised for a distinct purpose from
+ self-fertilised seeds; and some flowers on these plants were again
+ self-fertilised, yielding seed of the second self-fertilised generation;
+ and other flowers were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant. The
+ seeds thus produced were sown on the opposite sides of four large pots.
+ They germinated, however, so irregularly (the crossed seedlings generally
+ coming up first) that I was able to save only six pairs of equal age.
+ These when in full flower were measured, as in Table 3/25.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 3/25. Verbascum thapsus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants of the Second Generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 76 : 53 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 54 : 66.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 62 : 75. Pot 3 : 60 5/8 : 30 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 73 : 62. Pot 4 : 66 4/8 : 52.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 392.13 : 339.00.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We here see that two of the self-fertilised plants exceed in height their
+ crossed opponents. Nevertheless the average height of the six crossed
+ plants is 65.34 inches, and that of the six self-fertilised plants 56.5
+ inches; or as 100 to 86.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vandellia nummularifolia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeds were sent to me by Mr. J. Scott from Calcutta of this small Indian
+ weed, which bears perfect and cleistogene flowers. (3/10. The convenient
+ term of CLEISTOGENE was proposed by Kuhn in an article on the present
+ genus in &lsquo;Bot. Zeitung&rsquo; 1867 page 65.) The latter are extremely small,
+ imperfectly developed, and never expand, yet yield plenty of seeds. The
+ perfect and open flowers are also small, of a white colour with purple
+ marks; they generally produce seed, although the contrary has been
+ asserted; and they do so even if protected from insects. They have a
+ rather complicated structure, and appear to be adapted for
+ cross-fertilisation, but were not carefully examined by me. They are not
+ easy to fertilise artificially, and it is possible that some of the
+ flowers which I thought that I had succeeded in crossing were afterwards
+ spontaneously self-fertilised under the net. Sixteen capsules from the
+ crossed perfect flowers contained on an average ninety-three seeds (with a
+ maximum in one capsule of 137), and thirteen capsules from the
+ self-fertilised perfect flowers contained sixty-two seeds (with a maximum
+ in one capsule of 135); or as 100 to 67. But I suspect that this
+ considerable excess was accidental, as on one occasion nine crossed
+ capsules were compared with seven self-fertilised capsules (both included
+ in the above number), and they contained almost exactly the same average
+ number of seed. I may add that fifteen capsules from self-fertilised
+ cleistogene flowers contained on an average sixty-four seeds, with a
+ maximum in one of eighty-seven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Crossed and self-fertilised seeds from the perfect flowers, and other
+ seeds from the self-fertilised cleistogene flowers, were sown in five
+ pots, each divided superficially into three compartments. The seedlings
+ were thinned at an early age, so that twenty plants were left in each of
+ the three divisions. The crossed plants when in full flower averaged 4.3
+ inches, and the self-fertilised plants from the perfect flowers 4.27
+ inches in height; or as 100 to 99. The self-fertilised plants from the
+ cleistogene flowers averaged 4.06 inches in height; so that the crossed
+ were in height to these latter plants as 100 to 94.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I determined to compare again the growth of plants raised from crossed and
+ self-fertilised perfect flowers, and obtained two fresh lots of seeds.
+ These were sown on opposite sides of five pots, but they were not
+ sufficiently thinned, so that they grew rather crowded. When fully grown,
+ all those above 2 inches in height were selected, all below this standard
+ being rejected; the former consisted of forty-seven crossed and forty-one
+ self-fertilised plants; thus a greater number of the crossed than of the
+ self-fertilised plants grew to a height of above 2 inches. Of the crossed
+ plants, the twenty-four tallest were on an average 3.6 inches in height;
+ whilst the twenty-four tallest self-fertilised plants were 3.38 inches in
+ average height; or as 100 to 94. All these plants were then cut down close
+ to the ground, and the forty-seven crossed plants weighed 1090.3 grains,
+ and the forty-one self-fertilised plants weighed 887.4 grains. Therefore
+ an equal number of crossed and self-fertilised would have been to each
+ other in weight as 100 to 97. From these several facts we may conclude
+ that the crossed plants had some real, though very slight, advantage in
+ height and weight over the self-fertilised plants, when grown in
+ competition with one another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crossed plants were, however, inferior in fertility to the
+ self-fertilised. Six of the finest plants were selected out of the
+ forty-seven crossed plants, and six out of the forty-one self-fertilised
+ plants; and the former produced 598 capsules, whilst the latter or
+ self-fertilised plants produced 752 capsules. All these capsules were the
+ product of cleistogene flowers, for the plants did not bear during the
+ whole of this season any perfect flowers. The seeds were counted in ten
+ cleistogene capsules produced by crossed plants, and their average number
+ was 46.4 per capsule; whilst the number in ten cleistogene capsules
+ produced by the self-fertilised plants was 49.4; or as 100 to 106.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. GESNERIACEAE.&mdash;Gesneria pendulina.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Gesneria the several parts of the flower are arranged on nearly the
+ same plan as in Digitalis, and most or all of the species are dichogamous.
+ (3/11. Dr. Ogle &lsquo;Popular Science Review&rsquo; January 1870 page 51.) Plants
+ were raised from seed sent me by Fritz Muller from South Brazil. Seven
+ flowers were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant, and produced seven
+ capsules containing by weight 3.01 grains of seeds. Seven flowers on the
+ same plants were fertilised with their own pollen, and their seven
+ capsules contained exactly the same weight of seeds. Germinating seeds
+ were planted on opposite sides of four pots, and when fully grown measured
+ to the tips of their leaves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 3/26. Gesneria pendulina.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 42 2/8 : 39. Pot 1 : 24 4/8 : 27 3/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 33 : 30 6/8. Pot 2 : 27 : 19 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 33 4/8 : 31 7/8. Pot 3 : 29 4/8 : 28 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 30 6/8 : 29 6/8. Pot 4 : 36 : 26 3/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 256.50 : 233.13.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the eight crossed plants is 32.06 inches, and that
+ of the eight self-fertilised plants 29.14; or as 100 to 90.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. LABIATAE.&mdash;Salvia coccinea. (3/12. The admirable mechanical
+ adaptations in this genus for favouring or ensuring cross-fertilisation,
+ have been fully described by Sprengel, Hildebrand, Delpino, H. Muller,
+ Ogle, and others, in their several works.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This species, unlike most of the others in the same genus, yields a good
+ many seeds when insects are excluded. I gathered ninety-eight capsules
+ produced by flowers spontaneously self-fertilised under a net, and they
+ contained on an average 1.45 seeds, whilst flowers artificially fertilised
+ with their own pollen, in which case the stigma will have received plenty
+ of pollen, yielded on an average 3.3 seeds, or more than twice as many.
+ Twenty flowers were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant, and
+ twenty-six were self-fertilised. There was no great difference in the
+ proportional number of flowers which produced capsules by these two
+ processes, or in the number of the contained seeds, or in the weight of an
+ equal number of seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeds of both kinds were sown rather thickly on opposite sides of three
+ pots. When the seedlings were about 3 inches in height, the crossed showed
+ a slight advantage over the self-fertilised. When two-thirds grown, the
+ two tallest plants on each side of each pot were measured; the crossed
+ averaged 16.37 inches, and the self-fertilised 11.75 in height; or as 100
+ to 71. When the plants were fully grown and had done flowering, the two
+ tallest plants on each side were again measured, with the results shown in
+ Table 3/27.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 3/27. Salvia coccinea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 32 6/8 : 25. Pot 1 : 20 : 18 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 32 3/8 : 20 6/8. Pot 2 : 24 4/8 : 19 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 29 4/8 : 25. Pot 3 : 28 : 18.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 167.13 : 127.00.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be here seen that each of the six tallest crossed plants exceeds in
+ height its self-fertilised opponent; the former averaged 27.85 inches,
+ whilst the six tallest self-fertilised plants averaged 21.16 inches; or as
+ 100 to 76. In all three pots the first plant which flowered was a crossed
+ one. All the crossed plants together produced 409 flowers, whilst all the
+ self-fertilised together produced only 232 flowers; or as 100 to 57. So
+ that the crossed plants in this respect were far more productive than the
+ self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Origanum vulgare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This plant exists, according to H. Muller, under two forms; one
+ hermaphrodite and strongly proterandrous, so that it is almost certain to
+ be fertilised by pollen from another flower; the other form is exclusively
+ female, has a smaller corolla, and must of course be fertilised by pollen
+ from a distinct plant in order to yield any seeds. The plants on which I
+ experimented were hermaphrodites; they had been cultivated for a long
+ period as a pot-herb in my kitchen garden, and were, like so many
+ long-cultivated plants, extremely sterile. As I felt doubtful about the
+ specific name I sent specimens to Kew, and was assured that the species
+ was Origanum vulgare. My plants formed one great clump, and had evidently
+ spread from a single root by stolons. In a strict sense, therefore, they
+ all belonged to the same individual. My object in experimenting on them
+ was, firstly, to ascertain whether crossing flowers borne by plants having
+ distinct roots, but all derived asexually from the same individual, would
+ be in any respect more advantageous than self-fertilisation; and,
+ secondly, to raise for future trial seedlings which would constitute
+ really distinct individuals. Several plants in the above clump were
+ covered by a net, and about two dozen seeds (many of which, however, were
+ small and withered) were obtained from the flowers thus spontaneously
+ self-fertilised. The remainder of the plants were left uncovered and were
+ incessantly visited by bees, so that they were doubtless crossed by them.
+ These exposed plants yielded rather more and finer seed (but still very
+ few) than did the covered plants. The two lots of seeds thus obtained were
+ sown on opposite sides of two pots; the seedlings were carefully observed
+ from their first growth to maturity, but they did not differ at any period
+ in height or in vigour, the importance of which latter observation we
+ shall presently see. When fully grown, the tallest crossed plant in one
+ pot was a very little taller than the tallest self-fertilised plant on the
+ opposite side, and in the other pot exactly the reverse occurred. So that
+ the two lots were in fact equal; and a cross of this kind did no more good
+ than crossing two flowers on the same plant of Ipomoea or Mimulus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The plants were turned out of the two pots without being disturbed and
+ planted in the open ground, in order that they might grow more vigorously.
+ In the following summer all the self-fertilised and some of the
+ quasi-crossed plants were covered by a net. Many flowers on the latter
+ were crossed by me with pollen from a distinct plant, and others were left
+ to be crossed by the bees. These quasi-crossed plants produced rather more
+ seed than did the original ones in the great clump when left to the action
+ of the bees. Many flowers on the self-fertilised plants were artificially
+ self-fertilised, and others were allowed to fertilise themselves
+ spontaneously under the net, but they yielded altogether very few seeds.
+ These two lots of seeds&mdash;the product of a cross between distinct
+ seedlings, instead of as in the last case between plants multiplied by
+ stolons, and the product of self-fertilised flowers&mdash;were allowed to
+ germinate on bare sand, and several equal pairs were planted on opposite
+ sides of two LARGE pots. At a very early age the crossed plants showed
+ some superiority over the self-fertilised, which was ever afterwards
+ retained. When the plants were fully grown, the two tallest crossed and
+ the two tallest self-fertilised plants in each pot were measured, as shown
+ in Table 3/28. I regret that from want of time I did not measure all the
+ pairs; but the tallest on each side seemed fairly to represent the average
+ difference between the two lots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 3/28. Origanum vulgare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants (two tallest in each pot).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants (two tallest in each pot).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 26 : 24. Pot 1 : 21 : 21.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 17 : 12. Pot 2 : 16 : 11 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 80.0 : 68.5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the crossed plants is here 20 inches, and that of
+ the self-fertilised 17.12; or as 100 to 86. But this excess of height by
+ no means gives a fair idea of the vast superiority in vigour of the
+ crossed over the self-fertilised plants. The crossed flowered first and
+ produced thirty flower-stems, whilst the self-fertilised produced only
+ fifteen, or half the number. The pots were then bedded out, and the roots
+ probably came out of the holes at the bottom and thus aided their growth.
+ Early in the following summer the superiority of the crossed plants, owing
+ to their increase by stolons, over the self-fertilised plants was truly
+ wonderful. In Pot 1, and it should be remembered that very large pots had
+ been used, the oval clump of crossed plants was 10 by 4 1/2 inches across,
+ with the tallest stem, as yet young, 5 1/2 inches in height; whilst the
+ clump of self-fertilised plants, on the opposite side of the same pot, was
+ only 3 1/2 by 2 1/2 inches across, with the tallest young stem 4 inches in
+ height. In Pot 2, the clump of crossed plants was 18 by 9 inches across,
+ with the tallest young stem 8 1/2 inches in height; whilst the clump of
+ self-fertilised plants on the opposite side of the same pot was 12 by 4
+ 1/2 inches across, with the tallest young stem 6 inches in height. The
+ crossed plants during this season, as during the last, flowered first.
+ Both the crossed and self-fertilised plants being left freely exposed to
+ the visits of bees, manifestly produced much more seed than their
+ grand-parents,&mdash;the plants of the original clump still growing close
+ by in the same garden, and equally left to the action of the bees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. ACANTHACEAE.&mdash;Thunbergia alata.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It appears from Hildebrand&rsquo;s description (&lsquo;Botanische Zeitung&rsquo; 1867 page
+ 285) that the conspicuous flowers of this plant are adapted for
+ cross-fertilisation. Seedlings were twice raised from purchased seed; but
+ during the early summer, when first experimented on, they were extremely
+ sterile, many of the anthers containing hardly any pollen. Nevertheless,
+ during the autumn these same plants spontaneously produced a good many
+ seeds. Twenty-six flowers during the two years were crossed with pollen
+ from a distinct plant, but they yielded only eleven capsules; and these
+ contained very few seeds! Twenty-eight flowers were fertilised with pollen
+ from the same flower, and these yielded only ten capsules, which, however,
+ contained rather more seed than the crossed capsules. Eight pairs of
+ germinating seeds were planted on opposite sides of five pots; and exactly
+ half the crossed and half the self-fertilised plants exceeded their
+ opponents in height. Two of the self-fertilised plants died young, before
+ they were measured, and their crossed opponents were thrown away. The six
+ remaining pairs of these grew very unequally, some, both of the crossed
+ and self-fertilised plants, being more than twice as tall as the others.
+ The average height of the crossed plants was 60 inches, and that of the
+ self-fertilised plants 65 inches, or as 100 to 108. A cross, therefore,
+ between distinct individuals here appears to do no good; but this result
+ deduced from so few plants in a very sterile condition and growing very
+ unequally, obviously cannot be trusted.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV. CRUCIFERAE, PAPAVERACEAE, RESEDACEAE, ETC.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Brassica oleracea, crossed and self-fertilised plants.
+ Great effect of a cross with a fresh stock on the weight of the
+ offspring.
+ Iberis umbellata.
+ Papaver vagum.
+ Eschscholtzia californica, seedlings from a cross with a fresh stock not
+ more vigorous, but more fertile than the self-fertilised seedlings.
+ Reseda lutea and odorata, many individuals sterile with their own pollen.
+ Viola tricolor, wonderful effects of a cross.
+ Adonis aestivalis.
+ Delphinium consolida.
+ Viscaria oculata, crossed plants hardly taller, but more fertile than
+ the self-fertilised.
+ Dianthus caryophyllus, crossed and self-fertilised plants compared for
+ four generations.
+ Great effects of a cross with a fresh stock.
+ Uniform colour of the flowers on the self-fertilised plants.
+ Hibiscus africanus.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ [6. CRUCIFERAE.&mdash;Brassica oleracea.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ VAR. CATTELL&rsquo;S EARLY BARNES CABBAGE.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The flowers of the common cabbage are adapted, as shown by H. Muller, for
+ cross-fertilisation, and should this fail, for self-fertilisation. (4/1.
+ &lsquo;Die Befruchtung&rsquo; etc. page 139.) It is well known that the varieties are
+ crossed so largely by insects, that it is impossible to raise pure kinds
+ in the same garden, if more than one kind is in flower at the same time.
+ Cabbages, in one respect, were not well fitted for my experiments, as,
+ after they had formed heads, they were often difficult to measure. The
+ flower-stems also differ much in height; and a poor plant will sometimes
+ throw up a higher stem than that of a fine plant. In the later
+ experiments, the fully-grown plants were cut down and weighed, and then
+ the immense advantage from a cross became manifest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A single plant of the above variety was covered with a net just before
+ flowering, and was crossed with pollen from another plant of the same
+ variety growing close by; and the seven capsules thus produced contained
+ on an average 16.3 seeds, with a maximum of twenty in one capsule. Some
+ flowers were artificially self-fertilised, but their capsules did not
+ contain so many seeds as those from flowers spontaneously self-fertilised
+ under the net, of which a considerable number were produced. Fourteen of
+ these latter capsules contained on an average 4.1 seeds, with a maximum in
+ one of ten seeds; so that the seeds in the crossed capsules were in number
+ to those in the self-fertilised capsules as 100 to 25. The self-fertilised
+ seeds, fifty-eight of which weighed 3.88 grains, were, however, a little
+ finer than those from the crossed capsules, fifty-eight of which weighed
+ 3.76 grains. When few seeds are produced, these seem often to be better
+ nourished and to be heavier than when many are produced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two lots of seeds in an equal state of germination were planted, some
+ on opposite sides of a single pot, and some in the open ground. The young
+ crossed plants in the pot at first exceeded by a little in height the
+ self-fertilised; then equalled them; were then beaten; and lastly were
+ again victorious. The plants, without being disturbed, were turned out of
+ the pot, and planted in the open ground; and after growing for some time,
+ the crossed plants, which were all of nearly the same height, exceeded the
+ self-fertilised ones by 2 inches. When they flowered, the flower-stems of
+ the tallest crossed plant exceeded that of the tallest self-fertilised
+ plant by 6 inches. The other seedlings which were planted in the open
+ ground stood separate, so that they did not compete with one another;
+ nevertheless the crossed plants certainly grew to a rather greater height
+ than the self-fertilised; but no measurements were made. The crossed
+ plants which had been raised in the pot, and those planted in the open
+ ground, all flowered a little before the self-fertilised plants.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Some flowers on the crossed plants of the last generation were again
+ crossed with pollen from another crossed plant, and produced fine
+ capsules. The flowers on the self-fertilised plants of the last generation
+ were allowed to fertilise themselves spontaneously under a net, and they
+ produced some remarkably fine capsules. The two lots of seeds thus
+ produced germinated on sand, and eight pairs were planted on opposite
+ sides of four pots. These plants were measured to the tips of their leaves
+ on the 20th of October of the same year, and the eight crossed plants
+ averaged in height 8.4 inches, whilst the self-fertilised averaged 8.53
+ inches, so that the crossed were a little inferior in height, as 100 to
+ 101.5. By the 5th of June of the following year these plants had grown
+ much bulkier, and had begun to form heads. The crossed had now acquired a
+ marked superiority in general appearance, and averaged 8.02 inches in
+ height, whilst the self-fertilised averaged 7.31 inches; or as 100 to 91.
+ The plants were then turned out of their pots and planted undisturbed in
+ the open ground. By the 5th of August their heads were fully formed, but
+ several had grown so crooked that their heights could hardly be measured
+ with accuracy. The crossed plants, however, were on the whole considerably
+ taller than the self-fertilised. In the following year they flowered; the
+ crossed plants flowering before the self-fertilised in three of the pots,
+ and at the same time in Pot 2. The flower-stems were now measured, as
+ shown in Table 4/29.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 3/29. Brassica oleracea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Measured in inches to tops of flower-stems: 0 signifies that a Flower-stem
+ was not formed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 49 2/8 : 44. Pot 1 : 39 4/8 : 41.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 37 4/8 : 38. Pot 2 : 33 4/8 : 35 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 47 : 51 1/8. Pot 3 : 40 : 41 2/8. Pot 3 : 42 : 46 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 43 6/8 : 20 2/8. Pot 4 : 37 2/8 : 33 3/8. Pot 4 : 0 : 0.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 369.75 : 351.00.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nine flower-stems on the crossed plants here average 41.08 inches, and
+ the nine on the self-fertilised plants 39 inches in height, or as 100 to
+ 95. But this small difference, which, moreover, depended almost wholly on
+ one of the self-fertilised plants being only 20 inches high, does not in
+ the least show the vast superiority of the crossed over the
+ self-fertilised plants. Both lots, including the two plants in Pot 4,
+ which did not flower, were now cut down close to the ground and weighed,
+ but those in Pot 2 were excluded, for they had been accidentally injured
+ by a fall during transplantation, and one was almost killed. The eight
+ crossed plants weighed 219 ounces, whilst the eight self-fertilised plants
+ weighed only 82 ounces, or as 100 to 37; so that the superiority of the
+ former over the latter in weight was great.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ THE EFFECTS OF A CROSS WITH A FRESH STOCK.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Some flowers on a crossed plant of the last or second generation were
+ fertilised, without being castrated, by pollen taken from a plant of the
+ same variety, but not related to my plants, and brought from a nursery
+ garden (whence my seeds originally came) having a different soil and
+ aspect. The flowers on the self-fertilised plants of the last or second
+ generation (Table 4/29) were allowed to fertilise themselves spontaneously
+ under a net, and yielded plenty of seeds. These latter and the crossed
+ seeds, after germinating on sand, were planted in pairs on the opposite
+ sides of six large pots, which were kept at first in a cool greenhouse.
+ Early in January their heights were measured to the tips of their leaves.
+ The thirteen crossed plants averaged 13.16 inches in height, and the
+ twelve (for one had died) self-fertilised plants averaged 13.7 inches, or
+ as 100 to 104; so that the self-fertilised plants exceeded by a little the
+ crossed plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 3/30. Brassica oleracea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Weights in ounces of plants after they had formed heads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants from Pollen of fresh Stock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants of the Third Generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 130 : 18 2/4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 74 : 34 3/4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 121 : 17 2/4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 127 2/4 : 14.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 90 : 11 2/4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 6 : 106 2/4 : 46.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 649.00 : 142.25.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in the spring the plants were gradually hardened, and turned out of
+ their pots into the open ground without being disturbed. By the end of
+ August the greater number had formed fine heads, but several grew
+ extremely crooked, from having been drawn up to the light whilst in the
+ greenhouse. As it was scarcely possible to measure their heights, the
+ finest plant on each side of each pot was cut down close to the ground and
+ weighed. In Table 4/30 we have the result.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The six finest crossed plants average 108.16 ounces, whilst the six finest
+ self-fertilised plants average only 23.7 ounces, or as 100 to 22. This
+ difference shows in the clearest manner the enormous benefit which these
+ plants derived from a cross with another plant belonging to the same
+ sub-variety, but to a fresh stock, and grown during at least the three
+ previous generations under somewhat different conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE OFFSPRING FROM A CUT-LEAVED, CURLED, AND VARIEGATED WHITE-GREEN
+ CABBAGE CROSSED WITH A CUT-LEAVED, CURLED, AND VARIEGATED CRIMSON-GREEN
+ CABBAGE, COMPARED WITH THE SELF-FERTILISED OFFSPRING FROM THE TWO
+ VARIETIES.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These trials were made, not for the sake of comparing the growth of the
+ crossed and self-fertilised seedlings, but because I had seen it stated
+ that these varieties would not naturally intercross when growing uncovered
+ and near one another. This statement proved quite erroneous; but the
+ white-green variety was in some degree sterile in my garden, producing
+ little pollen and few seeds. It was therefore no wonder that seedlings
+ raised from the self-fertilised flowers of this variety were greatly
+ exceeded in height by seedlings from a cross between it and the more
+ vigorous crimson-green variety; and nothing more need be said about this
+ experiment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seedlings from the reciprocal cross, that is, from the crimson-green
+ variety fertilised with pollen from the white-green variety, offer a
+ somewhat more curious case. A few of these crossed seedlings reverted to a
+ pure green variety with their leaves less cut and curled, so that they
+ were altogether in a much more natural state, and these plants grew more
+ vigorously and taller than any of the others. Now it is a strange fact
+ that a much larger number of the self-fertilised seedlings from the
+ crimson-green variety than of the crossed seedlings thus reverted; and as
+ a consequence the self-fertilised seedlings grew taller by 2 1/2 inches on
+ an average than the crossed seedlings, with which they were put into
+ competition. At first, however, the crossed seedlings exceeded the
+ self-fertilised by an average of a quarter of an inch. We thus see that
+ reversion to a more natural condition acted more powerfully in favouring
+ the ultimate growth of these plants than did a cross; but it should be
+ remembered that the cross was with a semi-sterile variety having a feeble
+ constitution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Iberis umbellata.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ VAR. KERMESIANA.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ This variety produced plenty of spontaneously self-fertilised seed under a
+ net. Other plants in pots in the greenhouse were left uncovered, and as I
+ saw small flies visiting the flowers, it seemed probable that they would
+ be intercrossed. Consequently seeds supposed to have been thus crossed and
+ spontaneously self-fertilised seeds were sown on opposite sides of a pot.
+ The self-fertilised seedlings grew from the first quicker than the
+ supposed crossed seedlings, and when both lots were in full flower the
+ former were from 5 to 6 inches higher than the crossed! I record in my
+ notes that the self-fertilised seeds from which these self-fertilised
+ plants were raised were not so well ripened as the crossed; and this may
+ possibly have caused the great difference in their growth, in a somewhat
+ analogous manner as occurred with the self-fertilised plants of the eighth
+ generation of Ipomoea raised from unhealthy parents. It is a curious
+ circumstance, that two other lots of the above seeds were sown in pure
+ sand mixed with burnt earth, and therefore without any organic matter; and
+ here the supposed crossed seedlings grew to double the height of the
+ self-fertilised, before both lots died, as necessarily occurred at an
+ early period. We shall hereafter meet with another case apparently
+ analogous to this of Iberis in the third generation of Petunia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The above self-fertilised plants were allowed to fertilise themselves
+ again under a net, yielding self-fertilised plants of the second
+ generation, and the supposed crossed plants were crossed by pollen of a
+ distinct plant; but from want of time this was done in a careless manner,
+ namely, by smearing one head of expanded flowers over another. I should
+ have thought that this would have succeeded, and perhaps it did so; but
+ the fact of 108 of the self-fertilised seeds weighing 4.87 grains, whilst
+ the same number of the supposed crossed seeds weighed only 3.57 grains,
+ does not look like it. Five seedlings from each lot of seeds were raised,
+ and the self-fertilised plants, when fully grown, exceeded in average
+ height by a trifle (namely .4 of an inch) the five probably crossed
+ plants. I have thought it right to give this case and the last, because
+ had the supposed crossed plants proved superior to the self-fertilised in
+ height, I should have assumed without doubt that the former had really
+ been crossed. As it is, I do not know what to conclude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Being much surprised at the two foregoing trials, I determined to make
+ another, in which there should be no doubt about the crossing. I therefore
+ fertilised with great care (but as usual without castration) twenty-four
+ flowers on the supposed crossed plants of the last generation with pollen
+ from distinct plants, and thus obtained twenty-one capsules. The
+ self-fertilised plants of the last generation were allowed to fertilise
+ themselves again under a net, and the seedlings reared from these seeds
+ formed the third self-fertilised generation. Both lots of seeds, after
+ germinating on bare sand, were planted in pairs on the opposite sides of
+ two pots. All the remaining seeds were sown crowded on opposite sides of a
+ third pot; but as all the self-fertilised seedlings in this latter pot
+ died before they grew to any considerable height, they were not measured.
+ The plants in Pots 1 and 2 were measured when between 7 and 8 inches in
+ height, and the crossed exceeded the self-fertilised in average height by
+ 1.57 inches. When fully grown they were again measured to the summits of
+ their flower-heads, with the following result:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 4/31. Iberis umbellata.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants to the summits of their flower-heads, in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants of the Third Generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 18 : 19. Pot 1 : 21 : 21. Pot 1 : 18 2/8 : 19 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 19 : 16 6/8. Pot 2 : 18 4/8 : 7 4/8. Pot 2 : 17 6/8 : 14 4/8. Pot
+ 2 : 21 3/8 : 16 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 133.88 : 114.75.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the seven crossed plants is here 19.12 inches, and
+ that of the seven self-fertilised plants 16.39, or as 100 to 86. But as
+ the plants on the self-fertilised side grew very unequally, this ratio
+ cannot be fully trusted, and is probably too high. In both pots a crossed
+ plant flowered before any one of the self-fertilised. These plants were
+ left uncovered in the greenhouse; but from being too much crowded they
+ were not very productive. The seeds from all seven plants of both lots
+ were counted; the crossed produced 206, and the self-fertilised 154; or as
+ 100 to 75.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSS BY A FRESH STOCK.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ From the doubts caused by the two first trials, in which it was not known
+ with certainty that the plants had been crossed; and from the crossed
+ plants in the last experiment having been put into competition with plants
+ self-fertilised for three generations, which moreover grew very unequally,
+ I resolved to repeat the trial on a larger scale, and in a rather
+ different manner. I obtained seeds of the same crimson variety of Iberis
+ umbellata from another nursery garden, and raised plants from them. Some
+ of these plants were allowed to fertilise themselves spontaneously under a
+ net; others were crossed by pollen taken from plants raised from seed sent
+ me by Dr. Durando from Algiers, where the parent-plants had been
+ cultivated for some generations. These latter plants differed in having
+ pale pink instead of crimson flowers, but in no other respect. That the
+ cross had been effective (though the flowers on the crimson mother-plant
+ had NOT been castrated) was well shown when the thirty crossed seedlings
+ flowered, for twenty-four of them produced pale pink flowers, exactly like
+ those of their father; the six others having crimson flowers exactly like
+ those of their mother and like those of all the self-fertilised seedlings.
+ This case offers a good instance of a result which not rarely follows from
+ crossing varieties having differently coloured flowers; namely, that the
+ colours do not blend, but resemble perfectly those either of the father or
+ mother plant. The seeds of both lots, after germinating on sand, were
+ planted on opposite sides of eight pots. When fully grown, the plants were
+ measured to the summits of the flower-heads, as shown in Table 4/32.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 4/32. Iberis umbellata.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Height of Plants to the summits of the flower-heads, measured in inches: 0
+ signifies that the Plant died.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Plants from a Cross with a fresh Stock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Plants from Spontaneously Self-fertilised Seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 18 6/8 : 17 3/8. Pot 1 : 17 5/8 : 16 7/8. Pot 1 : 17 6/8 : 13 1/8.
+ Pot 1 : 20 1/8 : 15 3/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 20 2/8 : 0. Pot 2 : 15 7/8 : 16 6/8. Pot 2 : 17 : 15 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 19 2/8 : 13 6/8. Pot 3 : 18 1/8 : 14 2/8. Pot 3 : 15 2/8 : 13 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 17 1/8 : 16 4/8. Pot 4 : 18 7/8 : 14 4/8. Pot 4 : 17 5/8 : 16. Pot
+ 4 : 15 6/8 : 15 3/8. Pot 4 : 14 4/8 : 14 7/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 18 1/8 : 16 4/8. Pot 5 : 14 7/8 : 16 2/8. Pot 5 : 16 2/8 : 14 2/8.
+ Pot 5 : 15 5/8 : 14 2/8. Pot 5 : 12 4/8 : 16 1/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 6 : 18 6/8 : 16 1/8. Pot 6 : 18 6/8 : 15. Pot 6 : 17 3/8 : 15 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 7 : 18 : 16 3/8. Pot 7 : 16 4/8 : 14 4/8. Pot 7 : 18 2/8 : 13 5/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 8 : 20 6/8 : 15 6/8. Pot 8 : 17 7/8 : 16 3/8. Pot 8 : 13 5/8 : 20 2/8.
+ Pot 8 : 19 2/8 : 15 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 520.38 : 449.88.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the thirty crossed plants is here 17.34, and that of
+ the twenty-nine self-fertilised plants (one having died) 15.51, or as 100
+ to 89. I am surprised that the difference did not prove somewhat greater,
+ considering that in the last experiment it was as 100 to 86; but this
+ latter ratio, as before explained, was probably too great. It should,
+ however, be observed that in the last experiment (Table 4/31), the crossed
+ plants competed with plants of the third self-fertilised generation;
+ whilst in the present case, plants derived from a cross with a fresh stock
+ competed with self-fertilised plants of the first generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crossed plants in the present case, as in the last, were more fertile
+ than the self-fertilised, both lots being left uncovered in the
+ greenhouse. The thirty crossed plants produced 103 seed-bearing
+ flowers-heads, as well as some heads which yielded no seeds; whereas the
+ twenty-nine self-fertilised plants produced only 81 seed-bearing heads;
+ therefore thirty such plants would have produced 83.7 heads. We thus get
+ the ratio of 100 to 81, for the number of seed-bearing flower-heads
+ produced by the crossed and self-fertilised plants. Moreover, a number of
+ seed-bearing heads from the crossed plants, compared with the same number
+ from the self-fertilised, yielded seeds by weight, in the ratio of 100 to
+ 92. Combining these two elements, namely, the number of seed-bearing heads
+ and the weight of seeds in each head, the productiveness of the crossed to
+ the self-fertilised plants was as 100 to 75.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crossed and self-fertilised seeds, which remained after the above
+ pairs had been planted, (some in a state of germination and some not so),
+ were sown early in the year out of doors in two rows. Many of the
+ self-fertilised seedlings suffered greatly, and a much larger number of
+ them perished than of the crossed. In the autumn the surviving
+ self-fertilised plants were plainly less well-grown than the crossed
+ plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. PAPAVERACEAE.&mdash;Papaver vagum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A SUB-SPECIES OF Papaver dubium, FROM THE SOUTH OF FRANCE.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poppy does not secrete nectar, but the flowers are highly conspicuous
+ and are visited by many pollen-collecting bees, flies and beetles. The
+ anthers shed their pollen very early, and in the case of Papaver rhoeas,
+ it falls on the circumference of the radiating stigmas, so that this
+ species must often be self-fertilised; but with Papaver dubium the same
+ result does not follow (according to H. Muller &lsquo;Die Befruchtung&rsquo; page
+ 128), owing to the shortness of the stamens, unless the flower happens to
+ stand inclined. The present species, therefore, does not seem so well
+ fitted for self-fertilisation as most of the others. Nevertheless Papaver
+ vagum produced plenty of capsules in my garden when insects were excluded,
+ but only late in the season. I may here add that Papaver somniferum
+ produces an abundance of spontaneously self-fertilised capsules, as
+ Professor H. Hoffmann likewise found to be the case. (4/2. &lsquo;Zur
+ Speciesfrage&rsquo; 1875 page 53.) Some species of Papaver cross freely when
+ growing in the same garden, as I have known to be the case with Papaver
+ bracteatum and orientale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Plants of Papaver vagum were raised from seeds sent me from Antibes
+ through the kindness of Dr. Bornet. Some little time after the flowers had
+ expanded, several were fertilised with their own pollen, and others (not
+ castrated) with pollen from a distinct individual; but I have reason to
+ believe, from observations subsequently made, that these flowers had been
+ already fertilised by their own pollen, as this process seems to take
+ place soon after their expansion. (4/3. Mr. J. Scott found &lsquo;Report on the
+ Experimental Culture of the Opium Poppy&rsquo; Calcutta 1874 page 47, in the
+ case of Papaver somniferum, that if he cut away the stigmatic surface
+ before the flower had expanded, no seeds were produced; but if this was
+ done &ldquo;on the second day, or even a few hours after the expansion of the
+ flower on the first day, a partial fertilisation had already been
+ effected, and a few good seeds were almost invariably produced.&rdquo; This
+ proves at how early a period fertilisation takes place.) I raised,
+ however, a few seedlings of both lots, and the self-fertilised rather
+ exceeded the crossed plants in height.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in the following year I acted differently, and fertilised seven
+ flowers, very soon after their expansion, with pollen from another plant,
+ and obtained six capsules. From counting the seeds in a medium-sized one,
+ I estimated that the average number in each was at least 120. Four out of
+ twelve capsules, spontaneously self-fertilised at the same time, were
+ found to contain no good seeds; and the remaining eight contained on an
+ average 6.6 seeds per capsule. But it should be observed that later in the
+ season the same plants produced under a net plenty of very fine
+ spontaneously self-fertilised capsules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The above two lots of seeds, after germinating on sand, were planted in
+ pairs on opposite sides of five pots. The two lots of seedlings, when half
+ an inch in height, and again when 6 inches high, were measured to the tips
+ of their leaves, but presented no difference. When fully grown, the
+ flower-stalks were measured to the summits of the seed capsules, with the
+ following result:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 4/33. Papaver vagum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of flower-stalks to the summits of the seed capsules measured in
+ inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 24 2/8 : 21. Pot 1 : 30 : 26 5/8. Pot 1 : 18 4/8 : 16.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 14 4/8 : 15 3/8. Pot 2 : 22 : 20 1/8. Pot 2 : 19 5/8 : 14 1/8. Pot
+ 2 : 21 5/8 : 16 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 20 6/8 : 19 2/8. Pot 3 : 20 2/8 : 13 2/8. Pot 3 : 20 6/8 : 18.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 25 3/8 : 23 2/8. Pot 4 : 24 2/8 : 23.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 20 : 18 3/8. Pot 5 : 27 7/8 : 27. Pot 5 : 19 : 21 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 328.75 : 293.13.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fifteen crossed plants here average 21.91 inches, and the fifteen
+ self-fertilised plants 19.54 inches in height, or as 100 to 89. These
+ plants did not differ in fertility, as far as could be judged by the
+ number of capsules produced, for there were seventy-five on the crossed
+ side and seventy-four on the self-fertilised side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eschscholtzia californica.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This plant is remarkable from the crossed seedlings not exceeding in
+ height or vigour the self-fertilised. On the other hand, a cross greatly
+ increases the productiveness of the flowers on the parent-plant, and is
+ indeed sometimes necessary in order that they should produce any seed;
+ moreover, plants thus derived are themselves much more fertile than those
+ raised from self-fertilised flowers; so that the whole advantage of a
+ cross is confined to the reproductive system. It will be necessary for me
+ to give this singular case in considerable detail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twelve flowers on some plants in my flower-garden were fertilised with
+ pollen from distinct plants, and produced twelve capsules; but one of
+ these contained no good seed. The seeds of the eleven good capsules
+ weighed 17.4 grains. Eighteen flowers on the same plants were fertilised
+ with their own pollen and produced twelve good capsules, which contained
+ 13.61 grains weight of seed. Therefore an equal number of crossed and
+ self-fertilised capsules would have yielded seed by weight as 100 to 71.
+ (4/4. Professor Hildebrand experimented on plants in Germany on a larger
+ scale than I did, and found them much more self-fertile. Eighteen
+ capsules, produced by cross-fertilisation, contained on an average
+ eighty-five seeds, whilst fourteen capsules from self-fertilised flowers
+ contained on an average only nine seeds; that is, as 100 to 11: &lsquo;Jahrb.
+ fur Wissen Botanik.&rsquo; B. 7 page 467.) If we take into account of the fact
+ that a much greater proportion of flowers produced capsules when crossed
+ than when self-fertilised, the relative fertility of the crossed to the
+ self-fertilised flowers was as 100 to 52. Nevertheless these plants,
+ whilst still protected by the net, spontaneously produced a considerable
+ number of self-fertilised capsules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seeds of the two lots after germinating on sand were planted in pairs
+ on the opposite sides of four large pots. At first there was no difference
+ in their growth, but ultimately the crossed seedlings exceeded the
+ self-fertilised considerably in height, as shown in Table 4/34. But I
+ believe from the cases which follow that this result was accidental, owing
+ to only a few plants having been measured, and to one of the
+ self-fertilised plants having grown only to a height of 15 inches. The
+ plants had been kept in the greenhouse, and from being drawn up to the
+ light had to be tied to sticks in this and the following trials. They were
+ measured to the summits of their flower-stems.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 4/34. Eschscholtzia californica.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of Plants to the summits of their flower-stems measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 33 4/8 : 25.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 34 2/8 : 35.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 29 : 27 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 22 : 15.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 118.75 : 102.25.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The four crossed plants here average 29.68 inches, and the four
+ self-fertilised 25.56 in height; or as 100 to 86. The remaining seeds were
+ sown in a large pot in which a Cineraria had long been growing; and in
+ this case again the two crossed plants on the one side greatly exceeded in
+ height the two self-fertilised plants on the opposite side. The plants in
+ the above four pots from having been kept in the greenhouse did not
+ produce on this or any other similar occasion many capsules; but the
+ flowers on the crossed plants when again crossed were much more productive
+ than the flowers on the self-fertilised plants when again self-fertilised.
+ These plants after seeding were cut down and kept in the greenhouse; and
+ in the following year, when grown again, their relative heights were
+ reversed, as the self-fertilised plants in three out of the four pots were
+ now taller than and flowered before the crossed plants.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The fact just given with respect to the growth of the cut-down plants made
+ me doubtful about my first trial, so I determined to make another on a
+ larger scale with crossed and self-fertilised seedlings raised from the
+ crossed and self-fertilised plants of the last generation. Eleven pairs
+ were raised and grown in competition in the usual manner; and now the
+ result was different, for the two lots were nearly equal during their
+ whole growth. It would therefore be superfluous to give a table of their
+ heights. When fully grown and measured, the crossed averaged 32.47, and
+ the self-fertilised 32.81 inches in height; or as 100 to 101. There was no
+ great difference in the number of flowers and capsules produced by the two
+ lots when both were left freely exposed to the visits of insects.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ PLANTS RAISED FROM BRAZILIAN SEED.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Fritz Muller sent me from South Brazil seeds of plants which were there
+ absolutely sterile when fertilised with pollen from the same plant, but
+ were perfectly fertile when fertilised with pollen from any other plant.
+ The plants raised by me in England from these seeds were examined by
+ Professor Asa Gray, and pronounced to belong to E. Californica, with which
+ they were identical in general appearance. Two of these plants were
+ covered by a net, and were found not to be so completely self-sterile as
+ in Brazil. But I shall recur to this subject in another part of this work.
+ Here it will suffice to state that eight flowers on these two plants,
+ fertilised with pollen from another plant under the net, produced eight
+ fine capsules, each containing on an average about eighty seeds. Eight
+ flowers on these same plants, fertilised with their own pollen, produced
+ seven capsules, which contained on an average only twelve seeds, with a
+ maximum in one of sixteen seeds. Therefore the cross-fertilised capsules,
+ compared with the self-fertilised, yielded seeds in the ratio of about 100
+ to 15. These plants of Brazilian parentage differed also in a marked
+ manner from the English plants in producing extremely few spontaneously
+ self-fertilised capsules under a net.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Crossed and self-fertilised seeds from the above plants, after germinating
+ on bare sand, were planted in pairs on the opposite sides of five large
+ pots. The seedlings thus raised were the grandchildren of the plants which
+ grew in Brazil; the parents having been grown in England. As the
+ grandparents in Brazil absolutely require cross-fertilisation in order to
+ yield any seeds, I expected that self-fertilisation would have proved very
+ injurious to these seedlings, and that the crossed ones would have been
+ greatly superior in height and vigour to those raised from self-fertilised
+ flowers. But the result showed that my anticipation was erroneous; for as
+ in the last experiment with plants of the English stock, so in the present
+ one, the self-fertilised plants exceeded the crossed by a little in
+ height. It will be sufficient to state that the fourteen crossed plants
+ averaged 44.64, and the fourteen self-fertilised 45.12 inches in height;
+ or as 100 to 101.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ THE EFFECTS OF A CROSS WITH A FRESH STOCK.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I now tried a different experiment. Eight flowers on the self-fertilised
+ plants of the last experiment (i.e., grandchildren of the plants which
+ grew in Brazil) were again fertilised with pollen from the same plant, and
+ produced five capsules, containing on an average 27.4 seeds, with a
+ maximum in one of forty-two seeds. The seedlings raised from these seeds
+ formed the second SELF-FERTILISED generation of the Brazilian stock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eight flowers on one of the crossed plants of the last experiment were
+ crossed with pollen from another grandchild, and produced five capsules.
+ These contained on an average 31.6 seeds, with a maximum in one of
+ forty-nine seeds. The seedlings raised from these seeds may be called the
+ INTERCROSSED.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lastly, eight other flowers on the crossed plants of the last experiment
+ were fertilised with pollen from a plant of the English stock, growing in
+ my garden, and which must have been exposed during many previous
+ generations to very different conditions from those to which the Brazilian
+ progenitors of the mother-plant had been subjected. These eight flowers
+ produced only four capsules, containing on an average 63.2 seeds, with a
+ maximum in one of ninety. The plants raised from these seeds may be called
+ the ENGLISH-CROSSED. As far as the above averages can be trusted from so
+ few capsules, the English-crossed capsules contained twice as many seeds
+ as the intercrossed, and rather more than twice as many as the
+ self-fertilised capsules. The plants which yielded these capsules were
+ grown in pots in the greenhouse, so that their absolute productiveness
+ must not be compared with that of plants growing out of doors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The above three lots of seeds, namely, the self-fertilised, intercrossed,
+ and English-crossed, were planted in an equal state of germination (having
+ been as usual sown on bare sand) in nine large pots, each divided into
+ three parts by superficial partitions. Many of the self-fertilised seeds
+ germinated before those of the two crossed lots, and these were of course
+ rejected. The seedlings thus raised are the great-grandchildren of the
+ plants which grew in Brazil. When they were from 2 to 4 inches in height,
+ the three lots were equal. They were measured when four-fifths grown, and
+ again when fully grown, and as their relative heights were almost exactly
+ the same at these two ages, I will give only the last measurements. The
+ average height of the nineteen English-crossed plants was 45.92 inches;
+ that of the eighteen intercrossed plants (for one died), 43.38; and that
+ of the nineteen self-fertilised plants, 50.3 inches. So that we have the
+ following ratios in height:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The English-crossed to the self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 109.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The English-crossed to the intercrossed plants, as 100 to 94.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The intercrossed to the self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 116.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the seed-capsules had been gathered, all these plants were cut down
+ close to the ground and weighed. The nineteen English crossed plants
+ weighed 18.25 ounces; the intercrossed plants (with their weight
+ calculated as if there had been nineteen) weighed 18.2 ounces; and the
+ nineteen self-fertilised plants, 21.5 ounces. We have therefore for the
+ weights of the three lots of plants the following ratios:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The English-crossed to the self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 118.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The English-crossed to the intercrossed plants, as 100 to 100.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The intercrossed to the self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 118.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We thus see that in weight, as in height, the self-fertilised plants had a
+ decided advantage over the English-crossed and intercrossed plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The remaining seeds of the three kinds, whether or not in a state of
+ germination, were sown in three long parallel rows in the open ground; and
+ here again the self-fertilised seedlings exceeded in height by between 2
+ and 3 inches the seedlings in the two other rows, which were of nearly
+ equal heights. The three rows were left unprotected throughout the winter,
+ and all the plants were killed, with the exception of two of the
+ self-fertilised; so that as far as this little bit of evidence goes, some
+ of the self-fertilised plants were more hardy than any of the crossed
+ plants of either lot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We thus see that the self-fertilised plants which were grown in the nine
+ pots were superior in height (as 116 to 100), and in weight (as 118 to
+ 100), and apparently in hardiness, to the intercrossed plants derived from
+ a cross between the grandchildren of the Brazilian stock. The superiority
+ is here much more strongly marked than in the second trial with the plants
+ of the English stock, in which the self-fertilised were to the crossed in
+ height as 101 to 100. It is a far more remarkable fact&mdash;if we bear in
+ mind the effects of crossing plants with pollen from a fresh stock in the
+ cases of Ipomoea, Mimulus, Brassica, and Iberis&mdash;that the
+ self-fertilised plants exceeded in height (as 109 to 100), and in weight
+ (as 118 to 100), the offspring of the Brazilian stock crossed by the
+ English stock; the two stocks having been long subjected to widely
+ different conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we now turn to the fertility of the three lots of plants we find a very
+ different result. I may premise that in five out of the nine pots the
+ first plant which flowered was one of the English-crossed; in four of the
+ pots it was a self-fertilised plant; and in not one did an intercrossed
+ plant flower first; so that these latter plants were beaten in this
+ respect, as in so many other ways. The three closely adjoining rows of
+ plants growing in the open ground flowered profusely, and the flowers were
+ incessantly visited by bees, and certainly thus intercrossed. The manner
+ in which several plants in the previous experiments continued to be almost
+ sterile as long as they were covered by a net, but set a multitude of
+ capsules immediately that they were uncovered, proves how effectually the
+ bees carry pollen from plant to plant. My gardener gathered, at three
+ successive times, an equal number of ripe capsules from the plants of the
+ three lots, until he had collected forty-five from each lot. It is not
+ possible to judge from external appearance whether or not a capsule
+ contains any good seeds; so that I opened all the capsules. Of the
+ forty-five from the English-crossed plants, four were empty; of those from
+ the intercrossed, five were empty; and of those from the self-fertilised,
+ nine were empty. The seeds were counted in twenty-one capsules taken by
+ chance out of each lot, and the average number of seeds in the capsules
+ from the English-crossed plants was 67; from the intercrossed, 56; and
+ from the self-fertilised, 48.52. It therefore follows that:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The forty-five capsules (the four empty ones included) from the
+ English-crossed plants contained 2747 seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The forty-five capsules (the five empty ones included) from the
+ intercrossed plants contained 2240 seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The forty-five capsules (the nine empty ones included) from the
+ self-fertilised plants contained 1746.7 seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader should remember that these capsules are the product of
+ cross-fertilisation, effected by the bees; and that the difference in the
+ number of the contained seeds must depend on the constitution of the
+ plants;&mdash;that is, on whether they were derived from a cross with a
+ distinct stock, or from a cross between plants of the same stock, or from
+ self-fertilisation. From the above facts we obtain the following ratios:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Number of seeds contained in an equal number of naturally fertilised
+ capsules produced:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the English-crossed and self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 63.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the English-crossed and intercrossed plants, as 100 to 81.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the intercrossed and self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 78.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But to have ascertained the productiveness of the three lots of plants, it
+ would have been necessary to know how many capsules were produced by the
+ same number of plants. The three long rows, however, were not of quite
+ equal lengths, and the plants were much crowded, so that it would have
+ been extremely difficult to have ascertained how many capsules were
+ produced by them, even if I had been willing to undertake so laborious a
+ task as to collect and count all the capsules. But this was feasible with
+ the plants grown in pots in the greenhouse; and although these were much
+ less fertile than those growing out of doors, their relative fertility
+ appeared, after carefully observing them, to be the same. The nineteen
+ plants of the English-crossed stock in the pots produced altogether 240
+ capsules; the intercrossed plants (calculated as nineteen) produced 137.22
+ capsules; and the nineteen self-fertilised plants, 152 capsules. Now,
+ knowing the number of seeds contained in forty-five capsules of each lot,
+ it is easy to calculate the relative numbers of seeds produced by an equal
+ number of the plants of the three lots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Number of seeds produced by an equal number of naturally-fertilised
+ plants:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Plants of English-crossed and self-fertilised parentage, as 100 to 40
+ seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Plants of English-crossed and intercrossed parentage, as 100 to 45 seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Plants of intercrossed and self-fertilised parentage, as 100 to 89 seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The superiority in productiveness of the intercrossed plants (that is, the
+ product of a cross between the grandchildren of the plants which grew in
+ Brazil) over the self-fertilised, small as it is, is wholly due to the
+ larger average number of seeds contained in the capsules; for the
+ intercrossed plants produced fewer capsules in the greenhouse than did the
+ self-fertilised plants. The great superiority in productiveness of the
+ English-crossed over the self-fertilised plants is shown by the larger
+ number of capsules produced, the larger average number of contained seeds,
+ and the smaller number of empty capsules. As the English-crossed and
+ intercrossed plants were the offspring of crosses in every previous
+ generation (as must have been the case from the flowers being sterile with
+ their own pollen), we may conclude that the great superiority in
+ productiveness of the English-crossed over the intercrossed plants is due
+ to the two parents of the former having been long subjected to different
+ conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The English-crossed plants, though so superior in productiveness, were, as
+ we have seen, decidedly inferior in height and weight to the
+ self-fertilised, and only equal to, or hardly superior to, the
+ intercrossed plants. Therefore, the whole advantage of a cross with a
+ distinct stock is here confined to productiveness, and I have met with no
+ similar case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. RESEDACEAE.&mdash;Reseda lutea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeds collected from wild plants growing in this neighbourhood were sown
+ in the kitchen-garden; and several of the seedlings thus raised were
+ covered with a net. Of these, some were found (as will hereafter be more
+ fully described) to be absolutely sterile when left to fertilise
+ themselves spontaneously, although plenty of pollen fell on their stigmas;
+ and they were equally sterile when artificially and repeatedly fertilised
+ with their own pollen; whilst other plants produced a few spontaneously
+ self-fertilised capsules. The remaining plants were left uncovered, and as
+ pollen was carried from plant to plant by the hive and humble-bees which
+ incessantly visit the flowers, they produced an abundance of capsules. Of
+ the necessity of pollen being carried from one plant to another, I had
+ ample evidence in the case of this species and of R. odorata; for those
+ plants, which set no seeds or very few as long as they were protected from
+ insects, became loaded with capsules immediately that they were uncovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeds from the flowers spontaneously self-fertilised under the net, and
+ from flowers naturally crossed by the bees, were sown on opposite sides of
+ five large pots. The seedlings were thinned as soon as they appeared above
+ ground, so that an equal number were left on the two sides. After a time
+ the pots were plunged into the open ground. The same number of plants of
+ crossed and self-fertilised parentage were measured up to the summits of
+ their flower-stems, with the result given in Table 4/35. Those which did
+ not produce flower-stems were not measured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 4/35. Reseda lutea, in pots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants to the summits of the flower-stems measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 21 : 12 7/8. Pot 1 : 14 2/8 : 16. Pot 1 : 19 1/8 : 11 7/8. Pot 1 :
+ 7 : 15 2/8. Pot 1 : 15 1/8 : 19 1/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 20 4/8 : 12 4/8. Pot 2 : 17 3/8 : 16 2/8. Pot 2 : 23 7/8 : 16 2/8.
+ Pot 2 : 17 1/8 : 13 3/8. Pot 2 : 20 6/8 : 13 5/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 16 1/8 : 14 4/8. Pot 3 : 17 6/8 : 19 4/8. Pot 3 : 16 2/8 : 20 7/8.
+ Pot 3 : 10 : 7 7/8. Pot 3 : 10 : 17 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 22 1/8 : 9. Pot 4 : 19 : 11 4/8. Pot 4 : 18 7/8 : 11. Pot 4 : 16
+ 4/8 : 16. Pot 4 : 19 2/8 : 16 3/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 25 2/8 : 14 6/8. Pot 5 : 22 : 16. Pot 5 : 8 6/8 : 14 3/8. Pot 5 :
+ 14 2/8 : 14 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 412.25 : 350.86.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the twenty-four crossed plants is here 17.17 inches,
+ and that of the same number of self-fertilised plants 14.61; or as 100 to
+ 85. Of the crossed plants all but five flowered, whilst several of the
+ self-fertilised did not do so. The above pairs, whilst still in flower,
+ but with some capsules already formed, were afterwards cut down and
+ weighed. The crossed weighed 90.5 ounces; and an equal number of the
+ self-fertilised only 19 ounces, or as 100 to 21; and this is an
+ astonishing difference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeds of the same two lots were also sown in two adjoining rows in the
+ open ground. There were twenty crossed plants in the one row and
+ thirty-two self-fertilised plants in the other row, so that the experiment
+ was not quite fair; but not so unfair as it at first appears, for the
+ plants in the same row were not crowded so much as seriously to interfere
+ with each other&rsquo;s growth, and the ground was bare on the outside of both
+ rows. These plants were better nourished than those in the pots and grew
+ to a greater height. The eight tallest plants in each row were measured in
+ the same manner as before, with the following result:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 4/36. Reseda lutea, growing in the open ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants to the summits of the flower-stems measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 28 : 33 2/8.
+ 27 3/8 : 23.
+ 27 5/8 : 21 5/8.
+ 28 6/8 : 20 4/8.
+ 29 7/8 : 21 5/8.
+ 26 6/8 : 22.
+ 26 2/8 : 21 2/8.
+ 30 1/8 : 21 7/8.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Total : 224.75 : 185.13
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the crossed plants, whilst in full flower, was here
+ 28.09, and that of the self-fertilised 23.14 inches; or as 100 to 82. It
+ is a singular fact that the tallest plant in the two rows, was one of the
+ self-fertilised. The self-fertilised plants had smaller and paler green
+ leaves than the crossed. All the plants in the two rows were afterwards
+ cut down and weighed. The twenty crossed plants weighed 65 ounces, and
+ twenty self-fertilised (by calculation from the actual weight of the
+ thirty-two self-fertilised plants) weighed 26.25 ounces; or as 100 to 40.
+ Therefore the crossed plants did not exceed in weight the self-fertilised
+ plants in nearly so great a degree as those growing in the pots, owing
+ probably to the latter having been subjected to more severe mutual
+ competition. On the other hand, they exceeded the self-fertilised in
+ height in a slightly greater degree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reseda odorata.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Plants of the common mignonette were raised from purchased seed, and
+ several of them were placed under separate nets. Of these some became
+ loaded with spontaneously self-fertilised capsules; others produced a few,
+ and others not a single one. It must not be supposed that these latter
+ plants produced no seed because their stigmas did not receive any pollen,
+ for they were repeatedly fertilised with pollen from the same plant with
+ no effect; but they were perfectly fertile with pollen from any other
+ plant. Spontaneously self-fertilised seeds were saved from one of the
+ highly self-fertile plants, and other seeds were collected from the plants
+ growing outside the nets, which had been crossed by the bees. These seeds
+ after germinating on sand were planted in pairs on the opposite sides of
+ five pots. The plants were trained up sticks, and measured to the summits
+ of their leafy stems&mdash;the flower-stems not being included. We here
+ have the result:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 4/37. Reseda odorata (seedlings from a highly self-fertile plant).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants to the summits of the leafy stems, flower-stems not
+ included, measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 20 7/8 : 22 4/8. Pot 1 : 34 7/8 : 28 5/8. Pot 1 : 26 6/8 : 23 2/8.
+ Pot 1 : 32 6/8 : 30 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 34 3/8 : 28 5/8. Pot 2 : 34 5/8 : 30 5/8. Pot 2 : 11 6/8 : 23. Pot
+ 2 : 33 3/8 : 30 1/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 17 7/8 : 4 4/8. Pot 3 : 27 : 25. Pot 3 : 30 1/8 : 26 3/8. Pot 3 :
+ 30 2/8 : 25 1/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 21 5/8 : 22 6/8. Pot 4 : 28 : 25 4/8. Pot 4 : 32 5/8 : 15 1/8. Pot
+ 4 : 32 3/8 : 24 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 21 : 11 6/8. Pot 5 : 25 2/8 : 19 7/8. Pot 5 : 26 6/8 : 10 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 522.25 : 428.50.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the nineteen crossed plants is here 27.48, and that
+ of the nineteen self-fertilised 22.55 inches; or as 100 to 82. All these
+ plants were cut down in the early autumn and weighed: the crossed weighed
+ 11.5 ounces, and the self-fertilised 7.75 ounces, or as 100 to 67. These
+ two lots having been left freely exposed to the visits of insects, did not
+ present any difference to the eye in the number of seed-capsules which
+ they produced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The remainder of the same two lots of seeds were sown in two adjoining
+ rows in the open ground; so that the plants were exposed to only moderate
+ competition. The eight tallest on each side were measured, as shown in
+ Table 4/38.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 4/38. Reseda odorata, growing in the open ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 24 4/8 : 26 5/8.
+ 27 2/8 : 25 7/8.
+ 24 : 25.
+ 26 6/8 : 28 3/8.
+ 25 : 29 7/8.
+ 26 2/8 : 25 7/8.
+ 27 2/8 : 26 7/8.
+ 25 1/8 : 28 2/8.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Total : 206.13 : 216.75
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the eight crossed plants is 25.76, and that of the
+ eight self-fertilised 27.09; or as 100 to 105.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We here have the anomalous result of the self-fertilised plants being a
+ little taller than the crossed; of which fact I can offer no explanation.
+ It is of course possible, but not probable, that the labels may have been
+ interchanged by accident.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another experiment was now tried: all the self-fertilised capsules, though
+ very few in number, were gathered from one of the semi-self-sterile plants
+ under a net; and as several flowers on this same plant had been fertilised
+ with pollen from a distinct individual, crossed seeds were thus obtained.
+ I expected that the seedlings from this semi-self-sterile plant would have
+ profited in a higher degree from a cross, than did the seedlings from the
+ fully self-fertile plants. But my anticipation was quite wrong, for they
+ profited in a less degree. An analogous result followed in the case of
+ Eschscholtzia, in which the offspring of the plants of Brazilian parentage
+ (which were partially self-sterile) did not profit more from a cross, than
+ did the plants of the far more self-fertile English stock. The above two
+ lots of crossed and self-fertilised seeds from the same plant of Reseda
+ odorata, after germinating on sand, were planted on opposite sides of five
+ pots, and measured as in the last case, with the result in Table 4/39.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 4/39. Reseda odorata (seedlings from a semi-self-sterile plant).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants to the summits of the leafy stems, flower-stems not
+ included, measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 33 4/8 : 31. Pot 1 : 30 6/8 : 28. Pot 1 : 29 6/8 : 13 2/8. Pot 1 :
+ 20 : 32.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 22 : 21 6/8. Pot 2 : 33 4/8 : 26 6/8. Pot 2 : 31 2/8 : 25 2/8. Pot
+ 2 : 32 4/8 : 30 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 30 1/8 : 17 2/8. Pot 3 : 32 1/8 : 29 6/8. Pot 3 : 31 4/8 : 24 6/8.
+ Pot 3 : 32 2/8 : 34 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 19 1/8 : 20 6/8. Pot 4 : 30 1/8 : 32 6/8. Pot 4 : 24 3/8 : 31 4/8.
+ Pot 4 : 30 6/8 : 36 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 34 6/8 : 24 5/8. Pot 5 : 37 1/8 : 34. Pot 5 : 31 2/8 : 22 2/8. Pot
+ 5 : 33 : 37 1/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 599.75 : 554.25.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the twenty crossed plants is here 29.98, and that of
+ the twenty self-fertilised 27.71 inches; or as 100 to 92. These plants
+ were then cut down and weighed; and the crossed in this case exceeded the
+ self-fertilised in weight by a mere trifle, namely, in the ratio of 100 to
+ 99. The two lots, left freely exposed to insects, seemed to be equally
+ fertile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The remainder of the seed was sown in two adjoining rows in the open
+ ground; and the eight tallest plants in each row were measured, with the
+ result in Table 4/40.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 4/40. Reseda odorata, (seedlings from a semi-self-sterile plant,
+ planted in the open ground).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 28 2/8 : 22 3/8.
+ 22 4/8 : 24 3/8.
+ 25 7/8 : 23 4/8.
+ 25 3/8 : 21 4/8.
+ 29 4/8 : 22 5/8.
+ 27 1/8 : 27 3/8.
+ 22 4/8 : 27 3/8.
+ 26 2/8 : 19 2/8.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Total : 207.38 : 188.38.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the eight crossed plants is here 25.92, and that of
+ the eight self-fertilised plants 23.54 inches; or as 100 to 90.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. VIOLACEAE.&mdash;Viola tricolor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst the flowers of the common cultivated heartsease are young, the
+ anthers shed their pollen into a little semi-cylindrical passage, formed
+ by the basal portion of the lower petal, and surrounded by papillae. The
+ pollen thus collected lies close beneath the stigma, but can seldom gain
+ access into its cavity, except by the aid of insects, which pass their
+ proboscides down this passage into the nectary. (4/5. The flowers of this
+ plant have been fully described by Sprengel, Hildebrand, Delpino, and H.
+ Muller. The latter author sums up all the previous observations in his
+ &lsquo;Befruchtung der Blumen&rsquo; and in &lsquo;Nature&rsquo; November 20, 1873 page 44. See
+ also Mr. A.W. Bennett in &lsquo;Nature&rsquo; May 15, 1873 page 50 and some remarks by
+ Mr. Kitchener ibid page 143. The facts which follow on the effects of
+ covering up a plant of V. tricolor have been quoted by Sir J. Lubbock in
+ his &lsquo;British Wild Flowers&rsquo; etc. page 62.) Consequently when I covered up a
+ large plant of a cultivated variety, it set only eighteen capsules, and
+ most of these contained very few good seeds&mdash;several from only one to
+ three; whereas an equally fine uncovered plant of the same variety,
+ growing close by, produced 105 fine capsules. The few flowers which
+ produce capsules when insects are excluded, are perhaps fertilised by the
+ curling inwards of the petals as their wither, for by this means
+ pollen-grains adhering to the papillae might be inserted into the cavity
+ of the stigma. But it is more probable that their fertilisation is
+ effected, as Mr. Bennett suggests, by Thrips and certain minute beetles
+ which haunt the flowers, and which cannot be excluded by any net.
+ Humble-bees are the usual fertilisers; but I have more than once seen
+ flies (Rhingia rostrata) at work, with the under sides of their bodies,
+ heads and legs dusted with pollen; and having marked the flowers which
+ they visited, I found them after a few days fertilised. (4/6. I should add
+ that this fly apparently did not suck the nectar, but was attracted by the
+ papillae which surround the stigma. Hermann Muller also saw a small bee,
+ an Andrena, which could not reach the nectar, repeatedly inserting its
+ proboscis beneath the stigma, where the papillae are situated; so that
+ these papillae must be in some way attractive to insects. A writer asserts
+ &lsquo;Zoologist&rsquo; volume 3-4 page 1225, that a moth (Plusia) frequently visits
+ the flowers of the pansy. Hive-bees do not ordinarily visit them, but a
+ case has been recorded &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo; 1844 page 374, of these bees
+ doing so. Hermann Muller has also seen the hive-bee at work, but only on
+ the wild small-flowered form. He gives a list &lsquo;Nature&rsquo; 1873 page 45, of
+ all the insects which he has seen visiting both the large and
+ small-flowered forms. From his account, I suspect that the flowers of
+ plants in a state of nature are visited more frequently by insects than
+ those of the cultivated varieties. He has seen several butterflies sucking
+ the flowers of wild plants, and this I have never observed in gardens,
+ though I have watched the flowers during many years.) It is curious for
+ how long a time the flowers of the heartsease and of some other plants may
+ be watched without an insect being seen to visit them. During the summer
+ of 1841, I observed many times daily for more than a fortnight some large
+ clumps of heartsease growing in my garden, before I saw a single
+ humble-bee at work. During another summer I did the same, but at last saw
+ some dark-coloured humble-bees visiting on three successive days almost
+ every flower in several clumps; and almost all these flowers quickly
+ withered and produced fine capsules. I presume that a certain state of the
+ atmosphere is necessary for the secretion of nectar, and that as soon as
+ this occurs the insects discover the fact by the odour emitted, and
+ immediately frequent the flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the flowers require the aid of insects for their complete
+ fertilisation, and as they are not visited by insects nearly so often as
+ most other nectar-secreting flowers, we can understand the remarkable fact
+ discovered by H. Muller and described by him in &lsquo;Nature,&rsquo; namely, that
+ this species exists under two forms. One of these bears conspicuous
+ flowers, which, as we have seen, require the aid of insects, and are
+ adapted to be cross-fertilised by them; whilst the other form has much
+ smaller and less conspicuously coloured flowers, which are constructed on
+ a slightly different plan, favouring self-fertilisation, and are thus
+ adapted to ensure the propagation of the species. The self-fertile form,
+ however, is occasionally visited, and may be crossed by insects, though
+ this is rather doubtful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In my first experiments on Viola tricolor I was unsuccessful in raising
+ seedlings, and obtained only one full-grown crossed and self-fertilised
+ plant. The former was 12 1/2 inches and the latter 8 inches in height. On
+ the following year several flowers on a fresh plant were crossed with
+ pollen from another plant, which was known to be a distinct seedling; and
+ to this point it is important to attend. Several other flowers on the same
+ plant were fertilised with their own pollen. The average number of seeds
+ in the ten crossed capsules was 18.7, and in the twelve self-fertilised
+ capsules 12.83; or as 100 to 69. These seeds, after germinating on bare
+ sand, were planted in pairs on the opposite sides of five pots. They were
+ first measured when about a third of their full size, and the crossed
+ plants then averaged 3.87 inches, and the self-fertilised only 2.00 inches
+ in height; or as 100 to 52. They were kept in the greenhouse, and did not
+ grow vigorously. Whilst in flower they were again measured to the summits
+ of their stems (see Table 4/41), with the following result:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 4/41. Viola tricolor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 8 2/8 : 0 2/8. Pot 1 : 7 4/8 : 2 4/8. Pot 1 : 5 : 1 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 5 : 6. Pot 2 : 4 : 4. Pot 2 : 4 4/8 : 3 1/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 9 4/8 : 3 1/8. Pot 3 : 3 3/8 : 1 7/8. Pot 3 : 8 4/8 : 0 5/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 4 7/8 : 2 1/8. Pot 4 : 4 2/8 : 1 6/8. Pot 4 : 4 : 2 1/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 6 : 3. Pot 5 : 3 3/8 : 1 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 78.13 : 33.25.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the fourteen crossed plants is here 5.58 inches, and
+ that of the fourteen self-fertilised 2.37; or as 100 to 42. In four out of
+ the five pots, a crossed plant flowered before any one of the
+ self-fertilised; as likewise occurred with the pair raised during the
+ previous year. These plants without being disturbed were now turned out of
+ their pots and planted in the open ground, so as to form five separate
+ clumps. Early in the following summer (1869) they flowered profusely, and
+ being visited by humble-bees set many capsules, which were carefully
+ collected from all the plants on both sides. The crossed plants produced
+ 167 capsules, and the self-fertilised only 17; or as 100 to 10. So that
+ the crossed plants were more than twice the height of the self-fertilised,
+ generally flowered first, and produced ten times as many naturally
+ fertilised capsules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the early part of the summer of 1870 the crossed plants in all the five
+ clumps had grown and spread so much more than the self-fertilised, that
+ any comparison between them was superfluous. The crossed plants were
+ covered with a sheet of bloom, whilst only a single self-fertilised plant,
+ which was much finer than any of its brethren, flowered. The crossed and
+ self-fertilised plants had now grown all matted together on the respective
+ sides of the superficial partitions still separating them; and in the
+ clump which included the finest self-fertilised plant, I estimated that
+ the surface covered by the crossed plants was about nine times as large as
+ that covered by the self-fertilised plants. The extraordinary superiority
+ of the crossed over the self-fertilised plants in all five clumps, was no
+ doubt due to the crossed plants at first having had a decided advantage
+ over the self-fertilised, and then robbing them more and more of their
+ food during the succeeding seasons. But we should remember that the same
+ result would follow in a state of nature even to a greater degree; for my
+ plants grew in ground kept clear of weeds, so that the self-fertilised had
+ to compete only with the crossed plants; whereas the whole surface of the
+ ground is naturally covered with various kinds of plants, all of which
+ have to struggle together for existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ensuing winter was very severe, and in the following spring (1871) the
+ plants were again examined. All the self-fertilised were now dead, with
+ the exception of a single branch on one plant, which bore on its summit a
+ minute rosette of leaves about as large as a pea. On the other hand, all
+ the crossed plants without exception were growing vigorously. So that the
+ self-fertilised plants, besides their inferiority in other respects, were
+ more tender.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another experiment was now tried for the sake of ascertaining how far the
+ superiority of the crossed plants, or to speak more correctly, the
+ inferiority of the self-fertilised plants, would be transmitted to their
+ offspring. The one crossed and one self-fertilised plant, which were first
+ raised, had been turned out of their pot and planted in the open ground.
+ Both produced an abundance of very fine capsules, from which fact we may
+ safely conclude that they had been cross-fertilised by insects. Seeds from
+ both, after germinating on sand, were planted in pairs on the opposite
+ sides of three pots. The naturally crossed seedlings derived from the
+ crossed plants flowered in all three pots before the naturally crossed
+ seedlings derived from the self-fertilised plants. When both lots were in
+ full flower, the two tallest plants on each side of each pot were
+ measured, and the result is shown in Table 4/42.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 4/42. Viola tricolor: seedlings from crossed and self-fertilised
+ plants, the parents of both sets having been left to be naturally
+ fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Naturally Crossed Plants from artificially crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Naturally Crossed Plants from Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 12 1/8 : 9 6/8. Pot 1 : 11 6/8 : 8 3/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 13 2/8 : 9 6/8. Pot 2 : 10 : 11 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 14 4/8 : 11 1/8. Pot 3 : 13 6/8 : 11 3/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 75.38 : 61.88.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the six tallest plants derived from the crossed
+ plants is 12.56 inches; and that of the six tallest plants derived from
+ the self-fertilised plants is 10.31 inches; or as 100 to 82. We here see a
+ considerable difference in height between the two sets, though very far
+ from equalling that in the previous trials between the offspring from
+ crossed and self-fertilised flowers. This difference must be attributed to
+ the latter set of plants having inherited a weak constitution from their
+ parents, the offspring of self-fertilised flowers; notwithstanding that
+ the parents themselves had been freely intercrossed with other plants by
+ the aid of insects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. RANUNCULACEAE.&mdash;Adonis aestivalis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The results of my experiments on this plant are hardly worth giving, as I
+ remark in my notes made at the time, &ldquo;seedlings, from some unknown cause,
+ all miserably unhealthy.&rdquo; Nor did they ever become healthy; yet I feel
+ bound to give the present case, as it is opposed to the general results at
+ which I have arrived. Fifteen flowers were crossed and all produced fruit,
+ containing on an average 32.5 seeds; nineteen flowers were fertilised with
+ their own pollen, and they likewise all yielded fruit, containing a rather
+ larger average of 34.5 seeds; or as 100 to 106. Seedlings were raised from
+ these seeds. In one of the pots all the self-fertilised plants died whilst
+ quite young; in the two others, the measurements were as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 4/43. Adonis aestivalis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 14 : 13 4/8. Pot 1 : 13 4/8 : 13 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 16 2/8 : 15 2/8. Pot 2 : 13 2/8 : 15.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 57.00 : 57.25.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the four crossed plants is 14.25, and that of the
+ four self-fertilised plants 14.31; or as 100 to 100.4; so that they were
+ in fact of equal height. According to Professor H. Hoffman, this plant is
+ proterandrous (4/7. &lsquo;Zur Speciesfrage&rsquo; 1875 page 11.); nevertheless it
+ yields plenty of seeds when protected from insects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Delphinium consolida.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has been said in the case of this plant, as of so many others, that the
+ flowers are fertilised in the bud, and that distinct plants or varieties
+ can never naturally intercross. (4/8. Decaisne &lsquo;Comptes-Rendus&rsquo; July 1863
+ page 5.) But this is an error, as we may infer, firstly from the flowers
+ being proterandrous,&mdash;the mature stamens bending up, one after the
+ other, into the passage which leads to the nectary, and afterwards the
+ mature pistils bending in the same direction; secondly, from the number of
+ humble-bees which visit the flowers (4/9. Their structure is described by
+ H. Muller &lsquo;Befruchtung&rsquo; etc., page 122.); and thirdly, from the greater
+ fertility of the flowers when crossed with pollen from a distinct plant
+ than when spontaneously self-fertilised. In the year 1863 I enclosed a
+ large branch in a net, and crossed five flowers with pollen from a
+ distinct plant; these yielded capsules containing on an average 35.2 very
+ fine seeds, with a maximum of forty-two in one capsule. Thirty-two other
+ flowers on the same branch produced twenty-eight spontaneously
+ self-fertilised capsules, containing on an average 17.2 seeds, with a
+ maximum in one of thirty-six seeds. But six of these capsules were very
+ poor, yielding only from one to five seeds; if these are excluded, the
+ remaining twenty-two capsules give an average of 20.9 seeds, though many
+ of these seeds were small. The fairest ratio, therefore, for the number of
+ seeds produced by a cross and by spontaneous self-fertilisation is as 100
+ to 59. These seeds were not sown, as I had too many other experiments in
+ progress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the summer of 1867, which was a very unfavourable one, I again crossed
+ several flowers under a net with pollen from a distinct plant, and
+ fertilised other flowers on the same plant with their own pollen. The
+ former yielded a much larger proportion of capsules than the latter; and
+ many of the seeds in the self-fertilised capsules, though numerous, were
+ so poor that an equal number of seeds from the crossed and self-fertilised
+ capsules were in weight as 100 to 45. The two lots were allowed to
+ germinate on sand, and pairs were planted on the opposite sides of four
+ pots. When nearly two-thirds grown they were measured, as shown in Table
+ 4/44.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 4/44. Delphinium consolida.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 11 : 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 19 : 16 2/8. Pot 2 : 16 2/8 : 11 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 26 : 22.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 9 4/8 : 8 2/8. Pot 4 : 8 : 6 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 89.75 : 75.50.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The six crossed plants here average 14.95, and the six self-fertilised
+ 12.50 inches in height; or as 100 to 84. When fully grown they were again
+ measured, but from want of time only a single plant on each side was
+ measured; so that I have thought it best to give the earlier measurements.
+ At the later period the three tallest crossed plants still exceeded
+ considerably in height the three tallest self-fertilised, but not in quite
+ so great a degree as before. The pots were left uncovered in the
+ greenhouse, but whether the flowers were intercrossed by bees or
+ self-fertilised I do not know. The six crossed plants produced 282 mature
+ and immature capsules, whilst the six self-fertilised plants produced only
+ 159; or as 100 to 56. So that the crossed plants were very much more
+ productive than the self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. CARYOPHYLLACEAE.&mdash;Viscaria oculata.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twelve flowers were crossed with pollen from another plant, and yielded
+ ten capsules, containing by weight 5.77 grains of seeds. Eighteen flowers
+ were fertilised with their own pollen and yielded twelve capsules,
+ containing by weight 2.63 grains. Therefore the seeds from an equal number
+ of crossed and self-fertilised flowers would have been in weight as 100 to
+ 38. I had previously selected a medium-sized capsule from each lot, and
+ counted the seeds in both; the crossed one contained 284, and the
+ self-fertilised one 126 seeds; or as 100 to 44. These seeds were sown on
+ opposite sides of three pots, and several seedlings raised; but only the
+ tallest flower-stem of one plant on each side was measured. The three on
+ the crossed side averaged 32.5 inches, and the three on the
+ self-fertilised side 34 inches in height; or as 100 to 104. But this trial
+ was on much too small a scale to be trusted; the plants also grew so
+ unequally that one of the three flower-stems on the crossed plants was
+ very nearly twice as tall as that on one of the others; and one of the
+ three flower-stems on the self-fertilised plants exceeded in an equal
+ degree one of the others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the following year the experiment was repeated on a larger scale: ten
+ flowers were crossed on a new set of plants and yielded ten capsules
+ containing by weight 6.54 grains of seed. Eighteen spontaneously
+ self-fertilised capsules were gathered, of which two contained no seed;
+ the other sixteen contained by weight 6.07 grains of seed. Therefore the
+ weight of seed from an equal number of crossed and spontaneously
+ self-fertilised flowers (instead of artificially fertilised as in the
+ previous case) was as 100 to 58.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seeds after germinating on sand were planted in pairs on the opposite
+ sides of four pots, with all the remaining seeds sown crowded in the
+ opposite sides of a fifth pot; in this latter pot only the tallest plant
+ on each side was measured. Until the seedlings had grown about 5 inches in
+ height no difference could be perceived in the two lots. Both lots
+ flowered at nearly the same time. When they had almost done flowering, the
+ tallest flower-stem on each plant was measured, as shown in Table 4/45.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 4/45. Viscaria oculata.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tallest flower-stem on each plant measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 19 : 32 3/8. Pot 1 : 33 : 38. Pot 1 : 41 : 38. Pot 1 : 41 : 28
+ 7/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 37 4/8 : 36. Pot 2 : 36 4/8 : 32 3/8. Pot 2 : 38 : 35 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 44 4/8 : 36. Pot 3 : 39 4/8 : 20 7/8. Pot 3 : 39 : 30 5/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 30 2/8 : 36. Pot 4 : 31 : 39. Pot 4 : 33 1/8 : 29. Pot 4 : 24 : 38
+ 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 30 2/8 : 32. Crowded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 517.63 : 503.36.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fifteen crossed plants here average 34.5, and the fifteen
+ self-fertilised 33.55 inches in height; or as 100 to 97. So that the
+ excess of height of the crossed plants is quite insignificant. In
+ productiveness, however, the difference was much more plainly marked. All
+ the capsules were gathered from both lots of plants (except from the
+ crowded and unproductive ones in Pot 5), and at the close of the season
+ the few remaining flowers were added in. The fourteen crossed plants
+ produced 381, whilst the fourteen self-fertilised plants produced only 293
+ capsules and flowers; or as 100 to 77.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dianthus caryophyllus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The common carnation is strongly proterandrous, and therefore depends to a
+ large extent upon insects for fertilisation. I have seen only humble-bees
+ visiting the flowers, but I dare say other insects likewise do so. It is
+ notorious that if pure seed is desired, the greatest care is necessary to
+ prevent the varieties which grow in the same garden from intercrossing.
+ (4/10. &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo; 1847 page 268.) The pollen is generally shed
+ and lost before the two stigmas in the same flower diverge and are ready
+ to be fertilised. I was therefore often forced to use for
+ self-fertilisation pollen from the same plant instead of from the same
+ flower. But on two occasions, when I attended to this point, I was not
+ able to detect any marked difference in the number of seeds produced by
+ these two forms of self-fertilisation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several single-flowered carnations were planted in good soil, and were all
+ covered with a net. Eight flowers were crossed with pollen from a distinct
+ plant and yielded six capsules, containing on an average 88.6 seeds, with
+ a maximum in one of 112 seeds. Eight other flowers were self-fertilised in
+ the manner above described, and yielded seven capsules containing on an
+ average 82 seeds, with a maximum in one of 112 seeds. So that there was
+ very little difference in the number of seeds produced by
+ cross-fertilisation and self-fertilisation, namely, as 100 to 92. As these
+ plants were covered by a net, they produced spontaneously only a few
+ capsules containing any seeds, and these few may perhaps be attributed to
+ the action of Thrips and other minute insects which haunt the flowers. A
+ large majority of the spontaneously self-fertilised capsules produced by
+ several plants contained no seeds, or only a single one. Excluding these
+ latter capsules, I counted the seeds in eighteen of the finest ones, and
+ these contained on an average 18 seeds. One of the plants was
+ spontaneously self-fertile in a higher degree than any of the others. On
+ another occasion a single covered-up plant produced spontaneously eighteen
+ capsules, but only two of these contained any seed, namely 10 and 15.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FIRST GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The many seeds obtained from the above crossed and artificially
+ self-fertilised flowers were sown out of doors, and two large beds of
+ seedlings, closely adjoining one another, thus raised. This was the first
+ plant on which I experimented, and I had not then formed any regular
+ scheme of operation. When the two lots were in full flower, I measured
+ roughly a large number of plants but record only that the crossed were on
+ an average fully 4 inches taller than the self-fertilised. Judging from
+ subsequent measurements, we may assume that the crossed plants were about
+ 28 inches, and the self-fertilised about 24 inches in height; and this
+ will give us a ratio of 100 to 86. Out of a large number of plants, four
+ of the crossed ones flowered before any one of the self-fertilised plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thirty flowers on these crossed plants of the first generation were again
+ crossed with pollen from a distinct plant of the same lot, and yielded
+ twenty-nine capsules, containing on an average 55.62 seeds, with a maximum
+ in one of 110 seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thirty flowers on the self-fertilised plants were again self-fertilised;
+ eight of them with pollen from the same flower, and the remainder with
+ pollen from another flower on the same plant; and these produced
+ twenty-two capsules, containing on an average 35.95 seeds, with a maximum
+ in one of sixty-one seeds. We thus see, judging by the number of seeds per
+ capsule, that the crossed plants again crossed were more productive than
+ the self-fertilised again self-fertilised, in the ratio of 100 to 65. Both
+ the crossed and self-fertilised plants, from having grown much crowded in
+ the two beds, produced less fine capsules and fewer seeds than did their
+ parents.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The crossed and self-fertilised seeds from the crossed and self-fertilised
+ plants of the last generation were sown on opposite sides of two pots; but
+ the seedlings were not thinned enough, so that both lots grew very
+ irregularly, and most of the self-fertilised plants after a time died from
+ being smothered. My measurements were, therefore, very incomplete. From
+ the first the crossed seedlings appeared the finest, and when they were on
+ an average, by estimation, 5 inches high, the self-fertilised plants were
+ only 4 inches. In both pots the crossed plants flowered first. The two
+ tallest flower-stems on the crossed plants in the two pots were 17 and 16
+ 1/2 inches in height; and the two tallest flower-stems on the
+ self-fertilised plants 10 1/2 and 9 inches; so that their heights were as
+ 100 to 58. But this ratio, deduced from only two pairs, obviously is not
+ in the least trustworthy, and would not have been given had it not been
+ otherwise supported. I state in my notes that the crossed plants were very
+ much more luxuriant than their opponents, and seemed to be twice as bulky.
+ This latter estimate may be believed from the ascertained weights of the
+ two lots in the next generation. Some flowers on these crossed plants were
+ again crossed with pollen from another plant of the same lot, and some
+ flowers on the self-fertilised plants again self-fertilised; and from the
+ seeds thus obtained the plants of the next generation were raised.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE THIRD GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The seeds just alluded to were allowed to germinate on bare sand, and were
+ planted in pairs on the opposite sides of four pots. When the seedlings
+ were in full flower, the tallest stem on each plant was measured to the
+ base of the calyx. The measurements are given in Table 4/46. In Pot 1 the
+ crossed and self-fertilised plants flowered at the same time; but in the
+ other three pots the crossed flowered first. These latter plants also
+ continued flowering much later in the autumn than the self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 4/46. Dianthus caryophyllus (third generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tallest flower-stem on each plant measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 28 6/8 : 30. Pot 1 : 27 3/8 : 26.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 29 : 30 7/8. Pot 2 : 29 4/8 : 27 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 28 4/8 : 31 6/8. Pot 3 : 23 4/8 : 24 5/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 27 : 30. Pot 4 : 33 4/8 : 25.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 227.13 : 225.75.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the eight crossed plants is here 28.39 inches, and
+ of the eight self-fertilised 28.21; or as 100 to 99. So that there was no
+ difference in height worth speaking of; but in general vigour and
+ luxuriance there was an astonishing difference, as shown by their weights.
+ After the seed-capsules had been gathered, the eight crossed and the eight
+ self-fertilised plants were cut down and weighed; the former weighed 43
+ ounces, and the latter only 21 ounces; or as 100 to 49.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These plants were all kept under a net, so that the capsules which they
+ produced must have been all spontaneously self-fertilised. The eight
+ crossed plants produced twenty-one such capsules, of which only twelve
+ contained any seed, averaging 8.5 per capsule. On the other hand, the
+ eight self-fertilised plants produced no less than thirty-six capsules, of
+ which I examined twenty-five, and, with the exception of three, all
+ contained seeds, averaging 10.63 seeds per capsule. Thus the proportional
+ number of seeds per capsule produced by the plants of crossed origin to
+ those produced by the plants of self-fertilised origin (both lots being
+ spontaneously self-fertilised) was as 100 to 125. This anomalous result is
+ probably due to some of the self-fertilised plants having varied so as to
+ mature their pollen and stigmas more nearly at the same time than is
+ proper to the species; and we have already seen that some plants in the
+ first experiment differed from the others in being slightly more
+ self-fertile.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ THE EFFECTS OF A CROSS WITH A FRESH STOCK.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Twenty flowers on the self-fertilised plants of the last or third
+ generation, in Table 4/46, were fertilised with their own pollen, but
+ taken from other flowers on the same plants. These produced fifteen
+ capsules, which contained (omitting two with only three and six seeds) on
+ an average 47.23 seeds, with a maximum of seventy in one. The
+ self-fertilised capsules from the self-fertilised plants of the first
+ generation yielded the much lower average of 35.95 seeds; but as these
+ latter plants grew extremely crowded, nothing can be inferred with respect
+ to this difference in their self-fertility. The seedlings raised from the
+ above seeds constitute the plants of the fourth self-fertilised generation
+ in Table 4/47.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twelve flowers on the same plants of the third self-fertilised generation,
+ in Table 4/46, were crossed with pollen from the crossed plants in the
+ same table. These crossed plants had been intercrossed for the three
+ previous generations; and many of them, no doubt, were more or less
+ closely inter-related, but not so closely as in some of the experiments
+ with other species; for several carnation plants had been raised and
+ crossed in the earlier generations. They were not related, or only in a
+ distant degree, to the self-fertilised plants. The parents of both the
+ self-fertilised and crossed plants had been subjected to as nearly as
+ possible the same conditions during the three previous generations. The
+ above twelve flowers produced ten capsules, containing on an average 48.66
+ seeds, with a maximum in one of seventy-two seeds. The plants raised from
+ these seeds may be called the INTERCROSSED.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lastly, twelve flowers on the same self-fertilised plants of the third
+ generation were crossed with pollen from plants which had been raised from
+ seeds purchased in London. It is almost certain that the plants which
+ produced these seeds had grown under very different conditions to those to
+ which my self-fertilised and crossed plants had been subjected; and they
+ were in no degree related. The above twelve flowers thus crossed all
+ produced capsules, but these contained the low average of 37.41 seeds per
+ capsule, with a maximum in one of sixty-four seeds. It is surprising that
+ this cross with a fresh stock did not give a much higher average number of
+ seeds; for, as we shall immediately see, the plants raised from these
+ seeds, which may be called the LONDON-CROSSED, benefited greatly by the
+ cross, both in growth and fertility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The above three lots of seeds were allowed to germinate on bare sand. Many
+ of the London-crossed germinated before the others, and were rejected; and
+ many of the intercrossed later than those of the other two lots. The seeds
+ after thus germinating were planted in ten pots, made tripartite by
+ superficial divisions; but when only two kinds of seeds germinated at the
+ same time, they were planted on the opposite sides of other pots; and this
+ is indicated by blank spaces in one of the three columns in Table 4/47. A
+ 0 in the table signifies that the seedling died before it was measured;
+ and a + signifies that the plant did not produce a flower-stem, and
+ therefore was not measured. It deserves notice that no less than eight out
+ of the eighteen self-fertilised plants either died or did not flower;
+ whereas only three out of the eighteen intercrossed, and four out of the
+ twenty London-crossed plants, were in this predicament. The
+ self-fertilised plants had a decidedly less vigorous appearance than the
+ plants of the other two lots, their leaves being smaller and narrower. In
+ only one pot did a self-fertilised plant flower before one of the two
+ kinds of crossed plants, between which there was no marked difference in
+ the period of flowering. The plants were measured to the base of the
+ calyx, after they had completed their growth, late in the autumn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 4/47. Dianthus caryophyllus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants to the base of the calyx, measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: London-Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Intercrossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 4: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 39 5/8 : 25 1/8 : 29 2/8. Pot 1 : 30 7/8 : 21 6/8 : +.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 36 2/8 : : 22 3/8. Pot 2 : 0 : : +.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 28 5/8 : 30 2/8 : . Pot 3 : + : 23 1/8 : .
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 33 4/8 : 35 5/8 : 30. Pot 4 : 28 7/8 : 32 : 24 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 28 : 34 4/8 : +. Pot 5 : 0 : 24 2/8 : +.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 6 : 32 5/8 : 24 7/8 : 30 3/8. Pot 6 : 31 : 26 : 24 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 7 : 41 7/8 : 29 7/8 : 27 7/8. Pot 7 : 34 7/8 : 26 4/8 : 27.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 8 : 34 5/8 : 29 : 26 6/8. Pot 8 : 28 5/8 : 0 : +.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 9 : 25 5/8 : 28 5/8 : +. Pot 9 : 0 : + : 0.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 10 : 38 : 28 4/8 : 22 7/8. Pot 10 : 32 1/8 : + : 0.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 525.13 : 420.00 : 265.50.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the sixteen London-crossed plants in Table 4/47 is
+ 32.82 inches; that of the fifteen intercrossed plants, 28 inches; and that
+ of the ten self-fertilised plants, 26.55.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So that in height we have the following ratios:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The London-crossed to the self-fertilised as 100 to 81.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The London-crossed to the intercrossed as 100 to 85.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The intercrossed to the self-fertilised as 100 to 95.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These three lots of plants, which it should be remembered were all derived
+ on the mother-side from plants of the third self-fertilised generation,
+ fertilised in three different ways, were left exposed to the visits of
+ insects, and their flowers were freely crossed by them. As the capsules of
+ each lot became ripe they were gathered and kept separate, the empty or
+ bad ones being thrown away. But towards the middle of October, when the
+ capsules could no longer ripen, all were gathered and were counted,
+ whether good or bad. The capsules were then crushed, and the seed cleaned
+ by sieves and weighed. For the sake of uniformity the results are given
+ from calculation, as if there had been twenty plants in each lot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sixteen London-crossed plants actually produced 286 capsules;
+ therefore twenty such plants would have produced 357.5 capsules; and from
+ the actual weight of the seeds, the twenty plants would have yielded 462
+ grains weight of seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fifteen intercrossed plants actually produced 157 capsules; therefore
+ twenty of them would have produced 209.3 capsules and the seeds would have
+ weighed 208.48 grains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ten self-fertilised plants actually produced 70 capsules, therefore
+ twenty of them would have produced 140 capsules; and the seeds would have
+ weighed 153.2 grains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From these data we get the following ratios:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NUMBER OF CAPSULES PRODUCED BY AN EQUAL NUMBER OF PLANTS OF THE THREE
+ LOTS.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ NUMBER OF CAPSULES:
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The London-crossed to the self-fertilised as 100 to 39.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The London-crossed to the intercrossed as 100 to 45.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The intercrossed to the self-fertilised as 100 to 67.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ WEIGHT OF SEEDS PRODUCED BY AN EQUAL NUMBER OF PLANTS OF THE THREE LOTS.
+ </h3>
+ <h3>
+ WEIGHT OF SEED:
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The London-crossed to the self-fertilised as 100 to 33.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The London-crossed to the intercrossed as 100 to 45.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The intercrossed to the self-fertilised as 100 to 73.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We thus see how greatly the offspring from the self-fertilised plants of
+ the third generation crossed by a fresh stock, had their fertility
+ increased, whether tested by the number of capsules produced or by the
+ weight of the contained seeds; this latter being the more trustworthy
+ method. Even the offspring from the self-fertilised plants crossed by one
+ of the crossed plants of the same stock, notwithstanding that both lots
+ had been long subjected to the same conditions, had their fertility
+ considerably increased, as tested by the same two methods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In conclusion it may be well to repeat in reference to the fertility of
+ these three lots of plants, that their flowers were left freely exposed to
+ the visits of insects and were undoubtedly crossed by them, as may be
+ inferred from the large number of good capsules produced. These plants
+ were all the offspring of the same mother-plants, and the strongly marked
+ difference in their fertility must be attributed to the nature of the
+ pollen employed in fertilising their parents; and the difference in the
+ nature of the pollen must be attributed to the different treatment to
+ which the pollen-bearing parents had been subjected during several
+ previous generations.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ COLOUR OF THE FLOWERS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The flowers produced by the self-fertilised plants of the last or fourth
+ generation were as uniform in tint as those of a wild species, being of a
+ pale pink or rose colour. Analogous cases with Mimulus and Ipomoea, after
+ several generations of self-fertilisation, have been already given. The
+ flowers of the intercrossed plants of the fourth generation were likewise
+ nearly uniform in colour. On the other hand, the flowers of the
+ London-crossed plants, or those raised from a cross with the fresh stock
+ which bore dark crimson flowers, varied extremely in colour, as might have
+ been expected, and as is the general rule with seedling carnations. It
+ deserves notice that only two or three of the London-crossed plants
+ produced dark crimson flowers like those of their fathers, and only a very
+ few of a pale pink like those of their mothers. The great majority had
+ their petals longitudinally and variously striped with the two colours,&mdash;the
+ groundwork tint being, however, in some cases darker than that of the
+ mother-plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. MALVACEAE.&mdash;Hibiscus africanus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many flowers on this Hibiscus were crossed with pollen from a distinct
+ plant, and many others were self-fertilised. A rather larger proportional
+ number of the crossed than of the self-fertilised flowers yielded
+ capsules, and the crossed capsules contained rather more seeds. The
+ self-fertilised seeds were a little heavier than an equal number of the
+ crossed seeds, but they germinated badly, and I raised only four plants of
+ each lot. In three out of the four pots, the crossed plants flowered
+ first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 4/48. Hibiscus africanus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 13 4/8 : 16 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 14 : 14.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 8 : 7.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 17 4/8 : 20 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 53.00 : 57.75.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The four crossed plants average 13.25, and the four self-fertilised 14.43
+ inches in height; or as 100 to 109. Here we have the unusual case of
+ self-fertilised plants exceeding the crossed in height; but only four
+ pairs were measured, and these did not grow well or equally. I did not
+ compare the fertility of the two lots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V. GERANIACEAE, LEGUMINOSAE, ONAGRACEAE, ETC.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Pelargonium zonale, a cross between plants propagated by cuttings does
+ no good.
+ Tropaeolum minus.
+ Limnanthes douglasii.
+ Lupinus luteus and pilosus.
+ Phaseolus multiflorus and vulgaris.
+ Lathyrus odoratus, varieties of, never naturally intercross in England.
+ Pisum sativum, varieties of, rarely intercross, but a cross between them
+ highly beneficial.
+ Sarothamnus scoparius, wonderful effects of a cross.
+ Ononis minutissima, cleistogene flowers of.
+ Summary on the Leguminosae.
+ Clarkia elegans.
+ Bartonia aurea.
+ Passiflora gracilis.
+ Apium petroselinum.
+ Scabiosa atropurpurea.
+ Lactuca sativa.
+ Specularia speculum.
+ Lobelia ramosa, advantages of a cross during two generations.
+ Lobelia fulgens.
+ Nemophila insignis, great advantages of a cross.
+ Borago officinalis.
+ Nolana prostrata.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 13. GERANIACEAE.&mdash;Pelargonium zonale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This plant, as a general rule, is strongly proterandrous, and is therefore
+ adapted for cross-fertilisation by the aid of insects. (5/1. Mr. J. Denny,
+ a great raiser of new varieties of pelargoniums, after stating that this
+ species is proterandrous, adds &lsquo;The Florist and Pomologist&rsquo; January 1872
+ page 11, &ldquo;there are some varieties, especially those with petals of a pink
+ colour, or which possess a weakly constitution, where the pistil expands
+ as soon as or even before the pollen-bag bursts, and in which also the
+ pistil is frequently short, so when it expands it is smothered as it were
+ by the bursting anthers; these varieties are great seeders, each pip being
+ fertilised by its own pollen. I would instance Christine as an example of
+ this fact.&rdquo; We have here an interesting case of variability in an
+ important functional point.) Some flowers on a common scarlet variety were
+ self-fertilised, and other flowers were crossed with pollen from another
+ plant; but no sooner had I done so, than I remembered that these plants
+ had been propagated by cuttings from the same stock, and were therefore
+ parts in a strict sense of the same individual. Nevertheless, having made
+ the cross I resolved to save the seeds, which, after germinating on sand,
+ were planted on the opposite sides of three pots. In one pot the
+ quasi-crossed plant was very soon and ever afterwards taller and finer
+ than the self-fertilised. In the two other pots the seedlings on both
+ sides were for a time exactly equal; but when the self-fertilised plants
+ were about 10 inches in height, they surpassed their antagonists by a
+ little, and ever afterwards showed a more decided and increasing
+ advantage; so that the self-fertilised plants, taken altogether, were
+ somewhat superior to the quasi-crossed plants. In this case, as in that of
+ the Origanum, if individuals which have been asexually propagated from the
+ same stock, and which have been long subjected to the same conditions, are
+ crossed, no advantage whatever is gained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several flowers on another plant of the same variety were fertilised with
+ pollen from the younger flowers on the same plant, so as to avoid using
+ the old and long-shed pollen from the same flower, as I thought that this
+ latter might be less efficient than fresh pollen. Other flowers on the
+ same plant were crossed with fresh pollen from a plant which, although
+ closely similar, was known to have arisen as a distinct seedling. The
+ self-fertilised seeds germinated rather before the others; but as soon as
+ I got equal pairs they were planted on the opposite sides of four pots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/49. Pelargonium zonale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 22 3/8 : 25 5/8. Pot 1 : 19 6/8 : 12 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 15 : 19 6/8. Pot 2 : 12 2/8 : 22 3/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 30 5/8 : 19 4/8. Pot 3 : 18 4/8 : 7 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 38 : 9 1/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 156.50 : 116.38.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the two lots of seedlings were between 4 and 5 inches in height they
+ were equal, excepting in Pot 4, in which the crossed plant was much the
+ tallest. When between 11 and 14 inches in height, they were measured to
+ the tips of their uppermost leaves; the crossed averaged 13.46, and the
+ self-fertilised 11.07 inches in height, or as 100 to 82. Five months later
+ they were again measured in the same manner, and the results are given in
+ Table 5/49.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seven crossed plants now averaged 22.35, and the seven self-fertilised
+ 16.62 inches in height, or as 100 to 74. But from the great inequality of
+ the several plants, the result is less trustworthy than in most other
+ cases. In Pot 2 the two self-fertilised plants always had an advantage,
+ except whilst quite young over the two crossed plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I wished to ascertain how these plants would behave during a second
+ growth, they were cut down close to the ground whilst growing freely. The
+ crossed plants now showed their superiority in another way, for only one
+ out of the seven was killed by the operation, whilst three of the
+ self-fertilised plants never recovered. There was, therefore, no use in
+ keeping any of the plants excepting those in Pots 1 and 3; and in the
+ following year the crossed plants in these two pots showed during their
+ second growth nearly the same relative superiority over the
+ self-fertilised plants as before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tropaeolum minus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The flowers are proterandrous, and are manifestly adapted for
+ cross-fertilisation by insects, as shown by Sprengel and Delpino. Twelve
+ flowers on some plants growing out of doors were crossed with pollen from
+ a distinct plant and produced eleven capsules, containing altogether
+ twenty-four good seeds. Eighteen flowers were fertilised with their own
+ pollen and produced only eleven capsules, containing twenty-two good
+ seeds; so that a much larger proportion of the crossed than of the
+ self-fertilised flowers produced capsules, and the crossed capsules
+ contained rather more seed than the self-fertilised in the ratio of 100 to
+ 92. The seeds from the self-fertilised capsules were however the heavier
+ of the two, in the ratio of 100 to 87.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeds in an equal state of germination were planted on the opposite sides
+ of four pots, but only the two tallest plants on each side of each pot
+ were measured to the tops of their stems. The pots were placed in the
+ greenhouse, and the plants trained up sticks, so that they ascended to an
+ unusual height. In three of the pots the crossed plants flowered first,
+ but in the fourth at the same time with the self-fertilised. When the
+ seedlings were between 6 and 7 inches in height, the crossed began to show
+ a slight advantage over their opponents. When grown to a considerable
+ height the eight tallest crossed plants averaged 44.43, and the eight
+ tallest self-fertilised plants 37.34 inches, or as 100 to 84. When their
+ growth was completed they were again measured, as shown in Table 5/50.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/50. Tropaeolum minus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 65 : 31. Pot 1 : 50 : 45.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 69 : 42. Pot 2 : 35 : 45.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 70 : 50 4/8. Pot 3 : 59 4/8 : 55 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 61 4/8 : 37 4/8. Pot 4 : 57 4/8 : 61 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 467.5 : 368.0.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The eight tallest crossed plants now averaged 58.43, and the eight tallest
+ self-fertilised plants 46 inches in height, or as 100 to 79.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was also a great difference in the fertility of the two lots which
+ were left uncovered in the greenhouse. On the 17th of September the
+ capsules from all the plants were gathered, and the seeds counted. The
+ crossed plants yielded 243, whilst the same number of self-fertilised
+ plants yielded only 155 seeds, or as 100 to 64.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Limnanthes douglasii.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several flowers were crossed and self-fertilised in the usual manner, but
+ there was no marked difference in the number of seeds which they yielded.
+ A vast number of spontaneously self-fertilised capsules were also produced
+ under the net. Seedlings were raised in five pots from the above seeds,
+ and when the crossed were about 3 inches in height they showed a slight
+ advantage over the self-fertilised. When double this height, the sixteen
+ crossed and sixteen self-fertilised plants were measured to the tips of
+ their leaves; the former averaged 7.3 inches, and the self-fertilised 6.07
+ inches in height, or as 100 to 83. In all the pots, excepting 4, a crossed
+ plant flowered before any one of the self-fertilised plants. The plants,
+ when fully grown, were again measured to the summits of their ripe
+ capsules, with the result in Table 5/51.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/51. Limnanthes douglasii.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants to the summits of their ripe capsules, measured in
+ inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 17 7/8 : 15 1/8. Pot 1 : 17 6/8 : 16 4/8. Pot 1 : 13 : 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 20 : 14 4/8. Pot 2 : 22 : 15 6/8. Pot 2 : 21 : 16 1/8. Pot 2 : 18
+ 4/8 : 17.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 15 6/8 : 11 4/8. Pot 3 : 17 2/8 : 10 4/8. Pot 3 : 14 : 0.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 20 4/8 : 13 4/8. Pot 4 : 14 : 13. Pot 4 : 18 : 12 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 17 : 14 2/8. Pot 5 : 18 5/8 : 14 1/8. Pot 5 : 14 2/8 : 12 5/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 279.50 : 207.75.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sixteen crossed plants now averaged 17.46, and the fifteen (for one
+ had died) self-fertilised plants 13.85 inches in height, or as 100 to 79.
+ Mr. Galton considers that a higher ratio would be fairer, namely, 100 to
+ 76. He made a graphical representation of the above measurements, and adds
+ the words &ldquo;very good&rdquo; to the curvature thus formed. Both lots of plants
+ produced an abundance of seed-capsules, and, as far as could be judged by
+ the eye, there was no difference in their fertility.]
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ 14. LEGUMINOSAE.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ In this family I experimented on the following six genera, Lupinus,
+ Phaseolus, Lathyrus, Pisum, Sarothamnus, and Ononis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [Lupinus luteus. (5/2. The structure of the flowers of this plant, and
+ their manner of fertilisation, have been described by H. Muller
+ &lsquo;Befruchtung&rsquo; etc. page 243. The flowers do not secrete free nectar, and
+ bees generally visit them for their pollen. Mr. Farrer, however, remarks
+ &lsquo;Nature&rsquo; 1872 page 499, that &ldquo;there is a cavity at the back and base of
+ the vexillum, in which I have not been able to find nectar. But the bees,
+ which constantly visit these flowers, certainly go to this cavity for what
+ they want, and not to the staminal tube.&rdquo;)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few flowers were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant, but owing to
+ the unfavourable season only two crossed seeds were produced. Nine seeds
+ were saved from flowers spontaneously self-fertilised under a net, on the
+ same plant which yielded the two crossed seeds. One of these crossed seeds
+ was sown in a pot with two self-fertilised seeds on the opposite side; the
+ latter came up between two and three days before the crossed seed. The
+ second crossed seed was sown in like manner with two self-fertilised seeds
+ on the opposite side; these latter also came up about a day before the
+ crossed one. In both pots, therefore, the crossed seedlings from
+ germinating later, were at first completely beaten by the self-fertilised;
+ nevertheless, this state of things was afterwards completely reversed. The
+ seeds were sown late in the autumn, and the pots, which were much too
+ small, were kept in the greenhouse. The plants in consequence grew badly,
+ and the self-fertilised suffered most in both pots. The two crossed plants
+ when in flower during the following spring were 9 inches in height; one of
+ the self-fertilised plants was 8, and the three others only 3 inches in
+ height, being thus mere dwarfs. The two crossed plants produced thirteen
+ pods, whilst the four self-fertilised plants produced only a single one.
+ Some other self-fertilised plants which had been raised separately in
+ larger pots produced several spontaneously self-fertilised pods under a
+ net, and seeds from these were used in the following experiment.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The spontaneously self-fertilised seeds just mentioned, and crossed seeds
+ obtained by intercrossing the two crossed plants of the last generation,
+ after germinating on sand, were planted in pairs on the opposite sides of
+ three large pots. When the seedlings were only 4 inches in height, the
+ crossed had a slight advantage over their opponents. When grown to their
+ full height, every one of the crossed plants exceeded its opponent in
+ height. Nevertheless the self-fertilised plants in all three pots flowered
+ before the crossed! The measurements are given in Table 5/52.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/52. Lupinus luteus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 33 2/8 : 24 4/8. Pot 1 : 30 4/8 : 18 4/8. Pot 1 : 30 : 28.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 29 4/8 : 26. Pot 2 : 30 : 25.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 30 4/8 : 28. Pot 3 : 31 : 27 2/8. Pot 3 : 31 4/8 : 24 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 246.25 : 201.75.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The eight crossed plants here average 30.78, and the eight self-fertilised
+ 25.21 inches in height; or as 100 to 82. These plants were left uncovered
+ in the greenhouse to set their pods, but they produced very few good ones,
+ perhaps in part owing to few bees visiting them. The crossed plants
+ produced nine pods, containing on an average 3.4 seeds, and the
+ self-fertilised plants seven pods, containing on an average 3 seeds, so
+ that the seeds from an equal number of plants were as 100 to 88.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two other crossed seedlings, each with two self-fertilised seedlings on
+ the opposite sides of the same large pot, were turned out of their pots
+ early in the season, without being disturbed, into open ground of good
+ quality. They were thus subjected to but little competition with one
+ another, in comparison with the plants in the above three pots. In the
+ autumn the two crossed plants were about 3 inches taller than the four
+ self-fertilised plants; they looked also more vigorous and produced many
+ more pods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two other crossed and self-fertilised seeds of the same lot, after
+ germinating on sand, were planted on the opposite sides of a large pot, in
+ which a Calceolaria had long been growing, and were therefore exposed to
+ unfavourable conditions: the two crossed plants ultimately attained a
+ height of 20 1/2 and 20 inches, whilst the two self-fertilised were only
+ 18 and 9 1/2 inches high.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lupinus pilosus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From a series of accidents I was again unfortunate in obtaining a
+ sufficient number of crossed seedlings; and the following results would
+ not be worth giving, did they not strictly accord with those just given
+ with respect to Lupinus luteus. I raised at first only a single crossed
+ seedling, which was placed in competition with two self-fertilised ones on
+ the opposite side of the same pot. These plants, without being disturbed,
+ were soon afterwards turned into the open ground. By the autumn the
+ crossed plant had grown to so large a size that it almost smothered the
+ two self-fertilised plants, which were mere dwarfs; and the latter died
+ without maturing a single pod. Several self-fertilised seeds had been
+ planted at the same time separately in the open ground; and the two
+ tallest of these were 33 and 32 inches, whereas the one crossed plant was
+ 38 inches in height. This latter plant also produced many more pods than
+ did any one of the self-fertilised plants, although growing separately. A
+ few flowers on the one crossed plant were crossed with pollen from one of
+ the self-fertilised plants, for I had no other crossed plant from which to
+ obtain pollen. One of the self-fertilised plants having been covered by a
+ net produced plenty of spontaneously self-fertilised pods.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ From crossed and self-fertilised seeds obtained in the manner just
+ described, I succeeded in raising to maturity only a pair of plants, which
+ were kept in a pot in the greenhouse. The crossed plant grew to a height
+ of 33 inches, and the self-fertilised to that of 26 1/2 inches. The former
+ produced, whilst still kept in the greenhouse, eight pods, containing on
+ an average 2.77 seeds; and the latter only two pods, containing on an
+ average 2.5 seeds. The average height of the two crossed plants of the two
+ generations taken together was 35.5, and that of the three self-fertilised
+ plants of the same two generations 30.5; or as 100 to 86. (5/3. We here
+ see that both Lupinus luteus and pilosus seed freely when insects are
+ excluded; but Mr. Swale, of Christchurch, in New Zealand, informs me
+ &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo; 1858 page 828, that the garden varieties of the
+ lupine are not there visited by any bees, and that they seed less freely
+ than any other introduced leguminous plant, with the exception of red
+ clover. He adds &ldquo;I have, for amusement, during the summer, released the
+ stamens with a pin, and a pod of seed has always rewarded me for my
+ trouble, the adjoining flowers not so served having all proved blind.&rdquo; I
+ do not know to what species this statement refers.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Phaseolus multiflorus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This plant, the scarlet-runner of English gardeners and the Phaseolus
+ coccineus of Lamarck, originally came from Mexico, as I am informed by Mr.
+ Bentham. The flowers are so constructed that hive and humble-bees, which
+ visit them incessantly, almost always alight on the left wing-petal, as
+ they can best suck the nectar from this side. Their weight and movements
+ depress the petal, and this causes the stigma to protrude from the
+ spirally-wound keel, and a brush of hairs round the stigma pushes out the
+ pollen before it. The pollen adheres to the head or proboscis of the bee
+ which is at work, and is thus placed either on the stigma of the same
+ flower, or is carried to another flower. (5/4. The flowers have been
+ described by Delpino, and in an admirable manner by Mr. Farrer in the
+ &lsquo;Annals and Magazine of Natural History&rsquo; volume 2 4th series October 1868
+ page 256. My son Francis has explained &lsquo;Nature&rsquo; January 8, 1874 page 189,
+ the use of one peculiarity in their structure, namely, a little vertical
+ projection on the single free stamen near its base, which seems placed as
+ if to guard the entrance into the two nectar-holes in the staminal sheath.
+ He shows that this projection prevents the bees reaching the nectar,
+ unless they go to the left side of the flower, and it is absolutely
+ necessary for cross-fertilisation that they should alight on the left
+ wing-petal.) Several years ago I covered some plants under a large net,
+ and these produced on one occasion about one-third, and on another
+ occasion about one-eighth, of the number of pods which the same number of
+ uncovered plants growing close alongside produced. (5/5. &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo;
+ Chronicle&rsquo; 1857 page 725 and more especially ibid 1858 page 828. Also
+ &lsquo;Annals and Magazine of Natural History&rsquo; 3rd series volume 2 1858 page
+ 462.) This lessened fertility was not caused by any injury from the net,
+ as I moved the wing-petals of several protected flowers, in the same
+ manner as bees do, and these produced remarkably fine pods. When the net
+ was taken off, the flowers were immediately visited by bees, and it was
+ interesting to observe how quickly the plants became covered with young
+ pods. As the flowers are much frequented by Thrips, the self-fertilisation
+ of most of the flowers under the net may have been due to the action of
+ these minute insects. Dr. Ogle likewise covered up a large portion of a
+ plant, and &ldquo;out of a vast number of blossoms thus protected not a single
+ one produced a pod, while the unprotected blossoms were for the most part
+ fruitful.&rdquo; Mr. Belt gives a more curious case; this plant grows well and
+ flowers in Nicaragua; but as none of the native bees visit the flowers,
+ not a single pod is ever produced. (5/6. Dr. Ogle &lsquo;Popular Science Review&rsquo;
+ 1870 page 168. Mr. Belt &lsquo;The Naturalist in Nicaragua&rsquo; 1874 page 70. The
+ latter author gives a case &lsquo;Nature&rsquo; 1875 page 26, of a late crop of
+ Phaseolus multiflorus near London which &ldquo;was rendered barren&rdquo; by the
+ humble-bees cutting, as they frequently do, holes at the bases of the
+ flowers instead of entering them in the proper manner.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the facts now given we may feel nearly sure that individuals of the
+ same variety or of different varieties, if growing near each other and in
+ flower at the same time, would intercross; but I cannot myself advance any
+ direct evidence of such an occurrence, as only a single variety is
+ commonly cultivated in England. I have, however, received an account from
+ the Reverend W.A. Leighton, that plants raised by him from ordinary seed
+ produced seeds differing in an extraordinary manner in colour and shape,
+ leading to the belief that their parents must have been crossed. In France
+ M. Fermond more than once planted close together varieties which
+ ordinarily come true and which bear differently coloured flowers and
+ seeds; and the offspring thus raised varied so greatly that there could
+ hardly be a doubt that they had intercrossed. (5/7. &lsquo;Fécondation chez les
+ Végétaux&rsquo; 1859 pages 34-40. He adds that M. Villiers has described a
+ spontaneous hybrid, which he calls Phaseolus coccineus hybridus, in the
+ &lsquo;Annales de la Soc. R. de Horticulture&rsquo; June 1844.) On the other hand,
+ Professor H. Hoffman does not believe in the natural crossing of the
+ varieties; for although seedlings raised from two varieties growing close
+ together produced plants which yielded seeds of a mixed character, he
+ found that this likewise occurred with plants separated by a space of from
+ 40 to 150 paces from any other variety; he therefore attributes the mixed
+ character of the seed to spontaneous variability. (5/8. &lsquo;Bestimmung des
+ Werthes von Species und Varietat&rsquo; 1869 pages 47-72.) But the above
+ distance would be very far from sufficient to prevent intercrossing:
+ cabbages have been known to cross at several times this distance; and the
+ careful Gartner gives many instances of plants growing at from 600 to 800
+ yards apart fertilising one another. (5/9. &lsquo;Kenntnis der Befruchtung&rsquo; 1844
+ pages 573, 577.) Professor Hoffman even maintains that the flowers of the
+ kidney-bean are specially adapted for self-fertilisation. He enclosed
+ several flowers in bags; and as the buds often dropped off, he attributes
+ the partial sterility of these flowers to the injurious effects of the
+ bags, and not to the exclusion of insects. But the only safe method of
+ experimenting is to cover up a whole plant, which then never suffers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Self-fertilised seeds were obtained by moving up and down in the same
+ manner as bees do the wing-petals of flowers protected by a net; and
+ crossed seeds were obtained by crossing two of the plants under the same
+ net. The seeds after germinating on sand were planted on the opposite
+ sides of two large pots, and equal-sized sticks were given them to twine
+ up. When 8 inches in height, the plants on the two sides were equal. The
+ crossed plants flowered before the self-fertilised in both pots. As soon
+ as one of each pair had grown to the summit of its stick both were
+ measured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/53. Phaseolus multiflorus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 87 : 84 6/8. Pot 1 : 88 : 87. Pot 1 : 82 4/8 : 76.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 90 : 76 4/8. Pot 2 : 82 4/8 : 87 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 430.00 : 411.75.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the five crossed plants is 86 inches, and that of
+ the five self-fertilised plants 82.35; or as 100 to 96. The pots were kept
+ in the greenhouse, and there was little or no difference in the fertility
+ of the two lots. Therefore as far as these few observations serve, the
+ advantage gained by a cross is very small.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Phaseolus vulgaris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to this species, I merely ascertained that the flowers were
+ highly fertile when insects were excluded, as indeed must be the case, for
+ the plants are often forced during the winter when no insects are present.
+ Some plants of two varieties (namely Canterbury and Fulmer&rsquo;s Forcing Bean)
+ were covered with a net, and they seemed to produce as many pods,
+ containing as many beans, as some uncovered plants growing alongside; but
+ neither the pods nor the beans were actually counted. This difference in
+ self-fertility between Phaseolus vulgaris and multifloris is remarkable,
+ as these two species are so closely related that Linnaeus thought that
+ they formed one. When the varieties of Phaseolus vulgaris grow near one
+ another in the open ground, they sometimes cross largely, notwithstanding
+ their capacity for self-fertilisation. Mr. Coe has given me a remarkable
+ instance of this fact with respect to the negro and a white-seeded and a
+ brown-seeded variety, which were all grown together. The diversity of
+ character in the seedlings of the second generation raised by me from his
+ plants was wonderful. I could add other analogous cases, and the fact is
+ well-known to gardeners. (5/10. I have given Mr. Coe&rsquo;s case in the
+ &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo; 1858 page 829. See also for another case ibid page
+ 845.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lathyrus odoratus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Almost everyone who has studied the structure of papilionaceous flowers
+ has been convinced that they are specially adapted for
+ cross-fertilisation, although many of the species are likewise capable of
+ self-fertilisation. The case therefore of Lathyrus odoratus or the
+ sweet-pea is curious, for in this country it seems invariably to fertilise
+ itself. I conclude that this is so, as five varieties, differing greatly
+ in the colour of their flowers but in no other respect, are commonly sold
+ and come true; yet on inquiry from two great raisers of seed for sale, I
+ find that they take no precautions to insure purity&mdash;the five
+ varieties being habitually grown close together. (5/11. See Mr. W. Earley
+ in &lsquo;Nature&rsquo; 1872 page 242, to the same effect. He once, however, saw bees
+ visiting the flowers, and supposed that on this occasion they would have
+ been intercrossed.) I have myself purposely made similar trials with the
+ same result. Although the varieties always come true, yet, as we shall
+ presently see, one of the five well-known varieties occasionally gives
+ birth to another, which exhibits all its usual characters. Owing to this
+ curious fact, and to the darker-coloured varieties being the most
+ productive, these increase, to the exclusion of the others, as I was
+ informed by the late Mr. Masters, if there be no selection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to ascertain what would be the effect of crossing two varieties,
+ some flowers on the Purple sweet-pea, which has a dark reddish-purple
+ standard-petal with violet-coloured wing-petals and keel, were castrated
+ whilst very young, and were fertilised with pollen of the Painted Lady.
+ This latter variety has a pale cherry-coloured standard, with almost white
+ wings and keel. On two occasions I raised from a flower thus crossed
+ plants perfectly resembling both parent-forms; but the greater number
+ resembled the paternal variety. So perfect was the resemblance, that I
+ should have suspected some mistake in the label, had not the plants, which
+ were at first identical in appearance with the father or Painted Lady,
+ later in the season produced flowers blotched and streaked with dark
+ purple. This is an interesting example of partial reversion in the same
+ individual plant as it grows older. The purple-flowered plants were thrown
+ away, as they might possibly have been the product of the accidental
+ self-fertilisation of the mother-plant, owing to the castration not having
+ been effectual. But the plants which resembled in the colour of their
+ flowers the paternal variety or Painted Lady were preserved, and their
+ seeds saved. Next summer many plants were raised from these seeds, and
+ they generally resembled their grandfather the Painted Lady, but most of
+ them had their wing-petals streaked and stained with dark pink; and a few
+ had pale purple wings with the standard of a darker crimson than is
+ natural to the Painted Lady, so that they formed a new sub-variety.
+ Amongst these plants a single one appeared having purple flowers like
+ those of the grandmother, but with the petals slightly streaked with a
+ paler tint: this was thrown away. Seeds were again saved from the
+ foregoing plants, and the seedlings thus raised still resembled the
+ Painted Lady, or great-grandfather; but they now varied much, the standard
+ petal varying from pale to dark red, in a few instances with blotches of
+ white; and the wing-petals varied from nearly white to purple, the keel
+ being in all nearly white.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As no variability of this kind can be detected in plants raised from
+ seeds, the parents of which have grown during many successive generations
+ in close proximity, we may infer that they cannot have intercrossed. What
+ does occasionally occur is that in a row of plants raised from seeds of
+ one variety, another variety true of its kind appears; for instance, in a
+ long row of Scarlets (the seeds of which had been carefully gathered from
+ Scarlets for the sake of this experiment) two Purples and one Painted Lady
+ appeared. Seeds from these three aberrant plants were saved and sown in
+ separate beds. The seedlings from both the Purples were chiefly Purples,
+ but with some Painted Ladies and some Scarlets. The seedlings from the
+ aberrant Painted Lady were chiefly Painted Ladies with some Scarlets. Each
+ variety, whatever its parentage may have been, retained all its characters
+ perfect, and there was no streaking or blotching of the colours, as in the
+ foregoing plants of crossed origin. Another variety, however, is often
+ sold, which is striped and blotched with dark purple; and this is probably
+ of crossed origin, for I found, as well as Mr. Masters, that it did not
+ transmit its characters at all truly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the evidence now given, we may conclude that the varieties of the
+ sweet-pea rarely or never intercross in this country; and this is a highly
+ remarkable fact, considering, firstly, the general structure of the
+ flowers; secondly, the large quantity of pollen produced, far more than is
+ requisite for self-fertilisation; and thirdly, the occasional visit of
+ insects. That insects should sometimes fail to cross-fertilise the flowers
+ is intelligible, for I have thrice seen humble-bees of two kinds, as well
+ as hive-bees, sucking the nectar, and they did not depress the keel-petals
+ so as to expose the anthers and stigma; they were therefore quite
+ inefficient for fertilising the flowers. One of these bees, namely, Bombus
+ lapidarius, stood on one side at the base of the standard and inserted its
+ proboscis beneath the single separate stamen, as I afterwards ascertained
+ by opening the flower and finding this stamen prised up. Bees are forced
+ to act in this manner from the slit in the staminal tube being closely
+ covered by the broad membranous margin of the single stamen, and from the
+ tube not being perforated by nectar-passages. On the other hand, in the
+ three British species of Lathyrus which I have examined, and in the allied
+ genus Vicia, two nectar-passages are present. Therefore British bees might
+ well be puzzled how to act in the case of the sweet-pea. I may add that
+ the staminal tube of another exotic species, Lathyrus grandiflorus, is not
+ perforated by nectar-passages, and this species has rarely set any pods in
+ my garden, unless the wing-petals were moved up and down, in the same
+ manner as bees ought to do; and then pods were generally formed, but from
+ some cause often dropped off afterwards. One of my sons caught an elephant
+ sphinx-moth whilst visiting the flowers of the sweet-pea, but this insect
+ would not depress the wing-petals and keel. On the other hand, I have seen
+ on one occasion hive-bees, and two or three occasions the Megachile
+ willughbiella in the act of depressing the keel; and these bees had the
+ under sides of their bodies thickly covered with pollen, and could not
+ thus fail to carry pollen from one flower to the stigma of another. Why
+ then do not the varieties occasionally intercross, though this would not
+ often happen, as insects so rarely act in an efficient manner? The fact
+ cannot, as it appears, be explained by the flowers being self-fertilised
+ at a very early age; for although nectar is sometimes secreted and pollen
+ adheres to the viscid stigma before the flowers are fully expanded, yet in
+ five young flowers which were examined by me the pollen-tubes were not
+ exserted. Whatever the cause may be, we may conclude, that in England the
+ varieties never or very rarely intercross. But it does not follow from
+ this, that they would not be cross by the aid of other and larger insects
+ in their native country, which in botanical works is said to be the south
+ of Europe and the East Indies. Accordingly I wrote to Professor Delpino,
+ in Florence, and he informs me &ldquo;that it is the fixed opinion of gardeners
+ there that the varieties do intercross, and that they cannot be preserved
+ pure unless they are sown separately.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It follows also from the foregoing facts that the several varieties of the
+ sweet-pea must have propagated themselves in England by self-fertilisation
+ for very many generations, since the time when each new variety first
+ appeared. From the analogy of the plants of Mimulus and Ipomoea, which had
+ been self-fertilised for several generations, and from trials previously
+ made with the common pea, which is in nearly the same state as the
+ sweet-pea, it appeared to me very improbable that a cross between the
+ individuals of the same variety would benefit the offspring. A cross of
+ this kind was therefore not tried, which I now regret. But some flowers of
+ the Painted Lady, castrated at an early age, were fertilised with pollen
+ from the Purple sweet-pea; and it should be remembered that these
+ varieties differ in nothing except in the colour of their flowers. The
+ cross was manifestly effectual (though only two seeds were obtained), as
+ was shown by the two seedlings, when they flowered, closely resembling
+ their father, the Purple pea, excepting that they were a little lighter
+ coloured, with their keels slightly streaked with pale purple. Seeds from
+ flowers spontaneously self-fertilised under a net were at the same time
+ saved from the same mother-plant, the Painted Lady. These seeds
+ unfortunately did not germinate on sand at the same time with the crossed
+ seeds, so that they could not be planted simultaneously. One of the two
+ crossed seeds in a state of germination was planted in a pot (Number 1) in
+ which a self-fertilised seed in the same state had been planted four days
+ before, so that this latter seedling had a great advantage over the
+ crossed one. In Pot 2 the other crossed seed was planted two days before a
+ self-fertilised one; so that here the crossed seedling had a considerable
+ advantage over the self-fertilised one. But this crossed seedling had its
+ summit gnawed off by a slug, and was in consequence for a time quite
+ beaten by the self-fertilised plant. Nevertheless I allowed it to remain,
+ and so great was its constitutional vigour that it ultimately beat its
+ uninjured self-fertilised rival. When all four plants were almost fully
+ grown they were measured, as here shown:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/54. Lathyrus odoratus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 80 : 64 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 78 4/8 : 63.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 158.5 : 127.5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two crossed plants here average 79.25, and the two self-fertilised
+ 63.75 inches in height, or as 100 to 80. Six flowers on these two crossed
+ plants were reciprocally crossed with pollen from the other plant, and the
+ six pods thus produced contained on an average six peas, with a maximum in
+ one of seven. Eighteen spontaneously self-fertilised pods from the Painted
+ Lady, which, as already stated, had no doubt been self-fertilised for many
+ previous generations, contained on an average only 3.93 peas, with a
+ maximum in one of five peas; so that the number of peas in the crossed and
+ self-fertilised pods was as 100 to 65. The self-fertilised peas were,
+ however, quite as heavy as those from the crossed pods. From these two
+ lots of seeds, the plants of the next generation were raised.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Many of the self-fertilised peas just referred to germinated on sand
+ before any of the crossed ones, and were rejected. As soon as I got equal
+ pairs, they were planted on the opposite sides of two large pots, which
+ were kept in the greenhouse. The seedlings thus raised were the
+ grandchildren of the Painted Lady, which was first crossed by the Purple
+ variety. When the two lots were from 4 to 6 inches in height there was no
+ difference between them. Nor was there any marked difference in the period
+ of their flowering. When fully grown they were measured, as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/55. Lathyrus odoratus (Second Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Seedlings from Plants Crossed during the two previous
+ Generations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Seedlings from Plants Self-fertilised during many previous
+ Generations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 72 4/8 : 57 4/8. Pot 1 : 71 : 67. Pot 1 : 52 2/8 : 56 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 81 4/8 : 66 2/8. Pot 2 : 45 2/8 : 38 7/8. Pot 2 : 55 : 46.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 377.50 : 331.86.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the six crossed plants is here 62.91, and that of
+ the six self-fertilised 55.31 inches; or as 100 to 88. There was not much
+ difference in the fertility of the two lots; the crossed plants having
+ produced in the greenhouse thirty-five pods, and the self-fertilised
+ thirty-two pods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeds were saved from the self-fertilised flowers on these two lots of
+ plants, for the sake of ascertaining whether the seedlings thus raised
+ would inherit any difference in growth or vigour. It must therefore be
+ understood that both lots in the following trial are plants of
+ self-fertilised parentage; but that in the one lot the plants were the
+ children of plants which had been crossed during two previous generations,
+ having been before that self-fertilised for many generations; and that in
+ the other lot they were the children of plants which had not been crossed
+ for very many previous generations. The seeds germinated on sand and were
+ planted in pairs on the opposite sides of four pots. They were measured,
+ when fully grown, with the following result:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/56. Lathyrus odoratus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants from Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants from Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 72 : 65. Pot 1 : 72 : 61 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 58 : 64. Pot 2 : 68 : 68 2/8. Pot 2 : 72 4/8 : 56 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 81 : 60 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 77 4/8 : 76 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 501 : 452.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the seven self-fertilised plants, the offspring of
+ crossed plants, is 71.57, and that of the seven self-fertilised plants,
+ the offspring of self-fertilised plants, is 64.57; or as 100 to 90. The
+ self-fertilised plants from the self-fertilised produced rather more pods&mdash;namely,
+ thirty-six&mdash;than the self-fertilised plants from the crossed, for
+ these produced only thirty-one pods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few seeds of the same two lots were sown in the opposite corners of a
+ large box in which a Brugmansia had long been growing, and in which the
+ soil was so exhausted that seeds of Ipomoea purpurea would hardly
+ vegetate; yet the two plants of the sweet-pea which were raised flourished
+ well. For a long time the self-fertilised plant from the self-fertilised
+ beat the self-fertilised plant from the crossed plant; the former flowered
+ first, and was at one time 77 1/2 inches, whilst the latter was only 68
+ 1/2 in height; but ultimately the plant from the previous cross showed its
+ superiority and attained a height of 108 1/2 inches, whilst the other was
+ only 95 inches. I also sowed some of the same two lots of seeds in poor
+ soil in a shady place in a shrubbery. Here again the self-fertilised
+ plants from the self-fertilised for a long time exceeded considerably in
+ height those from the previously crossed plants; and this may probably be
+ attributed, in the present as in the last case, to these seeds having
+ germinated rather sooner than those from the crossed plants; but at the
+ close of the season the tallest of the self-fertilised plants from the
+ crossed plants was 30 inches, whilst the tallest of the self-fertilised
+ from the self-fertilised was 29 3/8 inches in height.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the various facts now given we see that plants derived from a cross
+ between two varieties of the sweet-pea, which differ in no respect except
+ in the colour of their flowers, exceed considerably in height the
+ offspring from self-fertilised plants, both in the first and second
+ generations. The crossed plants also transmit their superiority in height
+ and vigour to their self-fertilised offspring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pisum sativum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The common pea is perfectly fertile when its flowers are protected from
+ the visits of insects; I ascertained this with two or three different
+ varieties, as did Dr. Ogle with another. But the flowers are likewise
+ adapted for cross-fertilisation; Mr. Farrer specifies the following
+ points, namely: &ldquo;The open blossom displaying itself in the most attractive
+ and convenient position for insects; the conspicuous vexillum; the wings
+ forming an alighting place; the attachment of the wings to the keel, by
+ which any body pressing on the former must press down the latter; the
+ staminal tube enclosing nectar, and affording by means of its partially
+ free stamen with apertures on each side of its base an open passage to an
+ insect seeking the nectar; the moist and sticky pollen placed just where
+ it will be swept out of the apex of the keel against the entering insect;
+ the stiff elastic style so placed that on a pressure being applied to the
+ keel it will be pushed upwards out of the keel; the hairs on the style
+ placed on that side of the style only on which there is space for the
+ pollen, and in such a direction as to sweep it out; and the stigma so
+ placed as to meet an entering insect,&mdash;all these become correlated
+ parts of one elaborate mechanism, if we suppose that the fertilisation of
+ these flowers is effected by the carriage of pollen from one to the
+ other.&rdquo; (5/12. &lsquo;Nature&rsquo; October 10, 1872 page 479. Hermann Muller gives an
+ elaborate description of the flowers &lsquo;Befruchtung&rsquo; etc. page 247.)
+ Notwithstanding these manifest provisions for cross-fertilisation,
+ varieties which have been cultivated for very many successive generations
+ in close proximity, although flowering at the same time, remain pure. I
+ have elsewhere given evidence on this head, and if required could give
+ more. (5/13. &lsquo;Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication&rsquo; chapter
+ 9 2nd edition volume 1 page 348.) There can hardly be a doubt that some of
+ Knight&rsquo;s varieties, which were originally produced by an artificial cross
+ and were very vigorous, lasted for at least sixty years, and during all
+ these years were self-fertilised; for had it been otherwise, they would
+ not have kept true, as the several varieties are generally grown near
+ together. Most of the varieties, however, endure for a shorter period; and
+ this may be in part due to their weakness of constitution from
+ long-continued self-fertilisation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is remarkable, considering that the flowers secrete much nectar and
+ afford much pollen, how seldom they are visited by insects either in
+ England, or, as H. Muller remarks, in North Germany. I have observed the
+ flowers for the last thirty years, and in all this time have only thrice
+ seen bees of the proper kind at work (one of them being Bombus muscorum),
+ such as were sufficiently powerful to depress the keel, so as to get the
+ undersides of their bodies dusted with pollen. These bees visited several
+ flowers, and could hardly have failed to cross-fertilise them. Hive-bees
+ and other small kinds sometimes collect pollen from old and already
+ fertilised flowers, but this is of no account. The rarity of the visits of
+ efficient bees to this exotic plant is, I believe, the chief cause of the
+ varieties so seldom intercrossing. That a cross does occasionally take
+ place, as might be expected from what has just been stated, is certain,
+ from the recorded cases of the direct action of the pollen of one variety
+ on the seed-coats of another. (5/14. &lsquo;Variation of Animals and Plants
+ under Domestication&rsquo; chapter 11 2nd edition volume 1 page 428.) The late
+ Mr. Masters, who particularly attended to the raising of new varieties of
+ peas, was convinced that some of them had originated from accidental
+ crosses. But as such crosses are rare, the old varieties would not often
+ be thus deteriorated, more especially as plants departing from the proper
+ type are generally rejected by those who collect seed for sale. There is
+ another cause which probably tends to render cross-fertilisation rare,
+ namely, the early age at which the pollen-tubes are exserted; eight
+ flowers not fully expanded were examined, and in seven of these the
+ pollen-tubes were in this state; but they had not as yet penetrated the
+ stigma. Although so few insects visit the flowers of the pea in this
+ country or in North Germany, and although the anthers seem here to open
+ abnormally soon, it does not follow that the species in its native country
+ would be thus circumstanced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Owing to the varieties having been self-fertilised for many generations,
+ and to their having been subjected in each generation to nearly the same
+ conditions (as will be explained in a future chapter) I did not expect
+ that a cross between two such plants would benefit the offspring; and so
+ it proved on trial. In 1867 I covered up several plants of the Early
+ Emperor pea, which was not then a very new variety, so that it must
+ already have been propagated by self-fertilisation for at least a dozen
+ generations. Some flowers were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant
+ growing in the same row, and others were allowed to fertilise themselves
+ under a net. The two lots of seeds thus obtained were sown on opposite
+ sides of two large pots, but only four pairs came up at the same time. The
+ pots were kept in the greenhouse. The seedlings of both lots when between
+ 6 and 7 inches in height were equal. When nearly full-grown they were
+ measured, as in Table 5/57.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/57. Pisum sativum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 35 : 29 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 31 4/8 : 51. Pot 2 : 35 : 45. Pot 2 : 37 : 33.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 138.50 : 158.75.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the four crossed plants is here 34.62, and that of
+ the four self-fertilised plants 39.68, or as 100 to 115. So that the
+ crossed plants, far from beating the self-fertilised, were completely
+ beaten by them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There can be no doubt that the result would have been widely different, if
+ any two varieties out of the numberless ones which exist had been crossed.
+ Notwithstanding that both had been self-fertilised for many previous
+ generations, each would almost certainly have possessed its own peculiar
+ constitution; and this degree of differentiation would have been
+ sufficient to make a cross highly beneficial. I have spoken thus
+ confidently of the benefit which would have been derived from crossing any
+ two varieties of the pea from the following facts: Andrew Knight in
+ speaking of the results of crossing reciprocally very tall and short
+ varieties, says, &ldquo;I had in this experiment a striking instance of the
+ stimulative effects of crossing the breeds; for the smallest variety,
+ whose height rarely exceeded 2 feet, was increased to 6 feet; whilst the
+ height of the large and luxuriant kind was very little diminished.&rdquo; (5/15.
+ &lsquo;Philosophical Transactions&rsquo; 1799 page 200.) Recently Mr. Laxton has made
+ numerous crosses, and everyone had been astonished at the vigour and
+ luxuriance of the new varieties which he has thus raised and afterwards
+ fixed by selection. He gave me seed-peas produced from crosses between
+ four distinct kinds; and the plants thus raised were extraordinarily
+ vigorous, being in each case from 1 to 2 or even 3 feet taller than the
+ parent-forms, which were raised at the same time close alongside. But as I
+ did not measure their actual height I cannot give the exact ratio, but it
+ must have been at least as 100 to 75. A similar trial was subsequently
+ made with two other peas from a different cross, and the result was nearly
+ the same. For instance, a crossed seedling between the Maple and
+ Purple-podded pea was planted in poor soil and grew to the extraordinary
+ height of 116 inches; whereas the tallest plant of either parent variety,
+ namely, a Purple-podded pea, was only 70 inches in height; or as 100 to
+ 60.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sarothamnus scoparius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bees incessantly visit the flowers of the common Broom, and these are
+ adapted by a curious mechanism for cross-fertilisation. When a bee alights
+ on the wing-petals of a young flower, the keel is slightly opened and the
+ short stamens spring out, which rub their pollen against the abdomen of
+ the bee. If a rather older flower is visited for the first time (or if the
+ bee exerts great force on a younger flower), the keel opens along its
+ whole length, and the longer as well as the shorter stamens, together with
+ the much elongated curved pistil, spring forth with violence. The
+ flattened, spoon-like extremity of the pistil rests for a time on the back
+ of the bee, and leaves on it the load of pollen with which it is charged.
+ As soon as the bee flies away, the pistil instantly curls round, so that
+ the stigmatic surface is now upturned and occupies a position, in which it
+ would be rubbed against the abdomen of another bee visiting the same
+ flower. Thus, when the pistil first escapes from the keel, the stigma is
+ rubbed against the back of the bee, dusted with pollen from the longer
+ stamens, either of the same or another flower; and afterwards against the
+ lower surface of the bee dusted with pollen from the shorter stamens,
+ which is often shed a day or two before that from the longer stamens.
+ (5/16. These observations have been quoted in an abbreviated form by the
+ Reverend G. Henslow, in the &lsquo;Journal of Linnean Society Botany&rsquo; volume 9
+ 1866 page 358. Hermann Muller has since published a full and excellent
+ account of the flower in his &lsquo;Befruchtung&rsquo; etc. page 240.) By this
+ mechanism cross-fertilisation is rendered almost inevitable, and we shall
+ immediately see that pollen from a distinct plant is more effective than
+ that from the same flower. I need only add that, according to H. Muller,
+ the flowers do not secrete nectar, and he thinks that bees insert their
+ proboscides only in the hope of finding nectar; but they act in this
+ manner so frequently and for so long a time that I cannot avoid the belief
+ that they obtain something palatable within the flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the visits of bees are prevented, and if the flowers are not dashed by
+ the wind against any object, the keel never opens, so that the stamens and
+ pistil remain enclosed. Plants thus protected yield very few pods in
+ comparison with those produced by neighbouring uncovered bushes, and
+ sometimes none at all. I fertilised a few flowers on a plant growing
+ almost in a state of nature with pollen from another plant close
+ alongside, and the four crossed capsules contained on an average 9.2
+ seeds. This large number no doubt was due to the bush being covered up,
+ and thus not exhausted by producing many pods; for fifty pods gathered
+ from an adjoining plant, the flowers of which had been fertilised by the
+ bees, contained an average of only 7.14 seeds. Ninety-three pods
+ spontaneously self-fertilised on a large bush which had been covered up,
+ but had been much agitated by the wind, contained an average of 2.93
+ seeds. Ten of the finest of these ninety-three capsules yielded an average
+ of 4.30 seeds, that is less than half the average number in the four
+ artificially crossed capsules. The ratio of 7.14 to 2.93, or as 100 to 41,
+ is probably the fairest for the number of seeds per pod, yielded by
+ naturally-crossed and spontaneously self-fertilised flowers. The crossed
+ seeds compared with an equal number of the spontaneously self-fertilised
+ seeds were heavier, in the ratio of 100 to 88. We thus see that besides
+ the mechanical adaptations for cross-fertilisation, the flowers are much
+ more productive with pollen from a distinct plant than with their own
+ pollen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eight pairs of the above crossed and self-fertilised seeds, after they had
+ germinated on sand, were planted (1867) on the opposite sides of two large
+ pots. When several of the seedlings were an inch and a half in height,
+ there was no marked difference between the two lots. But even at this
+ early age the leaves of the self-fertilised seedlings were smaller and of
+ not so bright a green as those of the crossed seedlings. The pots were
+ kept in the greenhouse, and as the plants on the following spring (1868)
+ looked unhealthy and had grown but little, they were plunged, still in
+ their pots, into the open ground. The plants all suffered much from the
+ sudden change, especially the self-fertilised, and two of the latter died.
+ The remainder were measured, and I give the measurements in Table 5/58,
+ because I have not seen in any other species so great a difference between
+ the crossed and self-fertilised seedlings at so early an age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/58. Sarothamnus scoparius (very young plants).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 4 4/8 : 2 4/8. Pot 1 : 6 : 1 4/8. Pot 1 : 2 : 1.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 2 : 1 4/8. Pot 2 : 2 4/8 : 1. Pot 2 : 0 4/8 : 0 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 17.5 : 8.0.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The six crossed plants here average 2.91, and the six self-fertilised 1.33
+ inches in height; so that the former were more than twice as high as the
+ latter, or as 100 to 46.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the spring of the succeeding year (1869) the three crossed plants in
+ Pot 1 had all grown to nearly a foot in height, and they had smothered the
+ three little self-fertilised plants so completely that two were dead; and
+ the third, only an inch and a half in height, was dying. It should be
+ remembered that these plants had been bedded out in their pots, so that
+ they were subjected to very severe competition. This pot was now thrown
+ away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The six plants in Pot 2 were all alive. One of the self-fertilised was an
+ inch and a quarter taller than any one of the crossed plants; but the
+ other two self-fertilised plants were in a very poor condition. I
+ therefore resolved to leave these plants to struggle together for some
+ years. By the autumn of the same year (1869) the self-fertilised plant
+ which had been victorious was now beaten. The measurements are shown in
+ Table 5/59.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/59. Pot 2.&mdash;Sarothamnus scoparius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ : 15 6/8 : 13 1/8.
+ : 9 6/8 : 3.
+ : 8 2/8 : 2 4/8.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The same plants were again measured in the autumn of the following year,
+ 1870.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/60. Pot 2.&mdash;Sarothamnus scoparius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ : 26 2/8 : 14 2/8.
+ : 16 4/8 : 11 4/8.
+ : 14 : 9 6/8.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Total : 56.75 : 35.50.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The three crossed plants now averaged 18.91, and the three self-fertilised
+ 11.83 inches in height; or as 100 to 63. The three crossed plants in Pot
+ 1, as already shown, had beaten the three self-fertilised plants so
+ completely, that any comparison between them was superfluous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The winter of 1870-1871 was severe. In the spring the three crossed plants
+ in Pot 2 had not even the tips of their shoots in the least injured,
+ whereas all three self-fertilised plants were killed half-way down to the
+ ground; and this shows how much more tender they were. In consequence not
+ one of these latter plants bore a single flower during the ensuing summer
+ of 1871, whilst all three crossed plants flowered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ononis minutissima.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This plant, of which seeds were sent me from North Italy, produces,
+ besides the ordinary papilionaceous flowers, minute, imperfect, closed or
+ cleistogene flowers, which can never be cross-fertilised, but are highly
+ self-fertile. Some of the perfect flowers were crossed with pollen from a
+ distinct plant, and six capsules thus produced yielded on an average 3.66
+ seeds, with a maximum of five in one. Twelve perfect flowers were marked
+ and allowed to fertilise themselves spontaneously under a net, and they
+ yielded eight capsules, containing on an average 2.38 seeds, with a
+ maximum of three seeds in one. So that the crossed and self-fertilised
+ capsules from the perfect flowers yielded seeds in the proportion of 100
+ to 65. Fifty-three capsules produced by the cleistogene flowers contained
+ on an average 4.1 seeds, so that these were the most productive of all;
+ and the seeds themselves looked finer even than those from the crossed
+ perfect flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seeds from the crossed perfect flowers and from the self-fertilised
+ cleistogene flowers were allowed to germinate on sand; but unfortunately
+ only two pairs germinated at the same time. These were planted on the
+ opposite sides of the same pot, which was kept in the greenhouse. In the
+ summer of the same year, when the seedlings were about 4 1/2 inches in
+ height, the two lots were equal. In the autumn of the following year
+ (1868) the two crossed plants were of exactly the same height, namely, 11
+ 4/8 inches, and the two self-fertilised plants 12 6/8 and 7 2/8 inches; so
+ that one of the self-fertilised exceeded considerably in height all the
+ others. By the autumn of 1869 the two crossed plants had acquired the
+ supremacy; their height being 16 4/8 and 15 1/8, whilst that of the two
+ self-fertilised plants was 14 5/8 and 11 4/8 inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the autumn of 1870, the heights were as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/61. Ononis minutissima.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ : 20 3/8 : 17 4/8.
+ : 19 2/8 : 17 2/8.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Total : 39.63 : 34.75.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So that the mean height of the two crossed plants was 19.81, and that of
+ the two self-fertilised 17.37 inches; or as 100 to 88. It should be
+ remembered that the two lots were at first equal in height; that one of
+ the self-fertilised plants then had the advantage, the two crossed plants
+ being at last victorious.]
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ A SUMMARY ON THE LEGUMINOSAE.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Six genera in this family were experimented on, and the results are in
+ some respects remarkable. The crossed plants of the two species of Lupinus
+ were conspicuously superior to the self-fertilised plants in height and
+ fertility; and when grown under very unfavourable conditions, in vigour.
+ The scarlet-runner (Phaseolus multiflorus) is partially sterile if the
+ visits of bees are prevented, and there is reason to believe that
+ varieties growing near one another intercross. The five crossed plants,
+ however, exceeded in height the five self-fertilised only by a little.
+ Phaseolus vulgaris is perfectly self-sterile; nevertheless, varieties
+ growing in the same garden sometimes intercross largely. The varieties of
+ Lathyrus odoratus, on the other hand, appear never to intercross in this
+ country; and though the flowers are not often visited by efficient
+ insects, I cannot account for this fact, more especially as the varieties
+ are believed to intercross in North Italy. Plants raised from a cross
+ between two varieties, differing only in the colour of their flowers, grew
+ much taller and were under unfavourable conditions more vigorous than the
+ self-fertilised plants; they also transmitted, when self-fertilised, their
+ superiority to their offspring. The many varieties of the common Pea
+ (Pisum sativum), though growing in close proximity, very seldom
+ intercross; and this seems due to the rarity in this country of the visits
+ of bees sufficiently powerful to effect cross-fertilisation. A cross
+ between the self-fertilised individuals of the same variety does no good
+ whatever to the offspring; whilst a cross between distinct varieties,
+ though closely allied, does great good, of which we have excellent
+ evidence. The flowers of the Broom (Sarothamnus) are almost sterile if
+ they are not disturbed and if insects are excluded. The pollen from a
+ distinct plant is more effective than that from the same flower in
+ producing seeds. The crossed seedlings have an enormous advantage over the
+ self-fertilised when grown together in close competition. Lastly, only
+ four plants of the Ononis minutissima were raised; but as these were
+ observed during their whole growth, the advantage of the crossed over the
+ self-fertilised plants may, I think, be fully trusted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [15. ONAGRACEAE.&mdash;Clarkia elegans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Owing to the season being very unfavourable (1867), few of the flowers
+ which I fertilised formed capsules; twelve crossed flowers produced only
+ four, and eighteen self-fertilised flowers yielded only one capsule. The
+ seeds after germinating on sand were planted in three pots, but all the
+ self-fertilised plants died in one of them. When the two lots were between
+ 4 and 5 inches in height, the crossed began to show a slight superiority
+ over the self-fertilised. When in full flower they were measured, with the
+ following result:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/62. Clarkia elegans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 40 4/8 : 33. Pot 1 : 35 : 24. Pot 1 : 25 : 23.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 33 4/8 : 30 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 134.0 : 110.5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the four crossed plants is 33.5, and that of the
+ four self-fertilised plants 27.62 inches, or as 100 to 82. The crossed
+ plants altogether produced 105 and the self-fertilised plants 63 capsules;
+ or as 100 to 60. In both pots a self-fertilised plant flowered before any
+ one of the crossed plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. LOASACEAE.&mdash;Bartonia aurea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some flowers were crossed and self-fertilised in the usual manner during
+ two seasons; but as I reared on the first occasion only two pairs, the
+ results are given together. On both occasions the crossed capsules
+ contained slightly more seeds than the self-fertilised. During the first
+ year, when the plants were about 7 inches in height, the self-fertilised
+ were the tallest, and in the second year the crossed were the tallest.
+ When the two lots were in full flower they were measured, as in Table
+ 5/63.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/63. Bartonia aurea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 31 : 37.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 18 4/8 : 20 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 19 4/8 : 40 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 25 : 35. Pot 4 : 36 : 15 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 31 : 18. Pot 5 : 16 : 11 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 6 : 20 : 32 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 197.0 : 210.5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the eight crossed plants is 24.62, and that of the
+ eight self-fertilised 26.31 inches; or as 100 to 107. So that the
+ self-fertilised had a decided advantage over the crossed. But the plants
+ from some cause never grew well, and finally became so unhealthy that only
+ three crossed and three self-fertilised plants survived to set any
+ capsules, and these were few in number. The two lots seemed to be about
+ equally unproductive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. PASSIFLORACEAE.&mdash;Passiflora gracilis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This annual species produces spontaneously numerous fruits when insects
+ are excluded, and behaves in this respect very differently from most of
+ the other species in the genus, which are extremely sterile unless
+ fertilised with pollen from a distinct plant. (5/17. &lsquo;Variation of Animals
+ and Plants under Domestication&rsquo; chapter 17 2nd edition volume 2 page 118.)
+ Fourteen fruits from crossed flowers contained on an average 24.14 seeds.
+ Fourteen fruits (two poor ones being rejected), spontaneously
+ self-fertilised under a net, contained on an average 20.58 seeds per
+ fruit; or as 100 to 85. These seeds were sown on the opposite sides of
+ three pots, but only two pairs came up at the same time; and therefore a
+ fair judgment cannot be formed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/64. Passiflora gracilis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 56 : 38.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 42 : 64.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 98 : 102.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mean of the two crossed is 49 inches, and that of the two
+ self-fertilised 51 inches; or as 100 to 104.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. UMBELLIFERAE.&mdash;Apium petroselinum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Umbelliferae are proterandrous, and can hardly fail to be
+ cross-fertilised by the many flies and small Hymenoptera which visit the
+ flowers. (5/18. Hermann Muller &lsquo;Befruchtung&rsquo; etc. page 96. According to M.
+ Mustel as stated by Godron &lsquo;De l&rsquo;espèce&rsquo; tome 2 page 58 1859, varieties of
+ the carrot growing near each other readily intercross.) A plant of the
+ common parsley was covered by a net, and it apparently produced as many
+ and as fine spontaneously self-fertilised fruits or seeds as the adjoining
+ uncovered plants. The flowers on the latter were visited by so many
+ insects that they must have received pollen from one another. Some of
+ these two lots of seeds were left on sand, but nearly all the
+ self-fertilised seeds germinated before the others, so that I was forced
+ to throw all away. The remaining seeds were then sown on the opposite
+ sides of four pots. At first the self-fertilised seedlings were a little
+ taller in most of the pots than the naturally crossed seedlings, and this
+ no doubt was due to the self-fertilised seeds having germinated first. But
+ in the autumn all the plants were so equal that it did not seem worth
+ while to measure them. In two of the pots they were absolutely equal; in a
+ third, if there was any difference, it was in favour of the crossed
+ plants, and in a somewhat plainer manner in the fourth pot. But neither
+ side had any substantial advantage over the other; so that in height they
+ may be said to be as 100 to 100.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. DIPSACEAE.&mdash;Scabiosa atro-purpurea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The flowers, which are proterandrous, were fertilised during the
+ unfavourable season of 1867, so that I got few seeds, especially from the
+ self-fertilised heads, which were extremely sterile. The crossed and
+ self-fertilised plants raised from these seeds were measured before they
+ were in full flower, as in Table 5/65.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/65. Scabiosa atro-purpurea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 14 : 20.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 15 : 14 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 21 : 14. Pot 3 : 18 4/8 : 13.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 68.5 : 61.5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The four crossed plants averaged 17.12, and the four self-fertilised 15.37
+ inches in height; or as 100 to 90. One of the self-fertilised plants in
+ Pot 3 was killed by an accident, and its fellow pulled up; so that when
+ they were again measured to the summits of their flowers, there were only
+ three on each side; the crossed now averaged in height 32.83, and the
+ self-fertilised 30.16 inches; or as 100 to 92.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. COMPOSITAE.&mdash;Lactuca sativa. (5/19. The Compositae are
+ well-adapted for cross-fertilisation, but a nurseryman on whom I can rely,
+ told me that he had been in the habit of sowing several kinds of lettuce
+ near together for the sake of seed, and had never observed that they
+ became crossed. It is very improbable that all the varieties which were
+ thus cultivated near together flowered at different times; but two which I
+ selected by hazard and sowed near each other did not flower at the same
+ time; and my trial failed.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three plants of Lettuce (Great London Cos var.) grew close together in my
+ garden; one was covered by a net, and produced self-fertilised seeds, the
+ other two were allowed to be naturally crossed by insects; but the season
+ (1867) was unfavourable, and I did not obtain many seeds. Only one crossed
+ and one self-fertilised plant were raised in Pot 1, and their measurements
+ are given in Table 5/66. The flowers on this one self-fertilised plant
+ were again self-fertilised under a net, not with pollen from the same
+ floret, but from other florets on the same head. The flowers on the two
+ crossed plants were left to be crossed by insects, but the process was
+ aided by some pollen being occasionally transported by me from plant to
+ plant. These two lots of seeds, after germinating on sand, were planted in
+ pairs on the opposite sides of Pots 2 and 3, which were at first kept in
+ the greenhouse and then turned out of doors. The plants were measured when
+ in full flower. Table 5/66, therefore, includes plants belonging to two
+ generations. When the seedlings of the two lots were only 5 or 6 inches in
+ height they were equal. In Pot 3 one of the self-fertilised plants died
+ before flowering, as has occurred in so many other cases.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/66. Lactuca sativa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 27 : 21 4/8. Pot 1 : 25 : 20. First generation, planted in open
+ ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 29 4/8 : 24. Pot 2 : 17 4/8 : 10. Pot 2 : 12 4/8 : 11. Second
+ generation, planted in open ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 14 : 9 4/8. Pot 3 : 10 4/8 : 0. Second generation, kept in the
+ pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 136 : 96.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the seven crossed plants is 19.43, and that of the
+ six self-fertilised plants 16 inches; or as 100 to 82.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. CAMPANULACEAE.&mdash;Specularia speculum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the closely allied genus, Campanula, in which Specularia was formerly
+ included, the anthers shed at an early period their pollen, and this
+ adheres to the collecting hairs which surround the pistil beneath the
+ stigma; so that without some mechanical aid the flowers cannot be
+ fertilised. For instance, I covered up a plant of Campanula carpathica,
+ and it did not produce a single capsule, whilst the surrounding uncovered
+ plants seeded profusely. On the other hand, the present species of
+ Specularia appears to set almost as many capsules when covered up, as when
+ left to the visits of the Diptera, which, as far as I have seen, are the
+ only insects that frequent the flowers. (5/20. It has long been known that
+ another species of the genus, Specularia perfoliata, produces cleistogene
+ as well as perfect flowers, and the former are of course self-fertile.) I
+ did not ascertain whether the naturally crossed and spontaneously
+ self-fertilised capsules contained an equal number of seeds, but a
+ comparison of artificially crossed and self-fertilised flowers, showed
+ that the former were probably the most productive. It appears that this
+ plant is capable of producing a large number of self-fertilised capsules
+ owing to the petals closing at night, as well as during cold weather. In
+ the act of closing, the margins of the petals become reflexed, and their
+ inwardly projecting midribs then pass between the clefts of the stigma,
+ and in doing so push the pollen from the outside of the pistil on to the
+ stigmatic surfaces. (5/21. Mr. Meehan has lately shown &lsquo;Proceedings of the
+ Academy of Natural Science Philadelphia&rsquo; May 16, 1876 page 84, that the
+ closing of the flowers of Claytonia virginica and Ranunculus bulbosus
+ during the night causes their self-fertilisation.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twenty flowers were fertilised by me with their own pollen, but owing to
+ the bad season, only six capsules were produced; they contained on an
+ average 21.7 seeds, with a maximum of forty-eight in one. Fourteen flowers
+ were crossed with pollen from another plant, and these produced twelve
+ capsules, containing on an average 30 seeds, with a maximum in one of
+ fifty-seven seeds; so that the crossed seeds were to the self-fertilised
+ from an equal number of capsules as 100 to 72. The former were also
+ heavier than an equal number of self-fertilised seeds, in the ratio of 100
+ to 86. Thus, whether we judge by the number of capsules produced from an
+ equal number of flowers, or by the average number of the contained seeds,
+ or the maximum number in any one capsule, or by their weight, crossing
+ does great good in comparison with self-fertilisation. The two lots of
+ seeds were sown on the opposite sides of four pots; but the seedlings were
+ not sufficiently thinned. Only the tallest plant on each side was
+ measured, when fully grown. The measurements are given in Table 5/67. In
+ all four pots the crossed plants flowered first. When the seedlings were
+ only about an inch and a half in height both lots were equal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/67. Specularia speculum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Tallest Crossed Plant in each Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Tallest Self-fertilised Plant in each Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 18 : 15 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 17 : 19.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 22 1/8 : 18.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 20 : 23.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 77.13 : 75.75.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The four tallest crossed plants averaged 19.28, and the four tallest
+ self-fertilised 18.93 inches in height; or as 100 to 98. So that there was
+ no difference worth speaking of between the two lots in height; though
+ other great advantages are derived, as we have seen, from
+ cross-fertilisation. From being grown in pots and kept in the greenhouse,
+ none of the plants produced any capsules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lobelia ramosa. (5/22. I have adopted the name given to this plant in the
+ &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo; 1866. Professor T. Dyer, however, informs me that
+ it probably is a white variety of L. tenuior of R. Brown, from W.
+ Australia.)
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ VAR. SNOW-FLAKE.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The well-adapted means by which cross-fertilisation is ensured in this
+ genus have been described by several authors. (5/23. See the works of
+ Hildebrand and Delpino. Mr. Farrer also has given a remarkably clear
+ description of the mechanism by which cross-fertilisation is effected in
+ this genus, in the &lsquo;Annals and Magazine of Natural History&rsquo; volume 2 4th
+ series 1868 page 260. In the allied genus Isotoma, the curious spike which
+ projects rectangularly from the anthers, and which when shaken causes the
+ pollen to fall on the back of an entering insect, seems to have been
+ developed from a bristle, like one of those which spring from the anthers
+ in some of or all the species of Lobelia, as described by Mr. Farrer.) The
+ pistil as it slowly increases in length pushes the pollen out of the
+ conjoined anthers, by the aid of a ring of bristles; the two lobes of the
+ stigma being at this time closed and incapable of fertilisation. The
+ extrusion of the pollen is also aided by insects, which rub against the
+ little bristles that project from the anthers. The pollen thus pushed out
+ is carried by insects to the older flowers, in which the stigma of the now
+ freely projecting pistil is open and ready to be fertilised. I proved the
+ importance of the gaily-coloured corolla, by cutting off the large flowers
+ of Lobelia erinus; and these flowers were neglected by the hive-bees which
+ were incessantly visiting the other flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A capsule was obtained by crossing a flower of L. ramosa with pollen from
+ another plant, and two other capsules from artificially self-fertilised
+ flowers. The contained seeds were sown on the opposite sides of four pots.
+ Some of the crossed seedlings which came up before the others had to be
+ pulled up and thrown away. Whilst the plants were very small there was not
+ much difference in height between the two lots; but in Pot 3 the
+ self-fertilised were for a time the tallest. When in full flower the
+ tallest plant on each side of each pot was measured, and the result is
+ shown in Table 5/68. In all four pots a crossed plant flowered before any
+ one of its opponents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/68. Lobelia ramosa (First Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Tallest Crossed Plant in each Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Tallest Self-fertilised Plant in each Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 22 4/8 : 17 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 27 4/8 : 24.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 16 4/8 : 15.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 22 4/8 : 17.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 89.0 : 73.5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The four tallest crossed plants averaged 22.25, and the four tallest
+ self-fertilised 18.37 inches in height; or as 100 to 82. I was surprised
+ to find that the anthers of a good many of these self-fertilised plants
+ did not cohere and did not contain any pollen; and the anthers even of a
+ very few of the crossed plants were in the same condition. Some flowers on
+ the crossed plants were again crossed, four capsules being thus obtained;
+ and some flowers on the self-fertilised plants were again self-fertilised,
+ seven capsules being thus obtained. The seeds from both lots were weighed,
+ and it was calculated that an equal number of capsules would have yielded
+ seed in the proportion by weight of 100 for the crossed to 60 for the
+ self-fertilised capsules. So that the flowers on the crossed plants again
+ crossed were much more fertile than those on the self-fertilised plants
+ again self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The above two lots of seeds were placed on damp sand, and many of the
+ crossed seeds germinated, as on the last occasion, before the
+ self-fertilised, and were rejected. Three or four pairs in the same state
+ of germination were planted on the opposite sides of two pots; a single
+ pair in a third pot; and all the remaining seeds were sown crowded in a
+ fourth pot. When the seedlings were about one and a half inches in height,
+ they were equal on both sides of the three first pots; but in Pot 4, in
+ which they grew crowded and were thus exposed to severe competition, the
+ crossed were about a third taller than the self-fertilised. In this latter
+ pot, when the crossed averaged 5 inches in height, the self-fertilised
+ were about 4 inches; nor did they look nearly such fine plants. In all
+ four pots the crossed plants flowered some days before the
+ self-fertilised. When in full flower the tallest plant on each side was
+ measured; but before this time the single crossed plant in Pot 3, which
+ was taller than its antagonist, had died and was not measured. So that
+ only the tallest plant on each side of three pots was measured, as in
+ Table 5/69.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/69. Lobelia ramosa (Second Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Tallest Crossed Plant in each Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Tallest Self-fertilised Plant in each Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 27 4/8 : 18 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 21 : 19 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 21 4/8 : 19. Crowded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 70 : 57.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the three tallest crossed plants is here 23.33, and
+ that of the tallest self-fertilised 19 inches; or as 100 to 81. Besides
+ this difference in height, the crossed plants were much more vigorous and
+ more branched than the self-fertilised plants, and it is unfortunate that
+ they were not weighed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lobelia fulgens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This species offers a somewhat perplexing case. In the first generation
+ the self-fertilised plants, though few in number, greatly exceeded the
+ crossed in height; whilst in the second generation, when the trial was
+ made on a much larger scale, the crossed beat the self-fertilised plants.
+ As this species is generally propagated by off-sets, some seedlings were
+ first raised, in order to have distinct plants. On one of these plants
+ several flowers were fertilised with their own pollen; and as the pollen
+ is mature and shed long before the stigma of the same flower is ready for
+ fertilisation, it was necessary to number each flower and keep its pollen
+ in paper with a corresponding number. By this means well-matured pollen
+ was used for self-fertilisation. Several flowers on the same plant were
+ crossed with pollen from a distinct individual, and to obtain this the
+ conjoined anthers of young flowers were roughly squeezed, and as it is
+ naturally protruded very slowly by the growth of the pistil, it is
+ probable that the pollen used by me was hardly mature, certainly less
+ mature than that employed for self-fertilisation. I did not at the time
+ think of this source of error, but I now suspect that the growth of the
+ crossed plants was thus injured. Anyhow the trial was not perfectly fair.
+ Opposed to the belief that the pollen used in crossing was not in so good
+ a state as that used for self-fertilisation, is the fact that a greater
+ proportional number of the crossed than of the self-fertilised flowers
+ produced capsules; but there was no marked difference in the amount of
+ seed contained in the capsules of the two lots. (5/24. Gartner has shown
+ that certain plants of Lobelia fulgens are quite sterile with pollen from
+ the same plant, though this pollen is efficient on any other individual;
+ but none of the plants on which I experimented, which were kept in the
+ greenhouse, were in this peculiar condition.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the seeds obtained by the above two methods would not germinate when
+ left on bare sand, they were sown on the opposite sides of four pots; but
+ I succeeded in raising only a single pair of seedlings of the same age in
+ each pot. The self-fertilised seedlings, when only a few inches in height,
+ were in most of the pots taller than their opponents; and they flowered so
+ much earlier in all the pots, that the height of the flower-stems could be
+ fairly compared only in Pots 1 and 2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/70. Lobelia fulgens (First Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of flower-stems measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Height of Flower-stems on the Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Height of Flower-stems on the Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 33 : 50.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 36 4/8 : 38 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 21* : 43.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 12* : 35 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ *Not in full flower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mean height of the flower-stems of the two crossed plants in Pots 1
+ and 2 is here 34.75 inches, and that of the two self-fertilised plants in
+ the same pots 44.25 inches; or as 100 to 127. The self-fertilised plants
+ in Pots 3 and 4 were in every respect very much finer than the crossed
+ plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was so much surprised at this great superiority of the self-fertilised
+ over the crossed plants, that I determined to try how they would behave in
+ one of the pots during a second growth. The two plants, therefore, in Pot
+ 1 were cut down, and repotted without being disturbed in a much larger
+ pot. In the following year the self-fertilised plant showed even a greater
+ superiority than before; for the two tallest flower-stems produced by the
+ one crossed plant were only 29 4/8 and 30 1/8 inches in height, whereas
+ the two tallest stems on the one self-fertilised plant were 49 4/8 and 49
+ 6/8 inches; and this gives a ratio of 100 to 167. Considering all the
+ evidence, there can be no doubt that these self-fertilised plants had a
+ great superiority over the crossed plants.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/71. Lobelia fulgens (Second Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of flower-stems measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 27 3/8 : 32 3/8. Pot 1 : 26 : 26 3/8. Pot 1 : 24 3/8 : 25 1/8. Pot
+ 1 : 24 4/8 : 26 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 34 : 36 2/8. Pot 2 : 26 6/8 : 28 6/8. Pot 2 : 25 1/8 : 30 1/8. Pot
+ 2 : 26 : 32 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 40 4/8 : 30 4/8. Pot 3 : 37 5/8 : 28 2/8. Pot 3 : 32 1/8 : 23.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 34 5/8 : 29 4/8. Pot 4 : 32 2/8 : 28 3/8. Pot 4 : 29 3/8 : 26. Pot
+ 4 : 27 1/8 : 25 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 28 1/8 : 29. Pot 5 : 27 : 24 6/8. Pot 5 : 25 3/8 : 23 2/8. Pot 5 :
+ 24 3/8 : 24.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 6 : 33 5/8 : 44 2/8. Pot 6 : 32 : 37 6/8. Pot 6 : 26 1/8 : 37. Pot 6 :
+ 25 : 35.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 7 : 30 6/8 : 27 2/8. Pot 7 : 30 3/8 : 19 2/8. Pot 7 : 29 2/8 : 21.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 8 : 39 3/8 : 23 1/8. Pot 8 : 37 2/8 : 23 4/8. Pot 8 : 36 : 25 4/8. Pot
+ 8 : 36 : 25 1/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 9 : 33 3/8 : 19 3/8. Pot 9 : 25 : 16 3/8. Pot 9 : 25 3/8 : 19. Pot 9 :
+ 21 7/8 : 18 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 1014.00 : 921.63.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I determined on this occasion to avoid the error of using pollen of not
+ quite equal maturity for crossing and self-fertilisation; so that I
+ squeezed pollen out of the conjoined anthers of young flowers for both
+ operations. Several flowers on the crossed plant in Pot 1 in Table 5/70
+ were again crossed with pollen from a distinct plant. Several other
+ flowers on the self-fertilised plant in the same pot were again
+ self-fertilised with pollen from the anthers of other flowers on the SAME
+ PLANT. Therefore the degree of self-fertilisation was not quite so close
+ as in the last generation, in which pollen from the SAME FLOWER, kept in
+ paper, was used. These two lots of seeds were thinly sown on opposite
+ sides of nine pots; and the young seedlings were thinned, an equal number
+ of nearly as possible the same age being left on the two sides. In the
+ spring of the following year (1870), when the seedlings had grown to a
+ considerable size, they were measured to the tips of their leaves; and the
+ twenty-three crossed plants averaged 14.04 inches in height, whilst the
+ twenty-three self-fertilised seedlings were 13.54 inches; or as 100 to 96.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the summer of the same year several of these plants flowered, the
+ crossed and self-fertilised plants flowering almost simultaneously, and
+ all the flower-stems were measured. Those produced by eleven of the
+ crossed plants averaged 30.71 inches, and those by nine of the
+ self-fertilised plants 29.43 inches in height; or as 100 to 96.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The plants in these nine pots, after they had flowered, were repotted
+ without being disturbed in much larger pots; and in the following year,
+ 1871, all flowered freely; but they had grown into such an entangled mass,
+ that the separate plants on each side could no longer be distinguished.
+ Accordingly three or four of the tallest flower-stems on each side of each
+ pot were measured; and the measurements in Table 5/71 are, I think, more
+ trustworthy than the previous ones, from being more numerous, and from the
+ plants being well established and growing vigorously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the thirty-four tallest flower-stems on the
+ twenty-three crossed plants is 29.82 inches, and that of the same number
+ of flower-stems on the same number of self-fertilised plants is 27.10
+ inches, or as 100 to 91. So that the crossed plants now showed a decided
+ advantage over their self-fertilised opponents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. POLEMONIACEAE.&mdash;Nemophila insignis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twelve flowers were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant, but
+ produced only six capsules, containing on an average 18.3 seeds. Eighteen
+ flowers were fertilised with their own pollen and produced ten capsules,
+ containing on an average 12.7 seeds, so that the seeds per capsule were as
+ 100 to 69. (5/25. Several species of Polemoniaceae are known to be
+ proterandrous, but I did not attend to this point in Nemophila. Verlot
+ says &lsquo;Des Variétés&rsquo; 1865 page 66, that varieties growing near one another
+ spontaneously intercross.) The crossed seeds weighed a little less than an
+ equal number of self-fertilised seeds, in the proportion of 100 to 105;
+ but this was clearly due to some of the self-fertilised capsules
+ containing very few seeds, and these were much bulkier than the others,
+ from having been better nourished. A subsequent comparison of the number
+ of seeds in a few capsules did not show so great a superiority on the side
+ of the crossed capsules as in the present case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seeds were placed on sand, and after germinating were planted in pairs
+ on the opposite sides of five pots, which were kept in the greenhouse.
+ When the seedlings were from 2 to 3 inches in height, most of the crossed
+ had a slight advantage over the self-fertilised. The plants were trained
+ up sticks, and thus grew to a considerable height. In four out of the five
+ pots a crossed plant flowered before any one of the self-fertilised. The
+ plants were first measured to the tips of their leaves, before they had
+ flowered and when the crossed were under a foot in height. The twelve
+ crossed plants averaged 11.1 inches in height, whilst the twelve
+ self-fertilised were less than half of this height, namely, 5.45; or as
+ 100 to 49. Before the plants had grown to their full height, two of the
+ self-fertilised died, and as I feared that this might happen with others,
+ they were again measured to the tops of their stems, as shown in Table
+ 5/72.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/72. Nemophila insignis; 0 means that the plant died.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 32 4/8 : 21 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 34 4/8 : 23 5/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 33 1/8 : 19. Pot 3 : 22 2/8 : 7 2/8. Pot 3 : 29 : 17 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 35 4/8 : 10 4/8. Pot 4 : 33 4/8 : 27.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 35 : 0. Pot 5 : 38 : 18 3/8. Pot 5 : 36 : 20 4/8. Pot 5 : 37 4/8 :
+ 34. Pot 5 : 32 4/8 : 0.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 399.38 : 199.00.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The twelve crossed plants now averaged 33.28, and the ten self-fertilised
+ 19.9 inches in height, or as 100 to 60; so that they differed somewhat
+ less than before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The plants in Pots 3 and 5 were placed under a net in the greenhouse, two
+ of the crossed plants in the latter pot being pulled up on account of the
+ death of two of the self-fertilised; so that altogether six crossed and
+ six self-fertilised plants were left to fertilise themselves
+ spontaneously. The pots were rather small, and the plants did not produce
+ many capsules. The small size of the self-fertilised plants will largely
+ account for the fewness of the capsules which they produced. The six
+ crossed plants bore 105, and the six self-fertilised only 30 capsules; or
+ as 100 to 29.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The self-fertilised seeds thus obtained from the crossed and
+ self-fertilised plants, after germinating on sand, were planted on the
+ opposite sides of four small pots, and treated as before. But many of the
+ plants were unhealthy, and their heights were so unequal&mdash;some on
+ both sides being five times as tall as the others&mdash;that the averages
+ deduced from the measurements in Table 5/73 are not in the least
+ trustworthy. Nevertheless I have felt bound to give them, as they are
+ opposed to my general conclusions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seven self-fertilised plants from the crossed plants here average
+ 15.73, and the seven self-fertilised from the self-fertilised 21 inches in
+ height; or as 100 to 133. Strictly analogous experiments with Viola
+ tricolor and Lathyrus odoratus gave a very different result.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/73. Nemophila insignis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants from Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants from Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 27 : 27 4/8. Pot 1 : 14 : 34 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 17 6/8 : 23. Pot 2 : 24 4/8 : 32.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 16 : 7.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 5 3/8 : 7 2/8. Pot 4 : 5 4/8 : 16.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 110.13 : 147.00.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. BORAGINACEAE.&mdash;Borago officinalis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This plant is frequented by a greater number of bees than any other one
+ which I have observed. It is strongly proterandrous (H. Muller
+ &lsquo;Befruchtung&rsquo; etc. page 267), and the flowers can hardly fail to be
+ cross-fertilised; but should this not occur, they are capable of
+ self-fertilisation to a limited extent, as some pollen long remains within
+ the anthers, and is apt to fall on the mature stigma. In the year 1863 I
+ covered up a plant, and examined thirty-five flowers, of which only twelve
+ yielded any seeds; whereas of thirty-five flowers on an exposed plant
+ growing close by, all with the exception of two yielded seeds. The
+ covered-up plant, however, produced altogether twenty-five spontaneously
+ self-fertilised seeds; the exposed plant producing fifty-five seeds, the
+ product, no doubt, of cross-fertilisation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1868 eighteen flowers on a protected plant were crossed with
+ pollen from a distinct plant, but only seven of these produced fruit; and
+ I suspect that I applied pollen to many of the stigmas before they were
+ mature. These fruits contained on an average 2 seeds, with a maximum in
+ one of three seeds. Twenty-four spontaneously self-fertilised fruits were
+ produced by the same plant, and these contained on an average 1.2 seeds,
+ with a maximum of two in one fruit. So that the fruits from the
+ artificially crossed flowers yielded seeds compared with those from the
+ spontaneously self-fertilised flowers, in the ratio of 100 to 60. But the
+ self-fertilised seeds, as often occurs when few are produced, were heavier
+ than the crossed seeds in the ratio of 100 to 90.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These two lots of seeds were sown on opposite sides of two large pots; but
+ I succeeded in raising only four pairs of equal age. When the seedlings on
+ both sides were about 8 inches in height they were equal. When in full
+ flower they were measured, as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/74. Borago officinalis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 19 : 13 4/8. Pot 1 : 21 : 18 6/8. Pot 1 : 16 4/8 : 20 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 26 2/8 : 32 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 82.75 : 84.75.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the four crossed plants is here 20.68, and that of
+ the four self-fertilised 21.18 inches; or as 100 to 102. The
+ self-fertilised plants thus exceeded the crossed in height by a little;
+ but this was entirely due to the tallness of one of the self-fertilised.
+ The crossed plants in both pots flowered before the self-fertilised.
+ Therefore I believe if more plants had been raised, the result would have
+ been different. I regret that I did not attend to the fertility of the two
+ lots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. NOLANACEAE.&mdash;Nolana prostrata.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In some of the flowers the stamens are considerably shorter than the
+ pistil, in others equal to it in length. I suspected, therefore, but
+ erroneously as it proved, that this plant was dimorphic, like Primula,
+ Linum, etc., and in the year 1862 twelve plants, covered by a net in the
+ greenhouse, were subjected to trial. The spontaneously self-fertilised
+ flowers yielded 64 grains weight of seeds, but the product of fourteen
+ artificially crossed flowers is here included, which falsely increases the
+ weight of the self-fertilised seeds. Nine uncovered plants, the flowers of
+ which were eagerly visited by bees for their pollen and were no doubt
+ intercrossed by them, produced 79 grains weight of seeds: therefore twelve
+ plants thus treated would have yielded 105 grains. Thus the seeds produced
+ by the flowers on an equal number of plants, when crossed by bees, and
+ spontaneously self-fertilised (the product of fourteen artificially
+ crossed flowers being, however, included in the latter) were in weight as
+ 100 to 61.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the summer of 1867 the trial was repeated; thirty flowers were crossed
+ with pollen from a distinct plant and produced twenty-seven capsules, each
+ containing five seeds. Thirty-two flowers were fertilised with their own
+ pollen, and produced only six capsules, each with five seeds. So that the
+ crossed and self-fertilised capsules contained the same number of seeds,
+ though many more capsules were produced by the cross-fertilised than by
+ the self-fertilised flowers, in the ratio of 100 to 21.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An equal number of seeds of both lots were weighed, and the crossed seeds
+ were to the self-fertilised in weight as 100 to 82. Therefore a cross
+ increases the number of capsules produced and the weight of the seeds, but
+ not the number of seeds in each capsule.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These two lots of seeds, after germinating on sand, were planted on the
+ opposite sides of three pots. The seedlings when from 6 to 7 inches in
+ height were equal. The plants were measured when fully grown, but their
+ heights were so unequal in the several pots, that the result cannot be
+ fully trusted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 5/75. Nolana prostrata.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 8 4/8 : 4 2/8. Pot 1 : 6 4/8 : 7 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 10 4/8 : 14 4/8. Pot 2 : 18 : 18.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 20 2/8 : 22 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 63.75 : 67.00.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The five crossed plants average 12.75, and the five self-fertilised 13.4
+ inches in height; or as 100 to 105.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI. SOLANACEAE, PRIMULACEAE, POLYGONEAE, ETC.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Petunia violacea, crossed and self-fertilised plants compared for four
+ generations.
+ Effects of a cross with a fresh stock.
+ Uniform colour of the flowers on the self-fertilised plants of the
+ fourth generation.
+ Nicotiana tabacum, crossed and self-fertilised plants of equal height.
+ Great effects of a cross with a distinct sub-variety on the height, but
+ not on the fertility, of the offspring.
+ Cyclamen persicum, crossed seedlings greatly superior to the self-fertilised.
+ Anagallis collina.
+ Primula veris.
+ Equal-styled variety of Primula veris, fertility of, greatly increased
+ by a cross with a fresh stock.
+ Fagopyrum esculentum.
+ Beta vulgaris.
+ Canna warscewiczi, crossed and self-fertilised plants of equal height.
+ Zea mays.
+ Phalaris canariensis.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 25. SOLANACEAE. Petunia violacea.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ DINGY PURPLE VARIETY.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The flowers of this plant are so seldom visited during the day by insects
+ in this country, that I have never seen an instance; but my gardener, on
+ whom I can rely, once saw some humble-bees at work. Mr. Meehan says, that
+ in the United States bees bore through the corolla for the nectar, and
+ adds that their &ldquo;fertilisation is carried on by night-moths.&rdquo; (6/1.
+ &lsquo;Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Science of Philadelphia&rsquo; August 2,
+ 1870 page 90.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In France M. Naudin, after castrating a large number of flowers whilst in
+ bud, left them exposed to the visits of insects, and about a quarter
+ produced capsules (6/2. &lsquo;Annales des Sc. Nat.&rsquo; 4th series Bot. Tome 9 cah.
+ 5); but I am convinced that a much larger proportion of flowers in my
+ garden are cross-fertilised by insects, for protected flowers with their
+ own pollen placed on the stigma never yielded nearly a full complement of
+ seed; whilst those left uncovered produced fine capsules, showing that
+ pollen from other plants must have been brought to them, probably by
+ moths. Plants growing vigorously and flowering in pots in the greenhouse,
+ never yielded a single capsule; and this may be attributed, at least in
+ chief part, to the exclusion of moths.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Six flowers on a plant covered by a net were crossed with pollen from a
+ distinct plant and produced six capsules, containing by weight 4.44 grains
+ of seed. Six other flowers were fertilised with their own pollen and
+ produced only three capsules, containing only 1.49 grains weight of seed.
+ From this it follows that an equal number of crossed and self-fertilised
+ capsules would have contained seeds by weight as 100 to 67. I should not
+ have thought the proportional contents of so few capsules worth giving,
+ had not nearly the same result been confirmed by several subsequent
+ trials.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeds of the two lots were placed on sand, and many of the self-fertilised
+ seeds germinated before the crossed, and were rejected. Several pairs in
+ an equal state of germination were planted on the opposite sides of Pots 1
+ and 2; but only the tallest plant on each side was measured. Seeds were
+ also sown thickly on the two sides of a large pot (3), the seedlings being
+ afterwards thinned, so that an equal number was left on each side; the
+ three tallest on each side being measured. The pots were kept in the
+ greenhouse, and the plants were trained up sticks. For some time the young
+ crossed plants had no advantage in height over the self-fertilised; but
+ their leaves were larger. When fully grown and in flower the plants were
+ measured, as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/76. Petunia violacea (first generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 30 : 20 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 34 4/8 : 27 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 34 : 28 4/8. Pot 3 : 30 4/8 : 27 4/8. Pot 3 : 25 : 26.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 154 : 130.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The five tallest crossed plants here average 30.8, and the five tallest
+ self-fertilised 26 inches in height, or as 100 to 84.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three capsules were obtained by crossing flowers on the above crossed
+ plants, and three other capsules by again self-fertilising flowers on the
+ self-fertilised plants. One of the latter capsules appeared as fine as any
+ one of the crossed capsules; but the other two contained many imperfect
+ seeds. From these two lots of seeds the plants of the following generation
+ were raised.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ As in the last generation, many of the self-fertilised seeds germinated
+ before the crossed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeds in an equal state of germination were planted on the opposite sides
+ of three pots. The crossed seedlings soon greatly exceeded in height the
+ self-fertilised. In Pot 1, when the tallest crossed plant was 10 1/2
+ inches high, the tallest self-fertilised was only 3 1/2 inches; in Pot 2
+ the excess in height of the crossed was not quite so great. The plants
+ were treated as in the last generation, and when fully grown measured as
+ before. In Pot 3 both the crossed plants were killed at an early age by
+ some animal, so that the self-fertilised had no competitors. Nevertheless
+ these two self-fertilised plants were measured, and are included in Table
+ 6/77. The crossed plants flowered long before their self-fertilised
+ opponents in Pots 1 and 2, and before those growing separately in Pot 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/77. Petunia violacea (Second generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 57 2/8 : 13 4/8. Pot 1 : 36 2/8 : 8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 44 4/8 : 33 2/8. Pot 2 : 24 : 28.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 0 : 46 2/8. Pot 3 : 0 : 28 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 162.0 : 157.5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The four crossed plants average 40.5, and the six self-fertilised 26.25
+ inches in height; or as 100 to 65. But this great inequality is in part
+ accidental, owing to some of the self-fertilised plants being very short,
+ and to one of the crossed being very tall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twelve flowers on these crossed plants were again crossed, and eleven
+ capsules were produced; of these, five were poor and six good; the latter
+ contained by weight 3.75 grains of seeds. Twelve flowers on the
+ self-fertilised plants were again fertilised with their own pollen and
+ produced no less than twelve capsules, and the six finest of these
+ contained by weight 2.57 grains of seeds. It should however be observed
+ that these latter capsules were produced by the plants in Pot 3, which
+ were not exposed to any competition. The seeds in the six fine crossed
+ capsules to those in the six finest self-fertilised capsules were in
+ weight as 100 to 68. From these seeds the plants of the next generation
+ were raised.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE THIRD GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/78. Petunia violacea (third generation; plants very young).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 1 4/8 : 5 6/8. Pot 1 : 1 : 4 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 5 7/8 : 8 3/8. Pot 2 : 5 6/8 : 6 7/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 4 : 5 5/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 1 4/8 : 5 3/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 19.63 : 36.50.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The above seeds were placed on sand, and after germinating were planted in
+ pairs on the opposite sides of four pots; and all the remaining seeds were
+ thickly sown on the two sides of a fifth large pot. The result was
+ surprising, for the self-fertilised seedlings very early in life beat the
+ crossed, and at one time were nearly double their height. At first the
+ case appeared like that of Mimulus, in which after the third generation a
+ tall and highly self-fertile variety appeared. But as in the two
+ succeeding generations the crossed plants resumed their former superiority
+ over the self-fertilised, the case must be looked at as an anomaly. The
+ sole conjecture which I can form is that the crossed seeds had not been
+ sufficiently ripened, and thus produced weakly plants, as occurred with
+ Iberis. When the crossed plants were between 3 and 4 inches in height, the
+ six finest in four of the pots were measured to the summits of their
+ stems, and at the same time the six finest of the self-fertilised plants.
+ The measurements are given in Table 6/78, and it may be here seen that all
+ the self-fertilised plants exceed their opponents in height, whereas when
+ subsequently measured the excess of the self-fertilised depended chiefly
+ on the unusual tallness of two of the plants in Pot 2. The crossed plants
+ here average 3.27, and the self-fertilised 6.08 inches in height; or as
+ 100 to 186.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When fully grown they were again measured, as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/79. Petunia violacea (third generation; plants fully grown).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 41 4/8 : 40 6/8. Pot 1 : 48 : 39. Pot 1 : 36 : 48.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 36 : 47. Pot 2 : 21 : 80 2/8. Pot 2 : 36 2/8 : 86 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 52 : 46.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 57 : 43 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 327.75 : 431.00.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The eight crossed plants now averaged 40.96, and the eight self-fertilised
+ plants 53.87 inches in height, or as 100 to 131; and this excess chiefly
+ depended, as already stated, on the unusual tallness of two of the
+ self-fertilised plants in Pot 2. The self-fertilised had therefore lost
+ some of their former great superiority over the crossed plants. In three
+ of the pots the self-fertilised plants flowered first; but in Pot 3 at the
+ same time with the crossed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The case is rendered the more strange, because the crossed plants in the
+ fifth pot (not included in the two last tables), in which all the
+ remaining seeds had been thickly sown, were from the first finer plants
+ than the self-fertilised, and had larger leaves. At the period when the
+ two tallest crossed plants in this pot were 6 4/8 and 4 5/8 inches high,
+ the two tallest self-fertilised were only 4 inches. When the two crossed
+ plants were 12 and 10 inches high, the two self-fertilised were only 8
+ inches. These latter plants, as well as many others on the same side of
+ this pot never grew any higher, whereas several of the crossed plants grew
+ to the height of two feet! On account of this great superiority of the
+ crossed plants, the plants on neither side of this pot have been included
+ in the two last tables.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thirty flowers on the crossed plants in Pots 1 and 4 (Table 6/79) were
+ again crossed, and produced seventeen capsules. Thirty flowers on the
+ self-fertilised plants in the same two pots were again self-fertilised,
+ but produced only seven capsules. The contents of each capsule of both
+ lots were placed in separate watch-glasses, and the seeds from the crossed
+ appeared to the eye to be at least double the number of those from the
+ self-fertilised capsules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to ascertain whether the fertility of the self-fertilised plants
+ had been lessened by the plants having been self-fertilised for the three
+ previous generations, thirty flowers on the crossed plants were fertilised
+ with their own pollen. These yielded only five capsules, and their seeds
+ being placed in separate watch-glasses did not seem more numerous than
+ those from the capsules on the self-fertilised plants self-fertilised for
+ the fourth time. So that as far as can be judged from so few capsules, the
+ self-fertility of the self-fertilised plants had not decreased in
+ comparison with that of the plants which had been intercrossed during the
+ three previous generations. It should, however, be remembered that both
+ lots of plants had been subjected in each generation to almost exactly
+ similar conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeds from the crossed plants again crossed, and from the self-fertilised
+ again self-fertilised, produced by the plants in Pot 1 (Table 6/79), in
+ which the three self-fertilised plants were on an average only a little
+ taller than the crossed, were used in the following experiment. They were
+ kept separate from two similar lots of seeds produced by the two plants in
+ Pot 4 in the same table, in which the crossed plant was much taller than
+ its self-fertilised opponent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FOURTH GENERATION (RAISED FROM
+ THE PLANTS IN POT 1, TABLE 6/79).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Crossed and self-fertilised seeds from plants of the last generation in
+ Pot 1 in Table 6/79, were placed on sand, and after germinating, were
+ planted in pairs on the opposite sides of four pots. The seedlings when in
+ full flower were measured to the base of the calyx. The remaining seeds
+ were sown crowded on the two sides of Pot 5; and the four tallest plants
+ on each side of this pot were measured in the same manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/80. Petunia violacea (fourth generation; raised from plants of the
+ third generation in Pot 1, table 6/79).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 29 2/8 : 30 2/8. Pot 1 : 36 2/8 : 34 6/8. Pot 1 : 49 : 31 3/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 33 3/8 : 31 5/8. Pot 2 : 37 3/8 : 38 2/8. Pot 2 : 56 4/8 : 38 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 46 : 45 1/8. Pot 3 : 67 2/8 : 45. Pot 3 : 54 3/8 : 23 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 51 6/8 : 34. Pot 4 : 51 7/8 : 0.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 49 4/8 : 22 3/8. Pot 5 : 46 3/8 : 24 2/8. Pot 5 : 40 : 24 6/8. Pot
+ 5 : 53 : 30. Crowded plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 701.88 : 453.50.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fifteen crossed plants average 46.79, and the fourteen (one having
+ died) self-fertilised plants 32.39 inches in height; or as 100 to 69. So
+ that the crossed plants in this generation had recovered their wonted
+ superiority over the self-fertilised plants; though the parents of the
+ latter in Pot 1, Table 6/79, were a little taller than their crossed
+ opponents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FOURTH GENERATION (RAISED FROM
+ THE PLANTS IN POT 4, TABLE 6/79).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two similar lots of seeds, obtained from the plants in Pot 4 in Table
+ 6/79, in which the single crossed plant was at first shorter, but
+ ultimately much taller than its self-fertilised opponent, were treated in
+ every way like their brethren of the same generation in the last
+ experiment. We have in Table 6/81 the measurements of the present plants.
+ Although the crossed plants greatly exceeded in height the
+ self-fertilised; yet in three out of the five pots a self-fertilised plant
+ flowered before any one of the crossed; in a fourth pot simultaneously;
+ and in a fifth (namely Pot 2) a crossed plant flowered first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/81. Petunia violacea (fourth generation; raised from plants of the
+ third generation in Pot 4, Table 6/79).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 46 : 30 2/8. Pot 1 : 46 : 28.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 50 6/8 : 25. Pot 2 : 40 2/8 : 31 3/8. Pot 2 : 37 3/8 : 22 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 54 2/8 : 22 5/8. Pot 3 : 61 1/8 : 26 6/8. Pot 3 : 45 : 32.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 30 : 24 4/8. Pot 4 : 29 1/8 : 26.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 37 4/8 : 40 2/8. Pot 5 : 63 : 18 5/8. Pot 5 : 41 2/8 : 17 4/8.
+ Crowded plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 581.63 : 349.36.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The thirteen crossed plants here average 44.74, and the thirteen
+ self-fertilised plants 26.87 inches in height; or as 100 to 60. The
+ crossed parents of these were much taller, relatively to the
+ self-fertilised parents, than in the last case; and apparently they
+ transmitted some of this superiority to their crossed offspring. It is
+ unfortunate that I did not turn these plants out of doors, so as to
+ observe their relative fertility, for I compared the pollen from some of
+ the crossed and self-fertilised plants in Pot 1, Table 6/81, and there was
+ a marked difference in its state; that of the crossed plants contained
+ hardly any bad and empty grains, whilst such abounded in the pollen of the
+ self-fertilised plants.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ THE EFFECTS OF A CROSS WITH A FRESH STOCK.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I procured from a garden in Westerham, whence my plants originally came, a
+ fresh plant differing in no respect from mine except in the colour of the
+ flowers, which was a fine purple. But this plant must have been exposed
+ during at least four generations to very different conditions from those
+ to which my plants had been subjected, as these had been grown in pots in
+ the greenhouse. Eight flowers on the self-fertilised plants in Table 6/81,
+ of the last or fourth self-fertilised generation, were fertilised with
+ pollen from this fresh stock; all eight produced capsules containing
+ together by weight 5.01 grains of seeds. The plants raised from these
+ seeds may be called the Westerham-crossed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eight flowers on the crossed plants of the last or fourth generation in
+ Table 6/81 were again crossed with pollen from one of the other crossed
+ plants, and produced five capsules, containing by weight 2.07 grains of
+ seeds. The plants raised from these seeds may be called the INTERCROSSED;
+ and these form the fifth intercrossed generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eight flowers on the self-fertilised plants of the same generation in
+ Table 6/81 were again self-fertilised, and produced seven capsules,
+ containing by weight 2.1 grains of seeds. The SELF-FERTILISED plants
+ raised from these seeds form the fifth self-fertilised generation. These
+ latter plants and the intercrossed are comparable in all respects with the
+ crossed and self-fertilised plants of the four previous generations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the foregoing data it is easy to calculate that:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ten Westerham-crossed capsules would have contained 6.26 grains weight of
+ seed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ten intercrossed capsules would have contained 4.14 grains weight of seed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ten self-fertilised capsules would have contained 3.00 grains weight of
+ seed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We thus get the following ratios:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeds from the Westerham-crossed capsules to those from the capsules of
+ the fifth self-fertilised generation, in weight as 100 to 48.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeds from the Westerham-crossed capsules to those from the capsules of
+ the fifth intercrossed generation, in weight as 100 to 66.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeds from the intercrossed capsules to those from the self-fertilised
+ capsules, in weight as 100 to 72.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So that a cross with pollen from a fresh stock greatly increased the
+ productiveness of the flowers on plants which had been self-fertilised for
+ the four previous generations, in comparison not only with the flowers on
+ the same plants self-fertilised for the fifth time, but with the flowers
+ on the crossed plants crossed with pollen from another plant of the same
+ old stock for the fifth time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These three lots of seeds were placed on sand, and were planted in an
+ equal state of germination in seven pots, each made tripartite by three
+ superficial partitions. Some of the remaining seeds, whether or not in a
+ state of germination, were thickly sown in an eighth pot. The pots were
+ kept in the greenhouse, and the plants trained up sticks. They were first
+ measured to the tops of their stems when coming into flower; and the
+ twenty-two Westerham-crossed plants then averaged 25.51 inches; the
+ twenty-three intercrossed plants 30.38; and the twenty-three
+ self-fertilised plants 23.40 inches in height. We thus get the following
+ ratios:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Westerham-crossed plants in height to the self-fertilised as 100 to
+ 91.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Westerham-crossed plants in height to the intercrossed as 100 to 119.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The intercrossed plants in height to the self-fertilised as 100 to 77.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These plants were again measured when their growth appeared on a casual
+ inspection to be complete. But in this I was mistaken, for after cutting
+ them down, I found that the summits of the stems of the Westerham-crossed
+ plants were still growing vigorously; whilst the intercrossed had almost,
+ and the self-fertilised had quite completed their growth. Therefore I do
+ not doubt, if the three lots had been left to grow for another month, that
+ the ratios would have been somewhat different from those deduced from the
+ measurements in Table 6/82.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/82. Petunia violacea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Westerham-Crossed Plants (from self-fertilised Plants of fourth
+ generation crossed by a fresh stock).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Intercrossed Plants (Plants of one and the same stock
+ intercrossed for five generations).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 4: Self-fertilised Plants (self-fertilised for five generations).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 64 5/8 : 57 2/8 : 43 6/8. Pot 1 : 24 : 64 : 56 3/8. Pot 1 : 51 4/8
+ : 58 6/8 : 31 5/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 48 7/8 : 59 7/8 : 41 5/8. Pot 2 : 54 4/8 : 58 2/8 : 41 2/8. Pot 2
+ : 58 1/8 : 53 : 18 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 62 : 52 2/8 : 46 6/8. Pot 3 : 53 2/8 : 54 6/8 : 45. Pot 3 : 62 7/8
+ : 61 6/8 : 19 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 44 4/8 : 58 7/8 : 37 5/8. Pot 4 : 49 2/8 : 65 2/8 : 33 2/8. Pot 4
+ : .. : 59 6/8 : 32 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 43 1/8 : 35 6/8 : 41 6/8. Pot 5 : 53 7/8 : 34 6/8 : 26 4/8. Pot 5
+ : 53 2/8 : 54 6/8 : 0.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 6 : 37 4/8 : 56 : 46 4/8. Pot 6 : 61 : 63 5/8 : 29 6/8. Pot 6 : 0 : 57
+ 7/8 : 14 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 7 : 59 6/8 : 51 : 43. Pot 7 : 43 4/8 : 49 6/8 : 12 2/8. Pot 7 : 50 5/8
+ : 0 : 0.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 8 : 37 7/8 : 38 5/8 : 21 6/8. Pot 8 : 37 2/8 : 44 5/8 : 14 5/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 1051.25 : 1190.50 : 697.88.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The twenty-one Westerham-crossed plants now averaged 50.05 inches; the
+ twenty-two intercrossed plants, 54.11 inches; and the twenty-one
+ self-fertilised plants, 33.23 inches in height. We thus get the following
+ ratios:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Westerham-crossed plants in height to the self-fertilised as 100 to
+ 66.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Westerham-crossed plants in height to the intercrossed as 100 to 108.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The intercrossed plants in height to the self-fertilised as 100 to 61.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We here see that the Westerham-crossed (the offspring of plants
+ self-fertilised for four generations and then crossed with a fresh stock)
+ have gained greatly in height, since they were first measured, relatively
+ to the plants self-fertilised for five generations. They were then as 100
+ to 91, and now as 100 to 66 in height. The intercrossed plants (i.e.,
+ those which had been intercrossed for the last five generations) likewise
+ exceed in height the self-fertilised plants, as occurred in all the
+ previous generations with the exception of the abnormal plants of the
+ third generation. On the other hand, the Westerham-crossed plants are
+ exceeded in height by the intercrossed; and this is a surprising fact,
+ judging from most of the other strictly analogous cases. But as the
+ Westerham-crossed plants were still growing vigorously, while the
+ intercrossed had almost ceased to grow, there can hardly be a doubt that
+ if left to grow for another month they would have beaten the intercrossed
+ in height. That they were gaining on them is clear, as when measured
+ before they were as 100 to 119, and now as only 100 to 108 in height. The
+ Westerham-crossed plants had also leaves of a darker green, and looked
+ altogether more vigorous than the intercrossed; and what is much more
+ important, they produced, as we shall presently see, much heavier
+ seed-capsules. So that in fact the offspring from the self-fertilised
+ plants of the fourth generation crossed by a fresh stock were superior to
+ the intercrossed, as well as to the self-fertilised plants of the fifth
+ generation&mdash;of which latter fact there could not be the least doubt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These three lots of plants were cut down close to the ground and weighed.
+ The twenty-one Westerham-crossed plants weighed 32 ounces; the twenty-two
+ intercrossed plants, 34 ounces, and the twenty-one self-fertilised plants
+ 7 1/4 ounces. The following ratios are calculated for an equal number of
+ plants of each kind. But as the self-fertilised plants were just beginning
+ to wither, their relative weight is here slightly too small; and as the
+ Westerham-crossed were still growing vigorously, their relative weight
+ with time allowed would no doubt have greatly increased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Westerham-crossed plants in weight to the self-fertilised as 100 to
+ 22.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Westerham-crossed plants in weight to the intercrossed as 100 to 101.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The intercrossed plants in weight to the self-fertilised as 100 to 22.3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We here see, judging by weight instead of as before by height, that the
+ Westerham-crossed and the intercrossed have an immense advantage over the
+ self-fertilised. The Westerham-crossed are inferior to the intercrossed by
+ a mere trifle; but it is almost certain that if they had been allowed to
+ go on growing for another month, the former would have completely beaten
+ the latter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I had an abundance of seeds of the same three lots, from which the
+ foregoing plants had been raised, these were sown in three long parallel
+ and adjoining rows in the open ground, so as to ascertain whether under
+ these circumstances the results would be nearly the same as before. Late
+ in the autumn (November 13) the ten tallest plants were carefully selected
+ out of each row, and their heights measured, with the following result:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/83. Petunia violacea (plants growing in the open ground).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Westerham-Crossed Plants (from self-fertilised Plants of the
+ fourth generation crossed by a fresh stock).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: intercrossed Plants (Plants of one and the same stock
+ intercrossed for five generations).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: self-fertilised Plants (self-fertilised for five generations).
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 34 2/8 : 38 : 27 3/8.
+ 36 2/8 : 36 2/8 : 23.
+ 35 2/8 : 39 5/8 : 25.
+ 32 4/8 : 37 : 24 1/8.
+ 37 : 36 : 22 4/8.
+ 36 4/8 : 41 3/8 : 23 3/8.
+ 40 7/8 : 37 2/8 : 21 5/8.
+ 37 2/8 : 40 : 23 4/8.
+ 38 2/8 : 41 2/8 : 21 3/8.
+ 38 5/8 : 36 : 21 2/8.
+
+ 366.76 : 382.76 : 233.13.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The ten Westerham-crossed plants here average 36.67 inches in height; the
+ ten intercrossed plants, 38.27 inches; and the ten self-fertilised, 23.31
+ inches. These three lots of plants were also weighed; the
+ Westerham-crossed plants weighed 28 ounces; the intercrossed plants, 41
+ ounces; and the self-fertilised, 14.75 ounces. We thus get the following
+ ratios:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Westerham-crossed plants in height to the self-fertilised as 100 to
+ 63.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Westerham-crossed plants in weight to the self-fertilised as 100 to
+ 53.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Westerham-crossed plants in height to the intercrossed as 100 to 104.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Westerham-crossed plants in weight to the intercrossed as 100 to 146.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The intercrossed plants in height to the self-fertilised as 100 to 61.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The intercrossed plants in weight to the self-fertilised as 100 to 36.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the relative heights of the three lots are nearly the same (within
+ three or four per cent) as with the plants in the pots. In weight there is
+ a much greater difference: the Westerham-crossed exceed the
+ self-fertilised by much less than they did before; but the self-fertilised
+ plants in the pots had become slightly withered, as before stated, and
+ were in consequence unfairly light. The Westerham-crossed plants are here
+ inferior in weight to the intercrossed plants in a much higher degree than
+ in the pots; and this appeared due to their being much less branched,
+ owing to their having germinated in greater numbers and consequently being
+ much crowded. Their leaves were of a brighter green than those of the
+ intercrossed and self-fertilised plants.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ RELATIVE FERTILITY OF THE THREE LOTS OF PLANTS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ None of the plants in pots in the greenhouse ever produced a capsule; and
+ this may be attributed in chief part to the exclusion of moths. Therefore
+ the fertility of the three lots could be judged of only by that of the
+ plants growing out of doors, which from being left uncovered were probably
+ cross-fertilised. The plants in the three rows were exactly of the same
+ age and had been subjected to closely similar conditions, so that any
+ difference in their fertility must be attributed to their different
+ origin; namely, to the one lot being derived from plants self-fertilised
+ for four generations and then crossed with a fresh stock; to the second
+ lot being derived from plants of the same old stock intercrossed for five
+ generations; and to the third lot being derived from plants
+ self-fertilised for five generations. All the capsules, some nearly mature
+ and some only half-grown, were gathered, counted, and weighed from the ten
+ finest plants in each of the three rows, of which the measurements and
+ weights have already been given. The intercrossed plants, as we have seen,
+ were taller and considerably heavier than the plants of the other two
+ lots, and they produced a greater number of capsules than did even the
+ Westerham-crossed plants; and this may be attributed to the latter having
+ grown more crowded and being in consequence less branched. Therefore the
+ average weight of an equal number of capsules from each lot of plants
+ seems to be the fairest standard of comparison, as their weights will have
+ been determined chiefly by the number of the included seeds. As the
+ intercrossed plants were taller and heavier than the plants of the other
+ two lots, it might have been expected that they would have produced the
+ finest or heaviest capsules; but this was very far from being the case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ten tallest Westerham-crossed plants produced 111 ripe and unripe
+ capsules, weighing 121.2 grains. Therefore 100 of such capsules would have
+ weighed 109.18 grains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ten tallest intercrossed plants produced 129 capsules, weighing 76.45
+ grains. Therefore 100 of these capsules would have weighed 59.26 grains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ten tallest self-fertilised plants produced only 44 capsules, weighing
+ 22.35 grains. Therefore 100 of these capsules would have weighed 50.79
+ grains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From these data we get the following ratios for the fertility of the three
+ lots, as deduced from the relative weights of an equal number of capsules
+ from the finest plants in each lot:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Westerham-crossed plants to self-fertilised plants as 100 to 46.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Westerham-crossed plants to intercrossed plants as 100 to 54.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Intercrossed plants to self-fertilised plants as 100 to 86.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We here see how potent the influence of a cross with pollen from a fresh
+ stock has been on the fertility of plants self-fertilised for four
+ generations, in comparison with plants of the old stock when either
+ intercrossed or self-fertilised for five generations; the flowers on all
+ these plants having been left to be freely crossed by insects or to
+ fertilise themselves. The Westerham-crossed plants were also much taller
+ and heavier plants than the self-fertilised, both in the pots and open
+ ground; but they were less tall and heavy than the intercrossed plants.
+ This latter result, however, would almost certainly have been reversed, if
+ the plants had been allowed to grow for another month, as the
+ Westerham-crossed were still growing vigorously, whilst the intercrossed
+ had almost ceased to grow. This case reminds us of the somewhat analogous
+ one of Eschscholtzia, in which plants raised from a cross with a fresh
+ stock did not grow higher than the self-fertilised or intercrossed plants,
+ but produced a greater number of seed-capsules, which contained a far
+ larger average number of seeds.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ COLOUR OF THE FLOWERS ON THE ABOVE THREE LOTS OF PLANTS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The original mother-plant, from which the five successive self-fertilised
+ generations were raised, bore dingy purple flowers. At no time was any
+ selection practised, and the plants were subjected in each generation to
+ extremely uniform conditions. The result was, as in some previous cases,
+ that the flowers on all the self-fertilised plants, both in the pots and
+ open ground, were absolutely uniform in tint; this being a dull, rather
+ peculiar flesh colour. This uniformity was very striking in the long row
+ of plants growing in the open ground, and these first attracted my
+ attention. I did not notice in which generation the original colour began
+ to change and to become uniform, but I have every reason to believe that
+ the change was gradual. The flowers on the intercrossed plants were mostly
+ of the same tint, but not nearly so uniform as those on the
+ self-fertilised plants, and many of them were pale, approaching almost to
+ white. The flowers on the plants from the cross with the purple-flowered
+ Westerham stock were, as might have been expected, much more purple and
+ not nearly so uniform in tint. The self-fertilised plants were also
+ remarkably uniform in height, as judged by the eye; the intercrossed less
+ so, whilst the Westerham-crossed plants varied much in height.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nicotiana tabacum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This plant offers a curious case. Out of six trials with crossed and
+ self-fertilised plants, belonging to three successive generations, in one
+ alone did the crossed show any marked superiority in height over the
+ self-fertilised; in four of the trials they were approximately equal; and
+ in one (i.e., in the first generation) the self-fertilised plants were
+ greatly superior to the crossed. In no case did the capsules from flowers
+ fertilised with pollen from a distinct plant yield many more, and
+ sometimes they yielded much fewer seeds than the capsules from
+ self-fertilised flowers. But when the flowers of one variety were crossed
+ with pollen from a slightly different variety, which had grown under
+ somewhat different conditions,&mdash;that is, by a fresh stock,&mdash;the
+ seedlings derived from this cross exceeded in height and weight those from
+ the self-fertilised flowers in an extraordinary degree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twelve flowers on some plants of the common tobacco, raised from purchased
+ seeds, were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant of the same lot, and
+ these produced ten capsules. Twelve flowers on the same plants were
+ fertilised with their own pollen, and produced eleven capsules. The seeds
+ in the ten crossed capsules weighed 31.7 grains, whilst those in ten of
+ the self-fertilised capsules weighed 47.67 grains; or as 100 to 150. The
+ much greater productiveness of the self-fertilised than of the crossed
+ capsules can hardly be attributed to chance, as all the capsules of both
+ lots were very fine and healthy ones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seeds were placed on sand, and several pairs in an equal state of
+ germination were planted on the opposite sides of three pots. The
+ remaining seeds were thickly sown on the two sides of Pot 4, so that the
+ plants in this pot were much crowded. The tallest plant on each side of
+ each pot was measured. Whilst the plants were quite young the four tallest
+ crossed plants averaged 7.87 inches, and the four tallest self-fertilised
+ 14.87 inches in height; or as 100 to 189. The heights at this age are
+ given in the two left columns of Table 6/84.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When in full flower the tallest plants on each side were again measured,
+ see the two right hand columns in Table 6/84. But I should state that the
+ pots were not large enough, and the plants never grew to their proper
+ height. The four tallest crossed plants now averaged 18.5, and the four
+ tallest self-fertilised plants 32.75 inches in height; or as 100 to 178.
+ In all four pots a self-fertilised plant flowered before any one of the
+ crossed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Pot 4, in which the plants were extremely crowded, the two lots were at
+ first equal; and ultimately the tallest crossed plant exceeded by a trifle
+ the tallest self-fertilised plant. This recalled to my mind an analogous
+ case in the one generation of Petunia, in which the self-fertilised plants
+ were throughout their growth taller than the crossed in all the pots
+ except in the crowded one. Accordingly another trial was made, and some of
+ the same crossed and self-fertilised seeds of tobacco were sown thickly on
+ opposite sides of two additional pots; the plants being left to grow up
+ much crowded. When they were between 13 and 14 inches in height there was
+ no difference between the two sides, nor was there any marked difference
+ when the plants had grown as tall as they could; for in one pot the
+ tallest crossed plant was 26 1/2 inches in height, and exceeded by 2
+ inches the tallest self-fertilised plant, whilst in the other pot, the
+ tallest crossed plant was shorter by 3 1/2 inches than the tallest
+ self-fertilised plant, which was 22 inches in height.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/84. Nicotiana tabacum (first generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants, May 20, 1868.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: self-fertilised Plants, May 20, 1868.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 4: Crossed Plants, December 6, 1868.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 5: self-fertilised Plants, December 6, 1868.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 15 4/8 : 26 : 40 : 44.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 3 : 15 : 6 4/8 : 43.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 8 : 13 4/8 : 16 : 33.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 5 : 5 : 11 4/8 : 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 31.5 : 59.5 : 74.0 : 131.0.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the plants did not grow to their proper height in the above small pots
+ in Table 6/84, four crossed and four self-fertilised plants were raised
+ from the same seed, and were planted in pairs on the opposite sides of
+ four very large pots containing rich soil; so that they were not exposed
+ to at all severe mutual competition. When these plants were in flower I
+ neglected to measure them, but record in my notes that all four
+ self-fertilised plants exceeded in height the four crossed plants by 2 or
+ 3 inches. We have seen that the flowers on the original or parent-plants
+ which were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant yielded much fewer
+ seeds than those fertilised with their own pollen; and the trial just
+ given, as well as that in Table 6/84, show us clearly that the plants
+ raised from the crossed seeds were inferior in height to those from the
+ self-fertilised seeds; but only when not greatly crowded. When crowded and
+ thus subjected to very severe competition, the crossed and self-fertilised
+ plants were nearly equal in height.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Twelve flowers on the crossed plants of the last generation growing in the
+ four large pots just mentioned, were crossed with pollen from a crossed
+ plant growing in one of the other pots; and twelve flowers on the
+ self-fertilised plants were fertilised with their own pollen. All these
+ flowers of both lots produced fine capsules. Ten of the crossed capsules
+ contained by weight 38.92 grains of seeds, and ten of the self-fertilised
+ capsules 37.74 grains; or as 100 to 97. Some of these seeds in an equal
+ state of germination were planted in pairs on the opposite sides of five
+ large pots. A good many of the crossed seeds germinated before the
+ self-fertilised, and were of course rejected. The plants thus raised were
+ measured when several of them were in full flower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/85. Nicotiana tabacum (second generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 14 4/8 : 27 6/8. Pot 1 : 78 4/8 : 8 6/8. Pot 1 : 9 : 56.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 60 4/8 : 16 6/8. Pot 2 : 44 6/8 : 7. Pot 2 : 10 : 50 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 57 1/8 : 87 (A). Pot 3 : 1 2/8 : 81 2/8 (B).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 6 6/8 : 19. Pot 4 : 31 : 43 2/8. Pot 4 : 69 4/8 : 4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 99 4/8 : 9 4/8. Pot 5 : 29 2/8 : 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 511.63 : 413.75.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The thirteen crossed plants here average 39.35, and the thirteen
+ self-fertilised plants 31.82 inches in height; or as 100 to 81. But it
+ would be a very much fairer plan to exclude all the starved plants of only
+ 10 inches and under in height; and in this case the nine remaining crossed
+ plants average 53.84, and the seven remaining self-fertilised plants 51.78
+ inches in height, or as 100 to 96; and this difference is so small that
+ the crossed and self-fertilised plants may be considered as of equal
+ heights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In addition to these plants, three crossed plants were planted separately
+ in three large pots, and three self-fertilised plants in three other large
+ pots, so that they were not exposed to any competition; and now the
+ self-fertilised plants exceeded the crossed in height by a little, for the
+ three crossed averaged 55.91, and the three self-fertilised 59.16 inches;
+ or as 100 to 106.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE THIRD GENERATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/86. Nicotiana tabacum (third generation). Seedlings from the
+ self-fertilised plant A in pot 3, Table 6/85, of the last or second
+ generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: From Self-fertilised Plant, crossed by a Crossed Plant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: From Self-fertilised Plant again self-fertilised, forming the
+ third Self-fertilised generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 100 2/8 : 98. Pot 1 : 91 : 79.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 110 2/8 : 59 1/8. Pot 2 : 100 4/8 : 66 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 104 : 79 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 84 2/8 : 110 4/8. Pot 4 : 76 4/8 : 64 1/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 666.75 : 557.25.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I wished to ascertain, firstly, whether those self-fertilised plants of
+ the last generation, which greatly exceeded in height their crossed
+ opponents, would transmit the same tendency to their offspring, and
+ secondly, whether they possessed the same sexual constitution, I selected
+ for experiment the two self-fertilised plants marked A and B in Pot 3 in
+ Table 6/85, as these two were of nearly equal height, and were greatly
+ superior to their crossed opponents. Four flowers on each plant were
+ fertilised with their own pollen, and four others on the same plants were
+ crossed with pollen from one of the crossed plants growing in another pot.
+ This plan differs from that before followed, in which seedlings from
+ crossed plants again crossed, have been compared with seedlings from
+ self-fertilised plants again self-fertilised. The seeds from the crossed
+ and self-fertilised capsules of the above two plants were placed in
+ separate watch-glasses and compared, but were not weighed; and in both
+ cases those from the crossed capsules seemed to be rather less numerous
+ than those from the self-fertilised capsules. These seeds were planted in
+ the usual manner, and the heights of the crossed and self-fertilised
+ seedlings, when fully grown, are given in Tables 6/86 and 6/87.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seven crossed plants in the first of these two tables average 95.25,
+ and the seven self-fertilised 79.6 inches in height; or as 100 to 83. In
+ half the pots a crossed plant, and in the other half a self-fertilised
+ plant flowered first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We now come to the seedlings raised from the other parent-plant B.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/87. Nicotiana tabacum (third generation). Seedlings from the
+ self-fertilised plant B in pot 3, Table 6/85, of the last or second
+ generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: From Self-fertilised Plant, crossed by a Crossed Plant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: From Self-fertilised Plant again self-fertilised, forming the
+ third Self-fertilised generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 87 2/8 : 72 4/8. Pot 1 : 49 : 14 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 98 4/8 : 73. Pot 2 : 0 : 110 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 99 : 106 4/8. Pot 3 : 15 2/8 : 73 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 97 6/8 : 48 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 48 6/8 : 81 2/8. Pot 5 : 0 : 61 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 495.50 : 641.75.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seven crossed plants (for two of them died) here average 70.78 inches,
+ and the nine self-fertilised plants 71.3 inches in height; or as 100 to
+ barely 101. In four out of these five pots, a self-fertilised plant
+ flowered before any one of the crossed plants. So that, differently from
+ the last case, the self-fertilised plants are in some respects slightly
+ superior to the crossed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we now consider the crossed and self-fertilised plants of the three
+ generations, we find an extraordinary diversity in their relative heights.
+ In the first generation, the crossed plants were inferior to the
+ self-fertilised as 100 to 178; and the flowers on the original
+ parent-plants which were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant yielded
+ much fewer seeds than the self-fertilised flowers, in the proportion of
+ 100 to 150. But it is a strange fact that the self-fertilised plants,
+ which were subjected to very severe competition with the crossed, had on
+ two occasions no advantage over them. The inferiority of the crossed
+ plants of this first generation cannot be attributed to the immaturity of
+ the seeds, for I carefully examined them; nor to the seeds being diseased
+ or in any way injured in some one capsule, for the contents of the ten
+ crossed capsules were mingled together and a few taken by chance for
+ sowing. In the second generation the crossed and self-fertilised plants
+ were nearly equal in height. In the third generation, crossed and
+ self-fertilised seeds were obtained from two plants of the previous
+ generation, and the seedlings raised from them differed remarkably in
+ constitution; the crossed in the one case exceeded the self-fertilised in
+ height in the ratio of 100 to 83, and in the other case were almost equal.
+ This difference between the two lots, raised at the same time from two
+ plants growing in the same pot, and treated in every respect alike, as
+ well as the extraordinary superiority of the self-fertilised over the
+ crossed plants in the first generation, considered together, make me
+ believe that some individuals of the present species differ to a certain
+ extent from others in their sexual affinities (to use the term employed by
+ Gartner), like closely allied species of the same genus. Consequently if
+ two plants which thus differ are crossed, the seedlings suffer and are
+ beaten by those from the self-fertilised flowers, in which the sexual
+ elements are of the same nature. It is known that with our domestic
+ animals certain individuals are sexually incompatible, and will not
+ produce offspring, although fertile with other individuals. (6/3. I have
+ given evidence on this head in my &lsquo;Variation of Animals and Plants under
+ Domestication&rsquo; chapter 18 2nd edition volume 2 page 146.) But Kolreuter
+ has recorded a case which bears more closely on our present one, as it
+ shows that in the genus Nicotiana the varieties differ in their sexual
+ affinities. (6/4. &lsquo;Das Geschlecht der Pflanzen, Zweite Fortsetzung&rsquo; 1764
+ pages 55-60.) He experimented on five varieties of the common tobacco, and
+ proved that they were varieties by showing that they were perfectly
+ fertile when reciprocally crossed; but one of these varieties, if used
+ either as the father or the mother, was more fertile than any of the
+ others when crossed with a widely distinct species, N. glutinosa. As the
+ different varieties thus differ in their sexual affinities, there is
+ nothing surprising in the individuals of the same variety differing in a
+ like manner to a slight degree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Taking the plants of the three generations altogether, the crossed show no
+ superiority over the self-fertilised, and I can account for this fact only
+ by supposing that with this species, which is perfectly self-fertile
+ without insect aid, most of the individuals are in the same condition, as
+ those of the same variety of the common pea and of a few other exotic
+ plants, which have been self-fertilised for many generations. In such
+ cases a cross between two individuals does no good; nor does it in any
+ case, unless the individuals differ in general constitution, either from
+ so-called spontaneous variation, or from their progenitors having been
+ subjected to different conditions. I believe that this is the true
+ explanation in the present instance, because, as we shall immediately see,
+ the offspring of plants, which did not profit at all by being crossed with
+ a plant of the same stock, profited to an extraordinary degree by a cross
+ with a slightly different sub-variety.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ THE EFFECTS OF A CROSS WITH A FRESH STOCK.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I procured some seed of N. tabacum from Kew and raised some plants, which
+ formed a slightly different sub-variety from my former plants; as the
+ flowers were a shade pinker, the leaves a little more pointed, and the
+ plants not quite so tall. Therefore the advantage in height which the
+ seedlings gained by this cross cannot be attributed to direct inheritance.
+ Two of the plants of the third self-fertilised generation, growing in Pots
+ 2 and 5 in Table 6/87, which exceeded in height their crossed opponents
+ (as did their parents in a still higher degree) were fertilised with
+ pollen from the Kew plants, that is, by a fresh stock. The seedlings thus
+ raised may be called the Kew-crossed. Some other flowers on the same two
+ plants were fertilised with their own pollen, and the seedlings thus
+ raised from the fourth self-fertilised generation. The crossed capsules
+ produced by the plant in Pot 2, Table 6/87, were plainly less fine than
+ the self-fertilised capsules on the same plant. In Pot 5 the one finest
+ capsule was also a self-fertilised one; but the seeds produced by the two
+ crossed capsules together exceeded in number those produced by the two
+ self-fertilised capsules on the same plant. Therefore as far as the
+ flowers on the parent-plants are concerned, a cross with pollen from a
+ fresh stock did little or no good; and I did not expect that the offspring
+ would have received any benefit, but in this I was completely mistaken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crossed and self-fertilised seeds from the two plants were placed on
+ bare sand, and very many of the crossed seeds of both sets germinated
+ before the self-fertilised seeds, and protruded their radicles at a
+ quicker rate. Hence many of the crossed seeds had to be rejected, before
+ pairs in an equal state of germination were obtained for planting on the
+ opposite sides of sixteen large pots. The two series of seedlings raised
+ from the parent-plants in the two Pots 2 and 5 were kept separate, and
+ when fully grown were measured to the tips of their highest leaves, as
+ shown in Table 6/88. But as there was no uniform difference in height
+ between the crossed and self-fertilised seedlings raised from the two
+ plants, their heights have been added together in calculating the
+ averages. I should state that by the accidental fall of a large bush in
+ the greenhouse, several plants in both the series were much injured. These
+ were at once measured together with their opponents and afterwards thrown
+ away. The others were left to grow to their full height, and were measured
+ when in flower. This accident accounts for the small height of some of the
+ pairs; but as all the pairs, whether only partly or fully grown, were
+ measured at the same time, the measurements are fair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the twenty-six crossed plants in the sixteen pots of
+ the two series is 63.29, and that of the twenty-six self-fertilised plants
+ is 41.67 inches; or as 100 to 66. The superiority of the crossed plants
+ was shown in another way, for in every one of the sixteen pots a crossed
+ plant flowered before a self-fertilised one, with the exception of Pot 6
+ of the second series, in which the plants on the two sides flowered
+ simultaneously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/88. Nicotiana tabacum. Plants raised from two plants of the third
+ self-fertilised generation in Pots 2 and 5, in Table 6/87.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Kew-crossed Plants, pot 2, Table 6/87.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Plants of the fourth Self-fertilised generation, pot 2, Table
+ 6/87.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 4: Kew-crossed Plants, pot 5, Table 6/87.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 5: Plants of the fourth Self-fertilised generation, pot 5, Table
+ 6/87.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 84 6/8 : 68 4/8 : 77 6/8 : 56. Pot 1 : 31 : 5 : 7 2/8 : 5 3/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 78 4/8 : 51 4/8 : 55 4/8 : 27 6/8. Pot 2 : 48 : 70 : 18 : 7.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 77 3/8 : 12 6/8 : 76 2/8 : 60 6/8. Pot 3 : 77 1/8 : 6 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 49 2/8 : 29 4/8 : 90 4/8 : 11 6/8. Pot 4 : 15 6/8 : 32 : 22 2/8 :
+ 4 1/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 89 : 85 : 94 2/8 : 28 4/8. Pot 5 : 17 : 5 3/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 6 : 90 : 80 : 78 : 78 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 7 : 84 4/8 : 48 6/8 : 85 4/8 : 61 4/8. Pot 7 : 76 4/8 : 56 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 8 : 83 4/8 : 84 4/8 : 65 5/8 : 78 3/8. Pot 8 : : : 72 2/8 : 27 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 902.63 : 636.13 : 743.13 : 447.38.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the remaining seeds of both series, whether or not in a state of
+ germination, were thickly sown on the opposite sides of two very large
+ pots; and the six highest plants on each side of each pot were measured
+ after they had grown to nearly their full height. But their heights were
+ much less than in the former trials, owing to their extremely crowded
+ condition. Even whilst quite young, the crossed seedlings manifestly had
+ much broader and finer leaves than the self-fertilised seedlings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/89. Nicotiana tabacum. Plants of the same parentage as those in
+ Table 6/88, but grown extremely crowded in two large pots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Kew-crossed Plants, from pot 2, Table 6/87.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Plants of the fourth Self-fertilised generation, from pot 2,
+ Table 6/87.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Kew-crossed Plants, from pot 5, Table 6/87.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 4: Plants of the fourth Self-fertilised generation, from pot 5,
+ Table 6/87.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 42 4/8 : 22 4/8 : 44 6/8 : 22 4/8.
+ 34 : 19 2/8 : 42 4/8 : 21.
+ 30 4/8 : 14 2/8 : 27 4/8 : 18.
+ 23 4/8 : 16 : 31 2/8 : 15 2/8.
+ 26 6/8 : 13 4/8 : 32 : 13 5/8.
+ 18 3/8 : 16 : 24 6/8 : 14 6/8.
+</pre>
+ <h3>
+ 175.63 : 101.50 : 202.75 : 105.13.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The twelve tallest crossed plants in the two pots belonging to the two
+ series average here 31.53, and the twelve tallest self-fertilised plants
+ 17.21 inches in height; or as 100 to 54. The plants on both sides, when
+ fully grown, some time after they had been measured, were cut down close
+ to the ground and weighed. The twelve crossed plants weighed 21.25 ounces;
+ and the twelve self-fertilised plants only 7.83 ounces; or in weight as
+ 100 to 37.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rest of the crossed and self-fertilised seeds from the two
+ parent-plants (the same as in the last experiment) was sown on the 1st of
+ July in four long parallel and separate rows in good soil in the open
+ ground; so that the seedlings were not subjected to any mutual
+ competition. The summer was wet and unfavourable for their growth. Whilst
+ the seedlings were very small the two crossed rows had a clear advantage
+ over the two self-fertilised rows. When fully grown the twenty tallest
+ crossed plants and the twenty tallest self-fertilised plants were selected
+ and measured on the 11th of November to the extremities of their leaves,
+ as shown in Table 6/90. Of the twenty crossed plants, twelve had flowered;
+ whilst of the twenty self-fertilised plants one alone had flowered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/90. Nicotiana tabacum. Plants raised from the same seeds as in the
+ last two experiments, but sown separately in the open ground, so as not to
+ compete together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Kew-crossed Plants, from pot 2, Table 6/87.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Plants of the fourth Self-fertilised generation, from pot 2,
+ Table 6/87.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Kew-crossed Plants, from pot 5, Table 6/87.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 4: Plants of the fourth Self-fertilised generation, from pot 5,
+ Table 6/87.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 42 2/8 : 22 6/8 : 54 4/8 : 34 4/8.
+ 54 5/8 : 37 4/8 : 51 4/8 : 38 5/8.
+ 39 3/8 : 34 4/8 : 45 : 40 6/8.
+ 53 2/8 : 30 : 43 : 43 2/8.
+ 49 3/8 : 28 6/8 : 43 : 40.
+ 50 3/8 : 31 2/8 : 48 6/8 : 38 2/8.
+ 47 1/8 : 25 4/8 : 44 : 35 6/8.
+ 57 3/8 : 26 2/8 : 48 2/8 : 39 6/8.
+ 37 : 22 3/8 : 55 1/8 : 47 6/8.
+ 48 : 28 : 63 : 58 5/8.
+</pre>
+ <h3>
+ 478.75 : 286.86 : 496.13 : 417.25
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The twenty tallest crossed plants here average 48.74, and the twenty
+ tallest self-fertilised 35.2 inches in height; or as 100 to 72. These
+ plants after being measured were cut down close to the ground, and the
+ twenty crossed plants weighed 195.75 ounces, and the twenty
+ self-fertilised plants 123.25 ounces; or as 100 to 63.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Tables 6/88, 6/89 and 6/90, we have the measurements of fifty-six
+ plants derived from two plants of the third self-fertilised generation
+ crossed with pollen from a fresh stock, and of fifty-six plants of the
+ fourth self-fertilised generation derived from the same two plants. These
+ crossed and self-fertilised plants were treated in three different ways,
+ having been put, firstly, into moderately close competition with one
+ another in pots; secondly, having been subjected to unfavourable
+ conditions and to very severe competition from being greatly crowded in
+ two large pots; and thirdly, having been sown separately in open and good
+ ground, so as not to suffer from any mutual competition. In all these
+ cases the crossed plants in each lot were greatly superior to the
+ self-fertilised. This was shown in several ways,&mdash;by the earlier
+ germination of the crossed seeds, by the more rapid growth of the
+ seedlings whilst quite young, by the earlier flowering of the mature
+ plants, as well as by the greater height which they ultimately attained.
+ The superiority of the crossed plants was shown still more plainly when
+ the two lots were weighed; the weight of the crossed plants to that of the
+ self-fertilised in the two crowded pots being as 100 to 37. Better
+ evidence could hardly be desired of the immense advantage derived from a
+ cross with a fresh stock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. PRIMULACEAE.&mdash;Cyclamen persicum. (6/5. Cyclamen repandum
+ according to Lecoq &lsquo;Geographie Botanique de l&rsquo;Europe&rsquo; tome 8 1858 page
+ 150, is proterandrous, and this I believe to be the case with Cyclamen
+ persicum.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ten flowers crossed with pollen from plants known to be distinct
+ seedlings, yielded nine capsules, containing on an average 34.2 seeds,
+ with a maximum of seventy-seven in one. Ten flowers self-fertilised
+ yielded eight capsules, containing on an average only 13.1 seeds, with a
+ maximum of twenty-five in one. This gives a ratio of 100 to 38 for the
+ average number of seeds per capsule for the crossed and self-fertilised
+ flowers. The flowers hang downwards, and as the stigmas stand close
+ beneath the anthers, it might have been expected that pollen would have
+ fallen on them, and that they would have been spontaneously
+ self-fertilised; but these covered-up plants did not produce a single
+ capsule. On some other occasions uncovered plants in the same greenhouse
+ produced plenty of capsules, and I suppose that the flowers had been
+ visited by bees, which could hardly fail to carry pollen from plant to
+ plant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seeds obtained in the manner just described were placed on sand, and
+ after germinating were planted in pairs,&mdash;three crossed and three
+ self-fertilised plants on the opposite sides of four pots. When the leaves
+ were 2 or 3 inches in length, including the foot-stalks, the seedlings on
+ both sides were equal. In the course of a month or two the crossed plants
+ began to show a slight superiority over the self-fertilised, which
+ steadily increased; and the crossed flowered in all four pots some weeks
+ before, and much more profusely than the self-fertilised. The two tallest
+ flower-stems on the crossed plants in each pot were now measured, and the
+ average height of the eight stems was 9.49 inches. After a considerable
+ interval of time the self-fertilised plants flowered, and several of their
+ flower-stems (but I forgot to record how many) were roughly measured, and
+ their average height was a little under 7.5 inches; so that the
+ flower-stems on the crossed plants to those on the self-fertilised were at
+ least as 100 to 79. The reason why I did not make more careful
+ measurements of the self-fertilised plants was, that they looked such poor
+ specimens that I determined to there them re-potted in larger pots and in
+ the following year to measure them carefully; but we shall see that this
+ was partly frustrated by so few flower-stems being then produced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These plants were left uncovered in the greenhouse; and the twelve crossed
+ plants produced forty capsules, whilst the twelve self-fertilised plants
+ produced only five; or as 100 to 12. But this difference does not give a
+ just idea of the relative fertility of the two lots. I counted the seeds
+ in one of the finest capsules on the crossed plants, and it contained
+ seventy-three; whilst the finest of the five capsules produced by the
+ self-fertilised plants contained only thirty-five good seeds. In the other
+ four capsules most of the seeds were barely half as large as those in the
+ crossed capsules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/91. Cyclamen persicum: 0 implies that no flower-stem was produced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 10 : 0. Pot 1 : 9 2/8 : 0. Pot 1 : 10 2/8 : 0.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 9 2/8 : 0. Pot 2 : 10 : 0. Pot 2 : 10 2/8 : 0.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 9 1/8 : 8. Pot 3 : 9 5/8 : 6 7/8. Pot 3 : 9 5/8 : 6 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 11 1/8 : 0. Pot 4 : 10 5/8 : 7 7/8. Pot 4 : 10 6/8 : 0.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 119.88 : 29.50.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the following year the crossed plants again bore many flowers before
+ the self-fertilised bore a single one. The three tallest flower-stems on
+ the crossed plants in each of the pots were measured, as shown in Table
+ 6/91. In Pots 1 and 2 the self-fertilised plants did not produce a single
+ flower-stem; in Pot 4 only one; and in Pot 3 six, of which the three
+ tallest were measured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the twelve flower-stems on the crossed plants is
+ 9.99, and that of the four flower-stems on the self-fertilised plants 7.37
+ inches; or as 100 to 74. The self-fertilised plants were miserable
+ specimens, whilst the crossed ones looked very vigorous.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ ANAGALLIS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Anagallis collina, var. grandiflora (pale red and blue-flowered
+ sub-varieties).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Firstly, twenty-five flowers on some plants of the red variety were
+ crossed with pollen from a distinct plant of the same variety, and
+ produced ten capsules; thirty-one flowers were fertilised with their own
+ pollen, and produced eighteen capsules. These plants, which were grown in
+ pots in the greenhouse, were evidently in a very sterile condition, and
+ the seeds in both sets of capsules, especially in the self-fertilised,
+ although numerous, were of so poor a quality that it was very difficult to
+ determine which were good and which bad. But as far as I could judge, the
+ crossed capsules contained on an average 6.3 good seeds, with a maximum in
+ one of thirteen; whilst the self-fertilised contained 6.05 such seeds,
+ with a maximum in one of fourteen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Secondly, eleven flowers on the red variety were castrated whilst young
+ and fertilised with pollen from the blue variety, and this cross evidently
+ much increased their fertility; for the eleven flowers yielded seven
+ capsules, which contained on an average twice as many good seeds as
+ before, namely, 12.7; with a maximum in two of the capsules of seventeen
+ seeds. Therefore these crossed capsules yielded seeds compared with those
+ in the foregoing self-fertilised capsules, as 100 to 48. These seeds were
+ also conspicuously larger than those from the cross between two
+ individuals of the same red variety, and germinated much more freely. The
+ flowers on most of the plants produced by the cross between the
+ two-coloured varieties (of which several were raised), took after their
+ mother, and were red-coloured. But on two of the plants the flowers were
+ plainly stained with blue, and to such a degree in one case as to be
+ almost intermediate in tint.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crossed seeds of the two foregoing kinds and the self-fertilised were
+ sown on the opposite sides of two large pots, and the seedlings were
+ measured when fully grown, as shown in Tables 6/92a and 6/92b.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/92a. Anagallis collina: Red variety crossed by a distinct plant of
+ the red variety, and red variety self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 23 4/8 : 15 4/8. Pot 1 : 21 : 15 4/8. Pot 1 : 17 2/8 : 14.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 61.75 : 45.00.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/92b. Anagallis collina: Red variety crossed by blue variety, and
+ red variety self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 30 4/8 : 24 4/8. Pot 2 : 27 3/8 : 18 4/8. Pot 2 : 25 : 11 6/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 82.88 : 54.75.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Total of both lots:
+ : 144.63 : 99.75.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ As the plants of the two lots are few in number, they may be run together
+ for the general average; but I may first state that the height of the
+ seedlings from the cross between two individuals of the red variety is to
+ that of the self-fertilised plants of the red variety as 100 to 73;
+ whereas the height of the crossed offspring from the two varieties to the
+ self-fertilised plants of the red variety is as 100 to 66. So that the
+ cross between the two varieties is here seen to be the most advantageous.
+ The average height of all six crossed plants in the two lots taken
+ together is 48.20, and that of the six self-fertilised plants 33.25; or as
+ 100 to 69.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These six crossed plants produced spontaneously twenty-six capsules,
+ whilst the six self-fertilised plants produced only two, or as 100 to 8.
+ There is therefore the same extraordinary difference in fertility between
+ the crossed and self-fertilised plants as in the last genus, Cyclamen,
+ which belongs to the same family of the Primulaceae.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Primula veris. British flora. (var. officinalis, Linn.).
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ THE COWSLIP.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Most of the species in this genus are heterostyled or dimorphic; that is,
+ they present two forms,&mdash;one long-styled with short stamens, and the
+ other short-styled with long stamens. (6/6. See my paper &lsquo;On the Two Forms
+ or Dimorphic Condition in the Species of Primula&rsquo; in &lsquo;Journal of the
+ Proceedings of the Linnean Society&rsquo; volume 6 1862 page 77. A second paper,
+ to which I presently refer &lsquo;On the Hybrid-like Nature of the Offspring
+ from the Illegitimate Unions of Dimorphic and Trimorphic Plants&rsquo; was
+ published in volume 10 1867 page 393 of the same journal.) For complete
+ fertilisation it is necessary that pollen from the one form should be
+ applied to the stigma of the other form; and this is effected under nature
+ by insects. Such unions, and the seedlings raised from them, I have called
+ legitimate. If one form is fertilised with pollen from the same form, the
+ full complement of seed is not produced; and in the case of some
+ heterostyled genera no seed at all is produced. Such unions, and the
+ seedlings raised from them, I have called illegitimate. These seedlings
+ are often dwarfed and more or less sterile, like hybrids. I possessed some
+ long-styled plants of Primula veris, which during four successive
+ generations had been produced from illegitimate unions between long-styled
+ plants; they were, moreover, in some degree inter-related, and had been
+ subjected all the time to similar conditions in pots in the greenhouse. As
+ long as they were cultivated in this manner, they grew well and were
+ healthy and fertile. Their fertility even increased in the later
+ generations, as if they were becoming habituated to illegitimate
+ fertilisation. Plants of the first illegitimate generation when taken from
+ the greenhouse and planted in moderately good soil out of doors grew well
+ and were healthy; but when those of the two last illegitimate generations
+ were thus treated they became excessively sterile and dwarfed, and
+ remained so during the following year, by which time they ought to have
+ become accustomed to growing out of doors, so that they must have
+ possessed a weak constitution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under these circumstances, it seemed advisable to ascertain what would be
+ the effect of legitimately crossing long-styled plants of the fourth
+ illegitimate generation with pollen taken from non-related short-styled
+ plants, growing under different conditions. Accordingly several flowers on
+ plants of the fourth illegitimate generation (i.e.,
+ great-great-grandchildren of plants which had been legitimately
+ fertilised), growing vigorously in pots in the greenhouse, were
+ legitimately fertilised with pollen from an almost wild short-styled
+ cowslip, and these flowers yielded some fine capsules. Thirty other
+ flowers on the same illegitimate plants were fertilised with their own
+ pollen, and these yielded seventeen capsules, containing on an average
+ thirty-two seeds. This is a high degree of fertility; higher, I believe,
+ than that which generally obtains with illegitimately fertilised
+ long-styled plants growing out of doors, and higher than that of the
+ previous illegitimate generations, although their flowers were fertilised
+ with pollen taken from a distinct plant of the same form.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These two lots of seeds were sown (for they will not germinate well when
+ placed on bare sand) on the opposite sides of four pots, and the seedlings
+ were thinned, so that an equal number were left on the two sides. For some
+ time there was no marked difference in height between the two lots; and in
+ Pot 3, Table 6/93, the self-fertilised plants were rather the tallest. But
+ by the time that they had thrown up young flower-stems, the legitimately
+ crossed plants revealed much the finest, and had greener and larger
+ leaves. The breadth of the largest leaf on each plant was measured, and
+ those on the crossed plants were on an average a quarter of an inch
+ (exactly .28 of an inch) broader than those on the self-fertilised plants.
+ The plants, from being too much crowded, produced poor and short
+ flower-stems. The two finest on each side were measured; the eight on the
+ legitimately crossed plants averaged 4.08, and the eight on the
+ illegitimately self-fertilised plants averaged 2.93 inches in height; or
+ as 100 to 72.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These plants after they had flowered were turned out of their pots, and
+ planted in fairly good soil in the open ground. In the following year
+ (1870), when in full flower, the two tallest flower-stems on each side
+ were again measured, as shown in Table 6/93, which likewise gives the
+ number of flower-stems produced on both sides of all the pots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/93. Primula veris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Height: Legitimately crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Number of Flower-stems produced: Legitimately crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 4: Height: Illegitimately crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 5: Number of Flower-stems produced: Illegitimately crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 9 : 16 : 2 1/8 : 3. Pot 1 : 8 : : 3 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 7 : 16 : 6 : 3. Pot 2 : 6 4/8 : : 5 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 6 : 16 : 3 : 4. Pot 3 : 6 2/8 : : 0 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 7 3/8 : 14 : 2 5/8 : 5. Pot 4 : 6 1/8 : : 2 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 56.26 : 62 : 25.75 : 15.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the eight tallest flower-stems on the crossed plants
+ is here 7.03 inches, and that of the eight tallest flower-stems on the
+ self-fertilised plants 3.21 inches; or as 100 to 46. We see, also, that
+ the crossed plants bore sixty-two flower-stems; that is, above four times
+ as many as those (namely fifteen) borne by the self-fertilised plants. The
+ flowers were left exposed to the visits of insects, and as many plants of
+ both forms grew close by, they must have been legitimately and naturally
+ fertilised. Under these circumstances the crossed plants produced 324
+ capsules, whilst the self-fertilised produced only 16; and these were all
+ produced by a single plant in Pot 2, which was much finer than any other
+ self-fertilised plant. Judging by the number of capsules produced, the
+ fertility of an equal number of crossed and self-fertilised plants was as
+ 100 to 5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the succeeding year (1871) I did not count all the flower-stems on
+ these plants, but only those which produced capsules containing good
+ seeds. The season was unfavourable, and the crossed plants produced only
+ forty such flower-stems, bearing 168 good capsules, whilst the
+ self-fertilised plants produced only two such flower-stems, bearing only 6
+ capsules, half of which were very poor ones. So that the fertility of the
+ two lots, judging by the number of capsules, was as 100 to 3.5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In considering the great difference in height and the wonderful difference
+ in fertility between the two sets of plants, we should bear in mind that
+ this is the result of two distinct agencies. The self-fertilised plants
+ were the product of illegitimate fertilisation during five successive
+ generations, in all of which, excepting the last, the plants had been
+ fertilised with pollen taken from a distinct individual belonging to the
+ same form, but which was more or less closely related. The plants had also
+ been subjected in each generation to closely similar conditions. This
+ treatment alone, as I know from other observations, would have greatly
+ reduced the size and fertility of the offspring. On the other hand, the
+ crossed plants were the offspring of long-styled plants of the fourth
+ illegitimate generation legitimately crossed with pollen from a
+ short-styled plant, which, as well as its progenitors, had been exposed to
+ very different conditions; and this latter circumstance alone would have
+ given great vigour to the offspring, as we may infer from the several
+ analogous cases already given. How much proportional weight ought to be
+ attributed to these two agencies,&mdash;the one tending to injure the
+ self-fertilised offspring, and the other to benefit the crossed offspring,&mdash;cannot
+ be determined. But we shall immediately see that the greater part of the
+ benefit, as far as increased fertility is concerned, must be attributed to
+ the cross having been made with a fresh stock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Primula veris.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ EQUAL-STYLED AND RED-FLOWERED VAR.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I have described in my paper &lsquo;On the Illegitimate Unions of Dimorphic and
+ Trimorphic Plants&rsquo; this remarkable variety, which was sent to me from
+ Edinburgh by Mr. J. Scott. It possessed a pistil proper to the long-styled
+ form, and stamens proper to the short-styled form; so that it had lost the
+ heterostyled or dimorphic character common to most of the species of the
+ genus, and may be compared with an hermaphrodite form of a bisexual
+ animal. Consequently the pollen and stigma of the same flower are adapted
+ for complete mutual fertilisation, instead of its being necessary that
+ pollen should be brought from one form to another, as in the common
+ cowslip. From the stigma and anthers standing nearly on the same level,
+ the flowers are perfectly self-fertile when insects are excluded. Owing to
+ the fortunate existence of this variety, it is possible to fertilise its
+ flowers in a legitimate manner with their own pollen, and to cross other
+ flowers in a legitimate manner with pollen from another variety or fresh
+ stock. Thus the offspring from both unions can be compared quite fairly,
+ free from any doubt from the injurious effects of an illegitimate union.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The plants on which I experimented had been raised during two successive
+ generations from spontaneously self-fertilised seeds produced by plants
+ under a net; and as the variety is highly self-fertile, its progenitors in
+ Edinburgh may have been self-fertilised during some previous generations.
+ Several flowers on two of my plants were legitimately crossed with pollen
+ from a short-styled common cowslip growing almost wild in my orchard; so
+ that the cross was between plants which had been subjected to considerably
+ different conditions. Several other flowers on the same two plants were
+ allowed to fertilise themselves under a net; and this union, as already
+ explained, is a legitimate one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crossed and self-fertilised seeds thus obtained were sown thickly on
+ the opposite sides of three pots, and the seedlings thinned, so that an
+ equal number were left on the two sides. The seedlings during the first
+ year were nearly equal in height, excepting in Pot 3, Table 6/94, in which
+ the self-fertilised plants had a decided advantage. In the autumn the
+ plants were bedded out, in their pots; owing to this circumstance, and to
+ many plants growing in each pot, they did not flourish, and none were very
+ productive in seeds. But the conditions were perfectly equal and fair for
+ both sides. In the following spring I record in my notes that in two of
+ the pots the crossed plants are &ldquo;incomparably the finest in general
+ appearance,&rdquo; and in all three pots they flowered before the
+ self-fertilised. When in full flower the tallest flower-stem on each side
+ of each pot was measured, and the number of the flower-stems on both sides
+ counted, as shown in Table 6/94. The plants were left uncovered, and as
+ other plants were growing close by, the flowers no doubt were crossed by
+ insects. When the capsules were ripe they were gathered and counted, and
+ the result is likewise shown in Table 6/94.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/94. Primula veris (equal-styled, red-flowered variety).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Height of tallest flower-stem: crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Number of Flower-stems: crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 4: Number of good capsules: crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 5: Height of tallest flower-stem: self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 6: Number of Flower-stems: self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 7: Number of good capsules: self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 10 : 14 : 163 : 6 4/8 : 6 : 6.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Pot 2 : 8 4/8 : 12 : * : 5 : 2 : 0.
+ *Several, not counted.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 7 4/8 : 7 : 43 : 10 4/8 : 5 : 26.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Totals : 26.0 : 33 : 206 : 22.0 : 13 : 32.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the three tallest flower-stems on the crossed plants
+ is 8.66 inches, and that of the three on the self-fertilised plants 7.33
+ inches; or as 100 to 85.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the crossed plants together produced thirty-three flower-stems, whilst
+ the self-fertilised bore only thirteen. The number of the capsules were
+ counted only on the plants in Pots 1 and 3, for the self-fertilised plants
+ in Pot 2 produced none; therefore those on the crossed plants on the
+ opposite side were not counted. Capsules not containing any good seeds
+ were rejected. The crossed plants in the above two pots produced 206, and
+ the self-fertilised in the same pots only 32 capsules; or as 100 to 15.
+ Judging from the previous generations, the extreme unproductiveness of the
+ self-fertilised plants in this experiment was wholly due to their having
+ been subjected to unfavourable conditions, and to severe competition with
+ the crossed plants; for had they grown separately in good soil, it is
+ almost certain that they would have produced a large number of capsules.
+ The seeds were counted in twenty capsules from the crossed plants, and
+ they averaged 24.75; whilst in twenty capsules from the self-fertilised
+ plants the average was 17.65; or as 100 to 71. Moreover, the seeds from
+ the self-fertilised plants were not nearly so fine as those from the
+ crossed plants. If we consider together the number of capsules produced
+ and the average number of contained seeds, the fertility of the crossed
+ plants to the self-fertilised plants was as 100 to 11. We thus see what a
+ great effect, as far as fertility is concerned, was produced by a cross
+ between the two varieties, which had been long exposed to different
+ conditions, in comparison with self-fertilisation; the fertilisation
+ having been in both cases of the legitimate order.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Primula sinensis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the Chinese primrose is a heterostyled or dimorphic plant, like the
+ common cowslip, it might have been expected that the flowers of both forms
+ when illegitimately fertilised with their own pollen or with that from
+ flowers on another plant of the same form, would have yielded less seed
+ than the legitimately crossed flowers; and that the seedlings raised from
+ illegitimately self-fertilised seeds would have been somewhat dwarfed and
+ less fertile, in comparison with the seedlings from legitimately crossed
+ seeds. This holds good in relation to the fertility of the flowers; but to
+ my surprise there was no difference in growth between the offspring from a
+ legitimate union between two distinct plants, and from an illegitimate
+ union whether between the flowers on the same plant, or between distinct
+ plants of the same form. But I have shown, in the paper before referred
+ to, that in England this plant is in an abnormal condition, such as,
+ judging from analogous cases, would tend to render a cross between two
+ individuals of no benefit to the offspring. Our plants have been commonly
+ raised from self-fertilised seeds; and the seedlings have generally been
+ subjected to nearly uniform conditions in pots in greenhouses. Moreover,
+ many of the plants are now varying and changing their character, so as to
+ become in a greater or less degree equal-styled, and in consequence highly
+ self-fertile. From the analogy of Primula veris there can hardly be a
+ doubt that if a plant of Primula sinensis could have been procured direct
+ from China, and if it had been crossed with one of our English varieties,
+ the offspring would have shown wonderful superiority in height and
+ fertility (though probably not in the beauty of their flowers) over our
+ ordinary plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My first experiment consisted in fertilising many flowers on long-styled
+ and short-styled plants with their own pollen, and other flowers on the
+ same plants with pollen taken from distinct plants belonging to the same
+ form; so that all the unions were illegitimate. There was no uniform and
+ marked difference in the number of seeds obtained from these two modes of
+ self-fertilisation, both of which were illegitimate. The two lots of seeds
+ from both forms were sown thickly on opposite sides of four pots, and
+ numerous plants thus raised. But there was no difference in their growth,
+ excepting in one pot, in which the offspring from the illegitimate union
+ of two long-styled plants exceeded in a decided manner in height the
+ offspring of flowers on the same plants fertilised with their own pollen.
+ But in all four pots the plants raised from the union of distinct plants
+ belonging to the same form, flowered before the offspring from the
+ self-fertilised flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some long-styled and short-styled plants were now raised from purchased
+ seeds, and flowers on both forms were legitimately crossed with pollen
+ from a distinct plant; and other flowers on both forms were illegitimately
+ fertilised with pollen from the flowers on the same plant. The seeds were
+ sown on opposite sides of Pots 1 to 4 in Table 6/95; a single plant being
+ left on each side. Several flowers on the illegitimate long-styled and
+ short-styled plants described in the last paragraph, were also
+ legitimately and illegitimately fertilised in the manner just described,
+ and their seeds were sown in Pots 5 to 8 in the same table. As the two
+ sets of seedlings did not differ in any essential manner, their
+ measurements are given in a single table. I should add that the legitimate
+ unions in both cases yielded, as might have been expected, many more seeds
+ than the illegitimate unions. The seedlings whilst half-grown presented no
+ difference in height on the two sides of the several pots. When fully
+ grown they were measured to the tips of their longest leaves, and the
+ result is given in Table 6/95.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/95. Primula sinensis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Plants from legitimately Crossed seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Plants from illegitimately Self-fertilised seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 8 2/8 : 8. From short-styled mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 7 4/8 : 8 5/8. From short-styled mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 9 5/8 : 9 3/8. From long-styled mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 8 4/8 : 8 2/8. From long-styled mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 5 : 9 3/8 : 9. From illegitimate short-styled mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 6 : 9 7/8 : 9 4/8. From illegitimate short-styled mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 7 : 8 4/8 : 9 4/8. From illegitimate long-styled mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 8 : 10 4/8 : 10. From illegitimate long-styled mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 72.13 : 72.25.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In six out of the eight pots the legitimately crossed plants exceeded in
+ height by a trifle the illegitimately self-fertilised plants; but the
+ latter exceeded the former in two of the pots in a more strongly marked
+ manner. The average height of the eight legitimately crossed plants is
+ 9.01, and that of the eight illegitimately self-fertilised 9.03 inches, or
+ as 100 to 100.2. The plants on the opposite sides produced, as far as
+ could be judged by the eye, an equal number of flowers. I did not count
+ the capsules or the seeds produced by them; but undoubtedly, judging from
+ many previous observations, the plants derived from the legitimately
+ crossed seeds would have been considerably more fertile than those from
+ the illegitimately self-fertilised seeds. The crossed plants, as in the
+ previous case, flowered before the self-fertilised plants in all the pots
+ except in Pot 2, in which the two sides flowered simultaneously; and this
+ early flowering may, perhaps, be considered as an advantage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. POLYGONEAE.&mdash;Fagopyrum esculentum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This plant was discovered by Hildebrand to be heterostyled, that is, to
+ present, like the species of Primula, a long-styled and a short-styled
+ form, which are adapted for reciprocal fertilisation. Therefore the
+ following comparison of the growth of the crossed and self-fertilised
+ seedlings is not fair, for we do not know whether the difference in their
+ heights may not be wholly due to the illegitimate fertilisation of the
+ self-fertilised flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I obtained seeds by legitimately crossing flowers on long-styled and
+ short-styled plants, and by fertilising other flowers on both forms with
+ pollen from the same plant. Rather more seeds were obtained by the former
+ than by the latter process; and the legitimately crossed seeds were
+ heavier than an equal number of the illegitimately self-fertilised seeds,
+ in the ratio of 100 to 82. Crossed and self-fertilised seeds from the
+ short-styled parents, after germinating on sand, were planted in pairs on
+ the opposite sides of a large pot; and two similar lots of seeds from
+ long-styled parents were planted in a like manner on the opposite sides of
+ two other pots. In all three pots the legitimately crossed seedlings, when
+ a few inches in height, were taller than the self-fertilised; and in all
+ three pots they flowered before them by one or two days. When fully grown
+ they were all cut down close to the ground, and as I was pressed for time,
+ they were placed in a long row, the cut end of one plant touching the tip
+ of another, and the total length of the legitimately crossed plants was 47
+ feet 7 inches, and of the illegitimately self-fertilised plants 32 feet 8
+ inches. Therefore the average height of the fifteen crossed plants in all
+ three pots was 38.06 inches, and that of the fifteen self-fertilised
+ plants 26.13 inches; or as 100 to 69.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. CHENOPODIACEAE.&mdash;Beta vulgaris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A single plant, no others growing in the same garden, was left to
+ fertilise itself, and the self-fertilised seeds were collected. Seeds were
+ also collected from a plant growing in the midst of a large bed in another
+ garden; and as the incoherent pollen is abundant, the seeds of this plant
+ will almost certainly have been the product of a crossed between distinct
+ plants by means of the wind. Some of the two lots of seeds were sown on
+ the opposite sides of two very large pots; and the young seedlings were
+ thinned, so that an equal but considerable number was left on the two
+ sides. These plants were thus subjected to very severe competition, as
+ well as to poor conditions. The remaining seeds were sown out of doors in
+ good soil in two long and not closely adjoining rows, so that these
+ seedlings were placed under favourable conditions, and were not subjected
+ to any mutual competition. The self-fertilised seeds in the open ground
+ came up very badly; and on removing the soil in two or three places, it
+ was found that many had sprouted under ground and had then died. No such
+ case had been observed before. Owing to the large number of seedlings
+ which thus perished, the surviving self-fertilised plants grew thinly in
+ the row, and thus had an advantage over the crossed plants, which grew
+ very thickly in the other row. The young plants in the two rows were
+ protected by a little straw during the winter, and those in the two large
+ pots were placed in the greenhouse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no difference between the two lots in the pots until the ensuing
+ spring, when they had grown a little, and then some of the crossed plants
+ were finer and taller than any of the self-fertilised. When in full flower
+ their stems were measured, and the measurements are given in Table 6/96.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/96. Beta vulgaris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of flower stems measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 34 6/8 : 36. Pot 1 : 30 : 20 1/8. Pot 1 : 33 6/8 : 32 2/8. Pot 1 :
+ 34 4/8 : 32.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 42 3/8 : 42 1/8. Pot 2 : 33 1/8 : 26 4/8. Pot 2 : 31 2/8 : 29 2/8.
+ Pot 2 : 33 : 20 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 272.75 : 238.50.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the eight crossed plants is here 34.09, and that of
+ the eight self-fertilised plants 29.81; or as 100 to 87.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to the plants in the open ground, each long row was divided
+ into half, so as to diminish the chance of any accidental advantage in one
+ part of either row; and the four tallest plants in the two halves of the
+ two rows were carefully selected and measured. The eight tallest crossed
+ plants averaged 30.92, and the eight tallest self-fertilised 30.7 inches
+ in height, or as 100 to 99; so that they were practically equal. But we
+ should bear in mind that the trial was not quite fair, as the
+ self-fertilised plants had a great advantage over the crossed in being
+ much less crowded in their own row, owing to the large number of seeds
+ which had perished under ground after sprouting. Nor were the lots in the
+ two rows subjected to any mutual competition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. CANNACEAE.&mdash;Canna warscewiczi.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In most or all the species belonging to this genus, the pollen is shed
+ before the flower expands, and adheres in a mass to the foliaceous pistil
+ close beneath the stigmatic surface. As the edge of this mass generally
+ touches the edge of the stigma, and as it was ascertained by trials
+ purposely made that a very few pollen-grains suffice for fertilisation,
+ the present species and probably all the others of the genus are highly
+ self-fertile. Exceptions occasionally occur in which, from the stamen
+ being slightly shorter than usual, the pollen is deposited a little
+ beneath the stigmatic surface, and such flowers drop off unimpregnated
+ unless they are artificially fertilised. Sometimes, though rarely, the
+ stamen is a little longer than usual, and then the whole stigmatic surface
+ gets thickly covered with pollen. As some pollen is generally deposited in
+ contact with the edge of the stigma, certain authors have concluded that
+ the flowers are invariably self-fertilised. This is an extraordinary
+ conclusion, for it implies that a great amount of pollen is produced for
+ no purpose. On this view, also, the large size of the stigmatic surface is
+ an unintelligible feature in the structure of the flower, as well as the
+ relative position of all the parts, which is such that when insects visit
+ the flowers to suck the copious nectar, they cannot fail to carry pollen
+ from one flower to another. (6/7. Delpino has described &lsquo;Bot. Zeitung&rsquo;
+ 1867 page 277 and &lsquo;Scientific Opinion&rsquo; 1870 page 135, the structure of the
+ flowers in this genus, but he was mistaken in thinking that
+ self-fertilisation is impossible, at least in the case of the present
+ species. Dr. Dickie and Professor Faivre state that the flowers are
+ fertilised in the bud, and that self-fertilisation is inevitable. I
+ presume that they were misled by the pollen being deposited at a very
+ early period on the pistil: see &lsquo;Journal of Linnean Society Botany&rsquo; volume
+ 10 page 55 and &lsquo;Variabilité des Espèces&rsquo; 1868 page 158.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to Delpino, bees eagerly visit the flowers in North Italy, but I
+ have never seen any insect visiting the flowers of the present species in
+ my hothouse, although many plants grew there during several years.
+ Nevertheless these plants produced plenty of seed, as they likewise did
+ when covered by a net; they are therefore fully capable of
+ self-fertilisation, and have probably been self-fertilised in this country
+ for many generations. As they are cultivated in pots, and are not exposed
+ to competition with surrounding plants, they have also been subjected for
+ a considerable time to somewhat uniform conditions. This, therefore, is a
+ case exactly parallel with that of the common pea, in which we have no
+ right to expect much or any good from intercrossing plants thus descended
+ and thus treated; and no good did follow, excepting that the
+ cross-fertilised flowers yielded rather more seeds than the
+ self-fertilised. This species was one of the earlier ones on which I
+ experimented, and as I had not then raised any self-fertilised plants for
+ several successive generations under uniform conditions, I did not know or
+ even suspect that such treatment would interfere with the advantages to be
+ gained from a cross. I was therefore much surprised at the crossed plants
+ not growing more vigorously than the self-fertilised, and a large number
+ of plants were raised, notwithstanding that the present species is an
+ extremely troublesome one to experiment on. The seeds, even those which
+ have been long soaked in water, will not germinate well on bare sand; and
+ those that were sown in pots (which plan I was forced to follow)
+ germinated at very unequal intervals of time; so that it was difficult to
+ get pairs of the same exact age, and many seedlings had to be pulled up
+ and thrown away. My experiments were continued during three successive
+ generations; and in each generation the self-fertilised plants were again
+ self-fertilised, their early progenitors in this country having probably
+ been self-fertilised for many previous generations. In each generation,
+ also, the crossed plants were fertilised with pollen from another crossed
+ plant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the flowers which were crossed in the three generations, taken
+ together, a rather larger proportion yielded capsules than did those which
+ were self-fertilised. The seeds were counted in forty-seven capsules from
+ the crossed flowers, and they contained on an average 9.95 seeds; whereas
+ forty-eight capsules from the self-fertilised flowers contained on an
+ average 8.45 seeds; or as 100 to 85. The seeds from the crossed flowers
+ were not heavier, on the contrary a little lighter, than those from the
+ self-fertilised flowers, as was thrice ascertained. On one occasion I
+ weighed 200 of the crossed and 106 of the self-fertilised seeds, and the
+ relative weight of an equal number was as 100 for the crossed to 101.5 for
+ the self-fertilised. With other plants, when the seeds from the
+ self-fertilised flowers were heavier than those from the crossed flowers,
+ this appeared to be due generally to fewer having been produced by the
+ self-fertilised flowers, and to their having been in consequence better
+ nourished. But in the present instance the seeds from the crossed capsules
+ were separated into two lots,&mdash;namely, those from the capsules
+ containing over fourteen seeds, and those from the capsules containing
+ under fourteen seeds, and the seeds from the more productive capsules were
+ the heavier of the two; so that the above explanation here fails.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As pollen is deposited at a very early age on the pistil, generally in
+ contact with the stigma, some flowers whilst still in bud were castrated
+ for my first experiment, and were afterwards fertilised with pollen from a
+ distinct plant. Other flowers were fertilised with their own pollen. From
+ the seeds thus obtained, I succeeded in rearing only three pairs of plants
+ of equal age. The three crossed plants averaged 32.79 inches, and the
+ three self-fertilised 32.08 inches in height; so that they were nearly
+ equal, the crossed having a slight advantage. As the same result followed
+ in all three generations, it would be superfluous to give the heights of
+ all the plants, and I will give only the averages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to raise crossed and self-fertilised plants of the second
+ generation, some flowers on the above crossed plants were crossed within
+ twenty-four hours after they had expanded with pollen from a distinct
+ plant; and this interval would probably not be too great to allow of
+ cross-fertilisation being effectual. Some flowers on the self-fertilised
+ plants of the last generation were also self-fertilised. From these two
+ lots of seeds, ten crossed and twelve self-fertilised plants of equal ages
+ were raised; and these were measured when fully grown. The crossed
+ averaged 36.98, and the self-fertilised averaged 37.42 inches in height;
+ so that here again the two lots were nearly equal; but the self-fertilised
+ had a slight advantage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to raise plants of the third generation, a better plan was
+ followed, and flowers on the crossed plants of the second generation were
+ selected in which the stamens were too short to reach the stigmas, so that
+ they could not possibly have been self-fertilised. These flowers were
+ crossed with pollen from a distinct plant. Flowers on the self-fertilised
+ plants of the second generation were again self-fertilised. From the two
+ lots of seeds thus obtained, twenty-one crossed and nineteen
+ self-fertilised plants of equal age, and forming the third generation,
+ were raised in fourteen large pots. They were measured when fully grown,
+ and by an odd chance the average height of the two lots was exactly the
+ same, namely, 35.96 inches; so that neither side had the least advantage
+ over the other. To test this result, all the plants on both sides in ten
+ out of the above fourteen pots were cut down after they had flowered, and
+ in the ensuing year the stems were again measured; and now the crossed
+ plants exceeded by a little (namely, 1.7 inches) the self-fertilised. They
+ were again cut down, and on their flowering for the third time, the
+ self-fertilised plants had a slight advantage (namely, 1.54 inches) over
+ the crossed. Hence the result arrived at with these plants during the
+ previous trials was confirmed, namely, that neither lot had any decided
+ advantage over the other. It may, however, be worth mentioning that the
+ self-fertilised plants showed some tendency to flower before the crossed
+ plants: this occurred with all three pairs of the first generation; and
+ with the cut down plants of the third generation, a self-fertilised plant
+ flowered first in nine out of the twelve pots, whilst in the remaining
+ three pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we consider all the plants of the three generations taken together, the
+ thirty-four crossed plants average 35.98, and the thirty-four
+ self-fertilised plants 36.39 inches in height; or as 100 to 101. We may
+ therefore conclude that the two lots possessed equal powers of growth; and
+ this I believe to be the result of long-continued self-fertilisation,
+ together with exposure to similar conditions in each generation, so that
+ all the individuals had acquired a closely similar constitution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. GRAMINACEAE.&mdash;Zea mays.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This plant is monoecious, and was selected for trial on this account, no
+ other such plant having been experimented on. (6/8. Hildebrand remarks
+ that this species seems at first sight adapted to be fertilised by pollen
+ from the same plant, owing to the male flowers standing above the female
+ flowers; but practically it must generally be fertilised by pollen from
+ another plant, as the male flowers usually shed their pollen before the
+ female flowers are mature: &lsquo;Monatsbericht der K. Akad.&rsquo; Berlin October
+ 1872 page 743.) It is also anemophilous, or is fertilised by the wind; and
+ of such plants only the common beet had been tried. Some plants were
+ raised in the greenhouse, and were crossed with pollen taken from a
+ distinct plant; and a single plant, growing quite separately in a
+ different part of the house, was allowed to fertilise itself
+ spontaneously. The seeds thus obtained were placed on damp sand, and as
+ they germinated in pairs of equal age were planted on the opposite sides
+ of four very large pots; nevertheless they were considerably crowded. The
+ pots were kept in the hothouse. The plants were first measured to the tips
+ of their leaves when only between 1 and 2 feet in height, as shown in
+ Table 6/97.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/97. Zea mays.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 23 4/8 : 17 3/8. Pot 1 : 12 : 20 3/8. Pot 1 : 21 : 20.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 22 : 20. Pot 2 : 19 1/8 : 18 3/8. Pot 2 : 21 4/8 : 18 5/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 22 1/8 : 18 5/8. Pot 3 : 20 3/8 : 15 2/8. Pot 3 : 18 2/8 : 16 4/8.
+ Pot 3 : 21 5/8 : 18. Pot 3 : 23 2/8 : 16 2/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 21 : 18. Pot 4 : 22 1/8 : 12 6/8. Pot 4 : 23 : 15 4/8. Pot 4 : 12
+ : 18.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 302.88 : 263.63.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fifteen crossed plants here average 20.19, and the fifteen
+ self-fertilised plants 17.57 inches in height; or as 100 to 87. Mr. Galton
+ made a graphical representation, in accordance with the method described
+ in the introductory chapter, of the above measurements, and adds the words
+ &ldquo;very good&rdquo; to the curves thus formed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shortly afterwards one of the crossed plants in Pot 1 died; another became
+ much diseased and stunted; and the third never grew to its full height.
+ They seemed to have been all injured, probably by some larva gnawing their
+ roots. Therefore all the plants on both sides of this pot were rejected in
+ the subsequent measurements. When the plants were fully grown they were
+ again measured to the tips of the highest leaves, and the eleven crossed
+ plants now averaged 68.1, and the eleven self-fertilised plants 62.34
+ inches in height; or as 100 to 91. In all four pots a crossed plant
+ flowered before any one of the self-fertilised; but three of the plants
+ did not flower at all. Those that flowered were also measured to the
+ summits of the male flowers: the ten crossed plants averaged 66.51, and
+ the nine self-fertilised plants 61.59 inches in height; or as 100 to 93.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A large number of the same crossed and self-fertilised seeds were sown in
+ the middle of the summer in the open ground in two long rows. Very much
+ fewer of the self-fertilised than of the crossed plants produced flowers;
+ but those that did flower, flowered almost simultaneously. When fully
+ grown the ten tallest plants in each row were selected and measured to the
+ tips of their highest leaves, as well as to the summits of their male
+ flowers. The crossed averaged to the tips of their leaves 54 inches in
+ height, and the self-fertilised 44.65, or as 100 to 83; and to the summits
+ of their male flowers, 53.96 and 43.45 inches; or as 100 to 80.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Phalaris canariensis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hildebrand has shown in the paper referred to under the last species, that
+ this hermaphrodite grass is better adapted for cross-fertilisation than
+ for self-fertilisation. Several plants were raised in the greenhouse close
+ together, and their flowers were mutually intercrossed. Pollen from a
+ single plant growing quite separately was collected and placed on the
+ stigmas of the same plant. The seeds thus produced were self-fertilised,
+ for they were fertilised with pollen from the same plant, but it will have
+ been a mere chance whether with pollen from the same flowers. Both lots of
+ seeds, after germinating on sand, were planted in pairs on the opposite
+ sides of four pots, which were kept in the greenhouse. When the plants
+ were a little over a foot in height they were measured, and the crossed
+ plants averaged 13.38, and the self-fertilised 12.29 inches in height; or
+ as 100 to 92.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When in full flower they were again measured to the extremities of their
+ culms, as shown in Table 6/98.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/98. Phalaris canariensis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 1 : 42 2/8 : 41 2/8. Pot 1 : 39 6/8 : 45 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 2 : 37 : 31 6/8. Pot 2 : 49 4/8 : 37 2/8. Pot 4 : 29 : 42 3/8. Pot 2 :
+ 37 : 34 7/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 3 : 37 6/8 : 28. Pot 3 : 35 4/8 : 28. Pot 3 : 43 : 34.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pot 4 : 40 2/8 : 35 1/8. Pot 4 : 37 : 34 4/8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Total : 428.00 : 392.63.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The eleven crossed plants now averaged 38.9, and the eleven
+ self-fertilised plants 35.69 inches in height; or as 100 to 92, which is
+ the same ratio as before. Differently to what occurred with the maize, the
+ crossed plants did not flower before the self-fertilised; and though both
+ lots flowered very poorly from having been kept in pots in the greenhouse,
+ yet the self-fertilised plants produced twenty-eight flower-heads, whilst
+ the crossed produced only twenty!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two long rows of the same seeds were sown out of doors, and care was taken
+ that they were sown in nearly equal number; but a far greater number of
+ the crossed than of the self-fertilised seeds yielded plants. The
+ self-fertilised plants were in consequence not so much crowded as the
+ crossed, and thus had an advantage over them. When in full flower, the
+ twelve tallest plants were carefully selected from both rows and measured,
+ as shown in Table 6/99.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 6/99. Phalaris canariensis (growing in the open ground).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Crossed Plants, twelve tallest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants, twelve tallest.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 34 1/8 : 35 2/8.
+ 35 7/8 : 31 1/8.
+ 36 : 33.
+ 35 5/8 : 32.
+ 35 5/8 : 31 5/8.
+ 36 1/8 : 36.
+ 36 6/8 : 33.
+ 38 6/8 : 32.
+ 36 2/8 : 35 1/8.
+ 35 5/8 : 33 5/8.
+ 34 1/8 : 34 2/8.
+ 34 5/8 : 35.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Total : 429.5 : 402.0.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The twelve crossed plants here average 35.78, and the twelve
+ self-fertilised 33.5 inches in height; or as 100 to 93. In this case the
+ crossed plants flowered rather before the self-fertilised, and thus
+ differed from those growing in the pots.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII. A SUMMARY OF THE HEIGHTS AND WEIGHTS OF THE CROSSED AND
+ SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Number of species and plants measured.
+ Tables given.
+ Preliminary remarks on the offspring of plants crossed by a fresh stock.
+ Thirteen cases specially considered.
+ The effects of crossing a self-fertilised plant either by another
+ self-fertilised plant or by an intercrossed plant of the old stock.
+ Summary of the results.
+ Preliminary remarks on the crossed and self-fertilised plants of the
+ same stock.
+ The twenty-six exceptional cases considered, in which the crossed plants
+ did not exceed greatly in height the self-fertilised.
+ Most of these cases shown not to be real exceptions to the rule that
+ cross-fertilisation is beneficial.
+ Summary of results.
+ Relative weights of the crossed and self-fertilised plants.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The details which have been given under the head of each species are so
+ numerous and so intricate, that it is necessary to tabulate the results.
+ In Table 7/A, the number of plants of each kind which were raised from a
+ cross between two individuals of the same stock and from self-fertilised
+ seeds, together with their mean or average heights, are given. In the
+ right hand column, the mean height of the crossed to that of the
+ self-fertilised plants, the former being taken as 100, is shown. To make
+ this clear, it may be advisable to give an example. In the first
+ generation of Ipomoea, six plants derived from a cross between two plants
+ were measured, and their mean height is 86.00 inches; six plants derived
+ from flowers on the same parent-plant fertilised with their own pollen
+ were measured, and their mean height is 65.66 inches. From this it
+ follows, as shown in the right hand column, that if the mean height of the
+ crossed plants be taken as 100, that of the self-fertilised plants is 76.
+ The same plan is followed with all the other species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crossed and self-fertilised plants were generally grown in pots in
+ competition with one another, and always under as closely similar
+ conditions as could be attained. They were, however, sometimes grown in
+ separate rows in the open ground. With several of the species, the crossed
+ plants were again crossed, and the self-fertilised plants again
+ self-fertilised, and thus successive generations were raised and measured,
+ as may be seen in Table 7/A. Owing to this manner of proceeding, the
+ crossed plants became in the later generations more or less closely
+ inter-related.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Table 7/B the relative weights of the crossed and self-fertilised
+ plants, after they had flowered and had been cut down, are given in the
+ few cases in which they were ascertained. The results are, I think, more
+ striking and of greater value as evidence of constitutional vigour than
+ those deduced from the relative heights of the plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most important table is Table 7/C, as it includes the relative
+ heights, weights, and fertility of plants raised from parents crossed by a
+ fresh stock (that is, by non-related plants grown under different
+ conditions), or by a distinct sub-variety, in comparison with
+ self-fertilised plants, or in a few cases with plants of the same old
+ stock intercrossed during several generations. The relative fertility of
+ the plants in this and the other tables will be more fully considered in a
+ future chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 7/A. Relative heights of plants from parents crossed with pollen
+ from other plants of the same stock, and self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heights of plants measured in inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Name of Plant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Number of Crossed Plants measured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Average Height of Crossed Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 4: Number of Self-fertilised Plants measured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 5: Average Height of Self-fertilised Plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 6: x, where the ratio of the Average Height of the Crossed to the
+ Self-fertilised Plants is expressed as 100 to x.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;first generation:
+ 6 : 86.00 : 6 : 65.66 : 76.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;second generation:
+ 6 : 84.16 : 6 : 66.33 : 79.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;third generation:
+ 6 : 77.41 : 6 : 52.83 : 68.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;fourth generation:
+ 7 : 69.78 : 7 : 60.14 : 86.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;fifth generation:
+ 6 : 82.54 : 6 : 62.33 : 75.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;sixth generation:
+ 6 : 87.50 : 6 : 63.16 : 72.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;seventh generation:
+ 9 : 83.94 : 9 : 68.25 : 81.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;eighth generation:
+ 8 : 113.25 : 8 : 96.65 : 85.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;ninth generation:
+ 14 : 81.39 : 14 : 64.07 : 79.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;tenth generation:
+ 5 : 93.70 : 5 : 50.40 : 54.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;Number and average height of all the plants of the ten
+generations:
+ 73 : 85.84 : 73 : 66.02 : 77.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Mimulus luteus&mdash;three first generations, before the new and taller
+self-fertilised variety appeared:
+ 10 : 8.19 : 10 : 5.29 : 65.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Digitalis purpurea:
+ 16 : 51.33 : 8 : 35.87 : 70.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Calceolaria&mdash;(common greenhouse variety):
+ 1 : 19.50 : 1 : 15.00 : 77.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Linaria vulgaris:
+ 3 : 7.08 : 3 : 5.75 : 81.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Verbascum thapsus:
+ 6 : 65.34 : 6 : 56.50 : 86.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Vandellia nummularifolia&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised plants, raised
+from perfect flowers:
+ 20 : 4.30 : 20 : 4.27 : 99.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Vandellia nummularifolia&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised plants, raised
+from perfect flowers: second trial, plants crowded:
+ 24 : 3.60 : 24 : 3.38 : 94.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Vandellia nummularifolia&mdash;crossed plants raised from perfect flowers,
+and self-fertilised plants from cleistogene flowers:
+ 20 : 4.30 : 20 : 4.06 : 94.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Gesneria pendulina:
+ 8 : 32.06 : 8 : 29.14 : 90.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Salvia coccinea:
+ 6 : 27.85 : 6 : 21.16 : 76.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Origanum vulgare:
+ 4 : 20.00 : 4 : 17.12 : 86.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Thunbergia alata:
+ 6 : 60.00 : 6 : 65.00 : 108.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Brassica oleracea:
+ 9 : 41.08 : 9 : 39.00 : 95.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Iberis umbellata&mdash;the self-fertilised plants of the third generation:
+ 7 : 19.12 : 7 : 16.39 : 86.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Papaver vagum:
+ 15 : 21.91 : 15 : 19.54 : 89.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Eschscholtzia californica&mdash;English stock, first generation:
+ 4 : 29.68 : 4 : 25.56 : 86.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Eschscholtzia californica&mdash;English stock, second generation:
+ 11 : 32.47 : 11 : 32.81 : 101.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Eschscholtzia californica&mdash;Brazilian stock, first generation:
+ 14 : 44.64 : 14 : 45.12 : 101.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Eschscholtzia californica&mdash;Brazilian stock, second generation:
+ 18 : 43.38 : 19 : 50.30 : 116.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Eschscholtzia californica&mdash;average height and number of all the plants
+of Eschscholtzia:
+ 47 : 40.03 : 48 : 42.72 : 107.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Reseda lutea&mdash;grown in pots:
+ 24 : 17.17 : 24 : 14.61 : 85.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Reseda lutea&mdash;grown in open ground :
+ 8 : 28.09 : 8 : 23.14 : 82.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Reseda odorata&mdash;self-fertilised seeds from a highly self-fertile plant,
+grown in pots:
+ 19 : 27.48 : 19 : 22.55 : 82.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Reseda odorata&mdash;self-fertilised seeds from a highly self-fertile plant,
+grown in open ground:
+ 8 : 25.76 : 8 : 27.09 : 105.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Reseda odorata&mdash;self-fertilised seeds from a semi-self-fertile plant,
+grown in pots:
+ 20 : 29.98 : 20 : 27.71 : 92.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Reseda odorata&mdash;self-fertilised seeds from a semi-self-fertile plant,
+grown in open ground:
+ 8 : 25.92 : 8 : 23.54 : 90.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Viola tricolor:
+ 14 : 5.58 : 14 : 2.37 : 42.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Adonis aestivalis:
+ 4 : 14.25 : 4 : 14.31 : 100.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Delphinium consolida:
+ 6 : 14.95 : 6 : 12.50 : 84.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Viscaria oculata:
+ 15 : 34.50 : 15 : 33.55 : 97.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Dianthus caryophyllus&mdash;open ground, about :
+ 6?: 28? : 6?: 24? : 86.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Dianthus caryophyllus&mdash;second generation, in pots, crowded:
+ 2 : 16.75 : 2 : 9.75 : 58.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Dianthus caryophyllus&mdash;third generation, in pots:
+ 8 : 28.39 : 8 : 28.21 : 99.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Dianthus caryophyllus&mdash;offspring from plants of the third
+self-fertilised generation crossed by intercrossed plants of the third
+generation, compared with plants of fourth self-fertilised generation:
+ 15 : 28.00 : 10 : 26.55 : 95.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Dianthus caryophyllus&mdash;number and average height of all the plants of
+Dianthus:
+ 31 : 27.37 : 26 : 25.18 : 92.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Hibiscus africanus:
+ 4 : 13.25 : 4 : 14.43 : 109.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Pelargonium zonale:
+ 7 : 22.35 : 7 : 16.62 : 74.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Tropaeolum minus:
+ 8 : 58.43 : 8 : 46.00 : 79.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Limnanthes douglasii:
+ 16 : 17.46 : 16 : 13.85 : 79.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Lupinus luteus&mdash;second generation:
+ 8 : 30.78 : 8 : 25.21 : 82.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Lupinus pilosus&mdash;plants of two generations:
+ 2 : 35.50 : 3 : 30.50 : 86.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Phaseolus multiflorus:
+ 5 : 86.00 : 5 : 82.35 : 96.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Pisum sativum:
+ 4 : 34.62 : 4 : 39.68 : 115.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Sarothamnus scoparius&mdash;small seedlings:
+ 6 : 2.91 : 6 : 1.33 : 46.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Sarothamnus scoparius&mdash;the three survivors on each side after three
+years&rsquo; growth:
+ : 18.91 : : 11.83 : 63.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Ononis minutissima:
+ 2 : 19.81 : 2 : 17.37 : 88.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Clarkia elegans:
+ 4 : 33.50 : 4 : 27.62 : 82.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Bartonia aurea:
+ 8 : 24.62 : 8 : 26.31 : 107.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Passiflora gracilis:
+ 2 : 49.00 : 2 : 51.00 : 104.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Apium petroselinum:
+ * : : * : : 100.
+*not measured.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Scabiosa atro-purpurea:
+ 4 : 17.12 : 4 : 15.37 : 90.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Lactuca sativa&mdash;plants of two generations:
+ 7 : 19.43 : 6 : 16.00 : 82.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Specularia speculum:
+ 4 : 19.28 : 4 : 18.93 : 98.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Lobelia ramosa&mdash;first generation:
+ 4 : 22.25 : 4 : 18.37 : 82.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Lobelia ramosa&mdash;second generation:
+ 3 : 23.33 : 3 : 19.00 : 81.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Lobelia fulgens&mdash;first generation:
+ 2 : 34.75 : 2 : 44.25 : 127.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Lobelia fulgens&mdash;second generation:
+ 23 : 29.82 : 23 : 27.10 : 91.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Nemophila insignis&mdash;half-grown:
+ 12 : 11.10 : 12 : 5.45 : 49.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Nemophila insignis&mdash;the same fully-grown:
+ : 33.28 : : 19.90 : 60.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Borago officinalis:
+ 4 : 20.68 : 4 : 21.18 : 102.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Nolana prostrata:
+ 5 : 12.75 : 5 : 13.40 : 105.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Petunia violacea&mdash;first generation:
+ 5 : 30.80 : 5 : 26.00 : 84.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Petunia violacea&mdash;second generation:
+ 4 : 40.50 : 6 : 26.25 : 65.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Petunia violacea&mdash;third generation:
+ 8 : 40.96 : 8 : 53.87 : 131.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Petunia violacea&mdash;fourth generation:
+ 15 : 46.79 : 14 : 32.39 : 69.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Petunia violacea&mdash;fourth generation, from a distinct parent:
+ 13 : 44.74 : 13 : 26.87 : 60.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Petunia violacea&mdash;fifth generation:
+ 22 : 54.11 : 21 : 33.23 : 61.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Petunia violacea&mdash;fifth generation, in open ground:
+ 10 : 38.27 : 10 : 23.31 : 61.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Petunia violacea&mdash;Number and average height of all the plants in pots of
+Petunia:
+ 67 : 46.53 : 67 : 33.12 : 71.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Nicotiana tabacum&mdash;first generation:
+ 4 : 18.50 : 4 : 32.75 : 178.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Nicotiana tabacum&mdash;second generation:
+ 9 : 53.84 : 7 : 51.78 : 96.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Nicotiana tabacum&mdash;third generation:
+ 7 : 95.25 : 7 : 79.60 : 83.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Nicotiana tabacum&mdash;third generation but raised from a distinct plant:
+ 7 : 70.78 : 9 : 71.30 : 101.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Nicotiana tabacum&mdash;Number and average height of all the plants of
+Nicotiana:
+ 27 : 63.73 : 27 : 61.31 : 96.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Cyclamen persicum:
+ 8 : 9.49 : 8?: 7.50 : 79.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Anagallis collina:
+ 6 : 42.20 : 6 : 33.35 : 69.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Primula sinensis&mdash;a dimorphic species:
+ 8 : 9.01 : 8 : 9.03 : 100.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Fagopyrum esculentum&mdash;a dimorphic species:
+ 15 : 38.06 : 15 : 26.13 : 69.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Beta vulgaris&mdash;in pots:
+ 8 : 34.09 : 8 : 29.81 : 87.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Beta vulgaris&mdash;in open ground:
+ 8 : 30.92 : 8 : 30.70 : 99.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Canna warscewiczi&mdash;plants of three generations:
+ 34 : 35.98 : 34 : 36.39 : 101.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Zea mays&mdash;in pots, whilst young, measured to tips of leaves:
+ 15 : 20.19 : 15 : 17.57 : 87.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Zea mays&mdash;when full-grown, after the death of some, measured to tips of
+leaves:
+ : 68.10 : : 62.34 : 91.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Zea mays&mdash;when full-grown, after the death of some, measured to tips of
+flowers:
+ : 66.51 : : 61.59 : 93.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Zea mays&mdash;grown in open ground, measured to tips of leaves:
+ 10 : 54.00 : 10 : 44.55 : 83.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Zea mays&mdash;grown in open ground, measured to tips of flowers:
+ : 53.96 : : 43.45 : 80.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Phalaris canariensis&mdash;in pots.
+ 11 : 38.90 : 11 : 35.69 : 92.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Phalaris canariensis&mdash;in open ground:
+ 12 : 35.78 : 12 : 33.50 : 93.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 7/B.&mdash;Relative weights of plants from parents crossed with
+ pollen from distinct plants of the same stock, and self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Names of plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Number of crossed plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Number of self-fertilised plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 4: x, where the ratio of the Weight of the Crossed to the
+ Self-fertilised Plants is expressed as 100 to x.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;plants of the tenth generation:
+ 6 : 6 : 44.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Vandellia nummularifolia&mdash;first generation:
+ 41 : 41 : 97.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Brassica oleracea&mdash;first generation:
+ 9 : 9 : 37.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Eschscholtzia californica&mdash;plants of the second generation:
+ 19 : 19 : 118.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Reseda lutea&mdash;first generation, grown in pots:
+ 24 : 24 : 21.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Reseda lutea&mdash;first generation, grown in open ground:
+ 8 : 8 : 40.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Reseda odorata&mdash;first generation, descended from a highly self-fertile
+plant, grown in pots:
+ 19 : 19 : 67.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Reseda odorata&mdash;first generation, descended from a semi-self-fertile
+plant, grown in pots:
+ 20 : 20 : 99.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Dianthus caryophyllus&mdash;plants of the third generation:
+ 8 : 8 : 49.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Petunia violacea&mdash;plants of the fifth generation, in pots:
+ 22 : 21 : 22.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Petunia violacea&mdash;plants of the fifth generation, in open ground:
+ 10 : 10 : 36.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 7/C.&mdash;Relative heights, weights, and fertility of plants from
+ parents crossed by a fresh stock, and from parents either self-fertilised
+ or intercrossed with plants of the same stock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Names of the plants and nature of the experiments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Number of plants from a cross with a fresh stock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Average height in inches and weight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 4: Number of the plants from self-fertilised or intercrossed
+ parents of the same stock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 5: Average height in inches and weight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 4: x, where the ratio of the Height, Weight and Fertility of the
+ plants from the Cross with a fresh stock is expressed as 100 to x.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;offspring of plants intercrossed for nine generations
+and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of the tenth
+intercrossed generation:
+ 19 : 84.03 : 19 : 65.78 : 78.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;offspring of plants intercrossed for nine generations
+and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of the tenth
+intercrossed generation, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 51.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Mimulus luteus&mdash;offspring of plants self-fertilised for eight
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the ninth self-fertilised generation:
+ 28 : 21.62 : 19 : 10.44 : 52.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Mimulus luteus&mdash;offspring of plants self-fertilised for eight
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the ninth self-fertilised generation, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 3.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Mimulus luteus&mdash;offspring of plants self-fertilised for eight
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with the
+offspring of a plant self-fertilised for eight generations, and then
+intercrossed with another self-fertilised plant of the same generation:
+ 28 : 21.62 : 27 : 12.20 : 56.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Mimulus luteus&mdash;offspring of plants self-fertilised for eight
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with the
+offspring of a plant self-fertilised for eight generations, and then
+intercrossed with another self-fertilised plant of the same generation,
+in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 4.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Brassica oleracea&mdash;offspring of plants self-fertilised for two
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the third self-fertilised generation, by weight:
+ 6 : : 6 : : 22.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Iberis umbellata&mdash;offspring from English variety crossed by slightly
+different Algerine variety, compared with the self-fertilised offspring
+of the English variety:
+ 30 : 17.34 : 29 : 15.51 : 89.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Iberis umbellata&mdash;offspring from English variety crossed by slightly
+different Algerine variety, compared with the self-fertilised offspring
+of the English variety, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 75.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Eschscholtzia californica&mdash;offspring of a Brazilian stock crossed by an
+English stock, compared with plants of the Brazilian stock of the second
+self-fertilised generation:
+ 19 : 45.92 : 19 : 50.30 : 109.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Eschscholtzia californica&mdash;offspring of a Brazilian stock crossed by an
+English stock, compared with plants of the Brazilian stock of the second
+self-fertilised generation, in weight:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 118.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Eschscholtzia californica&mdash;offspring of a Brazilian stock crossed by an
+English stock, compared with plants of the Brazilian stock of the second
+self-fertilised generation, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 40.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Eschscholtzia californica&mdash;offspring of a Brazilian stock crossed by an
+English stock, compared with plants of the Brazilian stock of the second
+intercrossed generation, in height:
+ 19 : 45.92 : 18 : 43.38 : 94.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Eschscholtzia californica&mdash;offspring of a Brazilian stock crossed by an
+English stock, compared with plants of the Brazilian stock of the second
+intercrossed generation, in weight:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 100.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Eschscholtzia californica&mdash;offspring of a Brazilian stock crossed by an
+English stock, compared with plants of the Brazilian stock of the second
+intercrossed generation, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 45.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Dianthus caryophyllus&mdash;offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fourth self-fertilised generation:
+ 16 : 32.82 : 10 : 26.55 : 81.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Dianthus caryophyllus&mdash;offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fourth self-fertilised generation, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 33.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Dianthus caryophyllus&mdash;offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with the
+offspring of plants self-fertilised for three generations and then
+crossed by plants of the third intercrossed generation:
+ 16 : 32.82 : 15 : 28.00 : 85.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Dianthus caryophyllus&mdash;offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with the
+offspring of plants self-fertilised for three generations and then
+crossed by plants of the third intercrossed generation, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 45.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Pisum sativum&mdash;offspring from a cross between two closely allied
+varieties, compared with the self-fertilised offspring of one of the
+varieties, or with intercrossed plants of the same stock:
+ ? : : ? : : 60 to 75.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Lathyrus odoratus&mdash;offspring from two varieties, differing only in
+colour of their flowers, compared with the self-fertilised offspring of
+one of the varieties: in first generation:
+ 2 : 79.25 : 2 : 63.75 : 80.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Lathyrus odoratus&mdash;offspring from two varieties, differing only in
+colour of their flowers, compared with the self-fertilised offspring of
+one of the varieties: in second generation:
+ 6 : 62.91 : 6 : 55.31 : 88.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Petunia violacea&mdash;offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth self-fertilised generation, in height:
+ 21 : 50.05 : 21 : 33.23 : 66.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Petunia violacea&mdash;offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth self-fertilised generation, in weight:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 23.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Petunia violacea&mdash;offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth self-fertilised generation, grown in open ground, in height:
+ 10 : 36.67 : 10 : 23.31 : 63.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Petunia violacea&mdash;offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth self-fertilised generation, grown in open ground, in weight:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 53.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Petunia violacea&mdash;offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth self-fertilised generation, grown in open ground, in
+fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 46.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Petunia violacea&mdash;offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth intercrossed generation, in height:
+ 21 : 50.05 : 22 : 54.11 : 108.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Petunia violacea&mdash;offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth intercrossed generation, in weight:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 101.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Petunia violacea&mdash;offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth intercrossed generation, grown in open ground, in height:
+ 10 : 36.67 : 10 : 38.27 : 104.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Petunia violacea&mdash;offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth intercrossed generation, grown in open ground, in weight:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 146.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Petunia violacea&mdash;offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth intercrossed generation, grown in open ground, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 54.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Nicotiana tabacum&mdash;offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a slightly different variety, compared
+with plants of the fourth self-fertilised generation, grown not much
+crowded in pots, in height:
+ 26 : 63.29 : 26 : 41.67 : 66.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Nicotiana tabacum&mdash;offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a slightly different variety, compared
+with plants of the fourth self-fertilised generation, grown much crowded
+in pots, in height:
+ 12 : 31.53 : 12 : 17.21 : 54.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Nicotiana tabacum&mdash;offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a slightly different variety, compared
+with plants of the fourth self-fertilised generation, grown much crowded
+in pots, in weight:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 37.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Nicotiana tabacum&mdash;offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a slightly different variety, compared
+with plants of the fourth self-fertilised generation, grown in open
+ground, in height:
+ 20 : 48.74 : 20 : 35.20 : 72.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Nicotiana tabacum&mdash;offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a slightly different variety, compared
+with plants of the fourth self-fertilised generation, grown in open
+ground, in weight:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 63.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Anagallis collina&mdash;offspring from a red variety crossed by a blue
+variety, compared with the self-fertilised offspring of the red variety:
+ 3 : 27.62 : 3 : 18.21 : 66.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Anagallis collina&mdash;offspring from a red variety crossed by a blue
+variety, compared with the self-fertilised offspring of the red variety,
+in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 6.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Primula veris&mdash;offspring from long-styled plants of the third
+illegitimate generation, crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants
+of the fourth illegitimate and self-fertilised generation:
+ 8 : 7.03 : 8 : 3.21 : 46.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Primula veris&mdash;offspring from long-styled plants of the third
+illegitimate generation, crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants
+of the fourth illegitimate and self-fertilised generation, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 5.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Primula veris&mdash;offspring from long-styled plants of the third
+illegitimate generation, crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants
+of the fourth illegitimate and self-fertilised generation, in fertility
+in following year:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 3.5.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Primula veris&mdash;(equal-styled, red-flowered variety)&mdash;offspring from
+plants self-fertilised for two generations and then crossed by a
+different variety, compared with plants of the third self-fertilised
+generation:
+ 3 : 8.66 : 3 : 7.33 : 85.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Primula veris&mdash;(equal-styled, red-flowered variety)&mdash;offspring from
+plants self-fertilised for two generations and then crossed by a
+different variety, compared with plants of the third self-fertilised
+generation, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 11.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In these three tables the measurements of fifty-seven species, belonging
+ to fifty-two genera and to thirty great natural families, are given. The
+ species are natives of various parts of the world. The number of crossed
+ plants, including those derived from a cross between plants of the same
+ stock and of two different stocks, amounts to 1,101; and the number of
+ self-fertilised plants (including a few in Table 7/C derived from a cross
+ between plants of the same old stock) is 1,076. Their growth was observed
+ from the germination of the seeds to maturity; and most of them were
+ measured twice and some thrice. The various precautions taken to prevent
+ either lot being unduly favoured, have been described in the introductory
+ chapter. Bearing all these circumstances in mind, it may be admitted that
+ we have a fair basis for judging of the comparative effects of
+ cross-fertilisation and of self-fertilisation on the growth of the
+ offspring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will be the most convenient plan first to consider the results given in
+ Table 7/C, as an opportunity will thus be afforded of incidentally
+ discussing some important points. If the reader will look down the right
+ hand column of this table, he will see at a glance what an extraordinary
+ advantage in height, weight, and fertility the plants derived from a cross
+ with a fresh stock or with another sub-variety have over the
+ self-fertilised plants, as well as over the intercrossed plants of the
+ same old stock. There are only two exceptions to this rule, and these are
+ hardly real ones. In the case of Eschscholtzia, the advantage is confined
+ to fertility. In that of Petunia, though the plants derived from a cross
+ with a fresh stock had an immense superiority in height, weight, and
+ fertility over the self-fertilised plants, they were conquered by the
+ intercrossed plants of the same old stock in height and weight, but not in
+ fertility. It has, however, been shown that the superiority of these
+ intercrossed plants in height and weight was in all probability not real;
+ for if the two sets had been allowed to grow for another month, it is
+ almost certain that those from a cross with the fresh stock would have
+ been victorious in every way over the intercrossed plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before we consider in detail the several cases given in Table 7/C, some
+ preliminary remarks must be made. There is the clearest evidence, as we
+ shall presently see, that the advantage of a cross depends wholly on the
+ plants differing somewhat in constitution; and that the disadvantages of
+ self-fertilisation depend on the two parents, which are combined in the
+ same hermaphrodite flower, having a closely similar constitution. A
+ certain amount of differentiation in the sexual elements seems
+ indispensable for the full fertility of the parents, and for the full
+ vigour of the offspring. All the individuals of the same species, even
+ those produced in a state of nature, differ somewhat, though often very
+ slightly, from one another in external characters and probably in
+ constitution. This obviously holds good between the varieties of the same
+ species, as far as external characters are concerned; and much evidence
+ could be advanced with respect to their generally differing somewhat in
+ constitution. There can hardly be a doubt that the differences of all
+ kinds between the individuals and varieties of the same species depend
+ largely, and as I believe exclusively, on their progenitors having been
+ subjected to different conditions; though the conditions to which the
+ individuals of the same species are exposed in a state of nature often
+ falsely appear to us the same. For instance, the individuals growing
+ together are necessarily exposed to the same climate, and they seem to us
+ at first sight to be subjected to identically the same conditions; but
+ this can hardly be the case, except under the unusual contingency of each
+ individual being surrounded by other kinds of plants in exactly the same
+ proportional numbers. For the surrounding plants absorb different amounts
+ of various substances from the soil, and thus greatly affect the
+ nourishment and even the life of the individuals of any particular
+ species. These will also be shaded and otherwise affected by the nature of
+ the surrounding plants. Moreover, seeds often lie dormant in the ground,
+ and those which germinate during any one year will often have been matured
+ during very different seasons. Seeds are widely dispersed by various
+ means, and some will occasionally be brought from distant stations, where
+ their parents have grown under somewhat different conditions, and the
+ plants produced from such seeds will intercross with the old residents,
+ thus mingling their constitutional peculiarities in all sorts of
+ proportions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Plants when first subjected to culture, even in their native country,
+ cannot fail to be exposed to greatly changed conditions of life, more
+ especially from growing in cleared ground, and from not having to compete
+ with many or any surrounding plants. They are thus enabled to absorb
+ whatever they require which the soil may contain. Fresh seeds are often
+ brought from distant gardens, where the parent-plants have been subjected
+ to different conditions. Cultivated plants like those in a state of nature
+ frequently intercross, and will thus mingle their constitutional
+ peculiarities. On the other hand, as long as the individuals of any
+ species are cultivated in the same garden, they will apparently be
+ subjected to more uniform conditions than plants in a state of nature, as
+ the individuals have not to compete with various surrounding species. The
+ seeds sown at the same time in a garden have generally been matured during
+ the same season and in the same place; and in this respect they differ
+ much from the seeds sown by the hand of nature. Some exotic plants are not
+ frequented by the native insects in their new home, and therefore are not
+ intercrossed; and this appears to be a highly important factor in the
+ individuals acquiring uniformity of constitution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In my experiments the greatest care was taken that in each generation all
+ the crossed and self-fertilised plants should be subjected to the same
+ conditions. Not that the conditions were absolutely the same, for the more
+ vigorous individuals will have robbed the weaker ones of nutriment, and
+ likewise of water when the soil in the pots was becoming dry; and both
+ lots at one end of the pot will have received a little more light than
+ those at the other end. In the successive generations, the plants were
+ subjected to somewhat different conditions, for the seasons necessarily
+ varied, and they were sometimes raised at different periods of the year.
+ But as they were all kept under glass, they were exposed to far less
+ abrupt and great changes of temperature and moisture than are plants
+ growing out of doors. With respect to the intercrossed plants, their first
+ parents, which were not related, would almost certainly have differed
+ somewhat in constitution; and such constitutional peculiarities would be
+ variously mingled in each succeeding intercrossed generation, being
+ sometimes augmented, but more commonly neutralised in a greater or less
+ degree, and sometimes revived through reversion; just as we know to be the
+ case with the external characters of crossed species and varieties. With
+ the plants which were self-fertilised during the successive generations,
+ this latter important source of some diversity of constitution will have
+ been wholly eliminated; and the sexual elements produced by the same
+ flower must have been developed under as nearly the same conditions as it
+ is possible to conceive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Table 7/C the crossed plants are the offspring of a cross with a fresh
+ stock, or with a distinct variety; and they were put into competition
+ either with self-fertilised plants, or with intercrossed plants of the
+ same old stock. By the term fresh stock I mean a non-related plant, the
+ progenitors of which have been raised during some generations in another
+ garden, and have consequently been exposed to somewhat different
+ conditions. In the case of Nicotiana, Iberis, the red variety of Primula,
+ the common Pea, and perhaps Anagallis, the plants which were crossed may
+ be ranked as distinct varieties or sub-varieties of the same species; but
+ with Ipomoea, Mimulus, Dianthus, and Petunia, the plants which were
+ crossed differed exclusively in the tint of their flowers; and as a large
+ proportion of the plants raised from the same lot of purchased seeds thus
+ varied, the differences may be estimated as merely individual. Having made
+ these preliminary remarks, we will now consider in detail the several
+ cases given in Table 7/C, and they are well worthy of full consideration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Ipomoea purpurea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Plants growing in the same pots, and subjected in each generation to the
+ same conditions, were intercrossed for nine consecutive generations. These
+ intercrossed plants thus became in the later generations more or less
+ closely inter-related. Flowers on the plants of the ninth intercrossed
+ generation were fertilised with pollen taken from a fresh stock, and
+ seedlings thus raised. Other flowers on the same intercrossed plants were
+ fertilised with pollen from another intercrossed plant, producing
+ seedlings of the tenth intercrossed generation. These two sets of
+ seedlings were grown in competition with one another, and differed greatly
+ in height and fertility. For the offspring from the cross with a fresh
+ stock exceeded in height the intercrossed plants in the ratio of 100 to
+ 78; and this is nearly the same excess which the intercrossed had over the
+ self-fertilised plants in all ten generations taken together, namely, as
+ 100 to 77. The plants raised from the cross with a fresh stock were also
+ greatly superior in fertility to the intercrossed, namely, in the ratio of
+ 100 to 51, as judged by the relative weight of the seed-capsules produced
+ by an equal number of plants of the two sets, both having been left to be
+ naturally fertilised. It should be especially observed that none of the
+ plants of either lot were the product of self-fertilisation. On the
+ contrary, the intercrossed plants had certainly been crossed for the last
+ ten generations, and probably, during all previous generations, as we may
+ infer from the structure of the flowers and from the frequency of the
+ visits of humble-bees. And so it will have been with the parent-plants of
+ the fresh stock. The whole great difference in height and fertility
+ between the two lots must be attributed to the one being the product of a
+ cross with pollen from a fresh stock, and the other of a cross between
+ plants of the same old stock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This species offers another interesting case. In the five first
+ generations in which intercrossed and self-fertilised plants were put into
+ competition with one another, every single intercrossed plant beat its
+ self-fertilised antagonist, except in one instance, in which they were
+ equal in height. But in the sixth generation a plant appeared, named by me
+ the Hero, remarkable for its tallness and increased self-fertility, and
+ which transmitted its characters to the next three generations. The
+ children of Hero were again self-fertilised, forming the eighth
+ self-fertilised generation, and were likewise intercrossed one with
+ another; but this cross between plants which had been subjected to the
+ same conditions and had been self-fertilised during the seven previous
+ generations, did not effect the least good; for the intercrossed
+ grandchildren were actually shorter than the self-fertilised
+ grandchildren, in the ratio of 100 to 107. We here see that the mere act
+ of crossing two distinct plants does not by itself benefit the offspring.
+ This case is almost the converse of that in the last paragraph, on which
+ the offspring profited so greatly by a cross with a fresh stock. A similar
+ trial was made with the descendants of Hero in the following generation,
+ and with the same result. But the trial cannot be fully trusted, owing to
+ the extremely unhealthy condition of the plants. Subject to this same
+ serious cause of doubt, even a cross with a fresh stock did not benefit
+ the great-grandchildren of Hero; and if this were really the case, it is
+ the greatest anomaly observed by me in all my experiments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Mimulus luteus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the three first generations the intercrossed plants taken together
+ exceeded in height the self-fertilised taken together, in the ratio of 100
+ to 65, and in fertility in a still higher degree. In the fourth generation
+ a new variety, which grew taller and had whiter and larger flowers than
+ the old varieties, began to prevail, especially amongst the
+ self-fertilised plants. This variety transmitted its characters with
+ remarkable fidelity, so that all the plants in the later self-fertilised
+ generations belonged to it. These consequently exceeded the intercrossed
+ plants considerably in height. Thus in the seventh generation the
+ intercrossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height as 100 to 137.
+ It is a more remarkable fact that the self-fertilised plants of the sixth
+ generation had become much more fertile than the intercrossed plants,
+ judging by the number of capsules spontaneously produced, in the ratio of
+ 147 to 100. This variety, which as we have seen appeared amongst the
+ plants of the fourth self-fertilised generation, resembles in almost all
+ its constitutional peculiarities the variety called Hero which appeared in
+ the sixth self-fertilised generation of Ipomoea. No other such case, with
+ the partial exception of that of Nicotiana, occurred in my experiments,
+ carried on during eleven years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two plants of this variety of Mimulus, belonging to the sixth
+ self-fertilised generation, and growing in separate pots, were
+ intercrossed; and some flowers on the same plants were again
+ self-fertilised. From the seeds thus obtained, plants derived from a cross
+ between the self-fertilised plants, and others of the seventh
+ self-fertilised generation, were raised. But this cross did not do the
+ least good, the intercrossed plants being inferior in height to the
+ self-fertilised, in the ratio of 100 to 110. This case is exactly parallel
+ with that given under Ipomoea, of the grandchildren of Hero, and
+ apparently of its great-grandchildren; for the seedlings raised by
+ intercrossing these plants were not in any way superior to those of the
+ corresponding generation raised from the self-fertilised flowers.
+ Therefore in these several cases the crossing of plants, which had been
+ self-fertilised for several generations and which had been cultivated all
+ the time under as nearly as possible the same conditions, was not in the
+ least beneficial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another experiment was now tried. Firstly, plants of the eighth
+ self-fertilised generation were again self-fertilised, producing plants of
+ the ninth self-fertilised generation. Secondly, two of the plants of the
+ eighth self-fertilised generation were intercrossed one with another, as
+ in the experiment above referred to; but this was now effected on plants
+ which had been subjected to two additional generations of
+ self-fertilisation. Thirdly, the same plants of the eighth self-fertilised
+ generation were crossed with pollen from plants of a fresh stock brought
+ from a distant garden. Numerous plants were raised from these three sets
+ of seeds, and grown in competition with one another. The plants derived
+ from a cross between the self-fertilised plants exceeded in height by a
+ little the self-fertilised, namely, as 100 to 92; and in fertility in a
+ greater degree, namely, as 100 to 73. I do not know whether this
+ difference in the result, compared with that in the previous case, can be
+ accounted for by the increased deterioration of the self-fertilised plants
+ from two additional generations of self-fertilisation, and the consequent
+ advantage of any cross whatever, along merely between the self-fertilised
+ plants. But however this may be, the effects of crossing the
+ self-fertilised plants of the eighth generation with a fresh stock were
+ extremely striking; for the seedlings thus raised were to the
+ self-fertilised of the ninth generation as 100 to 52 in height, and as 100
+ to 3 in fertility! They were also to the intercrossed plants (derived from
+ crossing two of the self-fertilised plants of the eighth generation) in
+ height as 100 to 56, and in fertility as 100 to 4. Better evidence could
+ hardly be desired of the potent influence of a cross with a fresh stock on
+ plants which had been self-fertilised for eight generations, and had been
+ cultivated all the time under nearly uniform conditions, in comparison
+ with plants self-fertilised for nine generations continuously, or then
+ once intercrossed, namely in the last generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Brassica oleracea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some flowers on cabbage plants of the second self-fertilised generation
+ were crossed with pollen from a plant of the same variety brought from a
+ distant garden, and other flowers were again self-fertilised. Plants
+ derived from a cross with a fresh stock and plants of the third
+ self-fertilised generation were thus raised. The former were to the
+ self-fertilised in weight as 100 to 22; and this enormous difference must
+ be attributed in part to the beneficial effects of a cross with a fresh
+ stock, and in part to the deteriorating effects of self-fertilisation
+ continued during three generations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Iberis umbellata.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seedlings from a crimson English variety crossed by a pale-coloured
+ variety which had been grown for some generations in Algiers, were to the
+ self-fertilised seedlings from the crimson variety in height as 100 to 89,
+ and as 100 to 75 in fertility. I am surprised that this cross with another
+ variety did not produce a still more strongly marked beneficial effect;
+ for some intercrossed plants of the crimson English variety, put into
+ competition with plants of the same variety self-fertilised during three
+ generations, were in height as 100 to 86, and in fertility as 100 to 75.
+ The slightly greater difference in height in this latter case, may
+ possibly be attributed to the deteriorating effects of self-fertilisation
+ carried on for two additional generations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. Eschscholtzia californica.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This plant offers an almost unique case, inasmuch as the good effects of a
+ cross are confined to the reproductive system. Intercrossed and
+ self-fertilised plants of the English stock did not differ in height (nor
+ in weight, as far as was ascertained) in any constant manner; the
+ self-fertilised plants usually having the advantage. So it was with the
+ offspring of plants of the Brazilian stock, tried in the same manner. The
+ parent-plants, however, of the English stock produced many more seeds when
+ fertilised with pollen from another plant than when self-fertilised; and
+ in Brazil the parent-plants were absolutely sterile unless they were
+ fertilised with pollen from another plant. Intercrossed seedlings, raised
+ in England from the Brazilian stock, compared with self-fertilised
+ seedlings of the corresponding second generation, yielded seeds in number
+ as 100 to 89; both lots of plants being left freely exposed to the visits
+ of insects. If we now turn to the effects of crossing plants of the
+ Brazilian stock with pollen from the English stock,&mdash;so that plants
+ which had been long exposed to very different conditions were
+ intercrossed,&mdash;we find that the offspring were, as before, inferior
+ in height and weight to the plants of the Brazilian stock after two
+ generations of self-fertilisation, but were superior to them in the most
+ marked manner in the number of seeds produced, namely, as 100 to 40; both
+ lots of plants being left freely exposed to the visits of insects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the case of Ipomoea, we have seen that the plants derived from a cross
+ with a fresh stock were superior in height as 100 to 78, and in fertility
+ as 100 to 51, to the plants of the old stock, although these had been
+ intercrossed during the last ten generations. With Eschscholtzia we have a
+ nearly parallel case, but only as far as fertility is concerned, for the
+ plants derived from a cross with a fresh stock were superior in fertility
+ in the ratio of 100 to 45 to the Brazilian plants, which had been
+ artificially intercrossed in England for the two last generations, and
+ which must have been naturally intercrossed by insects during all previous
+ generations in Brazil, where otherwise they are quite sterile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. Dianthus caryophyllus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Plants self-fertilised for three generations were crossed with pollen from
+ a fresh stock, and their offspring were grown in competition with plants
+ of the fourth self-fertilised generation. The crossed plants thus obtained
+ were to the self-fertilised in height as 100 to 81, and in fertility (both
+ lots being left to be naturally fertilised by insects) as 100 to 33.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These same crossed plants were also to the offspring from the plants of
+ the third generation crossed by the intercrossed plants of the
+ corresponding generation, in height as 100 to 85, and in fertility as 100
+ to 45.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We thus see what a great advantage the offspring from a cross with a fresh
+ stock had, not only over the self-fertilised plants of the fourth
+ generation, but over the offspring from the self-fertilised plants of the
+ third generation, when crossed by the intercrossed plants of the old
+ stock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. Pisum sativum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has been shown under the head of this species, that the several
+ varieties in this country almost invariably fertilise themselves, owing to
+ insects rarely visiting the flowers; and as the plants have been long
+ cultivated under nearly similar conditions, we can understand why a cross
+ between two individuals of the same variety does not do the least good to
+ the offspring either in height or fertility. This case is almost exactly
+ parallel with that of Mimulus, or that of the Ipomoea named Hero; for in
+ these two instances, crossing plants which had been self-fertilised for
+ seven generations did not at all benefit the offspring. On the other hand,
+ a cross between two varieties of the pea causes a marked superiority in
+ the growth and vigour of the offspring, over the self-fertilised plants of
+ the same varieties, as shown by two excellent observers. From my own
+ observations (not made with great care) the offspring from crossed
+ varieties were to self-fertilised plants in height, in one case as 100 to
+ about 75, and in a second case as 100 to 60.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. Lathyrus odoratus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sweet-pea is in the same state in regard to self-fertilisation as the
+ common pea; and we have seen that seedlings from a cross between two
+ varieties, which differed in no respect except in the colour of their
+ flowers, were to the self-fertilised seedlings from the same mother-plant
+ in height as 100 to 80; and in the second generation as 100 to 88.
+ Unfortunately I did not ascertain whether crossing two plants of the same
+ variety failed to produce any beneficial effect, but I venture to predict
+ such would be the result.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. Petunia violacea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The intercrossed plants of the same stock in four out of the five
+ successive generations plainly exceeded in height the self-fertilised
+ plants. The latter in the fourth generation were crossed by a fresh stock,
+ and the seedlings thus obtained were put into competition with the
+ self-fertilised plants of the fifth generation. The crossed plants
+ exceeded the self-fertilised in height in the ratio of 100 to 66, and in
+ weight as 100 to 23; but this difference, though so great, is not much
+ greater than that between the intercrossed plants of the same stock in
+ comparison with the self-fertilised plants of the corresponding
+ generation. This case, therefore, seems at first sight opposed to the rule
+ that a cross with a fresh stock is much more beneficial than a cross
+ between individuals of the same stock. But as with Eschscholtzia, the
+ reproductive system was here chiefly benefited; for the plants raised from
+ the cross with the fresh stock were to the self-fertilised plants in
+ fertility, both lots being naturally fertilised, as 100 to 46, whereas the
+ intercrossed plants of the same stock were to the self-fertilised plants
+ of the corresponding fifth generation in fertility only as 100 to 86.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although at the time of measurement the plants raised from the cross with
+ the fresh stock did not exceed in height or weight the intercrossed plants
+ of the old stock (owing to the growth of the former not having been
+ completed, as explained under the head of this species), yet they exceeded
+ the intercrossed plants in fertility in the ratio of 100 to 54. This fact
+ is interesting, as it shows that plants self-fertilised for four
+ generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, yielded seedlings which
+ were nearly twice as fertile as those from plants of the same stock which
+ had been intercrossed for the five previous generations. We here see, as
+ with Eschscholtzia and Dianthus, that the mere act of crossing,
+ independently of the state of the crossed plants, has little efficacy in
+ giving increased fertility to the offspring. The same conclusion holds
+ good, as we have already seen, in the analogous cases of Ipomoea, Mimulus,
+ and Dianthus, with respect to height.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. Nicotiana tabacum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My plants were remarkably self-fertile, and the capsules from the
+ self-fertilised flowers apparently yielded more seeds than those which
+ were cross-fertilised. No insects were seen to visit the flowers in the
+ hothouse, and I suspect that the stock on which I experimented had been
+ raised under glass, and had been self-fertilised during several previous
+ generations; if so, we can understand why, in the course of three
+ generations, the crossed seedlings of the same stock did not uniformly
+ exceed in height the self-fertilised seedlings. But the case is
+ complicated by individual plants having different constitutions, so that
+ some of the crossed and self-fertilised seedlings raised at the same time
+ from the same parents behaved differently. However this may be, plants
+ raised from self-fertilised plants of the third generation crossed by a
+ slightly different sub-variety, exceeded greatly in height and weight the
+ self-fertilised plants of the fourth generation; and the trial was made on
+ a large scale. They exceeded them in height when grown in pots, and not
+ much crowded, in the ratio of 100 to 66; and when much crowded, as 100 to
+ 54. These crossed plants, when thus subjected to severe competition, also
+ exceeded the self-fertilised in weight in the ratio of 100 to 37. So it
+ was, but in a less degree (as may be seen in Table 7/C), when the two lots
+ were grown out of doors and not subjected to any mutual competition.
+ Nevertheless, strange as is the fact, the flowers on the mother-plants of
+ the third self-fertilised generation did not yield more seed when they
+ were crossed with pollen from plants of the fresh stock than when they
+ were self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. Anagallis collina.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Plants raised from a red variety crossed by another plant of the same
+ variety were in height to the self-fertilised plants from the red variety
+ as 100 to 73. When the flowers on the red variety were fertilised with
+ pollen from a closely similar blue-flowered variety, they yielded double
+ the number of seeds to what they did when crossed by pollen from another
+ individual of the same red variety, and the seeds were much finer. The
+ plants raised from this cross between the two varieties were to the
+ self-fertilised seedlings from the red variety, in height as 100 to 66,
+ and in fertility as 100 to 6.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. Primula veris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some flowers on long-styled plants of the third illegitimate generation
+ were legitimately crossed with pollen from a fresh stock, and others were
+ fertilised with their own pollen. From the seeds thus produced crossed
+ plants, and self-fertilised plants of the fourth illegitimate generation,
+ were raised. The former were to the latter in height as 100 to 46, and in
+ fertility during one year as 100 to 5, and as 100 to 3.5 during the next
+ year. In this case, however, we have no means of distinguishing between
+ the evil effects of illegitimate fertilisation continued during four
+ generations (that is, by pollen of the same form, but taken from a
+ distinct plant) and strict self-fertilisation. But it is probable that
+ these two processes do not differ so essentially as at first appears to be
+ the case. In the following experiment any doubt arising from illegitimate
+ fertilisation was completely eliminated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. Primula veris. (Equal-styled, red-flowered variety.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Flowers on plants of the second self-fertilised generation were crossed
+ with pollen from a distinct variety or fresh stock, and others were again
+ self-fertilised. Crossed plants and plants of the third self-fertilised
+ generation, all of legitimate origin, were thus raised; and the former was
+ to the latter in height as 100 to 85, and in fertility (as judged by the
+ number of capsules produced, together with the average number of seeds) as
+ 100 to 11.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ A SUMMARY OF THE MEASUREMENTS IN TABLE 7/C.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ This table includes the heights and often the weights of 292 plants
+ derived from a cross with a fresh stock, and of 305 plants, either of
+ self-fertilised origin, or derived from an intercross between plants of
+ the same stock. These 597 plants belong to thirteen species and twelve
+ genera. The various precautions which were taken to ensure a fair
+ comparison have already been stated. If we now look down the right hand
+ column, in which the mean height, weight, and fertility of the plants
+ derived from a cross with a fresh stock are represented by 100, we shall
+ see by the other figures how wonderfully superior they are both to the
+ self-fertilised and to the intercrossed plants of the same stock. With
+ respect to height and weight, there are only two exceptions to the rule,
+ namely, with Eschscholtzia and Petunia, and the latter is probably no real
+ exception. Nor do these two species offer an exception in regard to
+ fertility, for the plants derived from the cross with a fresh stock were
+ much more fertile than the self-fertilised plants. The difference between
+ the two sets of plants in the table is generally much greater in fertility
+ than in height or weight. On the other hand, with some of the species, as
+ with Nicotiana, there was no difference in fertility between the two sets,
+ although a great difference in height and weight. Considering all the
+ cases in this table, there can be no doubt that plants profit immensely,
+ though in different ways, by a cross with a fresh stock or with a distinct
+ sub-variety. It cannot be maintained that the benefit thus derived is due
+ merely to the plants of the fresh stock being perfectly healthy, whilst
+ those which had been long intercrossed or self-fertilised had become
+ unhealthy; for in most cases there was no appearance of such
+ unhealthiness, and we shall see under Table 7/A that the intercrossed
+ plants of the same stock are generally superior to a certain extent to the
+ self-fertilised,&mdash;both lots having been subjected to exactly the same
+ conditions and being equally healthy or unhealthy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We further learn from Table 7/C, that a cross between plants that have
+ been self-fertilised during several successive generations and kept all
+ the time under nearly uniform conditions, does not benefit the offspring
+ in the least or only in a very slight degree. Mimulus and the descendants
+ of Ipomoea named Hero offer instances of this rule. Again, plants
+ self-fertilised during several generations profit only to a small extent
+ by a cross with intercrossed plants of the same stock (as in the case of
+ Dianthus), in comparison with the effects of a cross by a fresh stock.
+ Plants of the same stock intercrossed during several generations (as with
+ Petunia) were inferior in a marked manner in fertility to those derived
+ from the corresponding self-fertilised plants crossed by a fresh stock.
+ Lastly, certain plants which are regularly intercrossed by insects in a
+ state of nature, and which were artificially crossed in each succeeding
+ generation in the course of my experiments, so that they can never or most
+ rarely have suffered any evil from self-fertilisation (as with
+ Eschscholtzia and Ipomoea), nevertheless profited greatly by a cross with
+ a fresh stock. These several cases taken together show us in the clearest
+ manner that it is not the mere crossing of any two individuals which is
+ beneficial to the offspring. The benefit thus derived depends on the
+ plants which are united differing in some manner, and there can hardly be
+ a doubt that it is in the constitution or nature of the sexual elements.
+ Anyhow, it is certain that the differences are not of an external nature,
+ for two plants which resemble each other as closely as the individuals of
+ the same species ever do, profit in the plainest manner when intercrossed,
+ if their progenitors have been exposed during several generations to
+ different conditions. But to this latter subject I shall have to recur in
+ a future chapter.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ TABLE 7/A.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ We will now turn to our first table, which relates to crossed and
+ self-fertilised plants of the same stock. These consist of fifty-four
+ species belonging to thirty natural orders. The total number of crossed
+ plants of which measurements are given is 796, and of self-fertilised 809;
+ that is altogether 1,605 plants. Some of the species were experimented on
+ during several successive generations; and it should be borne in mind that
+ in such cases the crossed plants in each generation were crossed with
+ pollen from another crossed plant, and the flowers on the self-fertilised
+ plants were almost always fertilised with their own pollen, though
+ sometimes with pollen from other flowers on the same plant. The crossed
+ plants thus became more or less closely inter-related in the later
+ generations; and both lots were subjected in each generation to almost
+ absolutely the same conditions, and to nearly the same conditions in the
+ successive generations. It would have been a better plan in some respects
+ if I had always crossed some flowers either on the self-fertilised or
+ intercrossed plants of each generation with pollen from a non-related
+ plant, grown under different conditions, as was done with the plants in
+ Table 7/C; for by this procedure I should have learnt how much the
+ offspring became deteriorated through continued self-fertilisation in the
+ successive generations. As the case stands, the self-fertilised plants of
+ the successive generations in Table 7/A were put into competition with and
+ compared with intercrossed plants, which were probably deteriorated in
+ some degree by being more or less inter-related and grown under similar
+ conditions. Nevertheless, had I always followed the plan in Table 7/C, I
+ should not have discovered the important fact that, although a cross
+ between plants which are rather closely related and which had been
+ subjected to closely similar conditions, gives during several generations
+ some advantage to the offspring, yet that after a time they may be
+ intercrossed with no advantage whatever to the offspring. Nor should I
+ have learnt that the self-fertilised plants of the later generations might
+ be crossed with intercrossed plants of the same stock with little or no
+ advantage, although they profited to an extraordinary degree by a cross
+ with a fresh stock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to the greater number of the plants in Table 7/A, nothing
+ special need here be said; full particulars may be found under the head of
+ each species by the aid of the Index. The figures in the right-hand column
+ show the mean height of the self-fertilised plants, that of the crossed
+ plants with which they competed being represented by 100. No notice is
+ here taken of the few cases in which crossed and self-fertilised plants
+ were grown in the open ground, so as not to compete together. The table
+ includes, as we have seen, plants belonging to fifty-four species, but as
+ some of these were measured during several successive generations, there
+ are eighty-three cases in which crossed and self-fertilised plants were
+ compared. As in each generation the number of plants which were measured
+ (given in the table) was never very large and sometimes small, whenever in
+ the right hand column the mean height of the crossed and self-fertilised
+ plants is the same within five per cent, their heights may be considered
+ as practically equal. Of such cases, that is, of self-fertilised plants of
+ which the mean height is expressed by figures between 95 and 105, there
+ are eighteen, either in some one or all the generations. There are eight
+ cases in which the self-fertilised plants exceed the crossed by above five
+ per cent, as shown by the figures in the right hand column being above
+ 105. Lastly, there are fifty-seven cases in which the crossed plants
+ exceed the self-fertilised in a ratio of at least 100 to 95, and generally
+ in a much higher degree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the relative heights of the crossed and self-fertilised plants had been
+ due to mere chance, there would have been about as many cases of
+ self-fertilised plants exceeding the crossed in height by above five per
+ cent as of the crossed thus exceeding the self-fertilised; but we see that
+ of the latter there are fifty-seven cases, and of the former only eight
+ cases; so that the cases in which the crossed plants exceed in height the
+ self-fertilised in the above proportion are more than seven times as
+ numerous as those in which the self-fertilised exceed the crossed in the
+ same proportion. For our special purpose of comparing the powers of growth
+ of crossed and self-fertilised plants, it may be said that in fifty-seven
+ cases the crossed plants exceeded the self-fertilised by more than five
+ per cent, and that in twenty-six cases (18 + 8) they did not thus exceed
+ them. But we shall now show that in several of these twenty-six cases the
+ crossed plants had a decided advantage over the self-fertilised in other
+ respects, though not in height; that in other cases the mean heights are
+ not trustworthy, owing to too few plants having been measured, or to their
+ having grown unequally from being unhealthy, or to both causes combined.
+ Nevertheless, as these cases are opposed to my general conclusion I have
+ felt bound to give them. Lastly, the cause of the crossed plants having no
+ advantage over the self-fertilised can be explained in some other cases.
+ Thus a very small residue is left in which the self-fertilised plants
+ appear, as far as my experiments serve, to be really equal or superior to
+ the crossed plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will now consider in some little detail the eighteen cases in which the
+ self-fertilised plants equalled in average height the crossed plants
+ within five per cent; and the eight cases in which the self-fertilised
+ plants exceeded in average height the crossed plants by above five per
+ cent; making altogether twenty-six cases in which the crossed plants were
+ not taller than the self-fertilised plants in any marked degree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [1. Dianthus caryophyllus (third generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This plant was experimented on during four generations, in three of which
+ the crossed plants exceeded in height the self-fertilised generally by
+ much more than five per cent; and we have seen under Table 7/C that the
+ offspring from the plants of the third self-fertilised generation crossed
+ by a fresh stock profited in height and fertility to an extraordinary
+ degree. But in this third generation the crossed plants of the same stock
+ were in height to the self-fertilised only as 100 to 99, that is, they
+ were practically equal. Nevertheless, when the eight crossed and eight
+ self-fertilised plants were cut down and weighed, the former were to the
+ latter in weight as 100 to 49! There can therefore be not the least doubt
+ that the crossed plants of this species are greatly superior in vigour and
+ luxuriance to the self-fertilised; and what was the cause of the
+ self-fertilised plants of the third generation, though so light and thin,
+ growing up so as almost to equal the crossed in height, I cannot explain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Lobelia fulgens (first generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crossed plants of this generation were much inferior in height to the
+ self-fertilised, in the proportion of 100 to 127. Although only two pairs
+ were measured, which is obviously much too few to be trusted, yet from
+ other evidence given under the head of this species, it is certain that
+ the self-fertilised plants were very much more vigorous than the crossed.
+ As I used pollen of unequal maturity for crossing and self-fertilising the
+ parent-plants, it is possible that the great difference in the growth of
+ their offspring may have been due to this cause. In the next generation
+ this source of error was avoided, and many more plants were raised, and
+ now the average height of the twenty-three crossed plants was to that of
+ the twenty-three self-fertilised plants as 100 to 91. We can therefore
+ hardly doubt that a cross is beneficial to this species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Petunia violacea (third generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eight crossed plants were to eight self-fertilised of the third generation
+ in average height as 100 to 131; and at an early age the crossed were
+ inferior even in a still higher degree. But it is a remarkable fact that
+ in one pot in which plants of both lots grew extremely crowded, the
+ crossed were thrice as tall as the self-fertilised. As in the two
+ preceding and two succeeding generations, as well as with plants raised by
+ a crossed with a fresh stock, the crossed greatly exceeded the
+ self-fertilised in height, weight, and fertility (when these two latter
+ points were attended to), the present case must be looked at as an anomaly
+ not affecting the general rule. The most probable explanation is that the
+ seeds from which the crossed plants of the third generation were raised
+ were not well ripened; for I have observed an analogous case with Iberis.
+ Self-fertilised seedlings of this latter plant, which were known to have
+ been produced from seeds not well matured, grew from the first much more
+ quickly than the crossed plants, which were raised from better matured
+ seeds; so that having thus once got a great start they were enabled ever
+ afterwards to retain their advantage. Some of these same seeds of the
+ Iberis were sown on the opposite sides of pots filled with burnt earth and
+ pure sand, not containing any organic matter; and now the young crossed
+ seedlings grew during their short life to double the height of the
+ self-fertilised, in the same manner as occurred with the above two sets of
+ seedlings of Petunia which were much crowded and thus exposed to very
+ unfavourable conditions. We have seen also in the eighth generation of
+ Ipomoea that the self-fertilised seedlings raised from unhealthy parents
+ grew at first very much more quickly than the crossed seedlings, so that
+ they were for a long time much taller, though ultimately beaten by them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4, 5, 6. Eschscholtzia californica.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Four sets of measurements are given in Table 7/A. In one of these the
+ crossed plants exceed the self-fertilised in average height, so that this
+ is not one of the exceptions here to be considered. In two other cases the
+ crossed equalled the self-fertilised in height within five per cent; and
+ in the fourth case the self-fertilised exceeded the crossed by above this
+ limit. We have seen in Table 7/C that the whole advantage of a cross by a
+ fresh stock is confined to fertility, and so it was with the intercrossed
+ plants of the same stock compared with the self-fertilised, for the former
+ were in fertility to the latter as 100 to 89. The intercrossed plants thus
+ have at least one important advantage over the self-fertilised. Moreover,
+ the flowers on the parent-plants when fertilised with pollen from another
+ individual of the same stock yield far more seeds than when
+ self-fertilised; the flowers in this latter case being often quite
+ sterile. We may therefore conclude that a cross does some good, though it
+ does not give to the crossed seedlings increased powers of growth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. Viscaria oculata.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average height of the fifteen intercrossed plants to that of the
+ fifteen self-fertilised plants was only as 100 to 97; but the former
+ produced many more capsules than the latter, in the ratio of 100 to 77.
+ Moreover, the flowers on the parent-plants which were crossed and
+ self-fertilised, yielded seeds on one occasion in the proportion of 100 to
+ 38, and on a second occasion in the proportion of 100 to 58. So that there
+ can be no doubt about the beneficial effects of a cross, although the mean
+ height of the crossed plants was only three per cent above that of the
+ self-fertilised plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. Specularia speculum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only the four tallest of the crossed and the four tallest of the
+ self-fertilised plants, growing in four pots, were measured; and the
+ former were to the latter in height as 100 to 98. In all four pots a
+ crossed plant flowered before any one of the self-fertilised plants, and
+ this is usually a safe indication of some real superiority in the crossed
+ plants. The flowers on the parent-plants which were crossed with pollen
+ from another plant yielded seeds compared with the self-fertilised flowers
+ in the ratio of 100 to 72. We may therefore draw the same conclusion as in
+ the last case with respect to a cross being decidedly beneficial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. Borago officinalis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only four crossed and four self-fertilised plants were raised and
+ measured, and the former were to the latter in height as 100 to 102. So
+ small a number of measurements ought never to be trusted; and in the
+ present instance the advantage of the self-fertilised over the crossed
+ plants depended almost entirely on one of the self-fertilised plants
+ having grown to an unusual height. All four crossed plants flowered before
+ their self-fertilised opponents. The cross-fertilised flowers on the
+ parent-plants in comparison with the self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+ in the proportion of 100 to 60. So that here again we may draw the same
+ conclusion as in the two last cases.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. Passiflora gracilis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only two crossed and two self-fertilised plants were raised; and the
+ former were to the latter in height as 100 to 104. On the other hand,
+ fruits from the cross-fertilised flowers on the parent-plants contained
+ seeds in number, compared with those from the self-fertilised flowers, in
+ the proportion of 100 to 85.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. Phaseolus multiflorus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The five crossed plants were to the five self-fertilised in height as 100
+ to 96. Although the crossed plants were thus only four per cent taller
+ than the self-fertilised, they flowered in both pots before them. It is
+ therefore probable that they had some real advantage over the
+ self-fertilised plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. Adonis aestivalis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The four crossed plants were almost exactly equal in height to the four
+ self-fertilised plants, but as so few plants were measured, and as these
+ were all &ldquo;miserably unhealthy,&rdquo; nothing can be inferred with safety with
+ respect to their relative heights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. Bartonia aurea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The eight crossed plants were to the eight self-fertilised in height as
+ 100 to 107. This number of plants, considering the care with which they
+ were raised and compared, ought to have given a trustworthy result. But
+ from some unknown cause they grew very unequally, and they became so
+ unhealthy that only three of the crossed and three of the self-fertilised
+ plants set any seeds, and these few in number. Under these circumstances
+ the mean height of neither lot can be trusted, and the experiment is
+ valueless. The cross-fertilised flowers on the parent-plants yielded
+ rather more seeds than the self-fertilised flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. Thunbergia alata.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The six crossed plants were to the six self-fertilised in height as 100 to
+ 108. Here the self-fertilised plants seem to have a decided advantage; but
+ both lots grew unequally, some of the plants in both being more than twice
+ as tall as others. The parent-plants also were in an odd semi-sterile
+ condition. Under these circumstances the superiority of the
+ self-fertilised plants cannot be fully trusted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. Nolana prostrata.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The five crossed plants were to the five self-fertilised in height as 100
+ to 105; so that the latter seem here to have a small but decided
+ advantage. On the other hand, the flowers on the parent-plants which were
+ cross-fertilised produced very many more capsules than the self-fertilised
+ flowers, in the ratio of 100 to 21; and the seeds which the former
+ contained were heavier than an equal number from the self-fertilised
+ capsules in the ratio of 100 to 82.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. Hibiscus africanus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only four pairs were raised, and the crossed were to the self-fertilised
+ in height as 100 to 109. Excepting that too few plants were measured, I
+ know of nothing else to cause distrust in the result. The cross-fertilised
+ flowers on the parent-plants were, on the other hand, rather more
+ productive than the self-fertilised flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. Apium petroselinum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few plants (number not recorded) derived from flowers believed to have
+ been crossed by insects and a few self-fertilised plants were grown on the
+ opposite sides of four pots. They attained to a nearly equal height, the
+ crossed having a very slight advantage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. Vandellia nummularifolia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twenty crossed plants raised from the seeds of perfect flowers were to
+ twenty self-fertilised plants, likewise raised from the seeds of perfect
+ flowers, in height as 100 to 99. The experiment was repeated, with the
+ sole difference that the plants were allowed to grow more crowded; and now
+ the twenty-four tallest of the crossed plants were to the twenty-four
+ tallest self-fertilised plants in height as 100 to 94, and in weight as
+ 100 to 97. Moreover, a larger number of the crossed than of the
+ self-fertilised plants grew to a moderate height. The above-mentioned
+ twenty crossed plants were also grown in competition with twenty
+ self-fertilised plants raised from the closed or cleistogene flowers, and
+ their heights were as 100 to 94. Therefore had it not been for the first
+ trial, in which the crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height
+ only as 100 to 99, this species might have been classed with those in
+ which the crossed plants exceed the self-fertilised by above five per
+ cent. On the other hand, the crossed plants in the second trial bore fewer
+ capsules; and these contained fewer seeds, than did the self-fertilised
+ plants, all the capsules having been produced by cleistogene flowers. The
+ whole case therefore must be left doubtful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. Pisum sativum (common pea).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Four-plants derived from a cross between individuals of the same variety
+ were in height to four self-fertilised plants belonging to the same
+ variety as 100 to 115. Although this cross did no good, we have seen under
+ Table 7/C that a cross between distinct varieties adds greatly to the
+ height and vigour of the offspring; and it was there explained that the
+ fact of a cross between the individuals of the same variety not being
+ beneficial, is almost certainly due to their having been self-fertilised
+ for many generations, and in each generation grown under nearly similar
+ conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20, 21, 22. Canna warscewiczi.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Plants belonging to three generations were observed, and in all of three
+ the crossed were approximately equal to the self-fertilised; the average
+ height of the thirty-four crossed plants being to that of the same number
+ of self-fertilised plants as 100 to 101. Therefore the crossed plants had
+ no advantage over the self-fertilised; and it is probable that the same
+ explanation here holds good as in the case of Pisum sativum; for the
+ flowers of this Canna are perfectly self-fertile, and were never seen to
+ be visited by insects in the hothouse, so as to be crossed by them. This
+ plant, moreover, has been cultivated under glass for several generations
+ in pots, and therefore under nearly uniform conditions. The capsules
+ produced by the cross-fertilised flowers on the above thirty-four crossed
+ plants contained more seeds than did the capsules produced by the
+ self-fertilised flowers on the self-fertilised plants, in the proportion
+ of 100 to 85; so that in this respect crossing was beneficial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. Primula sinensis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The offspring of plants, some of which were legitimately and others
+ illegitimately fertilised with pollen from a distinct plant, were almost
+ exactly of the same height as the offspring of self-fertilised plants; but
+ the former with rare exceptions flowered before the latter. I have shown
+ in my paper on dimorphic plants that this species is commonly raised in
+ England from self-fertilised seed, and the plants from having been
+ cultivated in pots have been subjected to nearly uniform conditions.
+ Moreover, many of them are now varying and changing their character, so as
+ to become in a greater or less degree equal-styled, and in consequence
+ highly self-fertile. Therefore I believe that the cause of the crossed
+ plants not exceeding in height the self-fertilised is the same as in the
+ two previous cases of Pisum sativum and Canna.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24, 25, 26. Nicotiana tabacum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Four sets of measurements were made; in one, the self-fertilised plants
+ greatly exceeded in height the crossed, in two others they were
+ approximately equal to the crossed, and in the fourth were beaten by them;
+ but this latter case does not here concern us. The individual plants
+ differ in constitution, so that the descendants of some profit by their
+ parents having been intercrossed, whilst others do not. Taking all three
+ generations together, the twenty-seven crossed plants were in height to
+ the twenty-seven self-fertilised plants as 100 to 96. This excess of
+ height in the crossed plants, is so small compared with that displayed by
+ the offspring from the same mother-plants when crossed by a slightly
+ different variety, that we may suspect (as explained under Table 7/C) that
+ most of the individuals belonging to the variety which served as the
+ mother-plants in my experiments, had acquired a nearly similar
+ constitution, so as not to profit by being mutually intercrossed.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reviewing these twenty-six cases, in which the crossed plants either do
+ not exceed the self-fertilised by above five per cent in height, or are
+ inferior to them, we may conclude that much the greater number of the
+ cases do not form real exceptions to the rule,&mdash;that a cross between
+ two plants, unless these have been self-fertilised and exposed to nearly
+ the same conditions for many generations, gives a great advantage of some
+ kind to the offspring. Of the twenty-six cases, at least two, namely,
+ those of Adonis and Bartonia, may be wholly excluded, as the trials were
+ worthless from the extreme unhealthiness of the plants. Inn twelve other
+ cases (three trials with Eschscholtzia here included) the crossed plants
+ either were superior in height to the self-fertilised in all the other
+ generations excepting the one in question, or they showed their
+ superiority in some different manner, as in weight, fertility, or in
+ flowering first; or again, the cross-fertilised flowers on the
+ mother-plant were much more productive of seed than the self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Deducting these fourteen cases, there remain twelve in which the crossed
+ plants show no well-marked advantage over the self-fertilised. On the
+ other hand, we have seen that there are fifty-seven cases in which the
+ crossed plants exceed the self-fertilised in height by at least five per
+ cent, and generally in a much higher degree. But even in the twelve cases
+ just referred to, the want of any advantage on the crossed side is far
+ from certain: with Thunbergia the parent-plants were in an odd
+ semi-sterile condition, and the offspring grew very unequally; with
+ Hibiscus and Apium much too few plants were raised for the measurements to
+ be trusted, and the cross-fertilised flowers of Hibiscus produced rather
+ more seed than did the self-fertilised; with Vandellia the crossed plants
+ were a little taller and heavier than the self-fertilised, but as they
+ were less fertile the case must be left doubtful. Lastly, with Pisum,
+ Primula, the three generations of Canna, and the three of Nicotiana (which
+ together complete the twelve cases), a cross between two plants certainly
+ did no good or very little good to the offspring; but we have reason to
+ believe that this is the result of these plants having been
+ self-fertilised and cultivated under nearly uniform conditions for several
+ generations. The same result followed with the experimental plants of
+ Ipomoea and Mimulus, and to a certain extent with some other species,
+ which had been intentionally treated by me in this manner; yet we know
+ that these species in their normal condition profit greatly by being
+ intercrossed. There is, therefore, not a single case in Table 7/A which
+ affords decisive evidence against the rule that a cross between plants,
+ the progenitors of which have been subjected to somewhat diversified
+ conditions, is beneficial to the offspring. This is a surprising
+ conclusion, for from the analogy of domesticated animals it could not have
+ been anticipated, that the good effects of crossing or the evil effects of
+ self-fertilisation would have been perceptible until the plants had been
+ thus treated for several generations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The results given in Table 7/A may be looked at under another point of
+ view. Hitherto each generation has been considered as a separate case, of
+ which there are eighty-three; and this no doubt is the more correct method
+ of comparing the crossed and self-fertilised plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in those cases in which plants of the same species were observed
+ during several generations, a general average of their heights in all the
+ generations together may be made; and such averages are given in Table
+ 7/A; for instance, under Ipomoea the general average for the plants of all
+ ten generations is as 100 for the crossed, to 77 for the self-fertilised
+ plants. This having been done in each case in which more than one
+ generation was raised, it is easy to calculate the average of the average
+ heights of the crossed and self-fertilised plants of all the species
+ included in Table 7/A. It should however be observed that as only a few
+ plants of some species, whilst a considerable number of others, were
+ measured, the value of the mean or average heights of the several species
+ is very different. Subject to this source of error, it may be worth while
+ to give the mean of the mean heights of the fifty-four species in Table
+ 7/A; and the result is, calling the mean of the mean heights of the
+ crossed plants 100, that of the self-fertilised plants is 87. But it is a
+ better plan to divide the fifty-four species into three groups, as was
+ done with the previously given eighty-three cases. The first group
+ consists of species of which the mean heights of the self-fertilised
+ plants are within five per cent of 100; so that the crossed and
+ self-fertilised plants are approximately equal; and of such species there
+ are twelve about which nothing need be said, the mean of the mean heights
+ of the self-fertilised being of course very nearly 100, or exactly 99.58.
+ The second group consists of the species, thirty-seven in number, of which
+ the mean heights of the crossed plants exceed that of the self-fertilised
+ plants by more than five per cent; and the mean of their mean heights is
+ to that of the self-fertilised plants as 100 to 78. The third group
+ consists of the species, only five in number, of which the mean heights of
+ the self-fertilised plants exceed that of the crossed by more than five
+ per cent; and here the mean of the mean heights of the crossed plants is
+ to that of the self-fertilised as 100 to 109. Therefore if we exclude the
+ species which are approximately equal, there are thirty-seven species in
+ which the mean of the mean heights of the crossed plants exceeds that of
+ the self-fertilised by twenty-two per cent; whereas there are only five
+ species in which the mean of the mean heights of the self-fertilised
+ plants exceeds that of the crossed, and this only by nine per cent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The truth of the conclusion&mdash;that the good effects of a cross depend
+ on the plants having been subjected to different conditions or to their
+ belonging to different varieties, in both of which cases they would almost
+ certainly differ somewhat in constitution&mdash;is supported by a
+ comparison of the Tables 7/A and 7/C. The latter table gives the results
+ of crossing plants with a fresh stock or with a distinct variety; and the
+ superiority of the crossed offspring over the self-fertilised is here much
+ more general and much more strongly marked than in Table 7/A, in which
+ plants of the same stock were crossed. We have just seen that the mean of
+ the mean heights of the crossed plants of the whole fifty-four species in
+ Table 7/A is to that of the self-fertilised plants as 100 to 87; whereas
+ the mean of the mean heights of the plants crossed by a fresh stock is to
+ that of the self-fertilised in Table 7/C as 100 to 74. So that the crossed
+ plants beat the self-fertilised plants by thirteen per cent in Table 7/A,
+ and by twenty-six per cent, or double as much, in Table 7/C, which
+ includes the results of the cross by a fresh stock.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ TABLE 7/B.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ A few words must be added on the weights of the crossed plants of the same
+ stock, in comparison with the self-fertilised. Eleven cases are given in
+ Table 7/B, relating to eight species. The number of plants which were
+ weighed is shown in the two left columns, and their relative weights in
+ the right column, that of the crossed plants being taken as 100. A few
+ other cases have already been recorded in Table 7/C in reference to plants
+ crossed by a fresh stock. I regret that more trials of this kind were not
+ made, as the evidence of the superiority of the crossed over the
+ self-fertilised plants is thus shown in a more conclusive manner than by
+ their relative heights. But this plan was not thought of until a rather
+ late period, and there were difficulties either way, as the seeds had to
+ be collected when ripe, by which time the plants had often begun to
+ wither. In only one out of the eleven cases in Table 7/B, that of
+ Eschscholtzia, do the self-fertilised plants exceed the crossed in weight;
+ and we have already seen they are likewise superior to them in height,
+ though inferior in fertility, the whole advantage of a cross being here
+ confined to the reproductive system. With Vandellia the crossed plants
+ were a little heavier, as they were also a little taller than the
+ self-fertilised; but as a greater number of more productive capsules were
+ produced by the cleistogene flowers on the self-fertilised plants than by
+ those on the crossed plants, the case must be left, as remarked under
+ Table 7/A, altogether doubtful. The crossed and self-fertilised offspring
+ from a partially self-sterile plant of Reseda odorata were almost equal in
+ weight, though not in height. In the remaining eight cases, the crossed
+ plants show a wonderful superiority over the self-fertilised, being more
+ than double their weight, except in one case, and here the ratio is as
+ high as 100 to 67. The results thus deduced from the weights of the plants
+ confirm in a striking manner the former evidence of the beneficial effects
+ of a cross between two plants of the same stock; and in the few cases in
+ which plants derived from a cross with a fresh stock were weighed, the
+ results are similar or even more striking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII. DIFFERENCE BETWEEN CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS IN
+ CONSTITUTIONAL VIGOUR AND IN OTHER RESPECTS.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Greater constitutional vigour of crossed plants.
+ The effects of great crowding.
+ Competition with other kinds of plants.
+ Self-fertilised plants more liable to premature death.
+ Crossed plants generally flower before the self-fertilised.
+ Negative effects of intercrossing flowers on the same plant.
+ Cases described.
+ Transmission of the good effects of a cross to later generations.
+ Effects of crossing plants of closely related parentage.
+ Uniform colour of the flowers on plants self-fertilised during several
+ generations and cultivated under similar conditions.
+</pre>
+ <h3>
+ GREATER CONSTITUTIONAL VIGOUR OF CROSSED PLANTS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ As in almost all my experiments an equal number of crossed and
+ self-fertilised seeds, or more commonly seedlings just beginning to
+ sprout, were planted on the opposite sides of the same pots, they had to
+ compete with one another; and the greater height, weight, and fertility of
+ the crossed plants may be attributed to their possessing greater innate
+ constitutional vigour. Generally the plants of the two lots whilst very
+ young were of equal height; but afterwards the crossed gained insensibly
+ on their opponents, and this shows that they possessed some inherent
+ superiority, though not displayed at a very early period in life. There
+ were, however, some conspicuous exceptions to the rule of the two lots
+ being at first equal in height; thus the crossed seedlings of the broom
+ (Sarothamnus scoparius) when under three inches in height were more than
+ twice as tall as the self-fertilised plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the crossed or the self-fertilised plants had once grown decidedly
+ taller than their opponents, a still increasing advantage would tend to
+ follow from the stronger plants robbing the weaker ones of nourishment and
+ overshadowing them. This was evidently the case with the crossed plants of
+ Viola tricolor, which ultimately quite overwhelmed the self-fertilised.
+ But that the crossed plants have an inherent superiority, independently of
+ competition, was sometimes well shown when both lots were planted
+ separately, not far distant from one another, in good soil in the open
+ ground. This was likewise shown in several cases, even with plants growing
+ in close competition with one another, by one of the self-fertilised
+ plants exceeding for a time its crossed opponent, which had been injured
+ by some accident or was at first sickly, but being ultimately conquered by
+ it. The plants of the eighth generation of Ipomoea were raised from small
+ seeds produced by unhealthy parents, and the self-fertilised plants grew
+ at first very rapidly, so that when the plants of both lots were about
+ three feet in height, the mean height of the crossed to that of the
+ self-fertilised was as 100 to 122; when they were about six feet high the
+ two lots were very nearly equal, but ultimately when between eight and
+ nine feet in height, the crossed plants asserted their usually
+ superiority, and were to the self-fertilised in height as 100 to 85.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The constitutional superiority of the crossed over the self-fertilised
+ plants was proved in another way in the third generation of Mimulus, by
+ self-fertilised seeds being sown on one side of a pot, and after a certain
+ interval of time crossed seeds on the opposite side. The self-fertilised
+ seedlings thus had (for I ascertained that the seeds germinated
+ simultaneously) a clear advantage over the crossed in the start for the
+ race. Nevertheless they were easily beaten (as may be seen under the head
+ of Mimulus) when the crossed seeds were sown two whole days after the
+ self-fertilised. But when the interval was four days, the two lots were
+ nearly equal throughout life. Even in this latter case the crossed plants
+ still possessed an inherent advantage, for after both lots had grown to
+ their full height they were cut down, and without being disturbed were
+ transferred to a larger pot, and when in the ensuing year they had again
+ grown to their full height they were measured; and now the tallest crossed
+ plants were to the tallest self-fertilised plants in height as 100 to 75,
+ and in fertility (i.e., by weight of seeds produced by an equal number of
+ capsules from both lots) as 100 to 34.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My usual method of proceeding, namely, to plant several pairs of crossed
+ and self-fertilised seeds in an equal state of germination on the opposite
+ sides of the same pots, so that the plants were subjected to moderately
+ severe mutual competition, was I think the best that could have been
+ followed, and was a fair test of what occurs in a state of nature. For
+ plants sown by nature generally come up crowded, and are almost always
+ exposed to very severe competition with one another and with other kinds
+ of plants. This latter consideration led me to make some trials, chiefly
+ but not exclusively with Ipomoea and Mimulus, by sowing crossed and
+ self-fertilised seeds on the opposite sides of large pots in which other
+ plants had long been growing, or in the midst of other plants out of
+ doors. The seedlings were thus subjected to very severe competition with
+ plants of other kinds; and in all such cases, the crossed seedlings
+ exhibited a great superiority in their power of growth over the
+ self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the germinating seedlings had been planted in pairs on the opposite
+ sides of several pots, the remaining seeds, whether or not in a state of
+ germination, were in most cases sown very thickly on the two sides of an
+ additional large pot; so that the seedlings came up extremely crowded, and
+ were subjected to extremely severe competition and unfavourable
+ conditions. In such cases the crossed plants almost invariably showed a
+ greater superiority over the self-fertilised, than did the plants which
+ grew in pairs in the pots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes crossed and self-fertilised seeds were sown in separate rows in
+ the open ground, which was kept clear of weeds; so that the seedlings were
+ not subjected to any competition with other kinds of plants. Those however
+ in each row had to struggle with the adjoining ones in the same row. When
+ fully grown, several of the tallest plants in each row were selected,
+ measured, and compared. The result was in several cases (but not so
+ invariably as might have been expected) that the crossed plants did not
+ exceed in height the self-fertilised in nearly so great a degree as when
+ grown in pairs in the pots. Thus with the plants of Digitalis, which
+ competed together in pots, the crossed were to the self-fertilised in
+ height as 100 to 70; whilst those which were grown separately were only as
+ 100 to 85. Nearly the same result was observed with Brassica. With
+ Nicotiana the crossed were to the self-fertilised plants in height, when
+ grown extremely crowded together in pots, as 100 to 54; when grown much
+ less crowded in pots as 100 to 66, and when grow in the open ground, so as
+ to be subjected to but little competition, as 100 to 72. On the other hand
+ with Zea, there was a greater difference in height between the crossed and
+ self-fertilised plants growing out of doors, than between the pairs which
+ grew in pots in the hothouse; but this may be attributed to the
+ self-fertilised plants being more tender, so that they suffered more than
+ the crossed, when both lots were exposed to a cold and wet summer. Lastly,
+ with one out of two series of Reseda odorata, grown out of doors in rows,
+ as well as with Beta vulgaris, the crossed plants did not at all exceed
+ the self-fertilised in height, or exceeded them by a mere trifle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The innate power of the crossed plants to resist unfavourable conditions
+ far better than did the self-fertilised plants, was shown on two occasions
+ in a curious manner, namely, with Iberis and in the third generation of
+ Petunia, by the great superiority in height of the crossed over the
+ self-fertilised seedlings, when both sets were grown under extremely
+ unfavourable conditions; whereas owing to special circumstances exactly
+ the reverse occurred with the plants raised from the same seeds and grown
+ in pairs in pots. A nearly analogous case was observed on two other
+ occasions with plants of the first generation of Nicotiana.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crossed plants always withstood the injurious effects of being
+ suddenly removed into the open air after having been kept in the
+ greenhouse better than did the self-fertilised. On several occasions they
+ also resisted much better cold and intemperate weather. This was
+ manifestly the case with some crossed and self-fertilised plants of
+ Ipomoea, which were suddenly moved from the hothouse to the coldest part
+ of a cool greenhouse. The offspring of plants of the eighth
+ self-fertilised generation of Mimulus crossed by a fresh stock, survived a
+ frost which killed every single self-fertilised and intercrossed plant of
+ the same old stock. Nearly the same result followed with some crossed and
+ self-fertilised plants of Viola tricolor. Even the tips of the shoots of
+ the crossed plants of Sarothamnus scoparius were not touched by a very
+ severe winter; whereas all the self-fertilised plants were killed halfway
+ down to the ground, so that they were not able to flower during the next
+ summer. Young crossed seedlings of Nicotiana withstood a cold and wet
+ summer much better than the self-fertilised seedlings. I have met with
+ only one exception to the rule of crossed plants being hardier than the
+ self-fertilised: three long rows of Eschscholtzia plants, consisting of
+ crossed seedlings from a fresh stock, of intercrossed seedlings of the
+ same stock, and of self-fertilised ones, were left unprotected during a
+ severe winter, and all perished except two of the self-fertilised. But
+ this case is not so anomalous as it at first appears, for it should be
+ remembered that the self-fertilised plants of Eschscholtzia always grow
+ taller and are heavier than the crossed; the whole benefit of a cross with
+ this species being confined to increased fertility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Independently of any external cause which could be detected, the
+ self-fertilised plants were more liable to premature death than were the
+ crossed; and this seems to me a curious fact. Whilst the seedlings were
+ very young, if one died its antagonist was pulled up and thrown away, and
+ I believe that many more of the self-fertilised died at this early age
+ than of the crossed; but I neglected to keep any record. With Beta
+ vulgaris, however, it is certain that a large number of the
+ self-fertilised seeds perished after germinating beneath the ground,
+ whereas the crossed seeds sown at the same time did not thus suffer. When
+ a plant died at a somewhat more advanced age the fact was recorded; and I
+ find in my notes that out of several hundred plants, only seven of the
+ crossed died, whilst of the self-fertilised at least twenty-nine were thus
+ lost, that is more than four times as many. Mr. Galton, after examining
+ some of my tables, remarks: &ldquo;It is very evident that the columns with the
+ self-fertilised plants include the larger number of exceptionally small
+ plants;&rdquo; and the frequent presence of such puny plants no doubt stands in
+ close relation with their liability to premature death. The
+ self-fertilised plants of Petunia completed their growth and began to
+ wither sooner than did the intercrossed plants; and these latter
+ considerably before the offspring from a cross with a fresh stock.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ PERIOD OF FLOWERING.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ In some cases, as with Digitalis, Dianthus, and Reseda, a larger number of
+ the crossed than of the self-fertilised plants threw up flower-stems; but
+ this probably was merely the result of their greater power of growth; for
+ in the first generation of Lobelia fulgens, in which the self-fertilised
+ plants greatly exceeded in height the crossed plants, some of the latter
+ failed to throw up flower-stems. With a large number of species, the
+ crossed plants exhibited a well-marked tendency to flower before the
+ self-fertilised ones growing in the same pots. It should however be
+ remarked that no record was kept of the flowering of many of the species;
+ and when a record was kept, the flowering of the first plant in each pot
+ was alone observed, although two or more pairs grew in the same pot. I
+ will now give three lists,&mdash;one of the species in which the first
+ plant that flowered was a crossed one,&mdash;a second in which the first
+ that flowered was a self-fertilised plant,&mdash;and a third of those
+ which flowered at the same time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [SPECIES, OF WHICH THE FIRST PLANTS THAT FLOWERED WERE OF CROSSED
+ PARENTAGE.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ipomoea purpurea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I record in my notes that in all ten generations many of the crossed
+ plants flowered before the self-fertilised; but no details were kept.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mimulus luteus (First Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ten flowers on the crossed plants were fully expanded before one on the
+ self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mimulus luteus (Second and Third Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In both these generations a crossed plant flowered before one of the
+ self-fertilised in all three pots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mimulus luteus (Fifth Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all three pots a crossed plant flowered first; yet the self-fertilised
+ plants, which belonged to the new tall variety, were in height to the
+ crossed as 126 to 100.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mimulus luteus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Plants derived from a cross with a fresh stock as well as the intercrossed
+ plants of the old stock, flowered before the self-fertilised plants in
+ nine out of the ten pots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Salvia coccinea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A crossed plant flowered before any one of the self-fertilised in all
+ three pots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Origanum vulgare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During two successive seasons several crossed plants flowered before the
+ self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Brassica oleracea (First Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the crossed plants growing in pots and in the open ground flowered
+ first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Brassica oleracea (Second Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A crossed plant in three out of the four pots flowered before any one of
+ the self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Iberis umbellata.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In both pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eschscholtzia californica.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Plants derived from the Brazilian stock crossed by the English stock
+ flowered in five out of the nine pots first; in four of them a
+ self-fertilised plant flowered first; and not in one pot did an
+ intercrossed plant of the old stock flower first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Viola tricolor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A crossed plant in five out of the six pots flowered before any one of the
+ self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dianthus caryophyllus (First Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In two large beds of plants, four of the crossed plants flowered before
+ any one of the self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dianthus caryophyllus (Second Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In both pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dianthus caryophyllus (Third Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In three out of the four pots a crossed plant flowered first; yet the
+ crossed were to the self-fertilised in height only as 100 to 99, but in
+ weight as 100 to 49.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dianthus caryophyllus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Plants derived from a cross with a fresh stock, and the intercrossed
+ plants of the old stock, both flowered before the self-fertilised in nine
+ out of the ten pots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hibiscus africanus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In three out of the four pots a crossed plant flowered before any one of
+ the self-fertilised; yet the latter were to the crossed in height as 109
+ to 100.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tropaeolum minus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A crossed plant flowered before any one of the self-fertilised in three
+ out of the four pots, and simultaneously in the fourth pot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Limnanthes douglasii.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A crossed plant flowered before any one of the self-fertilised in four out
+ of the five pots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Phaseolus multiflorus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In both pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Specularia speculum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all four pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lobelia ramosa (First Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all four pots a crossed plant flowered before any one of the
+ self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lobelia ramosa (Second Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all four pots a crossed plant flowered some days before any one of the
+ self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nemophila insignis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In four out of the five pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Borago officinalis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In both pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Petunia violacea (Second Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all three pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nicotiana tabacum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A plant derived from a cross with a fresh stock flowered before any one of
+ the self-fertilised plants of the fourth generation, in fifteen out of the
+ sixteen pots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyclamen persicum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During two successive seasons a crossed plant flowered some weeks before
+ any one of the self-fertilised in all four pots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Primula veris (equal-styled var.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all three pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Primula sinensis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all four pots plants derived from an illegitimate cross between
+ distinct plants flowered before any one of the self-fertilised plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Primula sinensis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A legitimately crossed plant flowered before any one of the
+ self-fertilised plants in seven out of the eight pots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fagopyrum esculentum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A legitimately crossed plant flowered from one to two days before any one
+ of the self-fertilised plants in all three pots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Zea mays.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all four pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Phalaris canariensis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crossed plants flowered before the self-fertilised in the open ground,
+ but simultaneously in the pots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SPECIES OF WHICH THE FIRST PLANTS THAT FLOWERED WERE OF SELF-FERTILISED
+ PARENTAGE.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eschscholtzia californica (First Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crossed plants were at first taller than the self-fertilised, but on
+ their second growth during the following year the self-fertilised exceeded
+ the crossed in height, and now they flowered first in three out of the
+ four pots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lupinus luteus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although the crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height as 100
+ to 82; yet in all three pots the self-fertilised plants flowered first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Clarkia elegans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although the crossed plants were, as in the last case, to the
+ self-fertilised in height as 100 to 82, yet in the two pots the
+ self-fertilised flowered first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lobelia fulgens (First Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height only as 100 to
+ 127, and the latter flowered much before the crossed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Petunia violacea (Third Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height as 100 to 131,
+ and in three out of the four pots a self-fertilised plant flowered first;
+ in the fourth pot simultaneously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Petunia violacea (Fourth generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although the crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height as 100
+ to 69, yet in three out of the five pots a self-fertilised plant flowered
+ first; in the fourth pot simultaneously, and only in the fifth did a
+ crossed plant flower first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nicotiana tabacum (First Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height only as 100 to
+ 178, and a self-fertilised plant flowered first in all four pots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nicotiana tabacum (Third Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height as 100 to 101,
+ and in four out of the five pots a self-fertilised plant flowered first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Canna warscewiczi.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the three generations taken together the crossed were to the
+ self-fertilised in height as 100 to 101; in the first generation the
+ self-fertilised plants showed some tendency to flower first, and in the
+ third generation they flowered first in nine out of the twelve pots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SPECIES IN WHICH THE CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS FLOWERED ALMOST
+ SIMULTANEOUSLY.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mimulus luteus (Sixth Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crossed plants were inferior in height and vigour to the
+ self-fertilised plants, which all belonged to the new white-flowered tall
+ variety, yet in only half the pots did the self-fertilised plants flower
+ first, and in the other half the crossed plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Viscaria oculata.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crossed plants were only a little taller than the self-fertilised
+ (namely, as 100 to 97), but considerably more fertile, yet both lots
+ flowered almost simultaneously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lathyrus odoratus (Second Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although the crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height as 100
+ to 88, yet there was no marked difference in their period of flowering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lobelia fulgens (Second Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although the crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height as 100
+ to 91, yet they flowered simultaneously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nicotiana tabacum (Third Generation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although the crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height as 100
+ to 83, yet in half the pots a self-fertilised plant flowered first, and in
+ the other half a crossed plant.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These three lists include fifty-eight cases, in which the period of
+ flowering of the crossed and self-fertilised plants was recorded. In
+ forty-four of them a crossed plant flowered first either in a majority of
+ the pots or in all; in nine instances a self-fertilised plant flowered
+ first, and in five the two lots flowered simultaneously. One of the most
+ striking cases is that of Cyclamen, in which the crossed plants flowered
+ some weeks before the self-fertilised in all four pots during two seasons.
+ In the second generation of Lobelia ramosa, a crossed plant flowered in
+ all four pots some days before any one of the self-fertilised. Plants
+ derived from a cross with a fresh stock generally showed a very strongly
+ marked tendency to flower before the self-fertilised and the intercrossed
+ plants of the old stock; all three lots growing in the same pots. Thus
+ with Mimulus and Dianthus, in only one pot out of ten, and in Nicotiana in
+ only one pot out of sixteen, did a self-fertilised plant flower before the
+ plants of the two crossed kinds,&mdash;these latter flowering almost
+ simultaneously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A consideration of the two first lists, especially of the second one,
+ shows that a tendency to flower first is generally connected with greater
+ power of growth, that is, with greater height. But there are some
+ remarkable exceptions to this rule, proving that some other cause comes
+ into play. Thus the crossed plants both of Lupinus luteus and Clarkia
+ elegans were to the self-fertilised plants in height as 100 to 82, and yet
+ the latter flowered first. In the third generation of Nicotiana, and in
+ all three generations of Canna, the crossed and self-fertilised plants
+ were of nearly equal height, yet the self-fertilised tended to flower
+ first. On the other hand, with Primula sinensis, plants raised from a
+ cross between two distinct individuals, whether these were legitimately or
+ illegitimately crossed, flowered before the illegitimately self-fertilised
+ plants, although all the plants were of nearly equal height in both cases.
+ So it was with respect to height and flowering with Phaseolus, Specularia,
+ and Borago. The crossed plants of Hibiscus were inferior in height to the
+ self-fertilised, in the ratio of 100 to 109, and yet they flowered before
+ the self-fertilised in three out of the four pots. On the whole, there can
+ be no doubt that the crossed plants exhibit a tendency to flower before
+ the self-fertilised, almost though not quite so strongly marked as to grow
+ to a greater height, to weigh more, and to be more fertile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few other cases not included in the above three lists deserve notice. In
+ all three pots of Viola tricolor, naturally crossed plants the offspring
+ of crossed plants flowered before naturally crossed plants the offspring
+ of self-fertilised plants. Flowers on two plants, both of self-fertilised
+ parentage, of the sixth generation of Mimulus luteus were intercrossed,
+ and other flowers on the same plants were fertilised with their own
+ pollen; intercrossed seedlings and seedlings of the seventh
+ self-fertilised generation were thus raised, and the latter flowered
+ before the intercrossed in three out of the five pots. Flowers on a plant
+ both of Mimulus luteus and of Ipomoea purpurea were crossed with pollen
+ from other flowers on the same plant, and other flowers were fertilised
+ with their own pollen; intercrossed seedlings of this peculiar kind, and
+ others strictly self-fertilised being thus raised. In the case of the
+ Mimulus the self-fertilised plants flowered first in seven out of the
+ eight pots, and in the case of the Ipomoea in eight out of the ten pots;
+ so that an intercross between the flowers on the same plant was very far
+ from giving to the offspring thus raised, any advantage over the strictly
+ self-fertilised plants in their period of flowering.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ EFFECTS OF CROSSING FLOWERS ON THE SAME PLANT.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ In the discussion on the results of a cross with a fresh stock, given
+ under Table 7/C in the last chapter, it was shown that the mere act of
+ crossing by itself does no good; but that the advantages thus derived
+ depend on the plants which are crossed, either consisting of distinct
+ varieties which will almost certainly differ somewhat in constitution, or
+ on the progenitors of the plants which are crossed, though identical in
+ every external character, having been subjected to somewhat different
+ conditions and having thus acquired some slight difference in
+ constitution. All the flowers produced by the same plant have been
+ developed from the same seed; those which expand at the same time have
+ been exposed to exactly the same climatic influences; and the stems have
+ all been nourished by the same roots. Therefore in accordance with the
+ conclusion just referred to, no good ought to result from crossing flowers
+ on the same plant. (8/1. It is, however, possible that the stamens which
+ differ in length or construction in the same flower may produce pollen
+ differing in nature, and in this manner a cross might be made effective
+ between the several flowers on the same plant. Mr. Macnab states in a
+ communication to M. Verlot &lsquo;La Production des Varietes&rsquo; 1865 page 42, that
+ seedlings raised from the shorter and longer stamens of rhododendron
+ differ in character; but the shorter stamens apparently are becoming
+ rudimentary, and the seedlings are dwarfs, so that the result may be
+ simply due to a want of fertilising power in the pollen, as in the case of
+ the dwarfed plants of Mirabilis raised by Naudin by the use of too few
+ pollen-grains. Analogous statements have been made with respect to the
+ stamens of Pelargonium. With some of the Melastomaceae, seedlings raised
+ by me from flowers fertilised by pollen from the shorter stamens,
+ certainly differed in appearance from those raised from the longer
+ stamens, with differently coloured anthers; but here, again, there is some
+ reason for believing that the shorter stamens are tending towards
+ abortion. In the very different case of trimorphic heterostyled plants,
+ the two sets of stamens in the same flower have widely different
+ fertilising powers.) In opposition to this conclusion is the fact that a
+ bud is in one sense a distinct individual, and is capable of occasionally
+ or even not rarely assuming new external characters, as well as new
+ constitutional peculiarities. Plants raised from buds which have thus
+ varied may be propagated for a great length of time by grafts, cuttings,
+ etc., and sometimes even by seminal generation. (8/2. I have given
+ numerous cases of such bud-variations in my &lsquo;Variation of Animals and
+ Plants under Domestication&rsquo; chapter 11 2nd edition volume 1 page 448.)
+ There exist also numerous species in which the flowers on the same plant
+ differ from one another,&mdash;as in the sexual organs of monoecious and
+ polygamous plants,&mdash;in the structure of the circumferential flowers
+ in many Compositae, Umbelliferae, etc.,&mdash;in the structure of the
+ central flower in some plants,&mdash;in the two kinds of flowers produced
+ by cleistogene species,&mdash;and in several other such cases. These
+ instances clearly prove that the flowers on the same plant have often
+ varied independently of one another in many important respects, such
+ variations having been fixed, like those on distinct plants during the
+ development of species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was therefore necessary to ascertain by experiment what would be the
+ effect of intercrossing flowers on the same plant, in comparison with
+ fertilising them with their own pollen or crossing them with pollen from a
+ distinct plant. Trials were carefully made on five genera belonging to
+ four families; and in only one case, namely, Digitalis, did the offspring
+ from a cross between the flowers on the same plant receive any benefit,
+ and the benefit here was small compared with that derived from a cross
+ between distinct plants. In the chapter on Fertility, when we consider the
+ effects of cross-fertilisation and self-fertilisation on the
+ productiveness of the parent-plants we shall arrive at nearly the same
+ result, namely, that a cross between the flowers on the same plant does
+ not at all increase the number of the seeds, or only occasionally and to a
+ slight degree. I will now give an abstract of the results of the five
+ trials which were made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Digitalis purpurea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seedlings raised from intercrossed flowers on the same plant, and others
+ from flowers fertilised with their own pollen, were grown in the usual
+ manner in competition with one another on the opposite sides of ten pots.
+ In this and the four following cases, the details may be found under the
+ head of each species. In eight pots, in which the plants did not grow much
+ crowded, the flower-stems on sixteen intercrossed plants were in height to
+ those on sixteen self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 94. In the two other
+ pots on which the plants grew much crowded, the flower-stems on nine
+ intercrossed plants were in height to those on nine self-fertilised
+ plants, as 100 to 90. That the intercrossed plants in these two latter
+ pots had a real advantage over their self-fertilised opponents, was well
+ shown by their relative weights when cut down, which was as 100 to 78. The
+ mean height of the flower-stems on the twenty-five intercrossed plants in
+ the ten pots taken together, was to that of the flower-stems on the
+ twenty-five self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 92. Thus the intercrossed
+ plants were certainly superior to the self-fertilised in some degree; but
+ their superiority was small compared with that of the offspring from a
+ cross between distinct plants over the self-fertilised, this being in the
+ ratio of 100 to 70 in height. Nor does this latter ratio show at all
+ fairly the great superiority of the plants derived from a cross between
+ distinct individuals over the self-fertilised, as the former produced more
+ than twice as many flower-stems as the latter, and were much less liable
+ to premature death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Ipomoea purpurea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thirty-one intercrossed plants raised from a cross between flowers on the
+ same plants were grown in ten pots in competition with the same number of
+ self-fertilised plants, and the former were to the latter in height as 100
+ to 105. So that the self-fertilised plants were a little taller than the
+ intercrossed; and in eight out of the ten pots a self-fertilised plant
+ flowered before any one of the crossed plants in the same pots. The plants
+ which were not greatly crowded in nine of the pots (and these offer the
+ fairest standard of comparison) were cut down and weighed; and the weight
+ of the twenty-seven intercrossed plants was to that of the twenty-seven
+ self-fertilised as 100 to 124; so that by this test the superiority of the
+ self-fertilised was strongly marked. To this subject of the superiority of
+ the self-fertilised plants in certain cases, I shall have to recur in a
+ future chapter. If we now turn to the offspring from a cross between
+ distinct plants when put into competition with self-fertilised plants, we
+ find that the mean height of seventy-three such crossed plants, in the
+ course of ten generations, was to that of the same number of
+ self-fertilised plants as 100 to 77; and in the case of the plants of the
+ tenth generation in weight as 100 to 44. Thus the contrast between the
+ effects of crossing flowers on the same plant, and of crossing flowers on
+ distinct plants, is wonderfully great.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Mimulus luteus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twenty-two plants raised by crossing flowers on the same plant were grown
+ in competition with the same number of self-fertilised plants; and the
+ former were to the latter in height as 100 to 105, and in weight as 100 to
+ 103. Moreover, in seven out of the eight pots a self-fertilised plant
+ flowered before any of the intercrossed plants. So that here again the
+ self-fertilised exhibit a slight superiority over the intercrossed plants.
+ For the sake of comparison, I may add that seedlings raised during three
+ generations from a cross between distinct plants were to the
+ self-fertilised plants in height as 100 to 65.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Pelargonium zonale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two plants growing in separate pots, which had been propagated by cuttings
+ from the same plant, and therefore formed in fact parts of the same
+ individual, were intercrossed, and other flowers on one of these plants
+ were self-fertilised; but the seedlings obtained by the two processes did
+ not differ in height. When, on the other hand, flowers on one of the above
+ plants were crossed with pollen taken from a distinct seedling, and other
+ flowers were self-fertilised, the crossed offspring thus obtained were to
+ the self-fertilised in height as 100 to 74.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. Origanum vulgare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A plant which had been long cultivated in my kitchen garden, had spread by
+ stolons so as to form a large bed or clump. Seedlings raised by
+ intercrossing flowers on these plants, which strictly consisted of the
+ same plant, and other seedlings raised from self-fertilised flowers, were
+ carefully compared from their earliest youth to maturity; and they did not
+ differ at all in height or in constitutional vigour. Some flowers on these
+ seedlings were then crossed with pollen taken from a distinct seedling,
+ and other flowers were self-fertilised; two fresh lots of seedlings being
+ thus raised, which were the grandchildren of the plant that had spread by
+ stolons and formed a large clump in my garden. These differed much in
+ height, the crossed plants being to the self-fertilised as 100 to 86. They
+ differed, also, to a wonderful degree in constitutional vigour. The
+ crossed plants flowered first, and produced exactly twice as many
+ flower-stems; and they afterwards increased by stolons to such an extent
+ as almost to overwhelm the self-fertilised plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reviewing these five cases, we see that in four of them, the effect of a
+ cross between flowers on the same plant (even on offsets of the same plant
+ growing on separate roots, as with the Pelargonium and Origanum) does not
+ differ from that of the strictest self-fertilisation. Indeed, in two of
+ the cases the self-fertilised plants were superior to such intercrossed
+ plants. With Digitalis a cross between the flowers on the same plant
+ certainly did do some good, yet very slight compared with that from a
+ cross between distinct plants. On the whole the results here arrived at,
+ if we bear in mind that the flower-buds are to a certain extent distinct
+ individuals and occasionally vary independently of one another, agree well
+ with our general conclusion, that the advantages of a cross depend on the
+ progenitors of the crossed plants possessing somewhat different
+ constitutions, either from having been exposed to different conditions, or
+ to their having varied from unknown causes in a manner which we in our
+ ignorance are forced to speak of as spontaneous. Hereafter I shall have to
+ recur to this subject of the inefficiency of a cross between the flowers
+ on the same plant, when we consider the part which insects play in the
+ cross-fertilisation of flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ON THE TRANSMISSION OF THE GOOD EFFECTS FROM A CROSS AND OF THE EVIL
+ EFFECTS FROM SELF-FERTILISATION.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have seen that seedlings from a cross between distinct plants almost
+ always exceed their self-fertilised opponents in height, weight, and
+ constitutional vigour, and, as will hereafter be shown, often in
+ fertility. To ascertain whether this superiority would be transmitted
+ beyond the first generation, seedlings were raised on three occasions from
+ crossed and self-fertilised plants, both sets being fertilised in the same
+ manner, and therefore not as in the many cases given in Tables 7/A, 7/B,
+ 7/C, in which the crossed plants were again crossed and the
+ self-fertilised again self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Firstly, seedlings were raised from self-fertilised seeds produced under a
+ net by crossed and self-fertilised plants of Nemophila insignis; and the
+ latter were to the former in height as 133 to 100. But these seedlings
+ became very unhealthy early in life, and grew so unequally that some of
+ them in both lots were five times as tall as the others. Therefore this
+ experiment was quite worthless; but I have felt bound to give it, as
+ opposed to my general conclusion. I should state that in this and the two
+ following trials, both sets of plants were grown on the opposite sides of
+ the same pots, and treated in all respects alike. The details of the
+ experiments may be found under the head of each species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Secondly, a crossed and a self-fertilised plant of Heartsease (Viola
+ tricolor) grew near together in the open ground and near to other plants
+ of heartsease; and as both produced an abundance of very fine capsules,
+ the flowers on both were certainly cross-fertilised by insects. Seeds were
+ collected from both plants, and seedlings raised from them. Those from the
+ crossed plants flowered in all three pots before those from the
+ self-fertilised plants; and when fully grown the former were to the latter
+ in height as 100 to 82. As both sets of plants were the product of
+ cross-fertilisation, the difference in their growth and period of
+ flowering was clearly due to their parents having been of crossed and
+ self-fertilised parentage; and it is equally clear that they transmitted
+ different constitutional powers to their offspring, the grandchildren of
+ the plants which were originally crossed and self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thirdly, the Sweet Pea (Lathyrus odoratus) habitually fertilises itself in
+ this country. As I possessed plants, the parents and grandparents of which
+ had been artificially crossed and other plants descended from the same
+ parents which had been self-fertilised for many previous generations,
+ these two lots of plants were allowed to fertilise themselves under a net,
+ and their self-fertilised seeds saved. The seedlings thus raised were
+ grown in competition with each other in the usual manner, and differed in
+ their powers of growth. Those from the self-fertilised plants which had
+ been crossed during the two previous generations were to those from the
+ plants self-fertilised during many previous generations in height as 100
+ to 90. These two lots of seeds were likewise tried by being sown under
+ very unfavourable conditions in poor exhausted soil, and the plants whose
+ grandparents and great-grandparents had been crossed showed in an
+ unmistakable manner their superior constitutional vigour. In this case, as
+ in that of the heartsease, there could be no doubt that the advantage
+ derived from a cross between two plants was not confined to the offspring
+ of the first generation. That constitutional vigour due to cross-parentage
+ is transmitted for many generations may also be inferred as highly
+ probable, from some of Andrew Knight&rsquo;s varieties of the common pea, which
+ were raised by crossing distinct varieties, after which time they no doubt
+ fertilised themselves in each succeeding generation. These varieties
+ lasted for upwards of sixty years, &ldquo;but their glory is now departed.&rdquo;
+ (8/3. See the evidence on this head in my &lsquo;Variation under Domestication&rsquo;
+ chapter 9 volume 1 2nd edition page 397.) On the other hand, most of the
+ varieties of the common pea, which there is no reason to suppose owe their
+ origin to a cross, have had a much shorter existence. Some also of Mr.
+ Laxton&rsquo;s varieties produced by artificial crosses have retained their
+ astonishing vigour and luxuriance for a considerable number of
+ generations; but as Mr. Laxton informs me, his experience does not extend
+ beyond twelve generations, within which period he has never perceived any
+ diminution of vigour in his plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An allied point may be here noticed. As the force of inheritance is strong
+ with plants (of which abundant evidence could be given), it is almost
+ certain that seedlings from the same capsule or from the same plant would
+ tend to inherit nearly the same constitution; and as the advantage from a
+ cross depends on the plants which are crossed differing somewhat in
+ constitution, it may be inferred as probable that under similar conditions
+ a cross between the nearest relations would not benefit the offspring so
+ much as one between non-related plants. In support of this conclusion we
+ have some evidence, as Fritz Muller has shown by his valuable experiments
+ on hybrid Abutilons, that the union of brothers and sisters, parents and
+ children, and of other near relations is highly injurious to the fertility
+ of the offspring. In one case, moreover, seedlings from such near
+ relations possessed very weak constitutions. (8/4. &lsquo;Jenaische Zeitschrift
+ fur Naturw.&rsquo; B. 7 pages 22 and 45 1872 and 1873 pages 441-450.) This same
+ observer also found three plants of a Bignonia growing near together.
+ (8/5. &lsquo;Botanische Zeitung&rsquo; 1868 page 626.) He fertilised twenty-nine
+ flowers on one of them with their own pollen, and they did not set a
+ single capsule. Thirty flowers were then fertilised with pollen from a
+ distinct plant, one of the three growing together, and they yielded only
+ two capsules. Lastly, five flowers were fertilised with pollen from a
+ fourth plant growing at a distance, and all five produced capsules. It
+ seems therefore probable, as Fritz Muller suggests, that the three plants
+ growing near together were seedlings from the same parent, and that from
+ being closely related they had little power of fertilising one another.
+ (8/6. Some remarkable cases are given in my &lsquo;Variation under
+ Domestication&rsquo; chapter 17 2nd edition volume 2 page 121, of hybrids of
+ Gladiolus and Cistus, any one of which could be fertilised by pollen from
+ any other, but not by its own pollen.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lastly, the fact of the intercrossed plants in Table 7/A not exceeding in
+ height the self-fertilised plants in a greater and greater degree in the
+ later generations, is probably the result of their having become more and
+ more closely inter-related.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ UNIFORM COLOUR OF THE FLOWERS ON PLANTS, SELF-FERTILISED AND GROWN UNDER
+ SIMILAR CONDITIONS FOR SEVERAL GENERATIONS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the commencement of my experiments, the parent-plants of Mimulus
+ luteus, Ipomoea purpurea, Dianthus caryophyllus, and Petunia violacea,
+ raised from purchased seeds, varied greatly in the colour of their
+ flowers. This occurs with many plants which have been long cultivated as
+ an ornament for the flower-garden, and which have been propagated by
+ seeds. The colour of the flowers was a point to which I did not at first
+ in the least attend, and no selection whatever was practised.
+ Nevertheless, the flowers produced by the self-fertilised plants of the
+ above four species became absolutely uniform in tint, or very nearly so,
+ after they had been grown for some generations under closely similar
+ conditions. The intercrossed plants, which were more or less closely
+ inter-related in the later generations, and which had been likewise
+ cultivated all the time under similar conditions, became more uniform in
+ the colour of their flowers than were the original parent-plants, but much
+ less so than the self-fertilised plants. When self-fertilised plants of
+ one of the later generations were crossed with a fresh stock, and
+ seedlings thus raised, these presented a wonderful contrast in the
+ diversified tints of their flowers compared with those of the
+ self-fertilised seedlings. As such cases of flowers becoming uniformly
+ coloured without any aid from selection seem to me curious, I will give a
+ full abstract of my observations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mimulus luteus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A tall variety, bearing large, almost white flowers blotched with crimson,
+ appeared amongst the intercrossed and self-fertilised plants of the third
+ and fourth generations. This variety increased so rapidly, that in the
+ sixth generation of self-fertilised plants every single one consisted of
+ it. So it was with all the many plants which were raised, up to the last
+ or ninth self-fertilised generation. Although this variety first appeared
+ amongst the intercrossed plants, yet from their offspring being
+ intercrossed in each succeeding generation, it never prevailed amongst
+ them; and the flowers on the several intercrossed plants of the ninth
+ generation differed considerably in colour. On the other hand, the
+ uniformity in colour of the flowers on the plants of all the later
+ self-fertilised generations was quite surprising; on a casual inspection
+ they might have been said to be quite alike, but the crimson blotches were
+ not of exactly the same shape, or in exactly the same position. Both my
+ gardener and myself believe that this variety did not appear amongst the
+ parent-plants, raised from purchased seeds, but from its appearance
+ amongst both the crossed and self-fertilised plants of the third and
+ fourth generations; and from what I have seen of the variation of this
+ species on other occasions, it is probable that it would occasionally
+ appear under any circumstances. We learn, however, from the present case
+ that under the peculiar conditions to which my plants were subjected, this
+ particular variety, remarkable for its colouring, largeness of the
+ corolla, and increased height of the whole plant, prevailed in the sixth
+ and all the succeeding self-fertilised generations to the complete
+ exclusion of every other variety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ipomoea purpurea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My attention was first drawn to the present subject by observing that the
+ flowers on all the plants of the seventh self-fertilised generation were
+ of a uniform, remarkably rich, dark purple tint. The many plants which
+ were raised during the three succeeding generations, up to the last or
+ tenth, all produced flowers coloured in the same manner. They were
+ absolutely uniform in tint, like those of a constant species living in a
+ state of nature; and the self-fertilised plants might have been
+ distinguished with certainty, as my gardener remarked, without the aid of
+ labels, from the intercrossed plants of the later generations. These,
+ however, had more uniformly coloured flowers than those which were first
+ raised from the purchased seeds. This dark purple variety did not appear,
+ as far as my gardener and myself could recollect, before the fifth or
+ sixth self-fertilised generation. However this may have been, it became,
+ through continued self-fertilisation and the cultivation of the plants
+ under uniform conditions, perfectly constant, to the exclusion of every
+ other variety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dianthus caryophyllus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The self-fertilised plants of the third generation all bore flowers of
+ exactly the same pale rose-colour; and in this respect they differed quite
+ remarkably from the plants growing in a large bed close by and raised from
+ seeds purchased from the same nursery garden. In this case it is not
+ improbable that some of the parent-plants which were first self-fertilised
+ may have borne flowers thus coloured; but as several plants were
+ self-fertilised in the first generation, it is extremely improbable that
+ all bore flowers of exactly the same tint as those of the self-fertilised
+ plants of the third generation. The intercrossed plants of the third
+ generation likewise produced flowers almost, though not quite so uniform
+ in tint as those of the self-fertilised plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Petunia violacea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this case I happened to record in my notes that the flowers on the
+ parent-plant which was first self-fertilised were of a &ldquo;dingy purple
+ colour.&rdquo; In the fifth self-fertilised generation, every one of the
+ twenty-one self-fertilised plants growing in pots, and all the many plants
+ in a long row out of doors, produced flowers of absolutely the same tint,
+ namely, of a dull, rather peculiar and ugly flesh colour; therefore,
+ considerably unlike those on the parent-plant. I believe that this change
+ of colour supervened quite gradually; but I kept no record, as the point
+ did not interest me until I was struck with the uniform tint of the
+ flowers on the self-fertilised plants of the fifth generation. The flowers
+ on the intercrossed plants of the corresponding generation were mostly of
+ the same dull flesh colour, but not nearly so uniform as those on the
+ self-fertilised plants, some few being very pale, almost white. The
+ self-fertilised plants which grew in a long row in the open ground were
+ also remarkable for their uniformity in height, as were the intercrossed
+ plants in a less degree, both lots being compared with a large number of
+ plants raised at the same time under similar conditions from the
+ self-fertilised plants of the fourth generation crossed by a fresh stock.
+ I regret that I did not attend to the uniformity in height of the
+ self-fertilised seedlings in the later generations of the other species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These few cases seem to me to possess much interest. We learn from them
+ that new and slight shades of colour may be quickly and firmly fixed,
+ independently of any selection, if the conditions are kept as nearly
+ uniform as is possible, and no intercrossing be permitted. With Mimulus,
+ not only a grotesque style of colouring, but a larger corolla and
+ increased height of the whole plant were thus fixed; whereas with most
+ plants which have been long cultivated for the flower-garden, no character
+ is more variable than that of colour, excepting perhaps that of height.
+ From the consideration of these cases we may infer that the variability of
+ cultivated plants in the above respects is due, firstly, to their being
+ subjected to somewhat diversified conditions, and, secondly, to their
+ being often intercrossed, as would follow from the free access of insects.
+ I do not see how this inference can be avoided, as when the above plants
+ were cultivated for several generations under closely similar conditions,
+ and were intercrossed in each generation, the colour of their flowers
+ tended in some degree to change and to become uniform. When no
+ intercrossing with other plants of the same stock was allowed,&mdash;that
+ is, when the flowers were fertilised with their own pollen in each
+ generation&mdash;their colour in the later generations became as uniform
+ as that of plants growing in a state of nature, accompanied at least in
+ one instance by much uniformity in the height of the plants. But in saying
+ that the diversified tints of the flowers on cultivated plants treated in
+ the ordinary manner are due to differences in the soil, climate, etc., to
+ which they are exposed, I do not wish to imply that such variations are
+ caused by these agencies in any more direct manner than that in which the
+ most diversified illnesses, as colds, inflammation of the lungs or pleura,
+ rheumatism, etc., may be said to be caused by exposure to cold. In both
+ cases the constitution of the being which is acted on is of preponderant
+ importance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX. THE EFFECTS OF CROSS-FERTILISATION AND SELF-FERTILISATION ON
+ THE PRODUCTION OF SEEDS.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Fertility of plants of crossed and self-fertilised parentage, both lots
+ being fertilised in the same manner.
+ Fertility of the parent-plants when first crossed and self-fertilised,
+ and of their crossed and self-fertilised offspring when again crossed
+ and self-fertilised.
+ Comparison of the fertility of flowers fertilised with their own pollen
+ and with that from other flowers on the same plant.
+ Self-sterile plants.
+ Causes of self-sterility.
+ The appearance of highly self-fertile varieties.
+ Self-fertilisation apparently in some respects beneficial, independently
+ of the assured production of seeds.
+ Relative weights and rates of germination of seeds from crossed and
+ self-fertilised flowers.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The present chapter is devoted to the Fertility of plants, as influenced
+ by cross-fertilisation and self-fertilisation. The subject consists of two
+ distinct branches; firstly, the relative productiveness or fertility of
+ flowers crossed with pollen from a distinct plant and with their own
+ pollen, as shown by the proportional number of capsules which they
+ produce, together with the number of the contained seeds. Secondly, the
+ degree of innate fertility or sterility of the seedlings raised from
+ crossed and self-fertilised seeds; such seedlings being of the same age,
+ grown under the same conditions, and fertilised in the same manner. These
+ two branches of the subject correspond with the two which have to be
+ considered by any one treating of hybrid plants; namely, in the first
+ place the comparative productiveness of a species when fertilised with
+ pollen from a distinct species and with its own pollen; and in the second
+ place, the fertility of its hybrid offspring. These two classes of cases
+ do not always run parallel; thus some plants, as Gartner has shown, can be
+ crossed with great ease, but yield excessively sterile hybrids; while
+ others are crossed with extreme difficulty, but yield fairly fertile
+ hybrids.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The natural order to follow in this chapter would have been first to
+ consider the effects on the fertility of the parent-plants of crossing
+ them, and of fertilising them with their own pollen; but as we have
+ discussed in the two last chapters the relative height, weight, and
+ constitutional vigour of crossed and self-fertilised plants&mdash;that is,
+ of plants raised from crossed and self-fertilised seeds&mdash;it will be
+ convenient here first to consider their relative fertility. The cases
+ observed by me are given in Table 9/D, in which plants of crossed and
+ self-fertilised parentage were left to fertilise themselves, being either
+ crossed by insects or spontaneously self-fertilised. It should be observed
+ that the results cannot be considered as fully trustworthy, for the
+ fertility of a plant is a most variable element, depending on its age,
+ health, nature of the soil, amount of water given, and temperature to
+ which it is exposed. The number of the capsules produced and the number of
+ the contained seeds, ought to have been ascertained on a large number of
+ crossed and self-fertilised plants of the same age and treated in every
+ respect alike. In these two latter respects my observations may be
+ trusted, but a sufficient number of capsules were counted only in a few
+ instances. The fertility, or as it may perhaps better be called the
+ productiveness, of a plant depends on the number of capsules produced, and
+ on the number of seeds which these contain. But from various causes,
+ chiefly from the want of time, I was often compelled to rely on the number
+ of the capsules alone. Nevertheless, in the more interesting cases, the
+ seeds were also counted or weighed. The average number of seeds per
+ capsule is a more valuable criterion of fertility than the number of
+ capsules produced. This latter circumstance depends partly on the size of
+ the plant; and we know that crossed plants are generally taller and
+ heavier than the self-fertilised; but the difference in this respect is
+ rarely sufficient to account for the difference in the number of the
+ capsules produced. It need hardly be added that in Table 9/D the same
+ number of crossed and self-fertilised plants are always compared. Subject
+ to the foregoing sources of doubt I will now give the table, in which the
+ parentage of the plants experimented on, and the manner of determining
+ their fertility are explained. Fuller details may be found in the previous
+ part of this work, under the head of each species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 9/D.&mdash;RELATIVE FERTILITY OF PLANTS OF CROSSED AND
+ SELF-FERTILISED PARENTAGE, BOTH SETS BEING FERTILISED IN THE SAME MANNER.
+ FERTILITY JUDGED OF BY VARIOUS STANDARDS. THAT OF THE CROSSED PLANTS TAKEN
+ AS 100.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Name of plant and feature observed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: x, in the expression, as 100 to x.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;first generation: seeds per capsule on crossed and
+ self-fertilised plants, not growing much crowded, spontaneously
+ self-fertilised under a net, in number: 99.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;seeds per capsule on crossed and self-fertilised
+ plants from the same parents as in the last case, but growing much
+ crowded, spontaneously self-fertilised under a net, in number: 93.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;productiveness of the same plants, as judged by the
+ number of capsules produced, and average number of seeds per capsule: 45.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;third generation: seeds per capsule on crossed and
+ self-fertilised plants, spontaneously self-fertilised under a net, in
+ number: 94.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;productiveness of the same plants, as judged by the
+ number of capsules produced, and the average number of seeds per capsule:
+ 35.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;fifth generation: seeds per capsule on crossed and
+ self-fertilised plants, left uncovered in the hothouse, and spontaneously
+ fertilised: 89.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;ninth generation: number of capsules on crossed
+ plants to those on self-fertilised plants, spontaneously self-fertilised
+ under a net: 26.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mimulus luteus&mdash;an equal number of capsules on plants descended from
+ self-fertilised plants of the 8th generation crossed by a fresh stock, and
+ on plants of the 9th self-fertilised generation, both sets having been
+ left uncovered and spontaneously fertilised, contained seeds, by weight:
+ 30.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mimulus luteus&mdash;productiveness of the same plants, as judged by the
+ number of capsules produced, and the average weight of seeds per capsule:
+ 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vandellia nummularifolia&mdash;seeds per capsule from cleistogene flowers
+ on the crossed and self-fertilised plants, in number: 106.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Salvia coccinea&mdash;crossed plants, compared with self-fertilised
+ plants, produced flowers, in number: 57.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Iberis umbellata&mdash;plants left uncovered in greenhouse; intercrossed
+ plants of the 3rd generation, compared with self-fertilised plants of the
+ 3rd generation, yielded seeds, in number: 75.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Iberis umbellata&mdash;plants from a cross between two varieties, compared
+ with self-fertilised plants of the 3rd generation, yielded seeds, by
+ weight : 75.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Papaver vagum&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered,
+ produced capsules, in number: 99.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eschscholtzia californica&mdash;Brazilian stock; plants left uncovered and
+ cross-fertilised by bees; capsules on intercrossed plants of the 2nd
+ generation, compared with capsules on self-fertilised plants of 2nd
+ generation, contained seeds, in number: 78.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eschscholtzia californica&mdash;productiveness of the same plants, as
+ judged by the number of capsules produced, and the average number of seeds
+ per capsule: 89.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eschscholtzia californica&mdash;plants left uncovered and cross-fertilised
+ by bees; capsules on plants derived from intercrossed plants of the 2nd
+ generation of the Brazilian stock crossed by English stock, compared with
+ capsules on self-fertilised plants of 2nd generation, contained seeds, in
+ number: 63.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eschscholtzia californica&mdash;productiveness of the same plants, as
+ judged by the number of capsules produced, and the average number of seeds
+ per capsule: 40.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reseda odorata&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered
+ and cross-fertilised by bees; produced capsules in number (about): 100.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Viola tricolor&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered
+ and cross-fertilised by bees, produced capsules in number: 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Delphinium consolida&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised plants, left
+ uncovered in the greenhouse, produced capsules in number: 56.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Viscaria oculata&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered
+ in the greenhouse, produced capsules in number: 77.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dianthus caryophyllus&mdash;plants spontaneously self-fertilised under a
+ net; capsules on intercrossed and self-fertilised plants of the 3rd
+ generation contained seeds in number: 125.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dianthus caryophyllus&mdash;plants left uncovered and cross-fertilised by
+ insects: offspring from plants self-fertilised for three generations and
+ then crossed by an intercrossed plant of the same stock, compared with
+ plants of the 4th self-fertilised generation, produced seeds by weight:
+ 73.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dianthus caryophyllus&mdash;plants left uncovered and cross-fertilised by
+ insects: offspring from plants self-fertilised for three generations and
+ then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of the 4th
+ self-fertilised generation, produced seeds by weight: 33.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tropaeolum minus&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered
+ in the greenhouse, produced seeds in number: 64.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Limnanthes douglasii&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised plants, left
+ uncovered in the greenhouse, produced capsules in number (about): 100.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lupinus luteus&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised plants of the 2nd
+ generation, left uncovered in the greenhouse, produced seeds in number
+ (judged from only a few pods): 88.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Phaseolus multiflorus&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised plants, left
+ uncovered in the greenhouse, produced seeds in number (about): 100.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lathyrus odoratus&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised plants of the 2nd
+ generation, left uncovered in the greenhouse, but certainly
+ self-fertilised, produced pods in number: 91.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Clarkia elegans&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered
+ in the greenhouse, produced capsules in number: 60.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nemophila insignis&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised plants, covered by a
+ net and spontaneously self-fertilised in the greenhouse, produced capsules
+ in number: 29.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Petunia violacea&mdash;left uncovered and cross-fertilised by insects:
+ plants of the 5th intercrossed and self-fertilised generations produced
+ seeds, as judged by the weight of an equal number of capsules: 86.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Petunia violacea&mdash;left uncovered as above: offspring of plants
+ self-fertilised for four generations and then crossed by a fresh stock,
+ compared with plants of the 5th self-fertilised generation, produced
+ seeds, as judged by the weight of an equal number of capsules: 46.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyclamen persicum&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered
+ in the greenhouse, produced capsules in number: 12.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anagallis collina&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered
+ in the greenhouse, produced capsules in number: 8.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Primula veris&mdash;left uncovered in open ground and cross-fertilised by
+ insects: offspring from plants of the 3rd illegitimate generation crossed
+ by a fresh stock, compared with plants of the 4th illegitimate and
+ self-fertilised generation, produced capsules in number: 5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Same plants in the following year: 3.5.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Primula veris&mdash;(equal-styled variety): left uncovered in open ground
+ and cross-fertilised by insects: offspring from plants self-fertilised for
+ two generations and then crossed by another variety, compared with plants
+ of the 3rd self-fertilised generation, produced capsules in number: 15.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Primula veris&mdash;(equal-styled variety) same plants; average number of
+ seeds per capsule: 71.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Primula veris&mdash;(equal-styled variety) productiveness of the same
+ plants, as judged by the number of capsules produced and the average
+ number of seeds per capsule: 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This table includes thirty-three cases relating to twenty-three species,
+ and shows the degree of innate fertility of plants of crossed parentage in
+ comparison with those of self-fertilised parentage; both lots being
+ fertilised in the same manner. With several of the species, as with
+ Eschscholtzia, Reseda, Viola, Dianthus, Petunia, and Primula, both lots
+ were certainly cross-fertilised by insects, and so it probably was with
+ several of the others; but in some of the species, as with Nemophila, and
+ in some of the trials with Ipomoea and Dianthus, the plants were covered
+ up, and both lots were spontaneously self-fertilised. This also was
+ necessarily the case with the capsules produced by the cleistogene flowers
+ of Vandellia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fertility of the crossed plants is represented in Table 9/D by 100,
+ and that of the self-fertilised by the other figures. There are five cases
+ in which the fertility of the self-fertilised plants is approximately
+ equal to that of the crossed; nevertheless, in four of these cases the
+ crossed plants were plainly taller, and in the fifth somewhat taller than
+ the self-fertilised. But I should state that in some of these five cases
+ the fertility of the two lots was not strictly ascertained, as the
+ capsules were not actually counted, from appearing equal in number and
+ from all apparently containing a full complement of seeds. In only two
+ instances in the table, namely, with Vandellia and in the third generation
+ of Dianthus, the capsules on the self-fertilised plants contained more
+ seed than those on the crossed plants. With Dianthus the ratio between the
+ number of seeds contained in the self-fertilised and crossed capsules was
+ as 125 to 100; both sets of plants were left to fertilise themselves under
+ a net; and it is almost certain that the greater fertility of the
+ self-fertilised plants was here due merely to their having varied and
+ become less strictly dichogamous, so as to mature their anthers and
+ stigmas more nearly at the same time than is proper to the species.
+ Excluding the seven cases now referred to, there remain twenty-six in
+ which the crossed plants were manifestly much more fertile, sometimes to
+ an extraordinary degree, than the self-fertilised with which they grew in
+ competition. The most striking instances are those in which plants derived
+ from a cross with a fresh stock are compared with plants of one of the
+ later self-fertilised generations; yet there are some striking cases, as
+ that of Viola, between the intercrossed plants of the same stock and the
+ self-fertilised, even in the first generation. The results most to be
+ trusted are those in which the productiveness of the plants was
+ ascertained by the number of capsules produced by an equal number of
+ plants, together with the actual or average number of seeds in each
+ capsule. Of such cases there are twelve in the table, and the mean of
+ their mean fertility is as 100 for the crossed plants, to 59 for the
+ self-fertilised plants. The Primulaceae seem eminently liable to suffer in
+ fertility from self-fertilisation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following short table, Table 9/E, includes four cases which have
+ already been partly given in the last table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 9/E.&mdash;INNATE FERTILITY OF PLANTS FROM A CROSS WITH A FRESH
+ STOCK, COMPARED WITH THAT OF INTERCROSSED PLANTS OF THE SAME STOCK, AND
+ WITH THAT OF SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS, ALL OF THE CORRESPONDING GENERATION.
+ FERTILITY JUDGED OF BY THE NUMBER OR WEIGHT OF SEEDS PRODUCED BY AN EQUAL
+ NUMBER OF PLANTS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Name of plant and feature observed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: Plants from a cross with a fresh stock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 3: Intercrossed plants of the same stock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 4: Self-fertilised plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mimulus luteus&mdash;the intercrossed plants are derived from a cross
+ between two plants of the 8th self-fertilised generation. The
+ self-fertilised plants belong to the 9th generation: 100 : 4 : 3.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eschscholtzia californica&mdash;the intercrossed and self-fertilised
+ plants belong to the 2nd generation: 100 : 45 : 40.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dianthus caryophyllus&mdash;the intercrossed plants are derived from
+ self-fertilised of the 3rd generation, crossed by intercrossed plants of
+ the 3rd generation. The self-fertilised plants belong to the 4th
+ generation: 100 : 45 : 33.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Petunia violacea&mdash;the intercrossed and self-fertilised plants belong
+ to the 5th generation: 100 : 54 : 46.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NB.&mdash;In the above cases, excepting in that of Eschscholtzia, the
+ plants derived from a cross with a fresh stock belong on the mother-side
+ to the same stock with the intercrossed and self-fertilised plants, and to
+ the corresponding generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These cases show us how greatly superior in innate fertility the seedlings
+ from plants self-fertilised or intercrossed for several generations and
+ then crossed by a fresh stock are, in comparison with the seedlings from
+ plants of the old stock, either intercrossed or self-fertilised for the
+ same number of generations. The three lots of plants in each case were
+ left freely exposed to the visits of insects, and their flowers without
+ doubt were cross-fertilised by them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Table 9/E further shows us that in all four cases the intercrossed plants
+ of the same stock still have a decided though small advantage in fertility
+ over the self-fertilised plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to the state of the reproductive organs in the
+ self-fertilised plants of Tables 9/D and 9/E, only a few observations were
+ made. In the seventh and eighth generation of Ipomoea, the anthers in the
+ flowers of the self-fertilised plants were plainly smaller than those in
+ the flowers of the intercrossed plants. The tendency to sterility in these
+ same plants was also shown by the first-formed flowers, after they had
+ been carefully fertilised, often dropping off, in the same manner as
+ frequently occurs with hybrids. The flowers likewise tended to be
+ monstrous. In the fourth generation of Petunia, the pollen produced by the
+ self-fertilised and intercrossed plants was compared, and they were far
+ more empty and shrivelled grains in the former.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RELATIVE FERTILITY OF FLOWERS CROSSED WITH POLLEN FROM A DISTINCT PLANT
+ AND WITH THEIR OWN POLLEN. THIS HEADING INCLUDES FLOWERS ON THE
+ PARENT-PLANTS, AND ON THE CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED SEEDLINGS OF THE
+ FIRST OR A SUCCEEDING GENERATION.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I will first treat of the parent-plants, which were raised from seeds
+ purchased from nursery-gardens, or taken from plants growing in my garden,
+ or growing wild, and surrounded in every case by many individuals of the
+ same species. Plants thus circumstanced will commonly have been
+ intercrossed by insects; so that the seedlings which were first
+ experimented on will generally have been the product of a cross.
+ Consequently any difference in the fertility of their flowers, when
+ crossed and self-fertilised, will have been caused by the nature of the
+ pollen employed; that is, whether it was taken from a distinct plant or
+ from the same flower. The degrees of fertility shown in Table 9/F, were
+ determined in each case by the average number of seeds per capsule,
+ ascertained either by counting or weighing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another element ought properly to have been taken into account, namely,
+ the proportion of flowers which yielded capsules when they were crossed
+ and self-fertilised; and as crossed flowers generally produce a larger
+ proportion of capsules, their superiority in fertility, if this element
+ had been taken into account, would have been much more strongly marked
+ than appears in Table 9/F. But had I thus acted, there would have been
+ greater liability to error, as pollen applied to the stigma at the wrong
+ time fails to produce any effect, independently of its greater or less
+ potency. A good illustration of the great difference in the results which
+ sometimes follows, if the number of capsules produced relatively to the
+ number of flowers fertilised be included in the calculation, was afforded
+ by Nolana prostrata. Thirty flowers on some plants of this species were
+ crossed and produced twenty-seven capsules, each containing five seeds;
+ thirty-two flowers on the same plants were self-fertilised and produced
+ only six capsules, each containing five seeds. As the number of seeds per
+ capsule is here the same, the fertility of the crossed and self-fertilised
+ flowers is given in Table 9/F as equal, or as 100 to 100. But if the
+ flowers which failed to produce capsules be included, the crossed flowers
+ yielded on an average 4.50 seeds, whilst the self-fertilised flowers
+ yielded only 0.94 seeds, so that their relative fertility would have been
+ as 100 to 21. I should here state that it has been found convenient to
+ reserve for separate discussion the cases of flowers which are usually
+ quite sterile with their own pollen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 9/f.&mdash;relative fertility of the flowers on the parent-plants
+ used in my experiments, when fertilised with pollen from a distinct plant
+ and with their own pollen. Fertility judged of by the average number of
+ seeds per capsule. Fertility of crossed flowers taken as 100.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Name of plant and feature observed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: x, in the expression 100 to x.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+ as (about): 100.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mimulus luteus&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as
+ (by weight): 79.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Linaria vulgaris&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+ as: 14.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vandellia nummularifolia&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded
+ seeds as: 67?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gesneria pendulina&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+ as (by weight): 100.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Salvia coccinea&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as
+ (about): 100.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Brassica oleracea&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+ as: 25.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eschscholtzia californica&mdash;(English stock) crossed and
+ self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as (by weight): 71.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eschscholtzia californica&mdash;(Brazilian stock grown in England) crossed
+ and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds (by weight) as (about): 15.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Delphinium consolida&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers
+ (self-fertilised capsules spontaneously produced, but result supported by
+ other evidence) yielded seeds as: 59.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Viscaria oculata&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+ as (by weight): 38.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Viscaria oculata&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers (crossed
+ capsules compared on following year with spontaneously self-fertilised
+ capsules) yielded seeds as : 58.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dianthus caryophyllus&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded
+ seeds as: 92.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tropaeolum minus&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+ as: 92.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tropaeolum tricolorum&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded
+ seeds as: 115. (9/1. Tropaeolum tricolorum and Cuphea purpurea have been
+ introduced into this table, although seedlings were not raised from them;
+ but of the Cuphea only six crossed and six self-fertilised capsules, and
+ of the Tropaeolum only six crossed and eleven self-fertilised capsules,
+ were compared. A larger proportion of the self-fertilised than of the
+ crossed flowers of the Tropaeolum produced fruit.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Limnanthes douglasii&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded
+ seeds as (about): 100.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sarothamnus scoparius&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded
+ seeds as: 41.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ononis minutissima&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+ as: 65.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cuphea purpurea&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+ as: 113.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Passiflora gracilis&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded
+ seeds as: 85.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Specularia speculum&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded
+ seeds as: 72.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lobelia fulgens&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as
+ (about): 100.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nemophila insignis&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+ as (by weight): 69.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Borago officinalis&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+ as: 60.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nolana prostrata&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+ as: 100.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Petunia violacea&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+ as (by weight): 67.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nicotiana tabacum&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+ as (by weight): 150.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyclamen persicum&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+ as: 38.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anagallis collina&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+ as: 96.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Canna warscewiczi&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers (on three
+ generations of crossed and self-fertilised plants taken all together)
+ yielded seeds as: 85.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Table 9/G gives the relative fertility of flowers on crossed plants again
+ cross-fertilised, and of flowers on self-fertilised plants again
+ self-fertilised, either in the first or in a later generation. Here two
+ causes combine to diminish the fertility of the self-fertilised flowers;
+ namely, the lesser efficacy of pollen from the same flower, and the innate
+ lessened fertility of plants derived from self-fertilised seeds, which as
+ we have seen in the previous Table 9/D is strongly marked. The fertility
+ was determined in the same manner as in Table 9/F, that is, by the average
+ number of seeds per capsule; and the same remarks as before, with respect
+ to the different proportion of flowers which set capsules when they are
+ cross-fertilised and self-fertilised, are here likewise applicable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TABLE 9/G.&mdash;RELATIVE FERTILITY OF FLOWERS ON CROSSED AND
+ SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FIRST OR SOME SUCCEEDING GENERATION; THE
+ FORMER BEING AGAIN FERTILISED WITH POLLEN FROM A DISTINCT PLANT, AND THE
+ LATTER AGAIN WITH THEIR OWN POLLEN. FERTILITY JUDGED OF BY THE AVERAGE
+ NUMBER OF SEEDS PER CAPSULE. FERTILITY OF CROSSED FLOWERS TAKEN AS 100.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Name of plant and feature observed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: x, in the expression, 100 to x.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed
+ and self-fertilised plants of the first generation yielded seeds as: 93.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed
+ and self-fertilised plants of the 3rd generation yielded seeds as: 94.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed
+ and self-fertilised plants of the 4th generation yielded seeds as: 94.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ipomoea purpurea&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed
+ and self-fertilised plants of the 5th generation yielded seeds as: 107.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mimulus luteus&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed
+ and self-fertilised plants of the 3rd generation yielded seeds as (by
+ weight): 65.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mimulus luteus&mdash;same plants of the 3rd generation treated in the same
+ manner on the following year yielded seeds as (by weight): 34.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mimulus luteus&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed
+ and self-fertilised plants of the 4th generation yielded seeds as (by
+ weight): 40.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Viola tricolor&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed
+ and self-fertilised plants of the 1st generation yielded seeds as: 69.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dianthus caryophyllus&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the
+ crossed and self-fertilised plants of the 1st generation yielded seeds as:
+ 65.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dianthus caryophyllus&mdash;flowers on self-fertilised plants of the 3rd
+ generation crossed by intercrossed plants, and other flowers again
+ self-fertilised yielded seeds as: 97.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dianthus caryophyllus&mdash;flowers on self-fertilised plants of the 3rd
+ generation crossed by a fresh stock, and other flowers again
+ self-fertilised yielded seeds as: 127.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lathytus odoratus&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed
+ and self-fertilised plants of the 1st generation yielded seeds as: 65.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lobelia ramosa&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed
+ and self-fertilised plants of the 1st generation yielded seeds as (by
+ weight): 60.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Petunia violacea&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed
+ and self-fertilised plants of the 1st generation yielded seeds as (by
+ weight): 68.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Petunia violacea&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed
+ and self-fertilised plants of the 4th generation yielded seeds as (by
+ weight): 72.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Petunia violacea&mdash;flowers on self-fertilised plants of the 4th
+ generation crossed by a fresh stock, and other flowers again
+ self-fertilised yielded seeds as (by weight): 48.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nicotiana tabacum&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed
+ and self-fertilised plants of the 1st generation yielded seeds as (by
+ weight): 97.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nicotiana tabacum&mdash;flowers on self-fertilised plants of the 2nd
+ generation crossed by intercrossed plants, and other flowers again
+ self-fertilised yielded seeds as (by estimation): 110.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nicotiana tabacum&mdash;flowers on self-fertilised plants of the 3rd
+ generation crossed by a fresh stock, and other flowers again
+ self-fertilised yielded seeds as (by estimation): 110.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anagallis collina&mdash;flowers on red variety crossed by a blue variety,
+ and other flowers on the red variety self-fertilised yielded seeds as: 48.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Canna warscewiczi&mdash;crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed
+ and self-fertilised plants of three generations taken together yielded
+ seeds as: 85.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As both these tables relate to the fertility of flowers fertilised by
+ pollen from another plant and by their own pollen, they may be considered
+ together. The difference between them consists in the self-fertilised
+ flowers in Table 9/G, being produced by self-fertilised parents, and the
+ crossed flowers by crossed parents, which in the later generations had
+ become somewhat closely inter-related, and had been subjected all the time
+ to nearly the same conditions. These two tables include fifty cases
+ relating to thirty-two species. The flowers on many other species were
+ crossed and self-fertilised, but as only a few were thus treated, the
+ results cannot be trusted, as far as fertility is concerned, and are not
+ here given. Some other cases have been rejected, as the plants were in an
+ unhealthy condition. If we look to the figures in the two tables
+ expressing the ratios between the mean relative fertility of the crossed
+ and self-fertilised flowers, we see that in a majority of cases (i.e., in
+ thirty-five out of fifty) flowers fertilised by pollen from a distinct
+ plant yield more, sometimes many more, seeds than flowers fertilised with
+ their own pollen; and they commonly set a larger proportion of capsules.
+ The degree of infertility of the self-fertilised flowers differs extremely
+ in the different species, and even, as we shall see in the section on
+ self-sterile plants, in the individuals of the same species, as well as
+ under slightly changed conditions of life. Their fertility ranges from
+ zero to fertility equalling that of the crossed flowers; and of this fact
+ no explanation can be offered. There are fifteen cases in the two tables
+ in which the number of seeds per capsule produced by the self-fertilised
+ flowers equals or even exceeds that yielded by the crossed flowers. Some
+ few of these cases are, I believe, accidental; that is, would not recur on
+ a second trial. This was apparently the case with the plants of the fifth
+ generation of Ipomoea, and in one of the experiments with Dianthus.
+ Nicotiana offers the most anomalous case of any, as the self-fertilised
+ flowers on the parent-plants, and on their descendants of the second and
+ third generations, produced more seeds than did the crossed flowers; but
+ we shall recur to this case when we treat of highly self-fertile
+ varieties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It might have been expected that the difference in fertility between the
+ crossed and self-fertilised flowers would have been more strongly marked
+ in Table 9/G, in which the plants of one set were derived from
+ self-fertilised parents, than in Table 9/F, in which flowers on the
+ parent-plants were self-fertilised for the first time. But this is not the
+ case, as far as my scanty materials allow of any judgment. There is
+ therefore no evidence at present, that the fertility of plants goes on
+ diminishing in successive self-fertilised generations, although there is
+ some rather weak evidence that this does occur with respect to their
+ height or growth. But we should bear in mind that in the later generations
+ the crossed plants had become more or less closely inter-related, and had
+ been subjected all the time to nearly uniform conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is remarkable that there is no close correspondence, either in the
+ parent-plants or in the successive generations, between the relative
+ number of seeds produced by the crossed and self-fertilised flowers, and
+ the relative powers of growth of the seedlings raised from such seeds.
+ Thus, the crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the parent-plants of
+ Ipomoea, Gesneria, Salvia, Limnanthes, Lobelia fulgens, and Nolana
+ produced a nearly equal number of seeds, yet the plants raised from the
+ crossed seeds exceeded considerably in height those raised from the
+ self-fertilised seeds. The crossed flowers of Linaria and Viscaria yielded
+ far more seeds than the self-fertilised flowers; and although the plants
+ raised from the former were taller than those from the latter, they were
+ not so in any corresponding degree. With Nicotiana the flowers fertilised
+ with their own pollen were more productive than those crossed with pollen
+ from a slightly different variety; yet the plants raised from the latter
+ seeds were much taller, heavier, and more hardy than those raised from the
+ self-fertilised seeds. On the other hand, the crossed seedlings of
+ Eschscholtzia were neither taller nor heavier than the self-fertilised,
+ although the crossed flowers were far more productive than the
+ self-fertilised. But the best evidence of a want of correspondence between
+ the number of seeds produced by crossed and self-fertilised flowers, and
+ the vigour of the offspring raised from them, is afforded by the plants of
+ the Brazilian and European stocks of Eschscholtzia, and likewise by
+ certain individual plants of Reseda odorata; for it might have been
+ expected that the seedlings from plants, the flowers of which were
+ excessively self-sterile, would have profited in a greater degree by a
+ cross, than the seedlings from plants which were moderately or fully
+ self-fertile, and therefore apparently had no need to be crossed. But no
+ such result followed in either case: for instance, the crossed and
+ self-fertilised offspring from a highly self-fertile plant of Reseda
+ odorata were in average height to each other as 100 to 82; whereas the
+ similar offspring from an excessively self-sterile plant were as 100 to 92
+ in average height.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to the innate fertility of the plants of crossed and
+ self-fertilised parentage, given in the previous Table 9/D&mdash;that is,
+ the number of seeds produced by both lots when their flowers were
+ fertilised in the same manner,&mdash;nearly the same remarks are
+ applicable, in reference to the absence of any close correspondence
+ between their fertility and powers of growth, as in the case of the plants
+ in the Tables 9/F and 9/G, just considered. Thus the crossed and
+ self-fertilised plants of Ipomoea, Papaver, Reseda odorata, and Limnanthes
+ were almost equally fertile, yet the former exceeded considerably in
+ height the self-fertilised plants. On the other hand, the crossed and
+ self-fertilised plants of Mimulus and Primula differed to an extreme
+ degree in innate fertility, but by no means to a corresponding degree in
+ height or vigour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all the cases of self-fertilised flowers included in Tables 9/E, 9/F,
+ and 9/G, these were fertilised with their own pollen; but there is another
+ form of self-fertilisation, namely, by pollen from other flowers on the
+ same plant; but this latter method made no difference in comparison with
+ the former in the number of seeds produced, or only a slight difference.
+ Neither with Digitalis nor Dianthus were more seeds produced by the one
+ method than by the other, to any trustworthy degree. With Ipomoea rather
+ more seeds, in the proportion of 100 to 91, were produced from a crossed
+ between flowers on the same plant than from strictly self-fertilised
+ flowers; but I have reason to suspect that the result was accidental. With
+ Origanum vulgare, however, a cross between flowers on plants propagated by
+ stolons from the same stock certainly increased slightly their fertility.
+ This likewise occurred, as we shall see in the next section, with
+ Eschscholtzia, perhaps with Corydalis cava and Oncidium; but not so with
+ Bignonia, Abutilon, Tabernaemontana, Senecio, and apparently Reseda
+ odorata.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ SELF-STERILE PLANTS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The cases here to be described might have been introduced in Table 9/F,
+ which gives the relative fertility of flowers fertilised with their own
+ pollen, and with that from a distinct plant, but it has been found more
+ convenient to keep them for separate discussion. The present cases must
+ not be confounded with those to be given in the next chapter relatively to
+ flowers which are sterile when insects are excluded; for such sterility
+ depends not merely on the flowers being incapable of fertilisation with
+ their own pollen, but on mechanical causes, by which their pollen is
+ prevented from reaching the stigma, or on the pollen and stigma of the
+ same flower being matured at different periods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the seventeenth chapter of my &lsquo;Variation of Animals and Plants under
+ Domestication&rsquo; I had occasion to enter fully on the present subject; and I
+ will therefore here give only a brief abstract of the cases there
+ described, but others must be added, as they have an important bearing on
+ the present work. Kolreuter long ago described plants of Verbascum
+ phoeniceum which during two years were sterile with their own pollen, but
+ were easily fertilised by that of four other species; these plants however
+ afterwards became more or less self-fertile in a strangely fluctuating
+ manner. Mr. Scott also found that this species, as well as two of its
+ varieties, were self-sterile, as did Gartner in the case of Verbascum
+ nigrum. So it was, according to this latter author, with two plants of
+ Lobelia fulgens, though the pollen and ovules of both were in an efficient
+ state in relation to other species. Five species of Passiflora and certain
+ individuals of a sixth species have been found sterile with their own
+ pollen; but slight changes in their conditions, such as being grafted on
+ another stock or a change of temperature, rendered them self-fertile.
+ Flowers on a completely self-impotent plant of Passiflora alata fertilised
+ with pollen from its own self-impotent seedlings were quite fertile. Mr.
+ Scott, and afterwards Mr. Munro, found that some species of Oncidium and
+ of Maxillaria cultivated in a hothouse in Edinburgh were quite sterile
+ with their own pollen; and Fritz Muller found this to be the case with a
+ large number of Orchidaceous genera growing in their native home of South
+ Brazil. (9/2. &lsquo;Botanische Zeitung&rsquo; 1868 page 114.) He also discovered that
+ the pollen-masses of some orchids acted on their own stigmas like a
+ poison; and it appears that Gartner formerly observed indications of this
+ extraordinary fact in the case of some other plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fritz Muller also states that a species of Bignonia and Tabernaemontana
+ echinata are both sterile with their own pollen in their native country of
+ Brazil. (9/3. Ibid 1868 page 626 and 1870 page 274.) Several
+ Amaryllidaceous and Liliaceous plants are in the same predicament.
+ Hildebrand observed with care Corydalis cava, and found it completely
+ self-sterile (9/4. &lsquo;Report of the International Horticultural Congress&rsquo;
+ 1866.); but according to Caspary a few self-fertilised seeds are
+ occasionally produced: Corydalis halleri is only slightly self-sterile,
+ and C. intermedia not at all so. (9/5. &lsquo;Botanische Zeitung&rsquo; June 27,
+ 1873.) In another Fumariaceous genus, Hypecoum, Hildebrand observed that
+ H. grandiflorum was highly self-sterile, whilst H. procumbens was fairly
+ self-fertile. (9/6. &lsquo;Jahrb. fur wiss. Botanik&rsquo; B. 7 page 464.) Thunbergia
+ alata kept by me in a warm greenhouse was self-sterile early in the
+ season, but at a later period produced many spontaneously self-fertilised
+ fruits. So it was with Papaver vagum: another species, P. alpinum, was
+ found by Professor H. Hoffmann to be quite self-sterile excepting on one
+ occasion (9/7. &lsquo;Zur Speciesfrage&rsquo; 1875 page 47.); whilst P. somniferum has
+ been with me always completely self-sterile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eschscholtzia californica.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This species deserves a fuller consideration. A plant cultivated by Fritz
+ Muller in South Brazil happened to flower a month before any of the
+ others, and it did not produce a single capsule. This led him to make
+ further observations during the next six generations, and he found that
+ all his plants were completely sterile, unless they were crossed by
+ insects or were artificially fertilised with pollen from a distinct plant,
+ in which case they were completely fertile. (9/8. &lsquo;Botanische Zeitung&rsquo;
+ 1868 page 115 and 1869 page 223.) I was much surprised at this fact, as I
+ had found that English plants, when covered by a net, set a considerable
+ number of capsules; and that these contained seeds by weight, compared
+ with those on plants intercrossed by the bees, as 71 to 100. Professor
+ Hildebrand, however, found this species much more self-sterile in Germany
+ than it was with me in England, for the capsules produced by
+ self-fertilised flowers, compared with those from intercrossed flowers,
+ contained seeds in the ratio of only 11 to 100. At my request Fritz Muller
+ sent me from Brazil seeds of his self-sterile plants, from which I raised
+ seedlings. Two of these were covered with a net, and one produced
+ spontaneously only a single capsule containing no good seeds, but yet,
+ when artificially fertilised with its own pollen, produced a few capsules.
+ The other plant produced spontaneously under the net eight capsules, one
+ of which contained no less than thirty seeds, and on an average about ten
+ seeds per capsule. Eight flowers on these two plants were artificially
+ self-fertilised, and produced seven capsules, containing on an average
+ twelve seeds; eight other flowers were fertilised with pollen from a
+ distinct plant of the Brazilian stock, and produced eight capsules,
+ containing on an average about eighty seeds: this gives a ratio of 15
+ seeds for the self-fertilised capsules to 100 for the crossed capsules.
+ Later in the season twelve other flowers on these two plants were
+ artificially self-fertilised; but they yielded only two capsules,
+ containing three and six seeds. It appears therefore that a lower
+ temperature than that of Brazil favours the self-fertility of this plant,
+ whilst a still lower temperature lessens it. As soon as the two plants
+ which had been covered by the net were uncovered, they were visited by
+ many bees,and it was interesting to observe how quickly they became, even
+ the more sterile plant of the two, covered with young capsules. On the
+ following year eight flowers on plants of the Brazilian stock of
+ self-fertilised parentage (i.e., grandchildren of the plants which grew in
+ Brazil) were again self-fertilised, and produced five capsules, containing
+ on an average 27.4 seeds, with a maximum in one of forty-two seeds; so
+ that their self-fertility had evidently increased greatly by being reared
+ for two generations in England. On the whole we may conclude that plants
+ of the Brazilian stock are much more self-fertile in this country than in
+ Brazil, and less so than plants of the English stock in England; so that
+ the plants of Brazilian parentage retained by inheritance some of their
+ former sexual constitution. Conversely, seeds from English plants sent by
+ me to Fritz Muller and grown in Brazil, were much more self-fertile than
+ his plants which had been cultivated there for several generations; but he
+ informs me that one of the plants of English parentage which did not
+ flower the first year, and was thus exposed for two seasons to the climate
+ of Brazil, proved quite self-sterile, like a Brazilian plant, showing how
+ quickly the climate had acted on its sexual constitution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Abutilon darwinii.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeds of this plant were sent me by Fritz Muller, who found it, as well as
+ some other species of the same genus, quite sterile in its native home of
+ South Brazil, unless fertilised with pollen from a distinct plant, either
+ artificially or naturally by humming-birds. (9/9. &lsquo;Jenaische Zeitschr. fur
+ Naturwiss&rsquo; B. 7 1872 page 22 and 1873 page 441.) Several plants were
+ raised from these seeds and kept in the hothouse. They produced flowers
+ very early in the spring, and twenty of them were fertilised, some with
+ pollen from the same flower, and some with pollen from other flowers on
+ the same plants; but not a single capsule was thus produced, yet the
+ stigmas twenty-seven hours after the application of the pollen were
+ penetrated by the pollen-tubes. At the same time nineteen flowers were
+ crossed with pollen from a distinct plant, and these produced thirteen
+ capsules, all abounding with fine seeds. A greater number of capsules
+ would have been produced by the cross, had not some of the nineteen
+ flowers been on a plant which was afterwards proved to be from some
+ unknown cause completely sterile with pollen of any kind. Thus far these
+ plants behaved exactly like those in Brazil; but later in the season, in
+ the latter part of May and in June, they began to produce under a net a
+ few spontaneously self-fertilised capsules. As soon as this occurred,
+ sixteen flowers were fertilised with their own pollen, and these produced
+ five capsules, containing on an average 3.4 seeds. At the same time I
+ selected by chance four capsules from the uncovered plants growing close
+ by, the flowers of which I had seen visited by humble-bees, and these
+ contained on an average 21.5 seeds; so that the seeds in the naturally
+ intercrossed capsules to those in the self-fertilised capsules were as 100
+ to 16. The interesting point in this case is that these plants, which were
+ unnaturally treated by being grown in pots in a hothouse, under another
+ hemisphere, with a complete reversal of the seasons, were thus rendered
+ slightly self-fertile, whereas they seem always to be completely
+ self-sterile in their native home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Senecio cruentus (greenhouse varieties, commonly called Cinerarias,
+ probably derived from several fruticose or herbaceous species much
+ intercrossed (9/10. I am much obliged to Mr. Moore and to Mr. Thiselton
+ Dyer for giving me information with respect to the varieties on which I
+ experimented. Mr. Moore believes that Senecio cruentas, tussilaginis, and
+ perhaps heritieri, maderensis and populifolius have all been more or less
+ blended together in our Cinerarias.))
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two purple-flowered varieties were placed under a net in the greenhouse,
+ and four corymbs on each were repeatedly brushed with flowers from the
+ other plant, so that their stigmas were well covered with each other&rsquo;s
+ pollen. Two of the eight corymbs thus treated produced very few seeds, but
+ the other six produced on an average 41.3 seeds per corymb, and these
+ germinated well. The stigmas on four other corymbs on both plants were
+ well smeared with pollen from the flowers on their own corymbs; these
+ eight corymbs produced altogether ten extremely poor seeds, which proved
+ incapable of germinating. I examined many flowers on both plants, and
+ found the stigmas spontaneously covered with pollen; but they produced not
+ a single seed. These plants were afterwards left uncovered in the same
+ house where many other Cinerarias were in flower; and the flowers were
+ frequently visited by bees. They then produced plenty of seed, but one of
+ the two plants less than the other, as this species shows some tendency to
+ be dioecious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The trial was repeated on another variety with white petals tipped with
+ red. Many stigmas on two corymbs were covered with pollen from the
+ foregoing purple variety, and these produced eleven and twenty-two seeds,
+ which germinated well. A large number of the stigmas on several of the
+ other corymbs were repeatedly smeared with pollen from their own corymb;
+ but they yielded only five very poor seeds, which were incapable of
+ germination. Therefore the above three plants belonging to two varieties,
+ though growing vigorously and fertile with pollen from either of the other
+ two plants, were utterly sterile with pollen from other flowers on the
+ same plant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reseda odorata.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having observed that certain individuals were self-sterile, I covered
+ during the summer of 1868 seven plants under separate nets, and will call
+ these plants A, B, C, D, E, F, G. They all appeared to be quite sterile
+ with their own pollen, but fertile with that of any other plant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fourteen flowers on A were crossed with pollen from B or C, and produced
+ thirteen fine capsules. Sixteen flowers were fertilised with pollen from
+ other flowers on the same plant, but yielded not a single capsule.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fourteen flowers on B were crossed with pollen from A, C or D, and all
+ produced capsules; some of these were not very fine, yet they contained
+ plenty of seeds. Eighteen flowers were fertilised with pollen from other
+ flowers on the same plant, and produced not one capsule.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ten flowers on C were crossed with pollen from A, B, D or E, and produced
+ nine fine capsules. Nineteen flowers were fertilised with pollen from
+ other flowers on the same plant, and produced no capsules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ten flowers on D were crossed with pollen from A, B, C or E, and produced
+ nine fine capsules. Eighteen flowers were fertilised with pollen from
+ other flowers on the same plant, and produced no capsules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seven flowers on E were crossed with pollen from A, C, or D, and all
+ produced fine capsules. Eight flowers were fertilised with pollen from
+ other flowers on the same plant, and produced no capsules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the plants F and G no flowers were crossed, but very many (number not
+ recorded) were fertilised with pollen from other flowers on the same
+ plants, and these did not produce a single capsule.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We thus see that fifty-five flowers on five of the above plants were
+ reciprocally crossed in various ways; several flowers on each of these
+ plants being fertilised with pollen from several of the other plants.
+ These fifty-five flowers produced fifty-two capsules, almost all of which
+ were of full size and contained an abundance of seeds. On the other hand,
+ seventy-nine flowers (besides many others not recorded) were fertilised
+ with pollen from other flowers on the same plants, and these did not
+ produce a single capsule. In one case in which I examined the stigmas of
+ the flowers fertilised with their own pollen, these were penetrated by the
+ pollen-tubes, although such penetration produced no effect. Pollen falls
+ generally, and I believe always, from the anthers on the stigmas of the
+ same flower; yet only three out of the above seven protected plants
+ produced spontaneously any capsules, and these it might have been thought
+ must have been self-fertilised. There were altogether seven such capsules;
+ but as they were all seated close to the artificially crossed flowers, I
+ can hardly doubt that a few grains of foreign pollen had accidentally
+ fallen on their stigmas. Besides the above seven plants, four others were
+ kept covered under the SAME large net; and some of these produced here and
+ there in the most capricious manner little groups of capsules; and this
+ makes me believe that a bee, many of which settled on the outside of the
+ net, being attracted by the odour, had on some one occasion found an
+ entrance, and had intercrossed a few of the flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the spring of 1869 four plants raised from fresh seeds were carefully
+ protected under separate nets; and now the result was widely different to
+ what it was before. Three of these protected plants became actually loaded
+ with capsules, especially during the early part of the summer; and this
+ fact indicates that temperature produces some effect, but the experiment
+ given in the following paragraph shows that the innate constitution of the
+ plant is a far more important element. The fourth plant produced only a
+ few capsules, many of them of small size; yet it was far more self-fertile
+ than any of the seven plants tried during the previous year. The flowers
+ on four small branches of this semi-self-sterile plant were smeared with
+ pollen from one of the other plants, and they all produced fine capsules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I was much surprised at the difference in the results of the trials
+ made during the two previous years, six fresh plants were protected by
+ separate nets in the year 1870. Two of these proved almost completely
+ self-sterile, for on carefully searching them I found only three small
+ capsules, each containing either one or two seeds of small size, which,
+ however, germinated. A few flowers on both these plants were reciprocally
+ fertilised with each other&rsquo;s pollen, and a few with pollen from one of the
+ following self-fertile plants, and all these flowers produced fine
+ capsules. The four other plants whilst still remaining protected beneath
+ the nets presented a wonderful contrast (though one of them in a somewhat
+ less degree than the others), for they became actually covered with
+ spontaneously self-fertilised capsules, as numerous as, or very nearly so,
+ and as fine as those on the unprotected plants growing near.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The above three spontaneously self-fertilised capsules produced by the two
+ almost completely self-sterile plants, contained altogether five seeds;
+ and from these I raised in the following year (1871) five plants, which
+ were kept under separate nets. They grew to an extraordinarily large size,
+ and on August 29th were examined. At first sight they appeared entirely
+ destitute of capsules; but on carefully searching their many branches, two
+ or three capsules were found on three of the plants, half-a-dozen on the
+ fourth, and about eighteen on the fifth plant. But all these capsules were
+ small, some being empty; the greater number contained only a single seed,
+ and very rarely more than one. After this examination the nets were taken
+ off, and the bees immediately carried pollen from one of these almost
+ self-sterile plants to the other, for no other plants grew near. After a
+ few weeks the ends of the branches on all five plants became covered with
+ capsules, presenting a curious contrast with the lower and naked parts of
+ the same long branches. These five plants therefore inherited almost
+ exactly the same sexual constitution as their parents; and without doubt a
+ self-sterile race of Mignonette could have been easily established.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reseda lutea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Plants of this species were raised from seeds gathered from a group of
+ wild plants growing at no great distance from my garden. After casually
+ observing that some of these plants were self-sterile, two plants taken by
+ hazard were protected under separate nets. One of these soon became
+ covered with spontaneously self-fertilised capsules, as numerous as those
+ on the surrounding unprotected plants; so that it was evidently quite
+ self-fertile. The other plant was partially self-sterile, producing very
+ few capsules, many of which were of small size. When, however, this plant
+ had grown tall, the uppermost branches became pressed against the net and
+ grew crooked, and in this position the bees were able to suck the flowers
+ through the meshes, and brought pollen to them from the neighbouring
+ plants. These branches then became loaded with capsules; the other and
+ lower branches remaining almost bare. The sexual constitution of this
+ species is therefore similar to that of Reseda odorata.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CONCLUDING REMARKS ON SELF-STERILE PLANTS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ In order to favour as far as possible the self-fertilisation of some of
+ the foregoing plants, all the flowers on Reseda odorata and some of those
+ on the Abutilon were fertilised with pollen from other flowers on the same
+ plant, instead of with their own pollen, and in the case of the Senecio
+ with pollen from other flowers on the same corymb; but this made no
+ difference in the result. Fritz Muller tried both kinds of
+ self-fertilisation in the case of Bignonia, Tabernaemontana and Abutilon,
+ likewise with no difference in the result. With Eschscholtzia, however, he
+ found that pollen from other flowers on the same plant was a little more
+ effective than pollen from the same flower. So did Hildebrand in Germany;
+ as thirteen out of fourteen flowers of Eschscholtzia thus fertilised set
+ capsules, these containing on an average 9.5 seeds; whereas only fourteen
+ flowers out of twenty-one fertilised with their own pollen set capsules,
+ these containing on an average 9.0 seeds. (9/11. &lsquo;Pringsheim&rsquo;s Jahrbuch
+ fur wiss. Botanik&rsquo; 7 page 467.) Hildebrand found a trace of a similar
+ difference with Corydalis cava, as did Fritz Muller with an Oncidium.
+ (9/12. &lsquo;Variation under Domestication&rsquo; chapter 17 2nd edition volume 2
+ pages 113-115.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In considering the several cases above given of complete or almost
+ complete self-sterility, we are first struck with their wide distribution
+ throughout the vegetable kingdom. Their number is not at present large,
+ for they can be discovered only by protecting plants from insects and then
+ fertilising them with pollen from another plant of the same species and
+ with their own pollen; and the latter must be proved to be in an efficient
+ state by other trials. Unless all this be done, it is impossible to know
+ whether their self-sterility may not be due to the male or female
+ reproductive organs, or to both, having been affected by changed
+ conditions of life. As in the course of my experiments I have found three
+ new cases, and as Fritz Muller has observed indications of several others,
+ it is probable that they will hereafter be proved to be far from rare.
+ (9/13. Mr. Wilder, the editor of a horticultural journal in the United
+ States quoted in &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo; 1868 page 1286, states that Lilium
+ auratum, Impatiens pallida and fulva, and Forsythia viridissima, cannot be
+ fertilised with their own pollen.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As with plants of the same species and parentage, some individuals are
+ self-sterile and others self-fertile, of which fact Reseda odorata offers
+ the most striking instances, it is not at all surprising that species of
+ the same genus differ in this same manner. Thus Verbascum phoeniceum and
+ nigrum are self-sterile, whilst V. thapsus and lychnitis are quite
+ self-fertile, as I know by trial. There is the same difference between
+ some of the species of Papaver, Corydalis, and of other genera.
+ Nevertheless, the tendency to self-sterility certainly runs to a certain
+ extent in groups, as we see in the genus Passiflora, and with the Vandeae
+ amongst Orchids.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Self-sterility differs much in degree in different plants. In those
+ extraordinary cases in which pollen from the same flower acts on the
+ stigma like a poison, it is almost certain that the plants would never
+ yield a single self-fertilised seed. Other plants, like Corydalis cava,
+ occasionally, though very rarely, produce a few self-fertilised seeds. A
+ large number of species, as may be seen in Table 9/F, are less fertile
+ with their own pollen than with that from another plant; and lastly, some
+ species are perfectly self-fertile. Even with the individuals of the same
+ species, as just remarked, some are utterly self-sterile, others
+ moderately so, and some perfectly self-fertile. The cause, whatever it may
+ be, which renders many plants more or less sterile with their own pollen,
+ that is, when they are self-fertilised, must be different, at least to a
+ certain extent, from that which determines the difference in height,
+ vigour, and fertility of the seedlings raised from self-fertilised and
+ crossed seeds; for we have already seen that the two classes of cases do
+ not by any means run parallel. This want of parallelism would be
+ intelligible, if it could be shown that self-sterility depended solely on
+ the incapacity of the pollen-tubes to penetrate the stigma of the same
+ flower deeply enough to reach the ovules; whilst the greater or less
+ vigorous growth of the seedlings no doubt depends on the nature of the
+ contents of the pollen-grains and ovules. Now it is certain that with some
+ plants the stigmatic secretion does not properly excite the pollen-grains,
+ so that the tubes are not properly developed, if the pollen is taken from
+ the same flower. This is the case according to Fritz Muller with
+ Eschscholtzia, for he found that the pollen-tubes did not penetrate the
+ stigma deeply; and with the Orchidaceous genus Notylia they failed
+ altogether to penetrate it. (9/14. &lsquo;Botanische Zeitung&rsquo; 1868 pages 114,
+ 115.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With dimorphic and trimorphic species, an illegitimate union between
+ plants of the same form presents the closest analogy with
+ self-fertilisation, whilst a legitimate union closely resembles
+ cross-fertilisation; and here again the lessened fertility or complete
+ sterility of an illegitimate union depends, at least in part, on the
+ incapacity for interaction between the pollen-grains and stigma. Thus with
+ Linum grandiflorum, as I have elsewhere shown, not more than two or three
+ out of hundreds of pollen-grains, either of the long-styled or
+ short-styled form, when placed on the stigma of their own form, emit their
+ tubes, and these do not penetrate deeply; nor does the stigma itself
+ change colour, as occurs when it is legitimately fertilised. (9/15.
+ &lsquo;Journal of the Linnean Society Botany&rsquo; volume 7 1863 pages 73-75.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand the difference in innate fertility, as well as in growth
+ between plants raised from crossed and self-fertilised seeds, and the
+ difference in fertility and growth between the legitimate and illegitimate
+ offspring of dimorphic and trimorphic plants, must depend on some
+ incompatibility between the sexual elements contained within the
+ pollen-grains and ovules, as it is through their union that new organisms
+ are developed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we now turn to the more immediate cause of self-sterility, we clearly
+ see that in most cases it is determined by the conditions to which the
+ plants have been subjected. Thus Eschscholtzia is completely self-sterile
+ in the hot climate of Brazil, but is perfectly fertile there with the
+ pollen of any other individual. The offspring of Brazilian plants became
+ in England in a single generation partially self-fertile, and still more
+ so in the second generation. Conversely, the offspring of English plants,
+ after growing for two seasons in Brazil, became in the first generation
+ quite self-sterile. Again, Abutilon darwinii, which is self-sterile in its
+ native home of Brazil, became moderately self-fertile in a single
+ generation in an English hothouse. Some other plants are self-sterile
+ during the early part of the year, and later in the season become
+ self-fertile. Passiflora alata lost its self-sterility when grafted on
+ another species. With Reseda, however, in which some individuals of the
+ same parentage are self-sterile and others are self-fertile, we are forced
+ in our ignorance to speak of the cause as due to spontaneous variability;
+ but we should remember that the progenitors of these plants, either on the
+ male or female side, may have been exposed to somewhat different
+ conditions. The power of the environment thus to affect so readily and in
+ so peculiar a manner the reproductive organs, is a fact which has many
+ important bearings; and I have therefore thought the foregoing details
+ worth giving. For instance, the sterility of many animals and plants under
+ changed conditions of life, such as confinement, evidently comes within
+ the same general principle of the sexual system being easily affected by
+ the environment. It has already been proved, that a cross between plants
+ which have been self-fertilised or intercrossed during several
+ generations, having been kept all the time under closely similar
+ conditions, does not benefit the offspring; and on the other hand, that a
+ cross between plants that have been subjected to different conditions
+ benefits the offspring to an extraordinary degree. We may therefore
+ conclude that some degree of differentiation in the sexual system is
+ necessary for the full fertility of the parent-plants and for the full
+ vigour of their offspring. It seems also probable that with those plants
+ which are capable of complete self-fertilisation, the male and female
+ elements and organs already differ to an extent sufficient to excite their
+ mutual interaction; but that when such plants are taken to another
+ country, and become in consequence self-sterile, their sexual elements and
+ organs are so acted on as to be rendered too uniform for such interaction,
+ like those of a self-fertilised plant long cultivated under the same
+ conditions. Conversely, we may further infer that plants which are
+ self-sterile in their native country, but become self-fertile under
+ changed conditions, have their sexual elements so acted on, that they
+ become sufficiently differentiated for mutual interaction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We know that self-fertilised seedlings are inferior in many respects to
+ those from a cross; and as with plants in a state of nature pollen from
+ the same flower can hardly fail to be often left by insects or by the wind
+ on the stigma, it seems at first sight highly probable that self-sterility
+ has been gradually acquired through natural selection in order to prevent
+ self-fertilisation. It is no valid objection to this belief that the
+ structure of some flowers, and the dichogamous condition of many others,
+ suffice to prevent the pollen reaching the stigma of the same flower; for
+ we should remember that with most species many flowers expand at the same
+ time, and that pollen from the same plant is equally injurious or nearly
+ so as that from the same flower. Nevertheless, the belief that
+ self-sterility is a quality which has been gradually acquired for the
+ special purpose of preventing self-fertilisation must, I believe, be
+ rejected. In the first place, there is no close correspondence in degree
+ between the sterility of the parent-plants when self-fertilised, and the
+ extent to which their offspring suffer in vigour by this process; and some
+ such correspondence might have been expected if self-sterility had been
+ acquired on account of the injury caused by self-fertilisation. The fact
+ of individuals of the same parentage differing greatly in their degree of
+ self-sterility is likewise opposed to such a belief; unless, indeed, we
+ suppose that certain individuals have been rendered self-sterile to favour
+ intercrossing, whilst other individuals have been rendered self-fertile to
+ ensure the propagation of the species. The fact of self-sterile
+ individuals appearing only occasionally, as in the case of Lobelia, does
+ not countenance this latter view. But the strongest argument against the
+ belief that self-sterility has been acquired to prevent
+ self-fertilisation, is the immediate and powerful effect of changed
+ conditions in either causing or in removing self-sterility. We are not
+ therefore justified in admitting that this peculiar state of the
+ reproductive system has been gradually acquired through natural selection;
+ but we must look at it as an incidental result, dependent on the
+ conditions to which the plants have been subjected, like the ordinary
+ sterility caused in the case of animals by confinement, and in the case of
+ plants by too much manure, heat, etc. I do not, however, wish to maintain
+ that self-sterility may not sometimes be of service to a plant in
+ preventing self-fertilisation; but there are so many other means by which
+ this result might be prevented or rendered difficult, including as we
+ shall see in the next chapter the prepotency of pollen from a distinct
+ individual over a plant&rsquo;s own pollen, that self-sterility seems an almost
+ superfluous acquirement for this purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, the most interesting point in regard to self-sterile plants is
+ the evidence which they afford of the advantage, or rather of the
+ necessity, of some degree or kind of differentiation in the sexual
+ elements, in order that they should unite and give birth to a new being.
+ It was ascertained that the five plants of Reseda odorata which were
+ selected by chance, could be perfectly fertilised by pollen taken from any
+ one of them, but not by their own pollen; and a few additional trials were
+ made with some other individuals, which I have not thought worth
+ recording. So again, Hildebrand and Fritz Muller frequently speak of
+ self-sterile plants being fertile with the pollen of any other individual;
+ and if there had been any exceptions to the rule, these could hardly have
+ escaped their observation and my own. We may therefore confidently assert
+ that a self-sterile plant can be fertilised by the pollen of any one out
+ of a thousand or ten thousand individuals of the same species, but not by
+ its own. Now it is obviously impossible that the sexual organs and
+ elements of every individual can have been specialised with respect to
+ every other individual. But there is no difficulty in believing that the
+ sexual elements of each differ slightly in the same diversified manner as
+ do their external characters; and it has often been remarked that no two
+ individuals are absolutely alike. Therefore we can hardly avoid the
+ conclusion, that differences of an analogous and indefinite nature in the
+ reproductive system are sufficient to excite the mutual action of the
+ sexual elements, and that unless there be such differentiation fertility
+ fails.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ THE APPEARANCE OF HIGHLY SELF-FERTILE VARIETIES.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ We have just seen that the degree to which flowers are capable of being
+ fertilised with their own pollen differs much, both with the species of
+ the same genus, and sometimes with the individuals of the same species.
+ Some allied cases of the appearance of varieties which, when
+ self-fertilised, yield more seed and produce offspring growing taller than
+ their self-fertilised parents, or than the intercrossed plants of the
+ corresponding generation, will now be considered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Firstly, in the third and fourth generations of Mimulus luteus, a tall
+ variety, often alluded to, having large white flowers blotched with
+ crimson, appeared amongst both the intercrossed and self-fertilised
+ plants. It prevailed in all the later self-fertilised generations to the
+ exclusion of every other variety, and transmitted its characters
+ faithfully, but disappeared from the intercrossed plants, owing no doubt
+ to their characters being repeatedly blended by crossing. The
+ self-fertilised plants belonging to this variety were not only taller, but
+ more fertile than the intercrossed plants; though these latter in the
+ earlier generations were much taller and more fertile than the
+ self-fertilised plants. Thus in the fifth generation the self-fertilised
+ plants were to the intercrossed in height as 126 to 100. In the sixth
+ generation they were likewise much taller and finer plants, but were not
+ actually measured; they produced capsules compared with those on the
+ intercrossed plants, in number, as 147 to 100; and the self-fertilised
+ capsules contained a greater number of seeds. In the seventh generation
+ the self-fertilised plants were to the crossed in height as 137 to 100;
+ and twenty flowers on these self-fertilised plants fertilised with their
+ own pollen yielded nineteen very fine capsules,&mdash;a degree of
+ self-sterility which I have not seen equalled in any other case. This
+ variety seems to have become specially adapted to profit in every way by
+ self-fertilisation, although this process was so injurious to the
+ parent-plants during the first four generations. It should however be
+ remembered that seedlings raised from this variety, when crossed by a
+ fresh stock, were wonderfully superior in height and fertility to the
+ self-fertilised plants of the corresponding generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Secondly, in the sixth self-fertilised generation of Ipomoea a single
+ plant named the Hero appeared, which exceeded by a little in height its
+ intercrossed opponent,&mdash;a case which had not occurred in any previous
+ generation. Hero transmitted the peculiar colour of its flowers, as well
+ as its increased tallness and a high degree of self-fertility, to its
+ children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren. The self-fertilised
+ children of Hero were in height to other self-fertilised plants of the
+ same stock as 100 to 85. Ten self-fertilised capsules produced by the
+ grandchildren contained on an average 5.2 seeds; and this is a higher
+ average than was yielded in any other generation by the capsules of
+ self-fertilised flowers. The great-grandchildren of Hero derived from a
+ cross with a fresh stock were so unhealthy, from having been grown at an
+ unfavourable season, that their average height in comparison with that of
+ the self-fertilised plants cannot be judged of with any safety; but it did
+ not appear that they had profited even by a cross of this kind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thirdly, the plants of Nicotiana on which I experimented appear to come
+ under the present class of cases; for they varied in their sexual
+ constitution and were more or less highly self-fertile. They were probably
+ the offspring of plants which had been spontaneously self-fertilised under
+ glass for several generations in this country. The flowers on the
+ parent-plants which were first fertilised by me with their own pollen
+ yielded half again as many seeds as did those which were crossed; and the
+ seedlings raised from these self-fertilised seeds exceeded in height those
+ raised from the crossed seeds to an extraordinary degree. In the second
+ and third generations, although the self-fertilised plants did not exceed
+ the crossed in height, yet their self-fertilised flowers yielded on two
+ occasions considerably more seeds than the crossed flowers, even than
+ those which were crossed with pollen from a distinct stock or variety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lastly, as certain individual plants of Reseda odorata and lutea are
+ incomparably more self-fertile than other individuals, the former might be
+ included under the present heading of the appearance of new and highly
+ self-fertile varieties. But in this case we should have to look at these
+ two species as normally self-sterile; and this, judging by my experience,
+ appears to be the correct view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We may therefore conclude from the facts now given, that varieties
+ sometimes arise which when self-fertilised possess an increased power of
+ producing seeds and of growing to a greater height, than the intercrossed
+ or self-fertilised plants of the corresponding generation&mdash;all the
+ plants being of course subjected to the same conditions. The appearance of
+ such varieties is interesting, as it bears on the existence under nature
+ of plants which regularly fertilise themselves, such as Ophrys apifera and
+ a few other orchids, or as Leersia oryzoides, which produces an abundance
+ of cleistogene flowers, but most rarely flowers capable of
+ cross-fertilisation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some observations made on other plants lead me to suspect that
+ self-fertilisation is in some respects beneficial; although the benefit
+ thus derived is as a rule very small compared with that from a cross with
+ a distinct plant. Thus we have seen in the last chapter that seedlings of
+ Ipomoea and Mimulus raised from flowers fertilised with their own pollen,
+ which is the strictest possible form of self-fertilisation, were superior
+ in height, weight, and in early flowering to the seedlings raised from
+ flowers crossed with pollen from other flowers on the same plant; and this
+ superiority apparently was too strongly marked to be accidental. Again,
+ the cultivated varieties of the common pea are highly self-fertile,
+ although they have been self-fertilised for many generations; and they
+ exceeded in height seedlings from a cross between two plants belonging to
+ the same variety in the ratio of 115 to 100; but then only four pairs of
+ plants were measured and compared. The self-fertility of Primula veris
+ increased after several generations of illegitimate fertilisation, which
+ is a process closely analogous to self-fertilisation, but only as long as
+ the plants were cultivated under the same favourable conditions. I have
+ also elsewhere shown that with Primula veris and sinensis, equal-styled
+ varieties occasionally appear which possess the sexual organs of the two
+ forms combined in the same flower. (9/16. &lsquo;Journal of the Linnean Society
+ Botany&rsquo; volume 10 1867 pages 417, 419.) Consequently they fertilise
+ themselves in a legitimate manner and are highly self-fertile; but the
+ remarkable fact is that they are rather more fertile than ordinary plants
+ of the same species legitimately fertilised by pollen from a distinct
+ individual. Formerly it appeared to me probable, that the increased
+ fertility of these dimorphic plants might be accounted for by the stigma
+ lying so close to the anthers that it was impregnated at the most
+ favourable age and time of the day; but this explanation is not applicable
+ to the above given cases, in which the flowers were artificially
+ fertilised with their own pollen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Considering the facts now adduced, including the appearance of those
+ varieties which are more fertile and taller than their parents and than
+ the intercrossed plants of the corresponding generation, it is difficult
+ to avoid the suspicion that self-fertilisation is in some respects
+ advantageous; though if this be really the case, any such advantage is as
+ a rule quite insignificant compared with that from a cross with a distinct
+ plant, and especially with one of a fresh stock. Should this suspicion be
+ hereafter verified, it would throw light, as we shall see in the next
+ chapter, on the existence of plants bearing small and inconspicuous
+ flowers which are rarely visited by insects, and therefore are rarely
+ intercrossed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RELATIVE WEIGHT AND PERIOD OF GERMINATION OF SEEDS FROM CROSSED AND
+ SELF-FERTILISED FLOWERS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An equal number of seeds from flowers fertilised with pollen from another
+ plant, and from flowers fertilised with their own pollen, were weighed,
+ but only in sixteen cases. Their relative weights are given in the
+ following list; that of the seeds from the crossed flowers being taken as
+ 100.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 1: Name of Plant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Column 2: x, in the expression, 100 to x.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ipomoea purpurea (parent plants): 127. Ipomoea purpurea (third
+ generation): 87. Salvia coccinea: 100. Brassica oleracea: 103. Iberis
+ umbellata (second generation): 136. Delphinium consolida: 45. Hibiscus
+ africanus: 105. Tropaeolum minus: 115. Lathyrus odoratus (about): 100.
+ Sarothamnus scoparius: 88. Specularia speculum: 86. Nemophila insignis:
+ 105. Borago officinalis: 111. Cyclamen persicum (about): 50. Fagopyrum
+ esculentum: 82. Canna warscewiczi (3 generations): 102.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is remarkable that in ten out of these sixteen cases the
+ self-fertilised seeds were either superior or equal to the crossed in
+ weight; nevertheless, in six out of the ten cases (namely, with Ipomoea,
+ Salvia, Brassica, Tropaeolum, Lathyrus, and Nemophila) the plants raised
+ from these self-fertilised seeds were very inferior in height and in other
+ respects to those raised from the crossed seeds. The superiority in weight
+ of the self-fertilised seeds in at least six out of the ten cases, namely,
+ with Brassica, Hibiscus, Tropaeolum, Nemophila, Borago, and Canna, may be
+ accounted for in part by the self-fertilised capsules containing fewer
+ seeds; for when a capsule contains only a few seeds, these will be apt to
+ be better nourished, so as to be heavier, than when many are contained in
+ the same capsule. It should, however, be observed that in some of the
+ above cases, in which the crossed seeds were the heaviest, as with
+ Sarothamnus and Cyclamen, the crossed capsules contained a larger number
+ of seeds. Whatever may be the explanation of the self-fertilised seeds
+ being often the heaviest, it is remarkable in the case of Brassica,
+ Tropaeolum, Nemophila, and of the first generation of Ipomoea, that the
+ seedlings raised from them were inferior in height and in other respects
+ to the seedlings raised from the crossed seeds. This fact shows how
+ superior in constitutional vigour the crossed seedlings must have been,
+ for it cannot be doubted that heavy and fine seeds tend to yield the
+ finest plants. Mr. Galton has shown that this holds good with Lathyrus
+ odoratus; as has Mr. A.J. Wilson with the Swedish turnip, Brassica
+ campestris ruta baga. Mr. Wilson separated the largest and smallest seeds
+ of this latter plant, the ratio between the weights of the two lots being
+ as 100 to 59, and he found that the seedlings &ldquo;from the larger seeds took
+ the lead and maintained their superiority to the last, both in height and
+ thickness of stem.&rdquo; (9/17. &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo; 1867 page 107.
+ Loiseleur-Deslongchamp &lsquo;Les Cereales&rsquo; 1842 pages 208-219, was led by his
+ observations to the extraordinary conclusion that the smaller grains of
+ cereals produce as fine plants as the large. This conclusion is, however,
+ contradicted by Major Hallet&rsquo;s great success in improving wheat by the
+ selection of the finest grains. It is possible, however, that man, by
+ long-continued selection, may have given to the grains of the cereals a
+ greater amount of starch or other matter, than the seedlings can utilise
+ for their growth. There can be little doubt, as Humboldt long ago
+ remarked, that the grains of cereals have been rendered attractive to
+ birds in a degree which is highly injurious to the species.) Nor can this
+ difference in the growth of the seedling turnips be attributed to the
+ heavier seeds having been of crossed, and the lighter of self-fertilised
+ origin, for it is known that plants belonging to this genus are habitually
+ intercrossed by insects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to the relative period of germination of crossed and
+ self-fertilised seeds, a record was kept in only twenty-one cases; and the
+ results are very perplexing. Neglecting one case in which the two lots
+ germinated simultaneously, in ten cases or exactly one-half many of the
+ self-fertilised seeds germinated before the crossed, and in the other half
+ many of the crossed before the self-fertilised. In four out of these
+ twenty cases, seeds derived from a cross with a fresh stock were compared
+ with self-fertilised seeds from one of the later self-fertilised
+ generations; and here again in half the cases the crossed seeds, and in
+ the other half the self-fertilised seeds, germinated first. Yet the
+ seedlings of Mimulus raised from such self-fertilised seeds were inferior
+ in all respects to the crossed seedlings, and in the case of Eschscholtzia
+ they were inferior in fertility. Unfortunately the relative weight of the
+ two lots of seeds was ascertained in only a few instances in which their
+ germination was observed; but with Ipomoea and I believe with some of the
+ other species, the relative lightness of the self-fertilised seeds
+ apparently determined their early germination, probably owing to the
+ smaller mass being favourable to the more rapid completion of the chemical
+ and morphological changes necessary for germination. On the other hand,
+ Mr. Galton gave me seeds (no doubt all self-fertilised) of Lathyrus
+ odoratus, which were divided into two lots of heavier and lighter seeds;
+ and several of the former germinated first. It is evident that many more
+ observations are necessary before anything can be decided with respect to
+ the relative period of germination of crossed and self-fertilised seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X. MEANS OF FERTILISATION.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Sterility and fertility of plants when insects are excluded.
+ The means by which flowers are cross-fertilised.
+ Structures favourable to self-fertilisation.
+ Relation between the structure and conspicuousness of flowers, the
+ visits of insects, and the advantages of cross-fertilisation.
+ The means by which flowers are fertilised with pollen from a distinct
+ plant.
+ Greater fertilising power of such pollen.
+ Anemophilous species.
+ Conversion of anemophilous species into entomophilous.
+ Origin of nectar.
+ Anemophilous plants generally have their sexes separated.
+ Conversion of diclinous into hermaphrodite flowers.
+ Trees often have their sexes separated.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In the introductory chapter I briefly specified the various means by which
+ cross-fertilisation is favoured or ensured, namely, the separation of the
+ sexes,&mdash;the maturity of the male and female sexual elements at
+ different periods,&mdash;the heterostyled or dimorphic and trimorphic
+ condition of certain plants,&mdash;many mechanical contrivances,&mdash;the
+ more or less complete inefficiency of a flower&rsquo;s own pollen on the stigma,&mdash;and
+ the prepotency of pollen from any other individual over that from the same
+ plant. Some of these points require further consideration; but for full
+ details I must refer the reader to the several excellent works mentioned
+ in the introduction. I will in the first place give two lists: the first,
+ of plants which are either quite sterile or produce less than about half
+ the full complement of seeds, when insects are excluded; and a second list
+ of plants which, when thus treated, are fully fertile or produce at least
+ half the full complement of seeds. These lists have been compiled from the
+ several previous tables, with some additional cases from my own
+ observations and those of others. The species are arranged nearly in the
+ order followed by Lindley in his &lsquo;Vegetable Kingdom.&rsquo; The reader should
+ observe that the sterility or fertility of the plants in these two lists
+ depends on two wholly distinct causes; namely, the absence or presence of
+ the proper means by which pollen is applied to the stigma, and its less or
+ greater efficiency when thus applied. As it is obvious that with plants in
+ which the sexes are separate, pollen must be carried by some means from
+ flower to flower, such species are excluded from the lists; as are
+ likewise dimorphic and trimorphic plants, in which the same necessity
+ occurs to a limited extent. Experience has proved to me that,
+ independently of the exclusion of insects, the seed-bearing power of a
+ plant is not lessened by covering it while in flower under a thin net
+ supported on a frame; and this might indeed have been inferred from the
+ consideration of the two following lists, as they include a considerable
+ number of species belonging to the same genera, some of which are quite
+ sterile and others quite fertile when protected by a net from the access
+ of insects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [LIST OF PLANTS WHICH, WHEN INSECTS ARE EXCLUDED, ARE EITHER QUITE
+ STERILE, OR PRODUCE, AS FAR AS I COULD JUDGE, LESS THAN HALF THE NUMBER OF
+ SEEDS PRODUCED BY UNPROTECTED PLANTS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Passiflora alata, racemosa, coerulea, edulis, laurifolia, and some
+ individuals of P. quadrangularis (Passifloraceae), are quite sterile under
+ these conditions: see &lsquo;Variation of Animals and Plants under
+ Domestication&rsquo; chapter 17 2nd edition volume 2 page 118.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Viola canina (Violaceae).&mdash;Perfect flowers quite sterile unless
+ fertilised by bees, or artificially fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Viola tricolor.&mdash;Sets very few and poor capsules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reseda odorata (Resedaceae).&mdash;Some individuals quite sterile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reseda lutea.&mdash;Some individuals produce very few and poor capsules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Abutilon darwinii (Malvaceae).&mdash;Quite sterile in Brazil: see previous
+ discussion on self-sterile plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nymphaea (Nymphaeaceae).&mdash;Professor Caspary informs me that some of
+ the species are quite sterile if insects are excluded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Euryale amazonica (Nymphaeaceae).&mdash;Mr. J. Smith, of Kew, informs me
+ that capsules from flowers left to themselves, and probably not visited by
+ insects, contained from eight to fifteen seeds; those from flowers
+ artificially fertilised with pollen from other flowers on the same plant
+ contained from fifteen to thirty seeds; and that two flowers fertilised
+ with pollen brought from another plant at Chatsworth contained
+ respectively sixty and seventy-five seeds. I have given these statements
+ because Professor Caspary advances this plant as a case opposed to the
+ doctrine of the necessity or advantage of cross-fertilisation: see
+ Sitzungsberichte der Phys.-okon. Gesell.zu Konigsberg, B.6 page 20.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Delphinium consolida (Ranunculaceae).&mdash;Produces many capsules, but
+ these contain only about half the number of seeds compared with capsules
+ from flowers naturally fertilised by bees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eschscholtzia californica (Papaveraceae).&mdash;Brazilian plants quite
+ sterile: English plants produce a few capsules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Papaver vagum (Papaveraceae).&mdash;In the early part of the summer
+ produced very few capsules, and these contained very few seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Papaver alpinum.&mdash;H. Hoffmann (&lsquo;Speciesfrage&rsquo; 1875 page 47) states
+ that this species produced seeds capable of germination only on one
+ occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Corydalis cava (Fumariaceae).&mdash;Sterile: see the previous discussion
+ on self-sterile plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Corydalis solida.&mdash;I had a single plant in my garden (1863), and saw
+ many hive-bees sucking the flowers, but not a single seed was produced. I
+ was much surprised at this fact, as Professor Hildebrand&rsquo;s discovery that
+ C. cava is sterile with its own pollen had not then been made. He likewise
+ concludes from the few experiments which he made on the present species
+ that it is self-sterile. The two foregoing cases are interesting, because
+ botanists formerly thought (see, for instance, Lecoq, &lsquo;De la Fecondation
+ et de l&rsquo;Hybridation&rsquo; 1845 page 61 and Lindley &lsquo;Vegetable Kingdom&rsquo; 1853
+ page 436) that all the species of the Fumariaceae were specially adapted
+ for self-fertilisation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Corydalis lutea.&mdash;A covered-up plant produced (1861) exactly half as
+ many capsules as an exposed plant of the same size growing close
+ alongside. When humble-bees visit the flowers (and I repeatedly saw them
+ thus acting) the lower petals suddenly spring downwards and the pistil
+ upwards; this is due to the elasticity of the parts, which takes effect,
+ as soon as the coherent edges of the hood are separated by the entrance of
+ an insect. Unless insects visit the flowers the parts do not move.
+ Nevertheless, many of the flowers on the plants which I had protected
+ produced capsules, notwithstanding that their petals and pistils still
+ retained their original position; and I found to my surprise that these
+ capsules contained more seeds than those from flowers, the petals of which
+ had been artificially separated and allowed to spring apart. Thus, nine
+ capsules produced by undisturbed flowers contained fifty-three seeds;
+ whilst nine capsules from flowers, the petals of which had been
+ artificially separated, contained only thirty-two seeds. But we should
+ remember that if bees had been permitted to visit these flowers, they
+ would have visited them at the best time for fertilisation. The flowers,
+ the petals of which had been artificially separated, set their capsules
+ before those which were left undisturbed under the net. To show with what
+ certainty the flowers are visited by bees, I may add that on one occasion
+ all the flowers on some unprotected plants were examined, and every single
+ one had its petals separated; and, on a second occasion, forty-one out of
+ forty-three flowers were in this state. Hildebrand states (Pring. Jahr. f.
+ wiss. Botanik, B. 7 page 450) that the mechanism of the parts in this
+ species is nearly the same as in C. ochroleuca, which he has fully
+ described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hypecoum grandiflorum (Fumariaceae).&mdash;Highly self-sterile
+ (Hildebrand, ibid.).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kalmia latifolia (Ericaceae).&mdash;Mr. W.J. Beal says (&lsquo;American
+ Naturalist&rsquo; 1867) that flowers protected from insects wither and drop off,
+ with &ldquo;most of the anthers still remaining in the pockets.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pelargonium zonale (Geraniaceae).&mdash;Almost sterile; one plant produced
+ two fruits. It is probable that different varieties would differ in this
+ respect, as some are only feebly dichogamous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dianthus caryophyllus (Caryophyllaceae).&mdash;Produces very few capsules
+ which contain any good seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Phaseolus multiflorus (Leguminosae).&mdash;Plants protected from insects
+ produced on two occasions about one-third and one-eighth of the full
+ number of seeds: see my article in &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo; 1857 page 225
+ and 1858 page 828; also &lsquo;Annals and Magazine of Natural History&rsquo; 3rd
+ series volume 2 1858 page 462. Dr. Ogle (&lsquo;Popular Science Review&rsquo; 1870
+ page 168) found that a plant was quite sterile when covered up. The
+ flowers are not visited by insects in Nicaragua, and, according to Mr.
+ Belt, the species is there quite sterile: &lsquo;The Naturalist in Nicaragua&rsquo;
+ page 70.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vicia faba (Leguminosae).&mdash;Seventeen covered-up plants yielded 40
+ beans, whilst seventeen plants left unprotected and growing close
+ alongside produced 135 beans; these latter plants were, therefore, between
+ three and four times more fertile than the protected plants: see
+ &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo; for fuller details, 1858 page 828.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Erythrina (sp.?) (Leguminosae).&mdash;Sir W. MacArthur informed me that in
+ New South Wales the flowers do not set, unless the petals are moved in the
+ same manner as is done by insects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lathyrus grandiflorus (Leguminosae).&mdash;Is in this country more or less
+ sterile. It never sets pods unless the flowers are visited by humble-bees
+ (and this happens only rarely), or unless they are artificially
+ fertilised: see my article in &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo; 1858 page 828.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sarothamnus scoparius (Leguminosae).&mdash;Extremely sterile when the
+ flowers are neither visited by bees, nor disturbed by being beaten by the
+ wind against the surrounding net.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Melilotus officinalis (Leguminosae).&mdash;An unprotected plant visited by
+ bees produced at least thirty times more seeds than a protected one. On
+ this latter plant many scores of racemes did not produce a single pod;
+ several racemes produced each one or two pods; five produced three; six
+ produced four; and one produced six pods. On the unprotected plant each of
+ several racemes produced fifteen pods; nine produced between sixteen and
+ twenty-two pods, and one produced thirty pods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lotus corniculatus (Leguminosae).&mdash;Several covered-up plants produced
+ only two empty pods, and not a single good seed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Trifolium repens (Leguminosae).&mdash;Several plants were protected from
+ insects, and the seeds from ten flowers-heads on these plants, and from
+ ten heads on other plants growing outside the net (which I saw visited by
+ bees), were counted; and the seeds from the latter plants were very nearly
+ ten times as numerous as those from the protected plants. The experiment
+ was repeated on the following year; and twenty protected heads now yielded
+ only a single aborted seed, whilst twenty heads on the plants outside the
+ net (which I saw visited by bees) yielded 2290 seeds, as calculated by
+ weighing all the seed, and counting the number in a weight of two grains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Trifolium pratense.&mdash;One hundred flower-heads on plants protected by
+ a net did not produce a single seed, whilst 100 heads on plants growing
+ outside, which were visited by bees, yielded 68 grains weight of seeds;
+ and as eighty seeds weighed two grains, the 100 heads must have yielded
+ 2720 seeds. I have often watched this plant, and have never seen hive-bees
+ sucking the flowers, except from the outside through holes bitten by
+ humble-bees, or deep down between the flowers, as if in search of some
+ secretion from the calyx, almost in the same manner as described by Mr.
+ Farrer, in the case of Coronilla (&lsquo;Nature&rsquo; 1874 July 2 page 169). I must,
+ however, except one occasion, when an adjoining field of sainfoin
+ (Hedysarum onobrychis) had just been cut down, and when the bees seemed
+ driven to desperation. On this occasion most of the flowers of the clover
+ were somewhat withered, and contained an extraordinary quantity of nectar,
+ which the bees were able to suck. An experienced apiarian, Mr. Miner, says
+ that in the United States hive-bees never suck the red clover; and Mr. R.
+ Colgate informs me that he has observed the same fact in New Zealand after
+ the introduction of the hive-bee into that island. On the other hand, H.
+ Muller (&lsquo;Befruchtung&rsquo; page 224) has often seen hive-bees visiting this
+ plant in Germany, for the sake both of pollen and nectar, which latter
+ they obtained by breaking apart the petals. It is at least certain that
+ humble-bees are the chief fertilisers of the common red clover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Trifolium incarnatum.&mdash;The flower-heads containing ripe seeds, on
+ some covered and uncovered plants, appeared equally fine, but this was a
+ false appearance; 60 heads on the latter yielded 349 grains weight of
+ seeds, whereas 60 on the covered-up plants yielded only 63 grains, and
+ many of the seeds in the latter lot were poor and aborted. Therefore the
+ flowers which were visited by bees produced between five and six times as
+ many seeds as those which were protected. The covered-up plants not having
+ been much exhausted by seed-bearing, bore a second considerable crop of
+ flower-stems, whilst the exposed plants did not do so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cytisus laburnum (Leguminosae).&mdash;Seven flower-racemes ready to expand
+ were enclosed in a large bag made of net, and they did not seem in the
+ least injured by this treatment. Only three of them produced any pods,
+ each a single one; and these three pods contained one, four, and five
+ seeds. So that only a single pod from the seven racemes included a fair
+ complement of seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cuphea purpurea (Lythraceae).&mdash;Produced no seeds. Other flowers on
+ the same plant artificially fertilised under the net yielded seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vinca major (Apocynaceae).&mdash;Is generally quite sterile, but sometimes
+ sets seeds when artificially cross-fertilised: see my notice &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo;
+ Chronicle&rsquo; 1861 page 552.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vinca rosea.&mdash;Behaves in the same manner as the last species:
+ &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo; 1861 page 699, 736, 831.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tabernaemontana echinata (Apocynaceae).&mdash;Quite sterile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Petunia violacea (Solanaceae).&mdash;Quite sterile, as far as I have
+ observed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Solanum tuberosum (Solanaceae).&mdash;Tinzmann says (&lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo;
+ Chronicle&rsquo; 1846 page 183) that some varieties are quite sterile unless
+ fertilised by pollen from another variety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Primula scotica (Primulaceae).&mdash;A non-dimorphic species, which is
+ fertile with its own pollen, but is extremely sterile if insects are
+ excluded. J. Scott in &lsquo;Journal of the Linnean Society Botany&rsquo; volume 8
+ 1864 page 119.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cortusa matthioli (Primulaceae).&mdash;Protected plants completely
+ sterile; artificially self-fertilised flowers perfectly fertile. J. Scott
+ ibid. page 84.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyclamen persicum (Primulaceae).&mdash;During one season several
+ covered-up plants did not produce a single seed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Borago officinalis (Boraginaceae).&mdash;Protected plants produced about
+ half as many seeds as the unprotected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Salvia tenori (Labiatae).&mdash;Quite sterile; but two or three flowers on
+ the summits of three of the spikes, which touched the net when the wind
+ blew, produced a few seeds. This sterility was not due to the injurious
+ effects of the net, for I fertilised five flowers with pollen from an
+ adjoining plant, and these all yielded fine seeds. I removed the net,
+ whilst one little branch still bore a few not completely faded flowers,
+ and these were visited by bees and yielded seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Salvia coccinea.&mdash;Some covered-up plants produced a good many fruits,
+ but not, I think, half as many as did the uncovered plants; twenty-eight
+ of the fruits spontaneously produced by the protected plant contained on
+ an average only 1.45 seeds, whilst some artificially self-fertilised
+ fruits on the same plant contained more than twice as many, namely 3.3
+ seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bignonia (unnamed species) (Bignoniaceae).&mdash;Quite sterile: see my
+ account of self-sterile plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Digitalis purpurea (Scrophulariaceae).&mdash;Extremely sterile, only a few
+ poor capsules being produced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Linaria vulgaris (Scrophulariaceae).&mdash;Extremely sterile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Antirrhinum majus, red var. (Scrophulariaceae).&mdash;Fifty pods gathered
+ from a large plant under a net contained 9.8 grains weight of seeds; but
+ many (unfortunately not counted) of the fifty pods contained no seeds.
+ Fifty pods on a plant fully exposed to the visits of humble-bees contained
+ 23.1 grains weight of seed, that is, more than twice the weight; but in
+ this case again, several of the fifty pods contained no seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Antirrhinum majus (white var., with a pink mouth to the corolla).&mdash;Fifty
+ pods, of which only a very few were empty, on a covered-up plant contained
+ 20 grains weight of seed; so that this variety seems to be much more
+ self-fertile than the previous one. With Dr. W. Ogle (&lsquo;Popular Science
+ Review&rsquo; January 1870 page 52) a plant of this species was much more
+ sterile when protected from insects than with me, for it produced only two
+ small capsules. As showing the efficiency of bees, I may add that Mr.
+ Crocker castrated some young flowers and left them uncovered; and these
+ produced as many seeds as the unmutilated flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Antirrhinum majus (peloric var.).&mdash;This variety is quite fertile when
+ artificially fertilised with its own pollen, but is utterly sterile when
+ left to itself and uncovered, as humble-bees cannot crawl into the narrow
+ tubular flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Verbascum phoeniceum (Scrophulariaceae).&mdash;Quite sterile. See my
+ account of self-sterile plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Verbascum nigrum.&mdash;Quite sterile. See my account of self-sterile
+ plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Campanula carpathica (Lobeliaceae).&mdash;Quite sterile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lobelia ramosa (Lobeliaceae).&mdash;Quite sterile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lobelia fulgens.&mdash;This plant is never visited in my garden by bees,
+ and is quite sterile; but in a nursery-garden at a few miles&rsquo; distance I
+ saw humble-bees visiting the flowers, and they produced some capsules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Isotoma (a white-flowered var.) (Lobeliaceae).&mdash;Five plants left
+ unprotected in my greenhouse produced twenty-four fine capsules,
+ containing altogether 12.2 grains weight of seed, and thirteen other very
+ poor capsules, which were rejected. Five plants protected from insects,
+ but otherwise exposed to the same conditions as the above plants, produced
+ sixteen fine capsules, and twenty other very poor and rejected ones. The
+ sixteen fine capsules contained seeds by weight in such proportion that
+ twenty-four would have yielded 4.66 grains. So that the unprotected plants
+ produced nearly thrice as many seeds by weight as the protected plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leschenaultia formosa (Goodeniaceae).&mdash;Quite sterile. My experiments
+ on this plant, showing the necessity of insect aid, are given in the
+ &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo; 1871 page 1166.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Senecio cruentus (Compositae).&mdash;Quite sterile: see my account of
+ self-sterile plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heterocentron mexicanum (Malastomaceae).&mdash;Quite sterile; but this
+ species and the following members of the group produce plenty of seed when
+ artificially self-fertilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rhexia glandulosa (Melastomaceae).&mdash;Set spontaneously only two or
+ three capsules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Centradenia floribunda (Melastomaceae).&mdash;During some years produced
+ spontaneously two or three capsules, sometimes none.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pleroma (unnamed species from Kew) (Melastomaceae).&mdash;During some
+ years produced spontaneously two or three capsules, sometimes none.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Monochaetum ensiferum (Melastomaceae).&mdash;During some years produced
+ spontaneously two or three capsules, sometimes none.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hedychium (unnamed species) (Marantaceae).&mdash;Almost self-sterile
+ without aid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Orchideae.&mdash;An immense proportion of the species sterile, if insects
+ are excluded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PLANTS, WHICH WHEN PROTECTED FROM INSECTS ARE EITHER QUITE FERTILE, OR
+ YIELD MORE THAN HALF THE NUMBER OF SEEDS PRODUCED BY UNPROTECTED PLANTS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Passiflora gracilis (Passifloraceae).&mdash;Produces many fruits, but
+ these contain fewer seeds than fruits from intercrossed flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Brassica oleracea (Cruciferae).&mdash;Produces many capsules, but these
+ generally not so rich in seed as those on uncovered plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Raphanus sativus (Cruciferae).&mdash;Half of a large branching plant was
+ covered by a net, and was as thickly covered with capsules as the other
+ and unprotected half; but twenty of the capsules on the latter contained
+ on an average 3.5 seeds, whilst twenty of the protected capsules contained
+ only 1.85 seeds, that is, only a little more than half the number. This
+ plant might perhaps have been more properly included in the former list.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Iberis umbellata (Cruciferae).&mdash;Highly fertile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Iberis amara.&mdash;Highly fertile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reseda odorata and lutea (Resedaceae).&mdash;Certain individuals
+ completely self-fertile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Euryale ferox (Nymphaeaceae).&mdash;Professor Caspary informs me that this
+ plant is highly self-fertile when insects are excluded. He remarks in the
+ paper before referred to, that his plants (as well as those of the
+ Victoria regia) produce only one flower at a time; and that as this
+ species is an annual, and was introduced in 1809, it must have been
+ self-fertilised for the last fifty-six generations; but Dr. Hooker assures
+ me that to his knowledge it has been repeatedly introduced, and that at
+ Kew the same plant both of the Euryale and of the Victoria produce several
+ flowers at the same time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nymphaea (Nymphaeaceae).&mdash;Some species, as I am informed by Professor
+ Caspary, are quite self-fertile when insects are excluded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adonis aestivalis (Ranunculaceae).&mdash;Produces, according to Professor
+ H. Hoffmann (&lsquo;Speciesfrage&rsquo; page 11), plenty of seeds when protected from
+ insects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ranunculus acris (Ranunculaceae).&mdash;Produces plenty of seeds under a
+ net.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Papaver somniferum (Papaveraceae).&mdash;Thirty capsules from uncovered
+ plants yielded 15.6 grains weight of seed, and thirty capsules from
+ covered-up plants, growing in the same bed, yielded 16.5 grains weight; so
+ that the latter plants were more productive than the uncovered. Professor
+ H. Hoffmann (&lsquo;Speciesfrage&rsquo; 1875 page 53) also found this species
+ self-fertile when protected from insects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Papaver vagum.&mdash;Produced late in the summer plenty of seeds, which
+ germinated well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Papaver argemonoides.&mdash;According to Hildebrand (&lsquo;Jahrbuch fur w.
+ Bot.&rsquo; B.7 page 466), spontaneously self-fertilised flowers are by no means
+ sterile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Glaucium luteum (Papaveraceae).&mdash;According to Hildebrand (&lsquo;Jahrbuch
+ fur w. Bot.&rsquo; B.7 page 466), spontaneously self-fertilised flowers are by
+ no means sterile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Argemone ochroleuca (Papaveraceae).&mdash;According to Hildebrand
+ (&lsquo;Jahrbuch fur w. Bot.&rsquo; B.7 page 466), spontaneously self-fertilised
+ flowers are by no means sterile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adlumia cirrhosa (Fumariaceae).&mdash;Sets an abundance of capsules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hypecoum procumbens (Fumariaceae).&mdash;Hildebrand says (idem), with
+ respect to protected flowers, that &ldquo;eine gute Fruchtbildung eintrete.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fumaria officinalis (Fumariaceae).&mdash;Covered-up and unprotected plants
+ apparently produced an equal number of capsules, and the seeds of the
+ former seemed to the eye equally good. I have often watched this plant,
+ and so has Hildebrand, and we have never seen an insect visit the flowers.
+ Hermann Muller has likewise been struck with the rarity of the visits of
+ insects to it, though he has sometimes seen hive-bees at work. The flowers
+ may perhaps be visited by small moths, as is probably the case with the
+ following species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fumaria capreolata.&mdash;Several large beds of this plant growing wild
+ were watched by me during many days, but the flowers were never visited by
+ any insects, though a humble-bee was once seen closely to inspect them.
+ Nevertheless, as the nectary contains much nectar, especially in the
+ evening, I felt convinced that they were visited, probably by moths. The
+ petals do not naturally separate or open in the least; but they had been
+ opened by some means in a certain proportion of the flowers, in the same
+ manner as follows when a thick bristle is pushed into the nectary; so that
+ in this respect they resemble the flowers of Corydalis lutea. Thirty-four
+ heads, each including many flowers, were examined, and twenty of them had
+ from one to four flowers, whilst fourteen had not a single flower thus
+ opened. It is therefore clear that some of the flowers had been visited by
+ insects, while the majority had not; yet almost all produced capsules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Linum usitatissimum (Linaceae).&mdash;Appears to be quite fertile. H.
+ Hoffmann &lsquo;Botanische Zeitung&rsquo; 1876 page 566.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Impatiens barbigerum (Balsaminaceae).&mdash;The flowers, though
+ excellently adapted for cross-fertilisation by the bees which freely visit
+ them, set abundantly under a net.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Impatiens noli-me-tangere (Balsaminaceae).&mdash;This species produces
+ cleistogene and perfect flowers. A plant was covered with a net, and some
+ perfect flowers, marked with threads, produced eleven spontaneously
+ self-fertilised capsules, which contained on an average 3.45 seeds. I
+ neglected to ascertain the number of seeds produced by perfect flowers
+ exposed to the visits of insects, but I believe it is not greatly in
+ excess of the above average. Mr. A.W. Bennett has carefully described the
+ structure of the flowers of I. fulva in &lsquo;Journal of the Linnean Society&rsquo;
+ volume 13 Bot. 1872 page 147. This latter species is said to be sterile
+ with its own pollen (&lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo; 1868 page 1286), and if so, it
+ presents a remarkable contrast with I. barbigerum and noli-me-tangere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Limnanthes douglasii (Geraniaceae).&mdash;Highly fertile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Viscaria oculata (Caryophyllaceae).&mdash;Produces plenty of capsules with
+ good seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stellaria media (Caryophyllaceae).&mdash;Covered-up and uncovered plants
+ produced an equal number of capsules, and the seeds in both appeared
+ equally numerous and good.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beta vulgaris (Chenopodiaceae).&mdash;Highly self-fertile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vicia sativa (Leguminosae).&mdash;Protected and unprotected plants
+ produced an equal number of pods and equally fine seeds. If there was any
+ difference between the two lots, the covered-up plants were the most
+ productive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vicia hirsuta.&mdash;This species bears the smallest flowers of any
+ British leguminous plant. The result of covering up plants was exactly the
+ same as in the last species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pisum sativum (Leguminosae).&mdash;Fully fertile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lathyrus odoratus (Leguminosae).&mdash;Fully fertile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lathyrus nissolia.&mdash;Fully fertile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lupinus luteus (Leguminosae).&mdash;Fairly productive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lupinus pilosus.&mdash;Produced plenty of pods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ononis minutissima (Leguminosae).&mdash;Twelve perfect flowers on a plant
+ under a net were marked by threads, and produced eight pods, containing on
+ an average 2.38 seeds. Pods produced by flowers visited by insects would
+ probably have contained on an average 3.66 seeds, judging from the effects
+ of artificial cross-fertilisation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Phaseolus vulgaris (Leguminosae).&mdash;Quite fertile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Trifolium arvense (Leguminosae).&mdash;The excessively small flowers are
+ incessantly visited by hive and humble-bees. When insects were excluded
+ the flower-heads seemed to produce as many and as fine seeds as the
+ exposed heads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Trifolium procumbens.&mdash;On one occasion covered-up plants seemed to
+ yield as many seeds as the uncovered. On a second occasion sixty uncovered
+ flower-heads yielded 9.1 grains weight of seeds, whilst sixty heads on
+ protected plants yielded no less than 17.7 grains; so that these latter
+ plants were much more productive; but this result I suppose was
+ accidental. I have often watched this plant, and have never seen the
+ flowers visited by insects; but I suspect that the flowers of this
+ species, and more especially of Trifolium minus, are frequented by small
+ nocturnal moths which, as I hear from Mr. Bond, haunt the smaller clovers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Medicago lupulina (Leguminosae).&mdash;On account of the danger of losing
+ the seeds, I was forced to gather the pods before they were quite ripe;
+ 150 flower-heads on plants visited by bees yielded pods weighing 101
+ grains; whilst 150 heads on protected plants yielded pods weighing 77
+ grains. The inequality would probably have been greater if the mature
+ seeds could have been all safely collected and compared. Ig. Urban
+ (Keimung, Bluthen, etc., bei Medicago 1873) has described the means of
+ fertilisation in this genus, as has the Reverend G. Henslow in the
+ &lsquo;Journal of the Linnean Society Botany&rsquo; volume 9 1866 pages 327 and 355.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nicotiana tabacum (Solanaceae).&mdash;Fully self-fertile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ipomoea purpurea (Convolvulaceae).&mdash;Highly self-fertile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leptosiphon androsaceus (Polemoniacae).&mdash;Plants under a net produced
+ a good many capsules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Primula mollis (Primulaceae).&mdash;A non-dimorphic species, self-fertile:
+ J. Scott, in &lsquo;Journal of the Linnean Society Botany&rsquo; volume 8 1864 page
+ 120.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nolana prostrata (Nolanaceae).&mdash;Plants covered up in the greenhouse,
+ yielded seeds by weight compared with uncovered plants, the flowers of
+ which were visited by many bees, in the ratio of 100 to 61.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ajuga reptans (Labiatae).&mdash;Set a good many seeds; but none of the
+ stems under a net produced so many as several uncovered stems growing
+ closely by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Euphrasia officinalis (Scrophulariaceae).&mdash;Covered-up plants produced
+ plenty of seed; whether less than the exposed plants I cannot say. I saw
+ two small Dipterous insects (Dolichopos nigripennis and Empis chioptera)
+ repeatedly sucking the flowers; as they crawled into them, they rubbed
+ against the bristles which project from the anthers, and became dusted
+ with pollen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Veronica agrestis (Scrophulariaceae).&mdash;Covered-up plants produced an
+ abundance of seeds. I do not know whether any insects visit the flowers;
+ but I have observed Syrphidae repeatedly covered with pollen visiting the
+ flowers of V. hederaefolia and chamoedrys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mimulus luteus (Scrophulariaceae).&mdash;Highly self-fertile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Calceolaria (greenhouse variety) (Scrophulariaceae).&mdash;Highly
+ self-fertile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Verbascum thapsus (Scrophulariaceae).&mdash;Highly self-fertile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Verbascum lychnitis.&mdash;Highly self-fertile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vandellia nummularifolia (Scrophulariaceae).&mdash;Perfect flowers produce
+ a good many capsules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bartsia odontites (Scrophulariaceae).&mdash;Covered-up plants produced a
+ good many seeds; but several of these were shrivelled, nor were they so
+ numerous as those produced by unprotected plants, which were incessantly
+ visited by hive and humble-bees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Specularia speculum (Lobeliaceae).&mdash;Covered plants produced almost as
+ many capsules as the uncovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lactuca sativa (Compositae).&mdash;Covered plants produced some seeds, but
+ the summer was wet and unfavourable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Galium aparine (Rubiaceae).&mdash;Covered plants produced quite as many
+ seeds as the uncovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apium petroselinum (Umbelliferae).&mdash;Covered plants apparently were as
+ productive as the uncovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Zea mays (Gramineae).&mdash;A single plant in the greenhouse produced a
+ good many grains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Canna warscewiczi (Marantaceae).&mdash;Highly self-fertile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Orchidaceae.&mdash;In Europe Ophrys apifera is as regularly
+ self-fertilised as is any cleistogene flower. In the United States, South
+ Africa, and Australia there are a few species which are perfectly
+ self-fertile. These several cases are given in the second edition of my
+ work on the Fertilisation of Orchids.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Allium cepa (blood red var.) (Liliaceae).&mdash;Four flower-heads were
+ covered with a net, and they produced somewhat fewer and smaller capsules
+ than those on the uncovered heads. The capsules were counted on one
+ uncovered head, and were 289 in number; whilst those on a fine head from
+ under the net were only 199.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each of these lists contains by a mere accident the same number of genera,
+ namely, forty-nine. The genera in the first list include sixty-five
+ species, and those in the second sixty species; the Orchideae in both
+ being excluded. If the genera in this latter order, as well as in the
+ Asclepiadae and Apocynaceae, had been included, the number of species
+ which are sterile if insects are excluded would have been greatly
+ increased; but the lists are confined to species which were actually
+ experimented on. The results can be considered as only approximately
+ accurate, for fertility is so variable a character, that each species
+ ought to have been tried many times. The above number of species, namely,
+ 125, is as nothing to the host of living plants; but the mere fact of more
+ than half of them being sterile within the specified degree, when insects
+ are excluded, is a striking one; for whenever pollen has to be carried
+ from the anthers to the stigma in order to ensure full fertility, there is
+ at least a good chance of cross-fertilisation. I do not, however, believe
+ that if all known plants were tried in the same manner, half would be
+ found to be sterile within the specified limits; for many flowers were
+ selected for experiment which presented some remarkable structure; and
+ such flowers often require insect-aid. Thus out of the forty-nine genera
+ in the first list, about thirty-two have flowers which are asymmetrical or
+ present some remarkable peculiarity; whilst in the second list, including
+ species which are fully or moderately fertile when insects were excluded,
+ only about twenty-one out of the forty-nine are asymmetrical or present
+ any remarkable peculiarity.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ MEANS OF CROSS-FERTILISATION.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The most important of all the means by which pollen is carried from the
+ anthers to the stigma of the same flower, or from flower to flower, are
+ insects, belonging to the orders of Hymenoptera, Lepidoptera, and Diptera;
+ and in some parts of the world, birds. (10/1. I will here give all the
+ cases known to me of birds fertilising flowers. In South Brazil,
+ humming-birds certainly fertilise the various species of Abutilon, which
+ are sterile without their aid (Fritz Muller &lsquo;Jenaische Zeitschrift f.
+ Naturwiss.&rsquo; B. 7 1872 page 24.) Long-beaked humming-birds visit the
+ flowers of Brugmansia, whilst some of the short-beaked species often
+ penetrate its large corolla in order to obtain the nectar in an
+ illegitimate manner, in the same manner as do bees in all parts of the
+ world. It appears, indeed, that the beaks of humming-birds are specially
+ adapted to the various kinds of flowers which they visit: on the
+ Cordillera they suck the Salviae, and lacerate the flowers of the
+ Tacsoniae; in Nicaragua, Mr. Belt saw them sucking the flowers of
+ Marcgravia and Erythina, and thus they carried pollen from flower to
+ flower. In North America they are said to frequent the flowers of
+ Impatiens: (Gould &lsquo;Introduction to the Trochilidae&rsquo; 1861 pages 15, 120;
+ &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo; 1869 page 389; &lsquo;The Naturalist in Nicaragua&rsquo; page
+ 129; &lsquo;Journal of the Linnean Society Botany&rsquo; volume 13 1872 page 151.) I
+ may add that I often saw in Chile a Mimus with its head yellow with pollen
+ from, as I believe, a Cassia. I have been assured that at the Cape of Good
+ Hope, Strelitzia is fertilised by the Nectarinidae. There can hardly be a
+ doubt that many Australian flowers are fertilised by the many
+ honey-sucking birds of that country. Mr. Wallace remarks (address to the
+ Biological Section, British Association 1876) that he has &ldquo;often observed
+ the beaks and faces of the brush-tongued lories of the Moluccas covered
+ with pollen.&rdquo; In New Zealand, many specimens of the Anthornis melanura had
+ their heads coloured with pollen from the flowers of an endemic species of
+ Fuchsia (Potts &lsquo;Transactions of the New Zealand Institute&rsquo; volume 3 1870
+ page 72.) Next in importance, but in a quite subordinate degree, is the
+ wind; and with some aquatic plants, according to Delpino, currents of
+ water. The simple fact of the necessity in many cases of extraneous aid
+ for the transport of the pollen, and the many contrivances for this
+ purpose, render it highly probable that some great benefit is thus gained;
+ and this conclusion has now been firmly established by the proved
+ superiority in growth, vigour, and fertility of plants of crossed
+ parentage over those of self-fertilised parentage. But we should always
+ keep in mind that two somewhat opposed ends have to be gained; the first
+ and more important one being the production of seeds by any means, and the
+ second, cross-fertilisation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The advantages derived from cross-fertilisation throw a flood of light on
+ most of the chief characters of flowers. We can thus understand their
+ large size and bright colours, and in some cases the bright tints of the
+ adjoining parts, such as the peduncles, bracteae, etc. By this means they
+ are rendered conspicuous to insects, on the same principle that almost
+ every fruit which is devoured by birds presents a strong contrast in
+ colour with the green foliage, in order that it may be seen, and its seeds
+ freely disseminated. With some flowers conspicuousness is gained at the
+ expense even of the reproductive organs, as with the ray-florets of many
+ Compositae, the exterior flowers of Hydrangea, and the terminal flowers of
+ the Feather-hyacinth or Muscari. There is also reason to believe, and this
+ was the opinion of Sprengel, that flowers differ in colour in accordance
+ with the kinds of insects which frequent them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not only do the bright colours of flowers serve to attract insects, but
+ dark-coloured streaks and marks are often present, which Sprengel long ago
+ maintained served as guides to the nectary. These marks follow the veins
+ in the petals, or lie between them. They may occur on only one, or on all
+ excepting one or more of the upper or lower petals; or they may form a
+ dark ring round the tubular part of the corolla, or be confined to the
+ lips of an irregular flower. In the white varieties of many flowers, such
+ as of Digitalis purpurea, Antirrhinum majus, several species of Dianthus,
+ Phlox, Myosotis, Rhododendron, Pelargonium, Primula and Petunia, the marks
+ generally persist, whilst the rest of the corolla has become of a pure
+ white; but this may be due merely to their colour being more intense and
+ thus less readily obliterated. Sprengel&rsquo;s notion of the use of these marks
+ as guides appeared to me for a long time fanciful; for insects, without
+ such aid, readily discover and bite holes through the nectary from the
+ outside. They also discover the minute nectar-secreting glands on the
+ stipules and leaves of certain plants. Moreover, some few plants, such as
+ certain poppies, which are not nectariferous, have guiding marks; but we
+ might perhaps expect that some few plants would retain traces of a former
+ nectariferous condition. On the other hand, these marks are much more
+ common on asymmetrical flowers, the entrance into which would be apt to
+ puzzle insects, than on regular flowers. Sir J. Lubbock has also proved
+ that bees readily distinguish colours, and that they lose much time if the
+ position of honey which they have once visited be in the least changed.
+ (10/2. &lsquo;British Wild Flowers in relation to Insects&rsquo; 1875 page 44.) The
+ following case affords, I think, the best evidence that these marks have
+ really been developed in correlation with the nectary. The two upper
+ petals of the common Pelargonium are thus marked near their bases; and I
+ have repeatedly observed that when the flowers vary so as to become
+ peloric or regular, they lose their nectaries and at the same time the
+ dark marks. When the nectary is only partially aborted, only one of the
+ upper petals loses its mark. Therefore the nectary and these marks clearly
+ stand in some sort of close relation to one another; and the simplest view
+ is that they were developed together for a special purpose; the only
+ conceivable one being that the marks serve as a guide to the nectary. It
+ is, however, evident from what has been already said, that insects could
+ discover the nectar without the aid of guiding marks. They are of service
+ to the plant, only by aiding insects to visit and suck a greater number of
+ flowers within a given time than would otherwise be possible; and thus
+ there will be a better chance of fertilisation by pollen brought from a
+ distinct plant, and this we know is of paramount importance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The odours emitted by flowers attract insects, as I have observed in the
+ case of plants covered by a muslin net. Nageli affixed artificial flowers
+ to branches, scenting some with essential oils and leaving others
+ unscented; and insects were attracted to the former in an unmistakable
+ manner. (10/3. &lsquo;Enstehung etc. der Naturhist. Art.&rsquo; 1865 page 23.) Not a
+ few flowers are both conspicuous and odoriferous. Of all colours, white is
+ the prevailing one; and of white flowers a considerably larger proportion
+ smell sweetly than of any other colour, namely, 14.6 per cent; of red,
+ only 8.2 per cent are odoriferous. (10/4. The colours and odours of the
+ flowers of 4200 species have been tabulated by Landgrabe and by Schubler
+ and Kohler. I have not seen their original works, but a very full abstract
+ is given in Loudon&rsquo;s &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Magazine&rsquo; volume 13 1837 page 367.) The
+ fact of a larger proportion of white flowers smelling sweetly may depend
+ in part on those which are fertilised by moths requiring the double aid of
+ conspicuousness in the dusk and of odour. So great is the economy of
+ nature, that most flowers which are fertilised by crepuscular or nocturnal
+ insects emit their odour chiefly or exclusively in the evening. Some
+ flowers, however, which are highly odoriferous depend solely on this
+ quality for their fertilisation, such as the night-flowering stock
+ (Hesperis) and some species of Daphne; and these present the rare case of
+ flowers which are fertilised by insects being obscurely coloured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The storage of a supply of nectar in a protected place is manifestly
+ connected with the visits of insects. So is the position which the stamens
+ and pistils occupy, either permanently or at the proper period through
+ their own movements; for when mature they invariably stand in the pathway
+ leading to the nectary. The shape of the nectary and of the adjoining
+ parts are likewise related to the particular kinds of insects which
+ habitually visit the flowers; this has been well shown by Hermann Muller
+ by his comparison of lowland species which are chiefly visited by bees,
+ with alpine species belonging to the same genera which are visited by
+ butterflies. (10/5. &lsquo;Nature&rsquo; 1874 page 110, 1875 page 190, 1876 pages 210,
+ 289.) Flowers may also be adapted to certain kinds of insects, by
+ secreting nectar particularly attractive to them, and unattractive to
+ other kinds; of which fact Epipactis latifolia offers the most striking
+ instance known to me, as it is visited exclusively by wasps. Structures
+ also exist, such as the hairs within the corolla of the fox glove
+ (Digitalis), which apparently serve to exclude insects that are not well
+ fitted to bring pollen from one flower to another. (10/6. Belt &lsquo;The
+ Naturalist in Nicaragua&rsquo; 1874 page 132.) I need say nothing here of the
+ endless contrivances, such as the viscid glands attached to the
+ pollen-masses of the Orchideae and Asclepiadae, or the viscid or roughened
+ state of the pollen-grains of many plants, or the irritability of their
+ stamens which move when touched by insects etc.&mdash;as all these
+ contrivances evidently favour or ensure cross-fertilisation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All ordinary flowers are so far open that insects can force an entrance
+ into them, notwithstanding that some, like the Snapdragon (Antirrhinum),
+ various Papilionaceous and Fumariaceous flowers, are in appearance closed.
+ It cannot be maintained that their openness is necessary for fertility, as
+ cleistogene flowers which are permanently closed yield a full complement
+ of seeds. Pollen contains much nitrogen and phosphorus&mdash;the two most
+ precious of all the elements for the growth of plants&mdash;but in the
+ case of most open flowers, a large quantity of pollen is consumed by
+ pollen-devouring insects, and a large quantity is destroyed during
+ long-continued rain. With many plants this latter evil is guarded against,
+ as far as is possible, by the anthers opening only during dry weather
+ (10/7. Mr. Blackley observed that the ripe anthers of rye did not dehisce
+ whilst kept under a bell-glass in a damp atmosphere, whilst other anthers
+ exposed to the same temperature in the open air dehisced freely. He also
+ found much more pollen adhering to the sticky slides, which were attached
+ to kites and sent high up in the atmosphere, during the first fine and dry
+ days after wet weather, than at other times: &lsquo;Experimental Researches on
+ Hay Fever&rsquo; 1873 page 127.)&mdash;by the position and form of some or all
+ of the petals,&mdash;by the presence of hairs, etc., and as Kerner has
+ shown in his interesting essay, by the movements of the petals or of the
+ whole flower during cold and wet weather. (10/8. &lsquo;Die Schutzmittel des
+ Pollens&rsquo; 1873.) In order to compensate the loss of pollen in so many ways,
+ the anthers produce a far larger amount than is necessary for the
+ fertilisation of the same flower. I know this from my own experiments on
+ Ipomoea, given in the Introduction; and it is still more plainly shown by
+ the astonishingly small quantity produced by cleistogene flowers, which
+ lose none of their pollen, in comparison with that produced by the open
+ flowers borne by the same plants; and yet this small quantity suffices for
+ the fertilisation of all their numerous seeds. Mr. Hassall took pains in
+ estimating the number of pollen-grains produced by a flower of the
+ Dandelion (Leontodon), and found the number to be 243,600, and in a Paeony
+ 3,654,000 grains. (10/9. &lsquo;Annals and Magazine of Natural History&rsquo; volume 8
+ 1842 page 108.) The editor of the &lsquo;Botanical Register&rsquo; counted the ovules
+ in the flowers of Wistaria sinensis, and carefully estimated the number of
+ pollen-grains, and he found that for each ovule there were 7000 grains.
+ (10/10. Quoted in &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo; 1846 page 771.) With Mirabilis,
+ three or four of the very large pollen-grains are sufficient to fertilise
+ an ovule; but I do not know how many grains a flower produces. With
+ Hibiscus, Kolreuter found that sixty grains were necessary to fertilise
+ all the ovules of a flower, and he calculated that 4863 grains were
+ produced by a single flower, or eighty-one times too many. With Geum
+ urbanum, however, according to Gartner, the pollen is only ten times too
+ much. (10/11. Kolreuter &lsquo;Vorlaufige Nachricht&rsquo; 1761 page 9. Gartner
+ &lsquo;Beitrage zur Kenntniss&rsquo; etc. page 346.) As we thus see that the open
+ state of all ordinary flowers, and the consequent loss of much pollen,
+ necessitate the development of so prodigious an excess of this precious
+ substance, why, it may be asked, are flowers always left open? As many
+ plants exist throughout the vegetable kingdom which bear cleistogene
+ flowers, there can hardly be a doubt that all open flowers might easily
+ have been converted into closed ones. The graduated steps by which this
+ process could have been effected may be seen at the present time in
+ Lathyrus nissolia, Biophytum sensitivum, and several other plants. The
+ answer to the above question obviously is, that with permanently closed
+ flowers there could be no cross-fertilisation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The frequency, almost regularity, with which pollen is transported by
+ insects from flower to flower, often from a considerable distance, well
+ deserves attention. (10/12. An experiment made by Kolreuter &lsquo;Forsetsung&rsquo;
+ etc. 1763 page 69, affords good evidence on this head. Hibiscus vesicarius
+ is strongly dichogamous, its pollen being shed before the stigmas are
+ mature. Kolreuter marked 310 flowers, and put pollen from other flowers on
+ their stigmas every day, so that they were thoroughly fertilised; and he
+ left the same number of other flowers to the agency of insects. Afterwards
+ he counted the seeds of both lots: the flowers which he had fertilised
+ with such astonishing care produced 11,237 seeds, whilst those left to the
+ insects produced 10,886; that is, a less number by only 351; and this
+ small inferiority is fully accounted for by the insects not having worked
+ during some days, when the weather was cold with continued rain.) This is
+ best shown by the impossibility in many cases of raising two varieties of
+ the same species pure, if they grow at all near together; but to this
+ subject I shall presently return; also by the many cases of hybrids which
+ have appeared spontaneously both in gardens and a state of nature. With
+ respect to the distance from which pollen is often brought, no one who has
+ had any experience would expect to obtain pure cabbage-seed, for instance,
+ if a plant of another variety grew within two or three hundred yards. An
+ accurate observer, the late Mr. Masters of Canterbury, assured me that he
+ once had his whole stock of seeds &ldquo;seriously affected with purple
+ bastards,&rdquo; by some plants of purple kale which flowered in a cottager&rsquo;s
+ garden at the distance of half a mile; no other plant of this variety
+ growing any nearer. (10/13. Mr. W.C. Marshall caught no less than seven
+ specimens of a moth (Cucullia umbratica) with the pollinia of the
+ butterfly-orchis (Habenaria chlorantha) sticking to their eyes, and,
+ therefore, in the proper position for fertilising the flowers of this
+ species, on an island in Derwentwater, at the distance of half a mile from
+ any place where this plant grew: &lsquo;Nature&rsquo; 1872 page 393.) But the most
+ striking case which has been recorded is that by M. Godron, who shows by
+ the nature of the hybrids produced that Primula grandiflora must have been
+ crossed with pollen brought by bees from P. officinalis, growing at the
+ distance of above two kilometres, or of about one English mile and a
+ quarter. (10/14. &lsquo;Revue des Sc. Nat.&rsquo; 1875 page 331.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All those who have long attended to hybridisation, insist in the strongest
+ terms on the liability of castrated flowers to be fertilised by pollen
+ brought from distant plants of the same species. (10/15. See, for
+ instance, the remarks by Herbert &lsquo;Amaryllidaceae&rsquo; 1837 page 349. Also
+ Gartner&rsquo;s strong expressions on this subject in his &lsquo;Bastarderzeugung&rsquo;
+ 1849 page 670 and &lsquo;Kenntniss der Befruchtung&rsquo; 1844 pages 510, 573. Also
+ Lecoq &lsquo;De la Fecondation&rsquo; etc. 1845 page 27. Some statements have been
+ published during late years of the extraordinary tendency of hybrid plants
+ to revert to their parent forms; but as it is not said how the flowers
+ were protected from insects, it may be suspected that they were often
+ fertilised with pollen brought from a distance from the parent-species.)
+ The following case shows this in the clearest manner: Gartner, before he
+ had gained much experience, castrated and fertilised 520 flowers on
+ various species with pollen of other genera or other species, but left
+ them unprotected; for, as he says, he thought it a laughable idea that
+ pollen should be brought from flowers of the same species, none of which
+ grew nearer than between 500 and 600 yards. (10/16. &lsquo;Kenntniss der
+ Befruchtung&rsquo; pages 539, 550, 575, 576.) The result was that 289 of these
+ 520 flowers yielded no seed, or none that germinated; the seed of 29
+ flowers produced hybrids, such as might have been expected from the nature
+ of the pollen employed; and lastly, the seed of the remaining 202 flowers
+ produced perfectly pure plants, so that these flowers must have been
+ fertilised by pollen brought by insects from a distance of between 500 and
+ 600 yards. (10/17. Henschel&rsquo;s experiments quoted by Gartner &lsquo;Kenntniss&rsquo;
+ etc. page 574, which are worthless in all other respects, likewise show
+ how largely flowers are intercrossed by insects. He castrated many flowers
+ on thirty-seven species, belonging to twenty-two genera, and put on their
+ stigmas either no pollen, or pollen from distinct genera, yet they all
+ seeded, and all the seedlings raised from them were of course pure.) It is
+ of course possible that some of these 202 flowers might have been
+ fertilised by pollen left accidentally in them when they were castrated;
+ but to show how improbable this is, I may add that Gartner, during the
+ next eighteen years, castrated no less than 8042 flowers and hybridised
+ them in a closed room; and the seeds from only seventy of these, that is
+ considerably less than 1 per cent, produced pure or unhybridised
+ offspring. (10/18. &lsquo;Kenntniss&rsquo; etc. pages 555, 576.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the various facts now given, it is evident that most flowers are
+ adapted in an admirable manner for cross-fertilisation. Nevertheless, the
+ greater number likewise present structures which are manifestly adapted,
+ though not in so striking a manner, for self-fertilisation. The chief of
+ these is their hermaphrodite condition; that is, their including within
+ the same corolla both the male and female reproductive organs. These often
+ stand close together and are mature at the same time; so that pollen from
+ the same flower cannot fail to be deposited at the proper period on the
+ stigma. There are also various details of structure adapted for
+ self-fertilisation. (10/19. Hermann Muller &lsquo;Die Befruchtung&rsquo; etc. page
+ 448.) Such structures are best shown in those curious cases discovered by
+ Hermann Muller, in which a species exists under two forms,&mdash;one
+ bearing conspicuous flowers fitted for cross-fertilisation, and the other
+ smaller flowers fitted for self-fertilisation, with many parts in the
+ latter slightly modified for this special purpose. (10/20. &lsquo;Nature&rsquo; 1873
+ pages 44, 433.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As two objects in most respects opposed, namely, cross-fertilisation and
+ self-fertilisation, have in many cases to be gained, we can understand the
+ co-existence in so many flowers of structures which appear at first sight
+ unnecessarily complex and of an opposed nature. We can thus understand the
+ great contrast in structure between cleistogene flowers, which are adapted
+ exclusively for self-fertilisation, and ordinary flowers on the same
+ plant, which are adapted so as to allow of at least occasional
+ cross-fertilisation. (10/21. Fritz Muller has discovered in the animal
+ kingdom &lsquo;Jenaische Zeitschr.&rsquo; B. 4 page 451, a case curiously analogous to
+ that of the plants which bear cleistogene and perfect flowers. He finds in
+ the nests of termites in Brazil, males and females with imperfect wings,
+ which do not leave the nests and propagate the species in a cleistogene
+ manner, but only if a fully-developed queen after swarming does not enter
+ the old nest. The fully-developed males and females are winged, and
+ individuals from distinct nests can hardly fail often to intercross. In
+ the act of swarming they are destroyed in almost infinite numbers by a
+ host of enemies, so that a queen may often fail to enter an old nest; and
+ then the imperfectly developed males and females propagate and keep up the
+ stock.) The former are always minute, completely closed, with their petals
+ more or less rudimentary and never brightly coloured; they never secrete
+ nectar, never are odoriferous, have very small anthers which produce only
+ a few grains of pollen, and their stigmas are but little developed.
+ Bearing in mind that some flowers are cross-fertilised by the wind (called
+ anemophilous by Delpino), and others by insects (called entomophilous), we
+ can further understand, as was pointed out by me several years ago, the
+ great contrast in appearance between these two classes of flowers. (10/22.
+ &lsquo;Journal of the Linnean Society&rsquo; volume 7 Botany 1863 page 77.)
+ Anemophilous flowers resemble in many respects cleistogene flowers, but
+ differ widely in not being closed, in producing an extraordinary amount of
+ pollen which is always incoherent, and in the stigma often being largely
+ developed or plumose. We certainly owe the beauty and odour of our flowers
+ and the storage of a large supply of honey to the existence of insects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ON THE RELATION BETWEEN THE STRUCTURE AND CONSPICUOUSNESS OF FLOWERS, THE
+ VISITS OF INSECTS, AND THE ADVANTAGES OF CROSS-FERTILISATION.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has already been shown that there is no close relation between the
+ number of seeds produced by flowers when crossed and self-fertilised, and
+ the degree to which their offspring are aaffected by the two processes. I
+ have also given reasons for believing that the inefficiency of a plant&rsquo;s
+ own pollen is in most cases an incidental result, or has not been
+ specially acquired for the sake of preventing self-fertilisation. On the
+ other hand, there can hardly be a doubt that dichogamy, which prevails
+ according to Hildebrand in the greater number of species (10/23. &lsquo;Die
+ Geschlecter Vertheiling&rsquo; etc. page 32.),&mdash;that the heterostyled
+ condition of certain plants,&mdash;and that many mechanical structures&mdash;have
+ all been acquired so as both to check self-fertilisation and to favour
+ cross-fertilisation. The means for favouring cross-fertilisation must have
+ been acquired before those which prevent self-fertilisation; as it would
+ manifestly be injurious to a plant that its stigma should fail to receive
+ its own pollen, unless it had already become well adapted for receiving
+ pollen from another individual. It should be observed that many plants
+ still possess a high power of self-fertilisation, although their flowers
+ are excellently constructed for cross-fertilisation&mdash;for instance,
+ those of many papilionaceous species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be admitted as almost certain that some structures, such as a
+ narrow elongated nectary, or a long tubular corolla, have been developed
+ in order that certain kinds of insects alone should obtain the nectar.
+ These insects would thus find a store of nectar preserved from the attacks
+ of other insects; and they would thus be led to visit frequently such
+ flowers and to carry pollen from one to the other. (10/24. See the
+ interesting discussion on this subject by Hermann Muller, &lsquo;Die
+ Befruchtung&rsquo; etc. page 431.) It might perhaps have been expected that
+ plants having their flowers thus peculiarly constructed would profit in a
+ greater degree by being crossed, than ordinary or simple flowers; but this
+ does not seem to hold good. Thus Tropaeolum minus has a long nectary and
+ an irregular corolla, whilst Limnanthes douglasii has a regular flower and
+ no proper nectary, yet the crossed seedlings of both species are to the
+ self-fertilised in height as 100 to 79. Salvia coccinea has an irregular
+ corolla, with a curious apparatus by which insects depress the stamens,
+ while the flowers of Ipomoea are regular; and the crossed seedlings of the
+ former are in height to the self-fertilised as 100 to 76, whilst those of
+ the Ipomoea are as 100 to 77. Fagopyrum is dimorphic, and Anagallis
+ collina is non-dimorphic, and the crossed seedlings of both are in height
+ to the self-fertilised as 100 to 69.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With all European plants, excepting the comparatively rare anemophilous
+ kinds, the possibility of distinct individuals intercrossing depends on
+ the visits of insects; and Hermann Muller has proved by his valuable
+ observations, that large conspicuous flowers are visited much more
+ frequently and by many more kinds of insects, than are small inconspicuous
+ flowers. He further remarks that the flowers which are rarely visited must
+ be capable of self-fertilisation, otherwise they would quickly become
+ extinct. (10/25. &lsquo;Die Befruchtung&rsquo; etc. page 426. &lsquo;Nature&rsquo; 1873 page 433.)
+ There is, however, some liability to error in forming a judgment on this
+ head, from the extreme difficulty of ascertaining whether flowers which
+ are rarely or never visited during the day (as in the above given case of
+ Fumaria capreolata) are not visited by small nocturnal Lepidoptera, which
+ are known to be strongly attracted by sugar. (10/26. In answer to a
+ question by me, the editor of an entomological journal writes&mdash;&ldquo;The
+ Depressariae, as is notorious to every collector of Noctuae, come very
+ freely to sugar, and no doubt naturally visit flowers:&rdquo; the
+ &lsquo;Entomologists&rsquo; Weekly Intelligencer&rsquo; 1860 page 103.) The two lists given
+ in the early part of this chapter support Muller&rsquo;s conclusion that small
+ and inconspicuous flowers are completely self-fertile: for only eight or
+ nine out of the 125 species in the two lists come under this head, and all
+ of these were proved to be highly fertile when insects were excluded. The
+ singularly inconspicuous flowers of the Fly Ophrys (O. muscifera), as I
+ have elsewhere shown, are rarely visited by insects; and it is a strange
+ instance of imperfection, in contradiction to the above rule, that these
+ flowers are not self-fertile, so that a large proportion of them do not
+ produce seeds. The converse of the rule that plants bearing small and
+ inconspicuous flowers are self-fertile, namely, that plants with large and
+ conspicuous flowers are self-sterile, is far from true, as may be seen in
+ our second list of spontaneously self-fertile species; for this list
+ includes such species as Ipomoea purpurea, Adonis aestivalis, Verbascum
+ thapsus, Pisum sativum, Lathyrus odoratus, some species of Papaver and of
+ Nymphaea, and others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rarity of the visits of insects to small flowers, does not depend
+ altogether on their inconspicuousness, but likewise on the absence of some
+ sufficient attraction; for the flowers of Trifolium arvense are extremely
+ small, yet are incessantly visited by hive and humble-bees, as are the
+ small and dingy flowers of the asparagus. The flowers of Linaria
+ cymbalaria are small and not very conspicuous, yet at the proper time they
+ are freely visited by hive-bees. I may add that, according to Mr. Bennett,
+ there is another and quite distinct class of plants which cannot be much
+ frequented by insects, as they flower either exclusively or often during
+ the winter, and these seem adapted for self-fertilisation, as they shed
+ their pollen before the flowers expand. (10/27. &lsquo;Nature&rsquo; 1869 page 11.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That many flowers have been rendered conspicuous for the sake of guiding
+ insects to them is highly probable or almost certain; but it may be asked,
+ have other flowers been rendered inconspicuous so that they may not be
+ frequently visited, or have they merely retained a former and primitive
+ condition? If a plant were much reduced in size, so probably would be the
+ flowers through correlated growth, and this may possibly account for some
+ cases; but the size and colour of the corolla are both extremely variable
+ characters, and it can hardly be doubted that if large and
+ brightly-coloured flowers were advantageous to any species, these could be
+ acquired through natural selection within a moderate lapse of time, as
+ indeed we see with most alpine plants. Papilionaceous flowers are
+ manifestly constructed in relation to the visits of insects, and it seems
+ improbable, from the usual character of the group, that the progenitors of
+ the genera Vicia and Trifolium produced such minute and unattractive
+ flowers as those of V. hirsuta and T. procumbens. We are thus led to infer
+ that some plants either have not had their flowers increased in size, or
+ have actually had them reduced and purposely rendered inconspicuous, so
+ that they are now but little visited by insects. In either case they must
+ also have acquired or retained a high degree of self-fertility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If it became from any cause advantageous to a species to have its capacity
+ for self-fertilisation increased, there is little difficulty in believing
+ that this could readily be effected; for three cases of plants varying in
+ such a manner as to be more fertile with their own pollen than they
+ originally were, occurred in the course of my few experiments, namely,
+ with Mimulus, Ipomoea, and Nicotiana. Nor is there any reason to doubt
+ that many kinds of plants are capable under favourable circumstances of
+ propagating themselves for very many generations by self-fertilisation.
+ This is the case with the varieties of Pisum sativum and of Lathyrus
+ odoratus which are cultivated in England, and with Ophrys apifera and some
+ other plants in a state of nature. Nevertheless, most or all of these
+ plants retain structures in an efficient state which cannot be of the
+ least use excepting for cross-fertilisation. We have also seen reason to
+ suspect that self-fertilisation is in some peculiar manner beneficial to
+ certain plants; but if this be really the case, the benefit thus derived
+ is far more than counter-balanced by a cross with a fresh stock or with a
+ slightly different variety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding the several considerations just advanced, it seems to me
+ highly improbable that plants bearing small and inconspicuous flowers have
+ been or should continue to be subjected to self-fertilisation for a long
+ series of generations. I think so, not from the evil which manifestly
+ follows from self-fertilisation, in many cases even in the first
+ generation, as with Viola tricolor, Sarothamnus, Nemophila, Cyclamen,
+ etc.; nor from the probability of the evil increasing after several
+ generations, for on this latter head I have not sufficient evidence, owing
+ to the manner in which my experiments were conducted. But if plants
+ bearing small and inconspicuous flowers were not occasionally
+ intercrossed, and did not profit by the process, all their flowers would
+ probably have been rendered cleistogene, as they would thus have largely
+ benefited by having to produce only a small quantity of safely-protected
+ pollen. In coming to this conclusion, I have been guided by the frequency
+ with which plants belonging to distinct orders have been rendered
+ cleistogene. But I can hear of no instance of a species with all its
+ flowers rendered permanently cleistogene. Leersia makes the nearest
+ approach to this state; but as already stated, it has been known to
+ produce perfect flowers in one part of Germany. Some other plants of the
+ cleistogene class, for instance Aspicarpa, have failed to produce perfect
+ flowers during several years in a hothouse; but it does not follow that
+ they would fail to do so in their native country, any more than with
+ Vandellia, which with me produced only cleistogene flowers during certain
+ years. Plants belonging to this class commonly bear both kinds of flowers
+ every season, and the perfect flowers of Viola canina yield fine capsules,
+ but only when visited by bees. We have also seen that the seedlings of
+ Ononis minutissima, raised from the perfect flowers fertilised with pollen
+ from another plant, were finer than those from self-fertilised flowers;
+ and this was likewise the case to a certain extent with Vandellia. As
+ therefore no species which at one time bore small and inconspicuous
+ flowers has had all its flowers rendered cleistogene, I must believe that
+ plants now bearing small and inconspicuous flowers profit by their still
+ remaining open, so as to be occasionally intercrossed by insects. It has
+ been one of the greatest oversights in my work that I did not
+ experimentise on such flowers, owing to the difficulty of fertilising
+ them, and to my not having seen the importance of the subject. (10/28.
+ Some of the species of Solanum would be good ones for such experiments,
+ for they are said by Hermann Muller &lsquo;Befruchtung&rsquo; page 434, to be
+ unattractive to insects from not secreting nectar, not producing much
+ pollen, and not being very conspicuous. Hence probably it is that,
+ according to Verlot &lsquo;Production des Varieties&rsquo; 1865 page 72, the varieties
+ of &ldquo;les aubergines et les tomates&rdquo; (species of Solanum) do not intercross
+ when they are cultivated near together; but it should be remembered that
+ these are not endemic species. On the other hand, the flowers of the
+ common potato (S. tuberosum), though they do not secrete nectar Kurr
+ &lsquo;Bedeutung der Nektarien&rsquo; 1833 page 40, yet cannot be considered as
+ inconspicuous, and they are sometimes visited by diptera (Muller), and, as
+ I have seen, by humble-bees. Tinzmann (as quoted in &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo;
+ 1846 page 183, found that some of the varieties did not bear seed when
+ fertilised with pollen from the same variety, but were fertile with that
+ from another variety.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It should be remembered that in two of the cases in which highly
+ self-fertile varieties appeared amongst my experimental plants, namely,
+ with Mimulus and Nicotiana, such varieties were greatly benefited by a
+ cross with a fresh stock or with a slightly different variety; and this
+ likewise was the case with the cultivated varieties of Pisum sativum and
+ Lathyrus odoratus, which have been long propagated by self-fertilisation.
+ Therefore until the contrary is distinctly proved, I must believe that as
+ a general rule small and inconspicuous flowers are occasionally
+ intercrossed by insects; and that after long-continued self-fertilisation,
+ if they are crossed with pollen brought from a plant growing under
+ somewhat different conditions, or descended from one thus growing, their
+ offspring would profit greatly. It cannot be admitted, under our present
+ state of knowledge, that self-fertilisation continued during many
+ successive generations is ever the most beneficial method of reproduction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE MEANS WHICH FAVOUR OR ENSURE FLOWERS BEING FERTILISED WITH POLLEN FROM
+ A DISTINCT PLANT.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have seen in four cases that seedlings raised from a cross between
+ flowers on the same plant, even on plants appearing distinct from having
+ been propagated by stolons or cuttings, were not superior to seedlings
+ from self-fertilised flowers; and in a fifth case (Digitalis) superior
+ only in a slight degree. Therefore we might expect that with plants
+ growing in a state of nature a cross between the flowers on distinct
+ individuals, and not merely between the flowers on the same plant, would
+ generally or often be effected by some means. The fact of bees and of some
+ Diptera visiting the flowers of the same species as long as they can,
+ instead of promiscuously visiting various species, favours the
+ intercrossing of distinct plants. On the other hand, insects usually
+ search a large number of flowers on the same plant before they fly to
+ another, and this is opposed to cross-fertilisation. The extraordinary
+ number of flowers which bees are able to search within a very short space
+ of time, as will be shown in a future chapter, increases the chance of
+ cross-fertilisation; as does the fact that they are not able to perceive
+ without entering a flower whether other bees have exhausted the nectar.
+ For instance, Hermann Muller found that four-fifths of the flowers of
+ Lamium album which a humble-bee visited had been already exhausted of
+ their nectar. (10/29. &lsquo;Die Befruchtung&rsquo; etc. page 311.) In order that
+ distinct plants should be intercrossed, it is of course indispensable that
+ two or more individuals should grow near one another; and this is
+ generally the case. Thus A. de Candolle remarks that in ascending a
+ mountain the individuals of the same species do not commonly disappear
+ near its upper limit quite gradually, but rather abruptly. This fact can
+ hardly be explained by the nature of the conditions, as these graduate
+ away in an insensible manner, and it probably depends in large part on
+ vigorous seedlings being produced only as high up the mountain as many
+ individuals can subsist together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to dioecious plants, distinct individuals must always
+ fertilise each other. With monoecious plants, as pollen has to be carried
+ from flower to flower, there will always be a good chance of its being
+ carried from plant to plant. Delpino has also observed the curious fact
+ that certain individuals of the monoecious walnut (Juglans regia) are
+ proterandrous, and others proterogynous, and these will reciprocally
+ fertilise each other. (10/30. &lsquo;Ult. Osservazioni&rsquo; etc. part 2 fasc 2 page
+ 337.) So it is with the common nut (Corylus avellana) (10/31. &lsquo;Nature&rsquo;
+ 1875 page 26.), and, what is more surprising, with some few hermaphrodite
+ plants, as observed by Hermann Muller. (10/32. &lsquo;Die Befruchtung&rsquo; etc.
+ pages 285, 339.) These latter plants cannot fail to act on each other like
+ dimorphic or trimorphic species, in which the union of two individuals is
+ necessary for full and normal fertility. With ordinary hermaphrodite
+ species, the expansion of only a few flowers at the same time is one of
+ the simplest means for favouring the intercrossing of distinct
+ individuals; but this would render the plants less conspicuous to insects,
+ unless the flowers were of large size, as in the case of several bulbous
+ plants. Kerner thinks that it is for this object that the Australian
+ Villarsia parnassifolia produces daily only a single flower. (10/33. &lsquo;Die
+ Schutzmittel&rsquo; etc page 23.) Mr. Cheeseman also remarks, that as certain
+ Orchids in New Zealand which require insect-aid for their fertilisation
+ bear only a single flower, distinct plants cannot fail to intercross.
+ (10/34. &lsquo;Transactions of the New Zealand Institute&rsquo; volume 5 1873 page
+ 356.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dichogamy, which prevails so extensively throughout the vegetable kingdom,
+ much increases the chance of distinct individuals intercrossing. With
+ proterandrous species, which are far more ccommon than proterogynous, the
+ young flowers are exclusively male in function, and the older ones
+ exclusively female; and as bees habitually alight low down on the spikes
+ of flowers in order to crawl upwards, they get dusted with pollen from the
+ uppermost flowers, which they carry to the stigmas of the lower and older
+ flowers on the next spike which they visit. The degree to which distinct
+ plants will thus be intercrossed depends on the number of spikes in full
+ flower at the same time on the same plant. With proterogynous flowers and
+ with depending racemes, the manner in which insects visit the flowers
+ ought to be reversed in order that distinct plants should be intercrossed.
+ But this whole subject requires further investigation, as the great
+ importance of crosses between distinct individuals, instead of merely
+ between distinct flowers, has hitherto been hardly recognised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In some few cases the special movements of certain organs almost ensure
+ pollen being carried from plant to plant. Thus with many orchids, the
+ pollen-masses after becoming attached to the head or proboscis of an
+ insect do not move into the proper position for striking the stigma, until
+ ample time has elapsed for the insect to fly to another plant. With
+ Spiranthes autumnalis, the pollen-masses cannot be applied to the stigma
+ until the labellum and rostellum have moved apart, and this movement is
+ very slow. (10/35. &lsquo;The Various Contrivances by which British and Foreign
+ Orchids are fertilised&rsquo; first edition page 128.) With Posoqueria fragrans
+ (one of the Rubiaceae) the same end is gained by the movement of a
+ specially constructed stamen, as described by Fritz Muller.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We now come to a far more general and therefore more important means by
+ which the mutual fertilisation of distinct plants is effected, namely, the
+ fertilising power of pollen from another variety or individual being
+ greater than that of a plant&rsquo;s own pollen. The simplest and best known
+ case of prepotent action in pollen, though it does not bear directly on
+ our present subject, is that of a plant&rsquo;s own pollen over that from a
+ distinct species. If pollen from a distinct species be placed on the
+ stigma of a castrated flower, and then after the interval of several
+ hours, pollen from the same species be placed on the stigma, the effects
+ of the former are wholly obliterated, excepting in some rare cases. If two
+ varieties are treated in the same manner, the result is analogous, though
+ of directly opposite nature; for pollen from any other variety is often or
+ generally prepotent over that from the same flower. I will give some
+ instances: the pollen of Mimulus luteus regularly falls on the stigma of
+ its own flower, for the plant is highly fertile when insects are excluded.
+ Now several flowers on a remarkably constant whitish variety were
+ fertilised without being castrated with pollen from a yellowish variety;
+ and of the twenty-eight seedlings thus raised, every one bore yellowish
+ flowers, so that the pollen of the yellow variety completely overwhelmed
+ that of the mother-plant. Again, Iberis umbellata is spontaneously
+ self-fertile, and I saw an abundance of pollen from their own flowers on
+ the stigmas; nevertheless, of thirty seedlings raised from non-castrated
+ flowers of a crimson variety crossed with pollen from a pink variety,
+ twenty-four bore pink flowers, like those of the male or pollen-bearing
+ parent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In these two cases flowers were fertilised with pollen from a distinct
+ variety, and this was shown to be prepotent by the character of the
+ offspring. Nearly similar results often follow when two or more
+ self-fertile varieties are allowed to grow near one another and are
+ visited by insects. The common cabbage produces a large number of flowers
+ on the same stalk, and when insects are excluded these set many capsules,
+ moderately rich in seeds. I planted a white Kohl-rabi, a purple Kohl-rabi,
+ a Portsmouth broccoli, a Brussels sprout, and a Sugar-loaf cabbage near
+ together and left them uncovered. Seeds collected from each kind were sown
+ in separate beds; and the majority of the seedlings in all five beds were
+ mongrelised in the most complicated manner, some taking more after one
+ variety, and some after another. The effects of the Kohl-rabi were
+ particularly plain in the enlarged stems of many of the seedlings.
+ Altogether 233 plants were raised, of which 155 were mongrelised in the
+ plainest manner, and of the remaining 78 not half were absolutely pure. I
+ repeated the experiment by planting near together two varieties of cabbage
+ with purple-green and white-green lacinated leaves; and of the 325
+ seedlings raised from the purple-green variety, 165 had white-green and
+ 160 purple-green leaves. Of the 466 seedlings raised from the white-green
+ variety, 220 had purple-green and 246 white-green leaves. These cases show
+ how largely pollen from a neighbouring variety of the cabbage effaces the
+ action of the plant&rsquo;s own pollen. We should bear in mind that pollen must
+ be carried by the bees from flower to flower on the same large branching
+ stem much more abundantly than from plant to plant; and in the case of
+ plants the flowers of which are in some degree dichogamous, those on the
+ same stem would be of different ages, and would thus be as ready for
+ mutual fertilisation as the flowers on distinct plants, were it not for
+ the prepotency of pollen from another variety. (10/36. A writer in the
+ &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo; 1855 page 730, says that he planted a bed of
+ turnips (Brassica rapa) and of rape (B. napus) close together, and sowed
+ the seeds of the former. The result was that scarcely one seedling was
+ true to its kind, and several closely resembled rape.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several varieties of the radish (Raphanus sativus), which is moderately
+ self-fertile when insects are excluded, were in flower at the same time in
+ my garden. Seed was collected from one of them, and out of twenty-two
+ seedlings thus raised only twelve were true to their kind. (10/37. Duhamel
+ as quoted by Godron &lsquo;De l&rsquo;Espece&rsquo; tome 2 page 50, makes an analogous
+ statement with respect to this plant.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The onion produces a large number of flowers, all crowded together into a
+ large globular head, each flower having six stamens; so that the stigmas
+ receive plenty of pollen from their own and the adjoining anthers.
+ Consequently the plant is fairly self-fertile when protected from insects.
+ A blood-red, silver, globe and Spanish onion were planted near together;
+ and seedlings were raised from each kind in four separate beds. In all the
+ beds mongrels of various kinds were numerous, except amongst the ten
+ seedlings from the blood-red onion, which included only two. Altogether
+ forty-six seedlings were raised, of which thirty-one had been plainly
+ crossed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A similar result is known to follow with the varieties of many other
+ plants, if allowed to flower near together: I refer here only to species
+ which are capable of fertilising themselves, for if this be not the case,
+ they would of course be liable to be crossed by any other variety growing
+ near. Horticulturists do not commonly distinguish between the effects of
+ variability and intercrossing; but I have collected evidence on the
+ natural crossing of varieties of the tulip, hyacinth, anemone, ranunculus,
+ strawberry, Leptosiphon androsaceus, orange, rhododendron and rhubarb, all
+ of which plants I believe to be self-fertile. (10/38. With respect to
+ tulips and some other flowers, see Godron &lsquo;De l&rsquo;Espece&rsquo; tome 1 page 252.
+ For anemones &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo; 1859 page 98. For strawberries see
+ Herbert in &lsquo;Transactions of the Horticultural Society&rsquo; volume 4 page 17.
+ The same observer elsewhere speaks of the spontaneous crossing of
+ rhododendrons. Gallesio makes the same statement with respect to oranges.
+ I have myself known extensive crossing to occur with the common rhubarb.
+ For Leptosiphon, Verlot &lsquo;Des Varieties&rsquo; 1865 page 20. I have not included
+ in my list the Carnation, Nemophila, or Antirrhinum, the varieties of
+ which are known to cross freely, because these plants are not always
+ self-fertile. I know nothing about the self-fertility of Trollius Lecoq
+ &lsquo;De la Fecondation&rsquo; 1862 page 93, Mahonia, and Crinum, in which genera the
+ species intercross largely. With respect to Mahonia it is now scarcely
+ possible to procure in this country pure specimens of M. aquifolium or
+ repens; and the various species of Crinum sent by Herbert &lsquo;Amaryllidaceae&rsquo;
+ page 32, to Calcutta, crossed there so freely that pure seed could not be
+ saved.) Much other indirect evidence could be given with respect to the
+ extent to which varieties of the same species spontaneously intercross.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gardeners who raise seed for sale are compelled by dearly bought
+ experience to take extraordinary precautions against intercrossing. Thus
+ Messrs. Sharp &ldquo;have land engaged in the growth of seed in no less than
+ eight parishes.&rdquo; The mere fact of a vast number of plants belonging to the
+ same variety growing together is a considerable protection, as the chances
+ are strong in favour of plants of the same variety intercrossing; and it
+ is in chief part owing to this circumstance, that certain villages have
+ become famous for pure seed of particular varieties. (10/39. With respect
+ to Messrs. Sharp see &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo; 1856 page 823. Lindley&rsquo;s
+ &lsquo;Theory of Horticulture&rsquo; page 319.) Only two trials were made by me to
+ ascertain after how long an interval of time, pollen from a distinct
+ variety would obliterate more or less completely the action of a plant&rsquo;s
+ own pollen. The stigmas in two lately expanded flowers on a variety of
+ cabbage, called Ragged Jack, were well covered with pollen from the same
+ plant. After an interval of twenty-three hours, pollen from the Early
+ Barnes Cabbage growing at a distance was placed on both stigmas; and as
+ the plant was left uncovered, pollen from other flowers on the Ragged Jack
+ would certainly have been left by the bees during the next two or three
+ days on the same two stigmas. Under these circumstances it seemed very
+ unlikely that the pollen of the Barnes cabbage would produce any effect;
+ but three out of the fifteen plants raised from the two capsules thus
+ produced were plainly mongrelised: and I have no doubt that the twelve
+ other plants were affected, for they grew much more vigorously than the
+ self-fertilised seedlings from the Ragged Jack planted at the same time
+ and under the same conditions. Secondly, I placed on several stigmas of a
+ long-styled cowslip (Primula veris) plenty of pollen from the same plant,
+ and after twenty-four hours added some from a short-styled dark-red
+ Polyanthus, which is a variety of the cowslip. From the flowers thus
+ treated thirty seedlings were raised, and all these without exception bore
+ reddish flowers; so that the effect of the plant&rsquo;s own pollen, though
+ placed on the stigmas twenty-four hours previously, was quite destroyed by
+ that of the red variety. It should, however, be observed that these plants
+ are dimorphic, and that the second union was a legitimate one, whilst the
+ first was illegitimate; but flowers illegitimately fertilised with their
+ own pollen yield a moderately fair supply of seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have hitherto considered only the prepotent fertilising power of pollen
+ from a distinct variety over a plants&rsquo; own pollen,&mdash;both kinds of
+ pollen being placed on the same stigma. It is a much more remarkable fact
+ that pollen from another individual of the same variety is prepotent over
+ a plant&rsquo;s own pollen, as shown by the superiority of the seedlings raised
+ from a cross of this kind over seedlings from self-fertilised flowers.
+ Thus in Tables 7/A, B, and C, there are at least fifteen species which are
+ self-fertile when insects are excluded; and this implies that their
+ stigmas must receive their own pollen; nevertheless, most of the seedlings
+ which were raised by fertilising the non-castrated flowers of these
+ fifteen species with pollen from another plant were greatly superior, in
+ height, weight, and fertility, to the self-fertilised offspring. (10/40.
+ These fifteen species consist of Brassica oleracea, Reseda odorata and
+ lutea, Limnanthes douglasii, Papaver vagum, Viscaria oculata, Beta
+ vulgaris, Lupinus luteus, Ipomoea purpurea, Mimulus luteus, Calceolaria,
+ Verbascum thapsus, Vandellia nummularifolia, Lactuca sativa, and Zea
+ mays.) For instance, with Ipomoea purpurea every single intercrossed plant
+ exceeded in height its self-fertilised opponent until the sixth
+ generation; and so it was with Mimulus luteus until the fourth generation.
+ Out of six pairs of crossed and self-fertilised cabbages, every one of the
+ former was much heavier than the latter. With Papaver vagum, out of
+ fifteen pairs, all but two of the crossed plants were taller than their
+ self-fertilised opponents. Of eight pairs of Lupinus luteus, all but two
+ of the crossed were taller; of eight pairs of Beta vulgaris all but one;
+ and of fifteen pairs of Zea mays all but two were taller. Of fifteen pairs
+ of Limnanthes douglasii, and of seven pairs of Lactuca sativa, every
+ single crossed plant was taller than its self-fertilised opponent. It
+ should also be observed that in these experiments no particular care was
+ taken to cross-fertilise the flowers immediately after their expansion; it
+ is therefore almost certain that in many of these cases some pollen from
+ the same flower will have already fallen on and acted on the stigma.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There can hardly be a doubt that several other species of which the
+ crossed seedlings are more vigorous than the self-fertilised, as shown in
+ Tables 7/A, 7/B and 7/C, besides the above fifteen, must have received
+ their own pollen and that from another plant at nearly the same time; and
+ if so, the same remarks as those just given are applicable to them.
+ Scarcely any result from my experiments has surprised me so much as this
+ of the prepotency of pollen from a distinct individual over each plant&rsquo;s
+ own pollen, as proved by the greater constitutional vigour of the crossed
+ seedlings. The evidence of prepotency is here deduced from the comparative
+ growth of the two lots of seedlings; but we have similar evidence in many
+ cases from the much greater fertility of the non-castrated flowers on the
+ mother-plant, when these received at the same time their own pollen and
+ that from a distinct plant, in comparison with the flowers which received
+ only their own pollen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the various facts now given on the spontaneous intercrossing of
+ varieties growing near together, and on the effects of cross-fertilising
+ flowers which are self-fertile and have not been castrated, we may
+ conclude that pollen brought by insects or by the wind from a distinct
+ plant will generally prevent the action of pollen from the same flower,
+ even though it may have been applied some time before; and thus the
+ intercrossing of plants in a state of nature will be greatly favoured or
+ ensured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The case of a great tree covered with innumerable hermaphrodite flowers
+ seems at first sight strongly opposed to the belief in the frequency of
+ intercrosses between distinct individuals. The flowers which grow on the
+ opposite sides of such a tree will have been exposed to somewhat different
+ conditions, and a cross between them may perhaps be in some degree
+ beneficial; but it is not probable that it would be nearly so beneficial
+ as a cross between flowers on distinct trees, as we may infer from the
+ inefficiency of pollen taken from plants which have been propagated from
+ the same stock, though growing on separate roots. The number of bees which
+ frequent certain kinds of trees when in full flower is very great, and
+ they may be seen flying from tree to tree more frequently than might have
+ been expected. Nevertheless, if we consider how numerous are the flowers,
+ for instance, on a horse-chestnut or lime-tree, an incomparably larger
+ number of flowers must be fertilised by pollen brought from other flowers
+ on the same tree, than from flowers on a distinct tree. But we should bear
+ in mind that with the horse-chestnut, for instance, only one or two of the
+ several flowers on the same peduncle produce a seed; and that this seed is
+ the product of only one out of several ovules within the same ovarium. Now
+ we know from the experiments of Herbert and others that if one flower is
+ fertilised with pollen which is more efficient than that applied to the
+ other flowers on the same peduncle, the latter often drop off (10/41.
+ &lsquo;Variation under Domestication&rsquo; chapter 17 2nd edition volume 2 page
+ 120.); and it is probable that this would occur with many of the
+ self-fertilised flowers on a large tree, if other and adjoining flowers
+ were cross-fertilised. Of the flowers annually produced by a great tree,
+ it is almost certain that a large number would be self-fertilised; and if
+ we assume that the tree produced only 500 flowers, and that this number of
+ seeds were requisite to keep up the stock, so that at least one seedling
+ should hereafter struggle to maturity, then a large proportion of the
+ seedlings would necessarily be derived from self-fertilised seeds. But if
+ the tree annually produced 50,000 flowers, of which the self-fertilised
+ dropped off without yielding seeds, then the cross-fertilised flowers
+ might yield seeds in sufficient number to keep up the stock, and most of
+ the seedlings would be vigorous from being the product of a cross between
+ distinct individuals. In this manner the production of a vast number of
+ flowers, besides serving to entice numerous insects and to compensate for
+ the accidental destruction of many flowers by spring-frosts or otherwise,
+ would be a very great advantage to the species; and when we behold our
+ orchard-trees covered with a white sheet of bloom in the spring, we should
+ not falsely accuse nature of wasteful expenditure, though comparatively
+ little fruit is produced in the autumn.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ ANEMOPHILOUS PLANTS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The nature and relations of plants which are fertilised by the wind have
+ been admirably discussed by Delpino and Hermann Muller; and I have already
+ made some remarks on the structure of their flowers in contrast with those
+ of entomophilous species. (10/42. Delpino &lsquo;Ult. Osservazioni sulla
+ Dicogamia&rsquo; part 2 fasc. 1 1870 and &lsquo;Studi sopra un Lignaggio anemofilo&rsquo;
+ etc. 1871. Hermann Muller &lsquo;Die Befruchtung&rsquo; etc. pages 412, 442. Both
+ these authors remark that plants must have been anemophilous before they
+ were entomophilous. Hermann Muller further discusses in a very interesting
+ manner the steps by which entomophilous flowers became nectariferous and
+ gradually acquired their present structure through successive beneficial
+ changes.) There is good reason to believe that the first plants which
+ appeared on this earth were cryptogamic; and judging from what now occurs,
+ the male fertilising element must either have possessed the power of
+ spontaneous movement through the water or over damp surfaces, or have been
+ carried by currents of water to the female organs. That some of the most
+ ancient plants, such as ferns, possessed true sexual organs there can
+ hardly be a doubt; and this shows, as Hildebrand remarks, at how early a
+ period the sexes were separated. (10/43. &lsquo;Die Geschlechter-Vertheilung&rsquo;
+ 1867 pages 84-90.) As soon as plants became phanerogamic and grew on the
+ dry ground, if they were ever to intercross, it would be indispensable
+ that the male fertilising element should be transported by some means
+ through the air; and the wind is the simplest means of transport. There
+ must also have been a period when winged insects did not exist, and plants
+ would not then have been rendered entomophilous. Even at a somewhat later
+ period the more specialised orders of the Hymenoptera, Lepidoptera, and
+ Diptera, which are now chiefly concerned with the transport of pollen, did
+ not exist. Therefore the earliest terrestrial plants known to us, namely,
+ the Coniferae and Cycadiae, no doubt were anemophilous, like the existing
+ species of these same groups. A vestige of this early state of things is
+ likewise shown by some other groups of plants which are anemophilous, as
+ these on the whole stand lower in the scale than entomophilous species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no great difficulty in understanding how an anemophilous plant
+ might have been rendered entomophilous. Pollen is a nutritious substance,
+ and would soon have been discovered and devoured by insects; and if any
+ adhered to their bodies it would have been carried from the anthers to the
+ stigma of the same flower, or from one flower to another. One of the chief
+ characteristics of the pollen of anemophilous plants is its incoherence;
+ but pollen in this state can adhere to the hairy bodies of insects, as we
+ see with some Leguminosae, Ericaceae, and Melastomaceae. We have, however,
+ better evidence of the possibility of a transition of the above kind in
+ certain plants being now fertilised partly by the wind and partly by
+ insects. The common rhubarb (Rheum rhaponticum) is so far in an
+ intermediate condition, that I have seen many Diptera sucking the flowers,
+ with much pollen adhering to their bodies; and yet the pollen is so
+ incoherent, that clouds of it are emitted if the plant be gently shaken on
+ a sunny day, some of which could hardly fail to fall on the large stigmas
+ of the neighbouring flowers. According to Delpino and Hermann Muller, some
+ species of Plantago are in a similar intermediate condition. (10/44. &lsquo;Die
+ Befruchtung&rsquo; etc. page 342.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although it is probable that pollen was aboriginally the sole attraction
+ to insects, and although many plants now exist whose flowers are
+ frequented exclusively by pollen-devouring insects, yet the great majority
+ secrete nectar as the chief attraction. Many years ago I suggested that
+ primarily the saccharine matter in nectar was excreted as a waste product
+ of chemical changes in the sap; and that when the excretion happened to
+ occur within the envelopes of a flower, it was utilised for the important
+ object of cross-fertilisation, being subsequently much increased in
+ quantity and stored in various ways. (10/45. Nectar was regarded by De
+ Candolle and Dunal as an excretion, as stated by Martinet in &lsquo;Annal des
+ Sc. Nat.&rsquo; 1872 tome 14 page 211.) This view is rendered probable by the
+ leaves of some trees excreting, under certain climatic conditions, without
+ the aid of special glands, a saccharine fluid, often called honey-dew.
+ This is the case with the leaves of the lime; for although some authors
+ have disputed the fact, a most capable judge, Dr. Maxwell Masters, informs
+ me that, after having heard the discussions on this subject before the
+ Horticultural Society, he feels no doubt on this head. The leaves, as well
+ as the cut stems, of the manna ash (Fraxinus ornus) secrete in a like
+ manner saccharine matter. (10/46. &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo; 1876 page 242.)
+ According to Treviranus, so do the upper surfaces of the leaves of Carduus
+ arctioides during hot weather. Many analogous facts could be given.
+ (10/47. Kurr &lsquo;Untersuchungen uber die Bedeutung der Nektarien&rsquo; 1833 page
+ 115.) There are, however, a considerable number of plants which bear small
+ glands on their leaves, petioles, phyllodia, stipules, bracteae, or flower
+ peduncles, or on the outside of their calyx, and these glands secrete
+ minute drops of a sweet fluid, which is eagerly sought by sugar-loving
+ insects, such as ants, hive-bees, and wasps. (10/48. A large number of
+ cases are given by Delpino in the &lsquo;Bulletino Entomologico&rsquo; Anno 6 1874. To
+ these may be added those given in my text, as well as the excretion of
+ saccharine matter from the calyx of two species of Iris, and from the
+ bracteae of certain Orchideae: see Kurr &lsquo;Bedeutung der Nektarien&rsquo; 1833
+ pages 25, 28. Belt &lsquo;Nicaragua&rsquo; page 224, also refers to a similar
+ excretion by many epiphytal orchids and passion-flowers. Mr. Rodgers has
+ seen much nectar secreted from the bases of the flower-peduncles of
+ Vanilla. Link says that the only example of a hypopetalous nectary known
+ to him is externally at the base of the flowers of Chironia decussata: see
+ &lsquo;Reports on Botany, Ray Society&rsquo; 1846 page 355. An important memoir
+ bearing on this subject has lately appeared by Reinke &lsquo;Gottingen
+ Nachrichten&rsquo; 1873 page 825, who shows that in many plants the tips of the
+ serrations on the leaves in the bud bear glands which secrete only at a
+ very early age, and which have the same morphological structure as true
+ nectar-secreting glands. He further shows that the nectar-secreting glands
+ on the petioles of Prunus avium are not developed at a very early age, yet
+ wither away on the old leaves. They are homologous with those on the
+ serrations of the blades of the same leaves, as shown by their structure
+ and by transition-forms; for the lowest serrations on the blades of most
+ of the leaves secrete nectar instead of resin (harz).) In the case of the
+ glands on the stipules of Vicia sativa, the excretion manifestly depends
+ on changes in the sap, consequent on the sun shining brightly; for I
+ repeatedly observed that as soon as the sun was hidden behind clouds the
+ secretion ceased, and the hive-bees left the field; but as soon as the sun
+ broke out again, they returned to their feast. (10/49. I published a brief
+ notice of this case in the &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo; 1855 July 21 page 487,
+ and afterwards made further observations. Besides the hive-bee, another
+ species of bee, a moth, ants, and two kinds of flies sucked the drops of
+ fluid on the stipules. The larger drops tasted sweet. The hive-bees never
+ even looked at the flowers which were open at the same time; whilst two
+ species of humble-bees neglected the stipules and visited only the
+ flowers.) I have observed an analogous fact with the secretion of true
+ nectar in the flowers of Lobelia erinus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Delpino, however, maintains that the power of secreting a sweet fluid by
+ any extra-floral organ has been in every case specially gained, for the
+ sake of attracting ants and wasps as defenders of the plant against their
+ enemies; but I have never seen any reason to believe that this is so with
+ the three species observed by me, namely, Prunus laurocerasus, Vicia
+ sativa, and V. faba. No plant is so little attacked by enemies of any kind
+ as the common bracken-fern (Pteris aquilina); and yet, as my son Francis
+ has discovered, the large glands at the bases of the fronds, but only
+ whilst young, excrete much sweetish fluid, which is eagerly sought by
+ innumerable ants, chiefly belonging to Myrmica; and these ants certainly
+ do not serve as a protection against any enemy. Delpino argues that such
+ glands ought not to be considered as excretory, because if they were so,
+ they would be present in every species; but I cannot see much force in
+ this argument, as the leaves of some plants excrete sugar only during
+ certain states of the weather. That in some cases the secretion serves to
+ attract insects as defenders of the plant, and may have been developed to
+ a high degree for this special purpose, I have not the least doubt, from
+ the observations of Delpino, and more especially from those of Mr. Belt on
+ Acacia sphaerocephala, and on passion-flowers. This acacia likewise
+ produces, as an additional attraction to ants, small bodies containing
+ much oil and protoplasm, and analogous bodies are developed by a Cecropia
+ for the same purpose, as described by Fritz Muller. (10/50. Mr. Belt &lsquo;The
+ Naturalist in Nicaragua&rsquo; 1874 page 218, has given a most interesting
+ account of the paramount importance of ants as defenders of the above
+ Acacia. With respect to the Cecropia see &lsquo;Nature&rsquo; 1876 page 304. My son
+ Francis has described the microscopical structure and development of these
+ wonderful food-bodies in a paper read before the Linnean Society.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The excretion of a sweet fluid by glands seated outside of a flower is
+ rarely utilised as a means for cross-fertilisation by the aid of insects;
+ but this occurs with the bracteae of the Marcgraviaceae, as the late Dr.
+ Cruger informed me from actual observation in the West Indies, and as
+ Delpino infers with much acuteness from the relative position of the
+ several parts of their flowers. (10/51. &lsquo;Ult. Osservaz. Dicogamia&rsquo; 1868-69
+ page 188.) Mr. Farrer has also shown that the flowers of Coronilla are
+ curiously modified, so that bees may fertilise them whilst sucking the
+ fluid secreted from the outside of the calyx. (10/52. &lsquo;Nature&rsquo; 1874 page
+ 169.) It further appears probable from the observations of the Reverend
+ W.A. Leighton, that the fluid so abundantly secreted by glands on the
+ phyllodia of the Australian Acacia magnifica, which stand near the
+ flowers, is connected with their fertilisation. (10/53. &lsquo;Annals and
+ Magazine of Natural History&rsquo; volume 16 1865 page 14. In my work on the
+ &lsquo;Fertilisation of Orchids&rsquo; and in a paper subsequently published in the
+ &lsquo;Annals and Magazine of Natural History&rsquo; it has been shown that although
+ certain kinds of orchids possess a nectary, no nectar is actually secreted
+ by it; but that insects penetrate the inner walls and suck the fluid
+ contained in the intercellular spaces. I further suggested, in the case of
+ some other orchids which do not secrete nectar, that insects gnawed the
+ labellum; and this suggestion has since been proved true. Hermann Muller
+ and Delpino have now shown that some other plants have thickened petals
+ which are sucked or gnawed by insects, their fertilisation being thus
+ aided. All the known facts on this head have been collected by Delpino in
+ his &lsquo;Ult. Osserv.&rsquo; part 2 fasc. 2 1875 pages 59-63.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The amount of pollen produced by anemophilous plants, and the distance to
+ which it is often transported by the wind, are both surprisingly great.
+ Mr. Hassall found that the weight of pollen produced by a single plant of
+ the Bulrush (Typha) was 144 grains. Bucketfuls of pollen, chiefly of
+ Coniferae and Gramineae, have been swept off the decks of vessels near the
+ North American shore; and Mr. Riley has seen the ground near St. Louis, in
+ Missouri, covered with pollen, as if sprinkled with sulphur; and there was
+ good reason to believe that this had been transported from the
+ pine-forests at least 400 miles to the south. Kerner has seen the
+ snow-fields on the higher Alps similarly dusted; and Mr. Blackley found
+ numerous pollen-grains, in one instance 1200, adhering to sticky slides,
+ which were sent up to a height of from 500 to 1000 feet by means of a
+ kite, and then uncovered by a special mechanism. It is remarkable that in
+ these experiments there were on an average nineteen times as many
+ pollen-grains in the atmosphere at the higher than at the lower levels.
+ (10/54. For Mr. Hassall&rsquo;s observations see &lsquo;Annals and Magazine of Natural
+ History&rsquo; volume 8 1842 page 108. In the &lsquo;North American Journal of
+ Science&rsquo; January 1842, there is an account of the pollen swept off the
+ decks of a vessel. Riley &lsquo;Fifth Report on the Noxious Insects of Missouri&rsquo;
+ 1873 page 86. Kerner &lsquo;Die Schutzmittel des Pollens&rsquo; 1873 page 6. This
+ author has also seen a lake in the Tyrol so covered with pollen, that the
+ water no longer appeared blue. Mr. Blackley &lsquo;Experimental Researches on
+ Hay-fever&rsquo; 1873 pages 132, 141-152.) Considering these facts, it is not so
+ surprising as it at first appears that all, or nearly all, the stigmas of
+ anemophilous plants should receive pollen brought to them by mere chance
+ by the wind. During the early part of summer every object is thus dusted
+ with pollen; for instance, I examined for another purpose the labella of a
+ large number of flowers of the Fly Ophrys (which is rarely visited by
+ insects), and found on all very many pollen-grains of other plants, which
+ had been caught by their velvety surfaces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The extraordinary quantity and lightness of the pollen of anemophilous
+ plants are no doubt both necessary, as their pollen has generally to be
+ carried to the stigmas of other and often distant flowers; for, as we
+ shall soon see, most anemophilous plants have their sexes separated. The
+ fertilisation of these plants is generally aided by the stigmas being of
+ large size or plumose; and in the case of the Coniferae, by the naked
+ ovules secreting a drop of fluid, as shown by Delpino. Although the number
+ of anemophilous species is small, as the author just quoted remarks, the
+ number of individuals is large in comparison with that of entomophilous
+ species. This holds good especially in cold and temperate regions, where
+ insects are not so numerous as under a warmer climate, and where
+ consequently entomophilous plants are less favourably situated. We see
+ this in our forests of Coniferae and other trees, such as oaks, beeches,
+ birches, ashes, etc.; and in the Gramineae, Cyperaceae, and Juncaceae,
+ which clothe our meadows and swamps; all these trees and plants being
+ fertilised by the wind. As a large quantity of pollen is wasted by
+ anemophilous plants, it is surprising that so many vigorous species of
+ this kind abounding with individuals should still exist in any part of the
+ world; for if they had been rendered entomophilous, their pollen would
+ have been transported by the aid of the senses and appetites of insects
+ with incomparably greater safety than by the wind. That such a conversion
+ is possible can hardly be doubted, from the remarks lately made on the
+ existence of intermediate forms; and apparently it has been effected in
+ the group of willows, as we may infer from the nature of their nearest
+ allies. (10/55. Hermann Muller &lsquo;Die Befruchtung&rsquo; etc. page 149.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems at first sight a still more surprising fact that plants, after
+ having been once rendered entomophilous, should ever again have become
+ anemophilous; but this has occasionally though rarely occurred, for
+ instance, with the common Poterium sanguisorba, as may be inferred from
+ its belonging to the Rosaceae. Such cases are, however, intelligible, as
+ almost all plants require to be occasionally intercrossed; and if any
+ entomiphilous species ceased to be visited by insects, it would probably
+ perish unless it were rendered anemophilous. A plant would be neglected by
+ insects if nectar failed to be secreted, unless indeed a large supply of
+ attractive pollen was present; and from what we have seen of the excretion
+ of saccharine fluid from leaves and glands being largely governed in
+ several cases by climatic influences, and from some few flowers which do
+ not now secrete nectar still retaining coloured guiding-marks, the failure
+ of the secretion cannot be considered as a very improbable event. The same
+ result would follow to a certainty, if winged insects ceased to exist in
+ any district, or became very rare. Now there is only a single plant in the
+ great order of the Cruciferae, namely, Pringlea, which is anemophilous,
+ and this plant is an inhabitant of Kerguelen Land, where there are hardly
+ any winged insects, owing probably, as was suggested by me in the case of
+ Madeira, to the risk which they run of being blown out to sea and
+ destroyed. (10/56. The Reverend A.E. Eaton in &lsquo;Proceedings of the Royal
+ Society&rsquo; volume 23 1875 page 351.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A remarkable fact with respect to anemophilous plants is that they are
+ often diclinous, that is, they are either monoecious with their sexes
+ separated on the same plant, or dioecious with their sexes on distinct
+ plants. In the class Monoecia of Linnaeus, Delpino shows that the species
+ of twenty-eight genera are anemophilous, and of seventeen genera
+ entomophilous. (10/57. &lsquo;Studi sopra un Lignaggio anemofilo delle
+ Compositae&rsquo; 1871.) The larger proportion of entomophilous genera in this
+ latter class is probably the indirect result of insects having the power
+ of carrying pollen to another and sometimes distant plant much more
+ securely than the wind. In the above two classes taken together there are
+ thirty-eight anemophilous and thirty-six entomophilous genera; whereas in
+ the great mass of hermaphrodite plants the proportion of anemophilous to
+ entomophilous genera is extremely small. The cause of this remarkable
+ difference may be attributed to anemophilous plants having retained in a
+ greater degree than the entomophilous a primordial condition, in which the
+ sexes were separated and their mutual fertilisation effected by means of
+ the wind. That the earliest and lowest members of the vegetable kingdom
+ had their sexes separated, as is still the case to a large extent, is the
+ opinion of a high authority, Nageli. (10/58. &lsquo;Entstehung und Begriff der
+ Naturhist. Art&rsquo; 1865 page 22.) It is indeed difficult to avoid this
+ conclusion, if we admit the view, which seems highly probable, that the
+ conjugation of the Algae and of some of the simplest animals is the first
+ step towards sexual reproduction; and if we further bear in mind that a
+ greater and greater degree of differentiation between the cells which
+ conjugate can be traced, thus leading apparently to the development of the
+ two sexual forms. (10/59. See the interesting discussion on this whole
+ subject by O. Butschli in his &lsquo;Studien uber die ersten
+ Entwickelungsvorgange der Eizelle; etc. 1876 pages 207-219. Also Engelmann
+ &ldquo;Ueber Entwickelung von Infusorien&rdquo; &lsquo;Morphol. Jahrbuch&rsquo; B. 1 page 573.
+ Also Dr. A. Dodel &ldquo;Die Kraushaar-Algae&rdquo; &lsquo;Pringsheims Jahrbuch f. Wiss.
+ Bot.&rsquo; B. 10.) We have also seen that as plants became more highly
+ developed and affixed to the ground, they would be compelled to be
+ anemophilous in order to intercross. Therefore all plants which have not
+ since been greatly modified, would tend still to be both diclinous and
+ anemophilous; and we can thus understand the connection between these two
+ states, although they appear at first sight quite disconnected. If this
+ view is correct, plants must have been rendered hermaphrodites at a later
+ though still very early period, and entomophilous at a yet later period,
+ namely, after the development of winged insects. So that the relationship
+ between hermaphroditism and fertilisation by means of insects is likewise
+ to a certain extent intelligible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why the descendants of plants which were originally dioecious, and which
+ therefore profited by always intercrossing with another individual, should
+ have been converted into hermaphrodites, may perhaps be explained by the
+ risk which they ran, especially as long as they were anemophilous, of not
+ being always fertilised, and consequently of not leaving offspring. This
+ latter evil, the greatest of all to any organism, would have been much
+ lessened by their becoming hermaphrodites, though with the contingent
+ disadvantage of frequent self-fertilisation. By what graduated steps an
+ hermaphrodite condition was acquired we do not know. But we can see that
+ if a lowly organised form, in which the two sexes were represented by
+ somewhat different individuals, were to increase by budding either before
+ or after conjugation, the two incipient sexes would be capable of
+ appearing by buds on the same stock, as occasionally occurs with various
+ characters at the present day. The organism would then be in a monoecious
+ condition, and this is probably the first step towards hermaphroditism;
+ for if very simple male and female flowers on the same stock, each
+ consisting of a single stamen or pistil, were brought close together and
+ surrounded by a common envelope, in nearly the same manner as with the
+ florets of the Compositae, we should have an hermaphrodite flower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There seems to be no limit to the changes which organisms undergo under
+ changing conditions of life; and some hermaphrodite plants, descended as
+ we must believe from aboriginally diclinous plants, have had their sexes
+ again separated. That this has occurred, we may infer from the presence of
+ rudimentary stamens in the flowers of some individuals, and of rudimentary
+ pistils in the flowers of other individuals, for example in Lychnis
+ dioica. But a conversion of this kind will not have occurred unless
+ cross-fertilisation was already assured, generally by the agency of
+ insects; but why the production of male and female flowers on distinct
+ plants should have been advantageous to the species, cross-fertilisation
+ having been previously assured, is far from obvious. A plant might indeed
+ produce twice as many seeds as were necessary to keep up its numbers under
+ new or changed conditions of life; and if it did not vary by bearing fewer
+ flowers, and did vary in the state of its reproductive organs (as often
+ occurs under cultivation), a wasteful expenditure of seeds and pollen
+ would be saved by the flowers becoming diclinous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A related point is worth notice. I remarked in my Origin of Species that
+ in Britain a much larger proportion of trees and bushes than of herbaceous
+ plants have their sexes separated; and so it is, according to Asa Gray and
+ Hooker, in North America and New Zealand. (10/60. I find in the &lsquo;London
+ Catalogue of British Plants&rsquo; that there are thirty-two indigenous trees
+ and bushes in Great Britain, classed under nine families; but to err on
+ the safe side, I have counted only six species of willows. Of the
+ thirty-two trees and bushes, nineteen, or more than half, have their sexes
+ separated; and this is an enormous proportion compared with other British
+ plants. New Zealand abounds with diclinous plants and trees; and Dr.
+ Hooker calculates that out of about 756 phanerogamic plants inhabiting the
+ islands, no less than 108 are trees, belonging to thirty-five families. Of
+ these 108 trees, fifty-two, or very nearly half, have their sexes more or
+ less separated. Of bushes there are 149, of which sixty-one have their
+ sexes in the same state; whilst of the remaining 500 herbaceous plants
+ only 121, or less than a fourth, have their sexes separated. Lastly,
+ Professor Asa Gray informs me that in the United States there are 132
+ native trees (belonging to twenty-five families) of which ninety-five
+ (belonging to seventeen families) &ldquo;have their sexes more or less
+ separated, for the greater part decidedly separated.&rdquo;) It is, however,
+ doubtful how far this rule holds good generally, and it certainly does not
+ do so in Australia. But I have been assured that the flowers of the
+ prevailing Australian trees, namely, the Myrtaceae, swarm with insects,
+ and if they are dichogamous they would be practically diclinous. (10/61.
+ With respect to the Proteaceae of Australia, Mr. Bentham &lsquo;Journal of the
+ Linnean Society Botany&rsquo; volume 13 1871 pages 58, 64, remarks on the
+ various contrivances by which the stigma in the several genera is screened
+ from the action of the pollen from the same flower. For instance, in
+ Synaphea &ldquo;the stigma is held by the eunuch (i.e., one of the stamens which
+ is barren) safe from all pollution from her brother anthers, and is
+ preserved intact for any pollen that may be inserted by insects and other
+ agencies.&rdquo;) As far as anemophilous plants are concerned, we know that they
+ are apt to have their sexes separated, and we can see that it would be an
+ unfavourable circumstance for them to bear their flowers very close to the
+ ground, as their pollen is liable to be blown high up in the air (10/62.
+ Kerner &lsquo;Schutzmittel des Pollens&rsquo; 1873 page 4.); but as the culms of
+ grasses give sufficient elevation, we cannot thus account for so many
+ trees and bushes being diclinous. We may infer from our previous
+ discussion that a tree bearing numerous hermaphrodite flowers would rarely
+ intercross with another tree, except by means of the pollen of a distinct
+ individual being prepotent over the plants&rsquo; own pollen. Now the separation
+ of the sexes, whether the plant were anemophilous are entomophilous, would
+ most effectually bar self-fertilisation, and this may be the cause of so
+ many trees and bushes being diclinous. Or to put the case in another way,
+ a plant would be better fitted for development into a tree, if the sexes
+ were separated, than if it were hermaphrodite; for in the former case its
+ numerous flowers would be less liable to continued self-fertilisation. But
+ it should also be observed that the long life of a tree or bush permits of
+ the separation of the sexes, with much less risk of evil from impregnation
+ occasionally failing and seeds not being produced, than in the case of
+ short-lived plants. Hence it probably is, as Lecoq has remarked, that
+ annual plants are rarely dioecious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, we have seen reason to believe that the higher plants are
+ descended from extremely low forms which conjugated, and that the
+ conjugating individuals differed somewhat from one another,&mdash;the one
+ representing the male and the other the female&mdash;so that plants were
+ aboriginally dioecious. At a very early period such lowly organised
+ dioecious plants probably gave rise by budding to monoecious plants with
+ the two sexes borne by the same individual; and by a still closer union of
+ the sexes to hermaphrodite plants, which are now much the commonest form.
+ (10/63. There is a considerable amount of evidence that all the higher
+ animals are the descendants of hermaphrodites; and it is a curious problem
+ whether such hermaphroditism may not have been the result of the
+ conjugation of two slightly different individuals, which represented the
+ two incipient sexes. On this view, the higher animals may now owe their
+ bilateral structure, with all their organs double at an early embryonic
+ period, to the fusion or conjugation of two primordial individuals.) As
+ soon as plants became affixed to the ground, their pollen must have been
+ carried by some means from flower to flower, at first almost certainly by
+ the wind, then by pollen-devouring, and afterwards by nectar-seeking
+ insects. During subsequent ages some few entomophilous plants have been
+ again rendered anemophilous, and some hermaphrodite plants have had their
+ sexes again separated; and we can vaguely see the advantages of such
+ recurrent changes under certain conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dioecious plants, however fertilised, have a great advantage over other
+ plants in their cross-fertilisation being assured. But this advantage is
+ gained in the case of anemophilous species at the expense of the
+ production of an enormous superfluity of pollen, with some risk to them
+ and to entomophilous species of their fertilisation occasionally failing.
+ Half the individuals, moreover, namely, the males, produce no seed, and
+ this might possibly be a disadvantage. Delpino remarks that dioecious
+ plants cannot spread so easily as monoecious and hermaphrodite species,
+ for a single individual which happened to reach some new site could not
+ propagate its kind; but it may be doubted whether this is a serious evil.
+ Monoecious plants can hardly fail to be to a large extent dioecious in
+ function, owing to the lightness of their pollen and to the wind blowing
+ laterally, with the great additional advantage of occasionally or often
+ producing some self-fertilised seeds. When they are also dichogamous, they
+ are necessarily dioecious in function. Lastly, hermaphrodite plants can
+ generally produce at least some self-fertilised seeds, and they are at the
+ same time capable, through the various means specified in this chapter, of
+ cross-fertilisation. When their structure absolutely prevents
+ self-fertilisation, they are in the same relative position to one another
+ as monoecious and dioecious plants, with what may be an advantage, namely,
+ that every flower is capable of yielding seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI. THE HABITS OF INSECTS IN RELATION TO THE FERTILISATION OF
+ FLOWERS.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Insects visit the flowers of the same species as long as they can.
+ Cause of this habit.
+ Means by which bees recognise the flowers of the same species.
+ Sudden secretion of nectar.
+ Nectar of certain flowers unattractive to certain insects.
+ Industry of bees, and the number of flowers visited within a short time.
+ Perforation of the corolla by bees.
+ Skill shown in the operation.
+ Hive-bees profit by the holes made by humble-bees.
+ Effects of habit.
+ The motive for perforating flowers to save time.
+ Flowers growing in crowded masses chiefly perforated.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Bees and various other insects must be directed by instinct to search
+ flowers for nectar and pollen, as they act in this manner without
+ instruction as soon as they emerge from the pupa state. Their instincts,
+ however, are not of a specialised nature, for they visit many exotic
+ flowers as readily as the endemic kinds, and they often search for nectar
+ in flowers which do not secrete any; and they may be seen attempting to
+ suck it out of nectaries of such length that it cannot be reached by them.
+ (11/1. See, on this subject Hermann Muller &lsquo;Befruchtung&rsquo; etc. page 427;
+ and Sir J. Lubbock&rsquo;s &lsquo;British Wild Flowers&rsquo; etc. page 20. Muller &lsquo;Bienen
+ Zeitung&rsquo; June 1876 page 119, assigns good reasons for his belief that bees
+ and many other Hymenoptera have inherited from some early nectar-sucking
+ progenitor greater skill in robbing flowers than that which is displayed
+ by insects belonging to the other Orders.) All kinds of bees and certain
+ other insects usually visit the flowers of the same species as long as
+ they can, before going to another species. This fact was observed by
+ Aristotle with respect to the hive-bee more than 2000 years ago, and was
+ noticed by Dobbs in a paper published in 1736 in the Philosophical
+ Transactions. It may be observed by any one, both with hive and
+ humble-bees, in every flower-garden; not that the habit is invariably
+ followed. Mr. Bennett watched for several hours many plants of Lamium
+ album, L. purpureum, and another Labiate plant, Nepeta glechoma, all
+ growing mingled together on a bank near some hives; and he found that each
+ bee confined its visits to the same species. (11/2. &lsquo;Nature&rsquo; 1874 June 4
+ page 92.) The pollen of these three plants differs in colour, so that he
+ was able to test his observations by examining that which adhered to the
+ bodies of the captured bees, and he found one kind on each bee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Humble and hive-bees are good botanists, for they know that varieties may
+ differ widely in the colour of their flowers and yet belong to the same
+ species. I have repeatedly seen humble-bees flying straight from a plant
+ of the ordinary red Dictamnus fraxinella to a white variety; from one to
+ another very differently coloured variety of Delphinium consolida and of
+ Primula veris; from a dark purple to a bright yellow variety of Viola
+ tricolor; and with two species of Papaver, from one variety to another
+ which differed much in colour; but in this latter case some of the bees
+ flew indifferently to either species, although passing by other genera,
+ and thus acted as if the two species were merely varieties. Hermann Muller
+ also has seen hive-bees flying from flower to flower of Ranunculus
+ bulbosus and arvensis, and of Trifolium fragiferum and repens; and even
+ from blue hyacinths to blue violets. (11/3. &lsquo;Bienen Zeitung&rsquo; July 1876
+ page 183.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some species of Diptera or flies keep to the flowers of the same species
+ with almost as much regularity as do bees; and when captured they are
+ found covered with pollen. I have seen Rhingia rostrata acting in this
+ manner with the flowers of Lychnis dioica, Ajuga reptans, and Vici sepium.
+ Volucella plumosa and Empis cheiroptera flew straight from flower to
+ flower of Myosotis sylvatica. Dolichopus nigripennis behaved in the same
+ manner with Potentilla tormentilla; and other Diptera with Stellaria
+ holostea, Helianthemum vulgare, Bellis perennis, Veronica hederaefolia and
+ chamoedrys; but some flies visited indifferently the flowers of these two
+ latter species. I have seen more than once a minute Thrips, with pollen
+ adhering to its body, fly from one flower to another of the same kind; and
+ one was observed by me crawling about within a convolvulus with four
+ grains of pollen adhering to its head, which were deposited on the stigma.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fabricius and Sprengel state that when flies have once entered the flowers
+ of Aristolochia they never escape,&mdash;a statement which I could not
+ believe, as in this case the insects would not aid in the
+ cross-fertilisation of the plant; and this statement has now been shown by
+ Hildebrand to be erroneous. As the spathes of Arum maculatum are furnished
+ with filaments apparently adapted to prevent the exit of insects, they
+ resemble in this respect the flowers of Aristolochia; and on examining
+ several spathes, from thirty to sixty minute Diptera belonging to three
+ species were found in some of them; and many of these insects were lying
+ dead at the bottom, as if they had been permanently entrapped. In order to
+ discover whether the living ones could escape and carry pollen to another
+ plant, I tied in the spring of 1842 a fine muslin bag tightly round a
+ spathe; and on returning in an hour&rsquo;s time several little flies were
+ crawling about on the inner surface of the bag. I then gathered a spathe
+ and breathed hard into it; several flies soon crawled out, and all without
+ exception were dusted with arum pollen. These flies quickly flew away, and
+ I distinctly saw three of them fly to another plant about a yard off; they
+ alighted on the inner or concave surface of the spathe, and suddenly flew
+ down into the flower. I then opened this flower, and although not a single
+ anther had burst, several grains of pollen were lying at the bottom, which
+ must have been brought from another plant by one of these flies or by some
+ other insect. In another flower little flies were crawling about, and I
+ saw them leave pollen on the stigmas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not know whether Lepidoptera generally keep to the flowers of the
+ same species; but I once observed many minute moths (I believe Lampronia
+ (Tinea) calthella) apparently eating the pollen of Mercurialis annua, and
+ they had the whole front of their bodies covered with pollen. I then went
+ to a female plant some yards off, and saw in the course of fifteen minutes
+ three of these moths alight on the stigmas. Lepidoptera are probably often
+ induced to frequent the flowers of the same species, whenever these are
+ provided with a long and narrow nectary, as in this case other insects
+ cannot suck the nectar, which will thus be preserved for those having an
+ elongated proboscis. No doubt the Yucca moth visits only the flowers
+ whence its name is derived, for a most wonderful instinct guides this moth
+ to place pollen on the stigma, so that the ovules may be developed on
+ which the larvae feed. (11/4. Described by Mr. Riley in the &lsquo;American
+ Naturalist&rsquo; volume 7 October 1873.)With respect to Coleoptera, I have seen
+ Meligethes covered with pollen flying from flower to flower of the same
+ species; and this must often occur, as, according to M. Brisout, &ldquo;many of
+ the species affect only one kind of plant.&rdquo; (11/5. As quoted in &lsquo;American
+ Nat.&rsquo; May 1873 page 270.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must not be supposed from these several statements that insects
+ strictly confine their visits to the same species. They often visit other
+ species when only a few plants of the same kind grow near together. In a
+ flower-garden containing some plants of Œnothera, the pollen of which can
+ easily be recognised, I found not only single grains but masses of it
+ within many flowers of Mimulus, Digitalis, Antirrhinum, and Linaria. Other
+ kinds of pollen were likewise detected in these same flowers. A large
+ number of the stigmas of a plant of Thyme, in which the anthers were
+ completely aborted, were examined; and these stigmas, though scarcely
+ larger than a split needle, were covered not only with pollen of Thyme
+ brought from other plants by the bees, but with several other kinds of
+ pollen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That insects should visit the flowers of the same species as long as they
+ can, is of great importance to the plant, as it favours the
+ cross-fertilisation of distinct individuals of the same species; but no
+ one will suppose that insects act in this manner for the good of the
+ plant. The cause probably lies in insects being thus enabled to work
+ quicker; they have just learnt how to stand in the best position on the
+ flower, and how far and in what direction to insert their proboscides.
+ (11/6. Since these remarks were written, I find that Hermann Muller has
+ come to almost exactly the same conclusion with respect to the cause of
+ insects frequenting as long as they can the flowers of the same species:
+ &lsquo;Bienen Zeitung&rsquo; July 1876 page 182.) They act on the same principle as
+ does an artificer who has to make half-a-dozen engines, and who saves time
+ by making consecutively each wheel and part for all of them. Insects, or
+ at least bees, seem much influenced by habit in all their manifold
+ operations; and we shall presently see that this holds good in their
+ felonious practice of biting holes through the corolla.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a curious question how bees recognise the flowers of the same
+ species. That the coloured corolla is the chief guide cannot be doubted.
+ On a fine day, when hive-bees were incessantly visiting the little blue
+ flowers of Lobelia erinus, I cut off all the petals of some, and only the
+ lower striped petals of others, and these flowers were not once again
+ sucked by the bees, although some actually crawled over them. The removal
+ of the two little upper petals alone made no difference in their visits.
+ Mr. J. Anderson likewise states that when he removed the corollas of the
+ Calceolaria, bees never visited the flowers. (11/7. &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo;
+ 1853 page 534. Kurr cut off the nectaries from a large number of flowers
+ of several species, and found that the greater number yielded seeds; but
+ insects probably would not perceive the loss of the nectary until they had
+ inserted their proboscides into the holes thus formed, and in doing so
+ would fertilise the flowers. He also removed the whole corolla from a
+ considerable number of flowers, and these likewise yielded seeds. Flowers
+ which are self-fertile would naturally produce seeds under these
+ circumstances; but I am greatly surprised that Delphinium consolida, as
+ well as another species of Delphinium, and Viola tricolor, should have
+ produced a fair supply of seeds when thus treated; but it does not appear
+ that he compared the number of the seeds thus produced with those yielded
+ by unmutilated flowers left to the free access of insects: &lsquo;Bedeutung der
+ Nektarien&rsquo; 1833 pages 123-135.) On the other hand, in some large masses of
+ Geranium phaeum which had escaped out of a garden, I observed the unusual
+ fact of the flowers continuing to secrete an abundance of nectar after all
+ the petals had fallen off; and the flowers in this state were still
+ visited by humble-bees. But the bees might have learnt that these flowers
+ with all their petals lost were still worth visiting, by finding nectar in
+ those with only one or two lost. The colour alone of the corolla serves as
+ an approximate guide: thus I watched for some time humble-bees which were
+ visiting exclusively plants of the white-flowered Spiranthes autumnalis,
+ growing on short turf at a considerable distance apart; and these bees
+ often flew within a few inches of several other plants with white flowers,
+ and then without further examination passed onwards in search of the
+ Spiranthes. Again, many hive-bees which confined their visits to the
+ common ling (Calluna vulgaris), repeatedly flew towards Erica tetralix,
+ evidently attracted by the nearly similar tint of their flowers, and then
+ instantly passed on in search of the Calluna.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the colour of the flower is not the sole guide, is clearly shown by
+ the six cases above given of bees which repeatedly passed in a direct line
+ from one variety to another of the same species, although they bore very
+ differently coloured flowers. I observed also bees flying in a straight
+ line from one clump of a yellow-flowered Œnothera to every other clump of
+ the same plant in the garden, without turning an inch from their course to
+ plants of Eschscholtzia and others with yellow flowers which lay only a
+ foot or two on either side. In these cases the bees knew the position of
+ each plant in the garden perfectly well, as we may infer by the directness
+ of their flight; so that they were guided by experience and memory. But
+ how did they discover at first that the above varieties with differently
+ coloured flowers belonged to the same species? Improbable as it may
+ appear, they seem, at least sometimes, to recognise plants even from a
+ distance by their general aspect, in the same manner as we should do. On
+ three occasions I observed humble-bees flying in a perfectly straight line
+ from a tall larkspur (Delphinium) which was in full flower to another
+ plant of the same species at the distance of fifteen yards which had not
+ as yet a single flower open, and on which the buds showed only a faint
+ tinge of blue. Here neither odour nor the memory of former visits could
+ have come into play, and the tinge of blue was so faint that it could
+ hardly have served as a guide. (11/8. A fact mentioned by Hermann Muller
+ &lsquo;Die Befruchtung&rsquo; etc. page 347, shows that bees possess acute powers of
+ vision and discrimination; for those engaged in collecting pollen from
+ Primula elatior invariably passed by the flowers of the long-styled form,
+ in which the anthers are seated low down in the tubular corolla. Yet the
+ difference in aspect between the long-styled and short-styled forms is
+ extremely slight.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The conspicuousness of the corolla does not suffice to induce repeated
+ visits from insects, unless nectar is at the same time secreted, together
+ perhaps with some odour emitted. I watched for a fortnight many times
+ daily a wall covered with Linaria cymbalaria in full flower, and never saw
+ a bee even looking at one. There was then a very hot day, and suddenly
+ many bees were industriously at work on the flowers. It appears that a
+ certain degree of heat is necessary for the secretion of nectar; for I
+ observed with Lobelia erinus that if the sun ceased to shine for only half
+ an hour, the visits of the bees slackened and soon ceased. An analogous
+ fact with respect to the sweet excretion from the stipules of Vicia sativa
+ has been already given. As in the case of the Linaria, so with Pedicularis
+ sylvatica, Polygala vulgaris, Viola tricolor, and some species of
+ Trifolium, I have watched the flowers day after day without seeing a bee
+ at work, and then suddenly all the flowers were visited by many bees. Now
+ how did so many bees discover at once that the flowers were secreting
+ nectar? I presume that it must have been by their odour; and that as soon
+ as a few bees began to suck the flowers, others of the same and of
+ different kinds observed the fact and profited by it. We shall presently
+ see, when we treat of the perforation of the corolla, that bees are fully
+ capable of profiting by the labour of other species. Memory also comes
+ into play, for, as already remarked, bees know the position of each clump
+ of flowers in a garden. I have repeatedly seen them passing round a
+ corner, but otherwise in as straight a line as possible, from one plant of
+ Fraxinella and of Linaria to another and distant one of the same species;
+ although, owing to the intervention of other plants, the two were not in
+ sight of each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would appear that either the taste or the odour of the nectar of
+ certain flowers is unattractive to hive or to humble-bees, or to both; for
+ there seems no other reason why certain open flowers which secrete nectar
+ are not visited by them. The small quantity of nectar secreted by some of
+ these flowers can hardly be the cause of their neglect, as hive-bees
+ search eagerly for the minute drops on the glands on the leaves of the
+ Prunus laurocerasus. Even the bees from different hives sometimes visit
+ different kinds of flowers, as is said to be the case by Mr. Grant with
+ respect to the Polyanthus and Viola tricolor. (11/9. &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo;
+ Chronicle&rsquo; 1844 page 374.) I have known humble-bees to visit the flowers
+ of Lobelia fulgens in one garden and not in another at the distance of
+ only a few miles. The cupful of nectar in the labellum of Epipactis
+ latifolia is never touched by hive- or humble-bees, although I have seen
+ them flying close by; and yet the nectar has a pleasant taste to us, and
+ is habitually consumed by the common wasp. As far as I have seen, wasps
+ seek for nectar in this country only from the flowers of this Epipactis,
+ Scrophularia aquatica, Symphoricarpus racemosa (11/10. The same fact
+ apparently holds good in Italy, for Delpino says that the flowers of these
+ three plants are alone visited by wasps: &lsquo;Nettarii Estranuziali, Bulletino
+ Entomologico&rsquo; anno 6.), and Tritoma; the two former plants being endemic,
+ and the two latter exotic. As wasps are so fond of sugar and of any sweet
+ fluid, and as they do not disdain the minute drops on the glands of Prunus
+ laurocerasus, it is a strange fact that they do not suck the nectar of
+ many open flowers, which they could do without the aid of a proboscis.
+ Hive-bees visit the flowers of the Symphoricarpus and Tritoma, and this
+ makes it all the stranger that they do not visit the flowers of the
+ Epipactis, or, as far as I have seen, those of the Scrophularia aquatica;
+ although they do visit the flowers of Scrophularia nodosa, at least in
+ North America. (11/11. &lsquo;Silliman&rsquo;s American Journal of Science&rsquo; August
+ 1871.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The extraordinary industry of bees and the number of flowers which they
+ visit within a short time, so that each flower is visited repeatedly, must
+ greatly increase the chance of each receiving pollen from a distinct
+ plant. When the nectar is in any way hidden, bees cannot tell without
+ inserting their proboscides whether it has lately been exhausted by other
+ bees, and this, as remarked in a former chapter, forces them to visit many
+ more flowers than they otherwise would. But they endeavour to lose as
+ little time as they can; thus in flowers having several nectaries, if they
+ find one dry they do not try the others, but as I have often observed,
+ pass on to another flower. They work so industriously and effectually,
+ that even in the case of social plants, of which hundreds of thousands
+ grow together, as with the several kinds of heath, every single flower is
+ visited, of which evidence will presently be given. They lose no time and
+ fly very quickly from plant to plant, but I do not know the rate at which
+ hive-bees fly. Humble-bees fly at the rate of ten miles an hour, as I was
+ able to ascertain in the case of the males from their curious habit of
+ calling at certain fixed points, which made it easy to measure the time
+ taken in passing from one place to another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to the number of flowers which bees visit in a given time, I
+ observed that in exactly one minute a humble-bee visited twenty-four of
+ the closed flowers of the Linaria cymbalaria; another bee visited in the
+ same time twenty-two flowers of the Symphoricarpus racemosa; and another
+ seventeen flowers on two plants of a Delphinium. In the course of fifteen
+ minutes a single flower on the summit of a plant of Œnothera was visited
+ eight times by several humble-bees, and I followed the last of these bees,
+ whilst it visited in the course of a few additional minutes every plant of
+ the same species in a large flower-garden. In nineteen minutes every
+ flower on a small plant of Nemophila insignis was visited twice. In one
+ minute six flowers of a Campanula were entered by a pollen-collecting
+ hive-bee; and bees when thus employed work slower than when sucking
+ nectar. Lastly, seven flower-stalks on a plant of Dictamnus fraxinella
+ were observed on the 15th of June 1841 during ten minutes; they were
+ visited by thirteen humble-bees each of which entered many flowers. On the
+ 22nd the same flower-stalks were visited within the same time by eleven
+ humble-bees. This plant bore altogether 280 flowers, and from the above
+ data, taking into consideration how late in the evening humble-bees work,
+ each flower must have been visited at least thirty times daily, and the
+ same flower keeps open during several days. The frequency of the visits of
+ bees is also sometimes shown by the manner in which the petals are
+ scratched by their hooked tarsi; I have seen large beds of Mimulus,
+ Stachys, and Lathyrus with the beauty of their flowers thus sadly defaced.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ PERFORATION OF THE COROLLA BY BEES.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I have already alluded to bees biting holes in flowers for the sake of
+ obtaining the nectar. They often act in this manner, both with endemic and
+ exotic species, in many parts of Europe, in the United States, and in the
+ Himalaya; and therefore probably in all parts of the world. The plants,
+ the fertilisation of which actually depends on insects entering the
+ flowers, will fail to produce seed when their nectar is stolen from the
+ outside; and even with those species which are capable of fertilising
+ themselves without any aid, there can be no cross-fertilisation, and this,
+ as we know, is a serious evil in most cases. The extent to which
+ humble-bees carry on the practice of biting holes is surprising: a
+ remarkable case was observed by me near Bournemouth, where there were
+ formerly extensive heaths. I took a long walk, and every now and then
+ gathered a twig of Erica tetralix, and when I had got a handful all the
+ flowers were examined through a lens. This process was repeated many
+ times; but though many hundreds were examined, I did not succeed in
+ finding a single flower which had not been perforated. Humble-bees were at
+ the time sucking the flowers through these perforations. On the following
+ day a large number of flowers were examined on another heath with the same
+ result, but here hive-bees were sucking through the holes. This case is
+ all the more remarkable, as the innumerable holes had been made within a
+ fortnight, for before that time I saw the bees everywhere sucking in the
+ proper manner at the mouths of the corolla. In an extensive flower-garden
+ some large beds of Salvia grahami, Stachys coccinea, and Pentstemon
+ argutus (?) had every flower perforated, and many scores were examined. I
+ have seen whole fields of red clover (Trifolium pratense) in the same
+ state. Dr. Ogle found that 90 per cent of the flowers of Salvia glutinosa
+ had been bitten. In the United States Mr. Bailey says it is difficult to
+ find a blossom of the native Gerardia pedicularia without a hole in it;
+ and Mr. Gentry, in speaking of the introduced Wistaria sinensis, says
+ &ldquo;that nearly every flower had been perforated.&rdquo; (11/12. Dr. Ogle &lsquo;Pop.
+ Science Review&rsquo; July 1869 page 267. Bailey &lsquo;American Naturalist&rsquo; November
+ 1873 page 690. Gentry ibid May 1875 page 264.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As far as I have seen, it is always humble-bees which first bite the
+ holes, and they are well fitted for the work by possessing powerful
+ mandibles; but hive-bees afterwards profit by the holes thus made. Dr.
+ Hermann Muller, however, writes to me that hive-bees sometimes bite holes
+ through the flowers of Erica tetralix. No insects except bees, with the
+ single exception of wasps in the case of Tritoma, have sense enough, as
+ far as I have observed, to profit by the holes already made. Even
+ humble-bees do not always discover that it would be advantageous to them
+ to perforate certain flowers. There is an abundant supply of nectar in the
+ nectary of Tropaeolum tricolor, yet I have found this plant untouched in
+ more than one garden, while the flowers of other plants had been
+ extensively perforated; but a few years ago Sir J. Lubbock&rsquo;s gardener
+ assured me that he had seen humble-bees boring through the nectary of this
+ Tropaeolum. Muller has observed humble-bees trying to suck at the mouths
+ of the flowers of Primula elatior and of an Aquilegia, and, failing in
+ their attempts, they made holes through the corolla; but they often bite
+ holes, although they could with very little more trouble obtain the nectar
+ in a legitimate manner by the mouth of the corolla.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. W. Ogle has communicated to me a curious case. He gathered in
+ Switzerland 100 flower-stems of the common blue variety of the monkshood
+ (Aconitum napellus), and not a single flower was perforated; he then
+ gathered 100 stems of a white variety growing close by, and every one of
+ the open flowers had been perforated. (11/13. Dr. Ogle &lsquo;Popular Science
+ Review&rsquo; July 1869 page 267. Bailey &lsquo;American Naturalist&rsquo; November 1873
+ page 690. Gentry ibid May 1875 page 264.) This surprising difference in
+ the state of the flowers may be attributed with much probability to the
+ blue variety being distasteful to bees, from the presence of the acrid
+ matter which is so general in the Ranunculaceae, and to its absence in the
+ white variety in correlation with the loss of the blue tint. According to
+ Sprengel, this plant is strongly proterandrous (11/14. &lsquo;Das Entdeckte&rsquo;
+ etc. page 278.); it would therefore be more or less sterile unless bees
+ carried pollen from the younger to the older flowers. Consequently the
+ white variety, the flowers of which were always bitten instead of being
+ properly entered by the bees, would fail to yield the full number of seeds
+ and would be a comparatively rare plant, as Dr. Ogle informs me was the
+ case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bees show much skill in their manner of working, for they always make
+ their holes from the outside close to the spot where the nectar lies
+ hidden within the corolla. All the flowers in a large bed of Stachys
+ coccinea had either one or two slits made on the upper side of the corolla
+ near the base. The flowers of a Mirabilis and of Salvia coccinea were
+ perforated in the same manner; whilst those of Salvia grahami, in which
+ the calyx is much elongated, had both the calyx and the corolla invariably
+ perforated. The flowers of Pentstemon argutus are broader than those of
+ the plants just named, and two holes alongside each other had here always
+ been made just above the calyx. In these several cases the perforations
+ were on the upper side, but in Antirrhinum majus one or two holes had been
+ made on the lower side, close to the little protuberance which represents
+ the nectary, and therefore directly in front of and close to the spot
+ where the nectar is secreted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the most remarkable case of skill and judgment known to me, is that of
+ the perforation of the flowers of Lathyrus sylvestris, as described by my
+ son Francis. (11/15. &lsquo;Nature&rsquo; January 8, 1874 page 189.) The nectar in
+ this plant is enclosed within a tube, formed by the united stamens, which
+ surround the pistil so closely that a bee is forced to insert its
+ proboscis outside the tube; but two natural rounded passages or orifices
+ are left in the tube near the base, in order that the nectar may be
+ reached by the bees. Now my son found in sixteen out of twenty-four
+ flowers on this plant, and in eleven out of sixteen of those on the
+ cultivated everlasting pea, which is either a variety of the same species
+ or a closely allied one, that the left passage was larger than the right
+ one. And here comes the remarkable point,&mdash;the humble-bees bite holes
+ through the standard-petal, and they always operated on the left side over
+ the passage, which is generally the larger of the two. My son remarks: &ldquo;It
+ is difficult to say how the bees could have acquired this habit. Whether
+ they discovered the inequality in the size of the nectar-holes in sucking
+ the flowers in the proper way, and then utilised this knowledge in
+ determining where to gnaw the hole; or whether they found out the best
+ situation by biting through the standard at various points, and afterwards
+ remembered its situation in visiting other flowers. But in either case
+ they show a remarkable power of making use of what they have learnt by
+ experience.&rdquo; It seems probable that bees owe their skill in biting holes
+ through flowers of all kinds to their having long practised the instinct
+ of moulding cells and pots of wax, or of enlarging their old cocoons with
+ tubes of wax; for they are thus compelled to work on the inside and
+ outside of the same object.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the early part of the summer of 1857 I was led to observe during some
+ weeks several rows of the scarlet kidney-bean (Phaseolus multiflorus),
+ whilst attending to the fertilisation of this plant, and daily saw humble-
+ and hive-bees sucking at the mouths of the flowers. But one day I found
+ several humble-bees employed in cutting holes in flower after flower; and
+ on the next day every single hive-bee, without exception, instead of
+ alighting on the left wing-petal and sucking the flower in the proper
+ manner, flew straight without the least hesitation to the calyx, and
+ sucked through the holes which had been made only the day before by the
+ humble-bees; and they continued this habit for many following days.
+ (11/16. &lsquo;Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle&rsquo; 1857 page 725.) Mr. Belt has communicated
+ to me (July 28th, 1874) a similar case, with the sole difference that less
+ than half of the flowers had been perforated by the humble-bees;
+ nevertheless, all the hive-bees gave up sucking at the mouths of the
+ flowers and visited exclusively the bitten ones. Now how did the hive-bees
+ find out so quickly that holes had been made? Instinct seems to be out of
+ the question, as the plant is an exotic. The holes cannot be seen by bees
+ whilst standing on the wing-petals, where they had always previously
+ alighted. From the ease with which bees were deceived when the petals of
+ Lobelia erinus were cut off, it was clear that in this case they were not
+ guided to the nectar by its smell; and it may be doubted whether they were
+ attracted to the holes in the flowers of the Phaseolus by the odour
+ emitted from them. Did they perceive the holes by the sense of touch in
+ their proboscides, whilst sucking the flowers in the proper manner, and
+ then reason that it would save them time to alight on the outside of the
+ flowers and use the holes? This seems almost too abstruse an act of reason
+ for bees; and it is more probable that they saw the humble-bees at work,
+ and understanding what they were about, imitated them and took advantage
+ of the shorter path to the nectar. Even with animals high in the scale,
+ such as monkeys, we should be surprised at hearing that all the
+ individuals of one species within the space of twenty-four hours
+ understood an act performed by a distinct species, and profited by it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have repeatedly observed with various kinds of flowers that all the hive
+ and humble-bees which were sucking through the perforations, flew to them,
+ whether on the upper or under side of the corolla, without the least
+ hesitation; and this shows how quickly all the individuals within the
+ district had acquired the same knowledge. Yet habit comes into play to a
+ certain extent, as in so many of the other operations of bees. Dr. Ogle,
+ Messrs. Farrer and Belt have observed in the case of Phaseolus multiflorus
+ that certain individuals went exclusively to the perforations, while
+ others of the same species visited only the mouths of the flowers. (11/17.
+ Dr. Ogle &lsquo;Pop. Science Review&rsquo; April 1870 page 167. Mr. Farrer &lsquo;Annals and
+ Magazine of Natural History&rsquo; 4th series volume 2 1868 page 258. Mr. Belt
+ in a letter to me.) I noticed in 1861 exactly the same fact with Trifolium
+ pratense. So persistent is the force of habit, that when a bee which is
+ visiting perforated flowers comes to one which has not been bitten, it
+ does not go to the mouth, but instantly flies away in search of another
+ bitten flower. Nevertheless, I once saw a humble-bee visiting the hybrid
+ Rhododendron azaloides, and it entered the mouths of some flowers and cut
+ holes into the others. Dr. Hermann Muller informs me that in the same
+ district he has seen some individuals of Bombus mastrucatus boring through
+ the calyx and corolla of Rhinanthus alecterolophus, and others through the
+ corolla alone. Different species of bees may, however, sometimes be
+ observed acting differently at the same time on the same plant. I have
+ seen hive-bees sucking at the mouths of the flowers of the common bean;
+ humble-bees of one kind sucking through holes bitten in the calyx, and
+ humble-bees of another kind sucking the little drops of fluid excreted by
+ the stipules. Mr. Beal of Michigan informs me that the flowers of the
+ Missouri currant (Ribes aureum) abound with nectar, so that children often
+ suck them; and he saw hive-bees sucking through holes made by a bird, the
+ oriole, and at the same time humble-bees sucking in the proper manner at
+ the mouths of the flowers. (11/18. The flowers of the Ribes are however
+ sometimes perforated by humble-bees, and Mr. Bundy says that they were
+ able to bite through and rob seven flowers of their honey in a minute:
+ &lsquo;American Naturalist&rsquo; 1876 page 238.) This statement about the oriole
+ calls to mind what I have before said of certain species of humming-birds
+ boring holes through the flowers of the Brugmansia, whilst other species
+ entered by the mouth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The motive which impels bees to gnaw holes through the corolla seems to be
+ the saving of time, for they lose much time in climbing into and out of
+ large flowers, and in forcing their heads into closed ones. They were able
+ to visit nearly twice as many flowers, as far as I could judge, of a
+ Stachys and Pentstemon by alighting on the upper surface of the corolla
+ and sucking through the cut holes, than by entering in the proper way.
+ Nevertheless each bee before it has had much practice, must lose some time
+ in making each new perforation, especially when the perforation has to be
+ made through both calyx and corolla. This action therefore implies
+ foresight, of which faculty we have abundant evidence in their building
+ operations; and may we not further believe that some trace of their social
+ instinct, that is, of working for the good of other members of the
+ community, may here likewise play a part?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many years ago I was struck with the fact that humble-bees as a general
+ rule perforate flowers only when these grow in large numbers near
+ together. In a garden where there were some very large beds of Stachys
+ coccinea and of Pentstemon argutus, every single flower was perforated,
+ but I found two plants of the former species growing quite separate with
+ their petals much scratched, showing that they had been frequently visited
+ by bees, and yet not a single flower was perforated. I found also a
+ separate plant of the Pentstemon, and saw bees entering the mouth of the
+ corolla, and not a single flower had been perforated. In the following
+ year (1842) I visited the same garden several times: on the 19th of July
+ humble-bees were sucking the flowers of Stachys coccinea and Salvia
+ grahami in the proper manner, and none of the corollas were perforated. On
+ the 7th of August all the flowers were perforated, even those on some few
+ plants of the Salvia which grew at a little distance from the great bed.
+ On the 21st of August only a few flowers on the summits of the spikes of
+ both species remained fresh, and not one of these was now bored. Again, in
+ my own garden every plant in several rows of the common bean had many
+ flowers perforated; but I found three plants in separate parts of the
+ garden which had sprung up accidentally, and these had not a single flower
+ perforated. General Strachey formerly saw many perforated flowers in a
+ garden in the Himalaya, and he wrote to the owner to inquire whether this
+ relation between the plants growing crowded and their perforation by the
+ bees there held good, and was answered in the affirmative. Hence it
+ follows that the red clover (Trifolium pratense) and the common bean when
+ cultivated in great masses in fields,&mdash;that Erica tetralix growing in
+ large numbers on heaths,&mdash;rows of the scarlet kidney-bean in the
+ kitchen-garden,&mdash;and masses of any species in the flower-garden,&mdash;are
+ all eminently liable to be perforated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The explanation of this fact is not difficult. Flowers growing in large
+ numbers afford a rich booty to the bees, and are conspicuous from a
+ distance. They are consequently visited by crowds of these insects, and I
+ once counted between twenty and thirty bees flying about a bed of
+ Pentstemon. They are thus stimulated to work quickly by rivalry, and, what
+ is much more important, they find a large proportion of the flowers, as
+ suggested by my son, with their nectaries sucked dry. (11/19. &lsquo;Nature&rsquo;
+ January 8, 1874 page 189.) They thus waste much time in searching many
+ empty flowers, and are led to bite the holes, so as to find out as quickly
+ as possible whether there is any nectar present, and if so, to obtain it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Flowers which are partially or wholly sterile unless visited by insects in
+ the proper manner, such as those of most species of Salvia, of Trifolium
+ pratense, Phaseolus multiflorus, etc., will fail more or less completely
+ to produce seeds if the bees confine their visits to the perforations. The
+ perforated flowers of those species, which are capable of fertilising
+ themselves, will yield only self-fertilised seeds, and the seedlings will
+ in consequence be less vigorous. Therefore all plants must suffer in some
+ degree when bees obtain their nectar in a felonious manner by biting holes
+ through the corolla; and many species, it might be thought, would thus be
+ exterminated. But here, as is so general throughout nature, there is a
+ tendency towards a restored equilibrium. If a plant suffers from being
+ perforated, fewer individuals will be reared, and if its nectar is highly
+ important to the bees, these in their turn will suffer and decrease in
+ number; but, what is much more effective, as soon as the plant becomes
+ somewhat rare so as not to grow in crowded masses, the bees will no longer
+ be stimulated to gnaw holes in the flowers, but will enter them in a
+ legitimate manner. More seed will then be produced, and the seedlings
+ being the product of cross-fertilisation will be vigorous, so that the
+ species will tend to increase in number, to be again checked, as soon as
+ the plant again grows in crowded masses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII. GENERAL RESULTS.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Cross-fertilisation proved to be beneficial, and self-fertilisation
+ injurious.
+ Allied species differ greatly in the means by which cross-fertilisation
+ is favoured and self-fertilisation avoided.
+ The benefits and evils of the two processes depend on the degree of
+ differentiation in the sexual elements.
+ The evil effects not due to the combination of morbid tendencies in the
+ parents.
+ Nature of the conditions to which plants are subjected when growing near
+ together in a state of nature or under culture, and the effects of such
+ conditions.
+ Theoretical considerations with respect to the interaction of
+ differentiated sexual elements.
+ Practical lessons.
+ Genesis of the two sexes.
+ Close correspondence between the effects of cross-fertilisation and
+ self-fertilisation, and of the legitimate and illegitimate unions of
+ heterostyled plants, in comparison with hybrid unions.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The first and most important of the conclusions which may be drawn from
+ the observations given in this volume, is that cross-fertilisation is
+ generally beneficial, and self-fertilisation injurious. This is shown by
+ the difference in height, weight, constitutional vigour, and fertility of
+ the offspring from crossed and self-fertilised flowers, and in the number
+ of seeds produced by the parent-plants. With respect to the second of
+ these two propositions, namely, that self-fertilisation is generally
+ injurious, we have abundant evidence. The structure of the flowers in such
+ plants as Lobelia ramosa, Digitalis purpurea, etc., renders the aid of
+ insects almost indispensable for their fertilisation; and bearing in mind
+ the prepotency of pollen from a distinct individual over that from the
+ same individual, such plants will almost certainly have been crossed
+ during many or all previous generations. So it must be, owing merely to
+ the prepotency of foreign pollen, with cabbages and various other plants,
+ the varieties of which almost invariably intercross when grown together.
+ The same inference may be drawn still more surely with respect to those
+ plants, such as Reseda and Eschscholtzia, which are sterile with their own
+ pollen, but fertile with that from any other individual. These several
+ plants must therefore have been crossed during a long series of previous
+ generations, and the artificial crosses in my experiments cannot have
+ increased the vigour of the offspring beyond that of their progenitors.
+ Therefore the difference between the self-fertilised and crossed plants
+ raised by me cannot be attributed to the superiority of the crossed, but
+ to the inferiority of the self-fertilised seedlings, due to the injurious
+ effects of self-fertilisation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to the first proposition, namely, that cross-fertilisation is
+ generally beneficial, we likewise have excellent evidence. Plants of
+ Ipomoea were intercrossed for nine successive generations; they were then
+ again intercrossed, and at the same time crossed with a plant of a fresh
+ stock, that is, one brought from another garden; and the offspring of this
+ latter cross were to the intercrossed plants in height as 100 to 78, and
+ in fertility as 100 to 51. An analogous experiment with Eschscholtzia gave
+ a similar result, as far as fertility was concerned. In neither of these
+ cases were any of the plants the product of self-fertilisation. Plants of
+ Dianthus were self-fertilised for three generations, and this no doubt was
+ injurious; but when these plants were fertilised by a fresh stock and by
+ intercrossed plants of the same stock, there was a great difference in
+ fertility between the two sets of seedlings, and some difference in their
+ height. Petunia offers a nearly parallel case. With various other plants,
+ the wonderful effects of a cross with a fresh stock may be seen in Table
+ 7/C. Several accounts have also been published of the extraordinary growth
+ of seedlings from a cross between two varieties of the same species, some
+ of which are known never to fertilise themselves; so that here neither
+ self-fertilisation nor relationship even in a remote degree can have come
+ into play. (12/1. See &lsquo;Variation under Domestication&rsquo; chapter 19 2nd
+ edition volume 2 page 159.) We may therefore conclude that the above two
+ propositions are true,&mdash;that cross-fertilisation is generally
+ beneficial and self-fertilisation injurious to the offspring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That certain plants, for instance, Viola tricolor, Digitalis purpurea,
+ Sarothamnus scoparius, Cyclamen persicum, etc., which have been naturally
+ cross-fertilised for many or all previous generations, should suffer to an
+ extreme degree from a single act of self-fertilisation is a most
+ surprising fact. Nothing of the kkind has been observed in our domestic
+ animals; but then we must remember that the closest possible interbreeding
+ with such animals, that is, between brothers and sisters, cannot be
+ considered as nearly so close a union as that between the pollen and
+ ovules of the same flower. Whether the evil from self-fertilisation goes
+ on increasing during successive generations is not as yet known; but we
+ may infer from my experiments that the increase if any is far from rapid.
+ After plants have been propagated by self-fertilisation for several
+ generations, a single cross with a fresh stock restores their pristine
+ vigour; and we have a strictly analogous result with our domestic animals.
+ (12/2. Ibid chapter 19 2nd edition volume 2 page 159.) The good effects of
+ cross-fertilisation are transmitted by plants to the next generation; and
+ judging from the varieties of the common pea, to many succeeding
+ generations. But this may merely be that crossed plants of the first
+ generation are extremely vigorous, and transmit their vigour, like any
+ other character, to their successors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding the evil which many plants suffer from self-fertilisation,
+ they can be thus propagated under favourable conditions for many
+ generations, as shown by some of my experiments, and more especially by
+ the survival during at least half a century of the same varieties of the
+ common pea and sweet-pea. The same conclusion probably holds good with
+ several other exotic plants, which are never or most rarely
+ cross-fertilised in this country. But all these plants, as far as they
+ have been tried, profit greatly by a cross with a fresh stock. Some few
+ plants, for instance, Ophrys apifera, have almost certainly been
+ propagated in a state of nature for thousands of generations without
+ having been once intercrossed; and whether they would profit by a cross
+ with a fresh stock is not known. But such cases ought not to make us doubt
+ that as a general rule crossing is beneficial, any more than the existence
+ of plants which, in a state of nature, are propagated exclusively by
+ rhizomes, stolons, etc. (their flowers never producing seeds), (12/3. I
+ have given several cases in my &lsquo;Variation under Domestication&rsquo; chapter 18
+ 2nd edition volume 2 page 152.) (their flowers never producing seeds),
+ should make us doubt that seminal generation must have some great
+ advantage, as it is the common plan followed by nature. Whether any
+ species has been reproduced asexually from a very remote period cannot, of
+ course, be ascertained. Our sole means for forming any judgment on this
+ head is the duration of the varieties of our fruit trees which have been
+ long propagated by grafts or buds. Andrew Knight formerly maintained that
+ under these circumstances they always become weakly, but this conclusion
+ has been warmly disputed by others. A recent and competent judge,
+ Professor Asa Gray, leans to the side of Andrew Knight, which seems to me,
+ from such evidence as I have been able to collect, the more probable view,
+ notwithstanding many opposed facts. (12/4. &lsquo;Darwiniana: Essays and Reviews
+ pertaining to Darwinism&rsquo; 1876 page 338.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The means for favouring cross-fertilisation and preventing
+ self-fertilisation, or conversely for favouring self-fertilisation and
+ preventing to a certain extent cross-fertilisation, are wonderfully
+ diversified; and it is remarkable that these differ widely in closely
+ allied plants,&mdash;in the species of the same genus, and sometimes in
+ the individuals of the same species. (12/5. Hildebrand has insisted
+ strongly to this effect in his valuable observations on the fertilisation
+ of the Gramineae: &lsquo;Monatsbericht K. Akad. Berlin&rsquo; October 1872 page 763.)
+ It is not rare to find hermaphrodite plants and others with separated
+ sexes within the same genus; and it is common to find some of the species
+ dichogamous and others maturing their sexual elements simultaneously. The
+ dichogamous genus Saxifraga contains proterandrous and proterogynous
+ species. (12/6. Dr. Engler &lsquo;Botanische Zeitung&rsquo; 1868 page 833.) Several
+ genera include both heterostyled (dimorphic or trimorphic forms) and
+ homostyled species. Ophrys offers a remarkable instance of one species
+ having its structure manifestly adapted for self-fertilisation, and other
+ species as manifestly adapted for cross-fertilisation. Some con-generic
+ species are quite sterile and others quite fertile with their own pollen.
+ From these several causes we often find within the same genus species
+ which do not produce seeds, while others produce an abundance, when
+ insects are excluded. Some species bear cleistogene flowers which cannot
+ be crossed, as well as perfect flowers, whilst others in the same genus
+ never produce cleistogene flowers. Some species exist under two forms, the
+ one bearing conspicuous flowers adapted for cross-fertilisation, the other
+ bearing inconspicuous flowers adapted for self-fertilisation, whilst other
+ species in the same genus present only a single form. Even with the
+ individuals of the same species, the degree of self-sterility varies
+ greatly, as in Reseda. With polygamous plants, the distribution of the
+ sexes differs in the individuals of the same species. The relative period
+ at which the sexual elements in the same flower are mature, differs in the
+ varieties of Pelargonium; and Carriere gives several cases, showing that
+ the period varies according to the temperature to which the plants are
+ exposed. (12/7. &lsquo;Des Varieties&rsquo; 1865 page 30.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This extraordinary diversity in the means for favouring or preventing
+ cross- and self-fertilisation in closely allied forms, probably depends on
+ the results of both processes being highly beneficial to the species, but
+ directly opposed in many ways to one another and dependent on variable
+ conditions. Self-fertilisation assures the production of a large supply of
+ seeds; and the necessity or advantage of this will be determined by the
+ average length of life of the plant, which largely depends on the amount
+ of destruction suffered by the seeds and seedlings. This destruction
+ follows from the most various and variable causes, such as the presence of
+ animals of several kinds, and the growth of surrounding plants. The
+ possibility of cross-fertilisation depends mainly on the presence and
+ number of certain insects, often of insects belonging to special groups,
+ and on the degree to which they are attracted to the flowers of any
+ particular species in preference to other flowers,&mdash;all circumstances
+ likely to change. Moreover, the advantages which follow from
+ cross-fertilisation differ much in different plants, so that it is
+ probable that allied plants would often profit in different degrees by
+ cross-fertilisation. Under these extremely complex and fluctuating
+ conditions, with two somewhat opposed ends to be gained, namely, the safe
+ propagation of the species and the production of cross-fertilised,
+ vigorous offspring, it is not surprising that allied forms should exhibit
+ an extreme diversity in the means which favour either end. If, as there is
+ reason to suspect, self-fertilisation is in some respects beneficial,
+ although more than counterbalanced by the advantages derived from a cross
+ with a fresh stock, the problem becomes still more complicated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I only twice experimented on more than a single species in a genus, I
+ cannot say whether the crossed offspring of the several species within the
+ same genus differ in their degree of superiority over their
+ self-fertilised brethren; but I should expect that this would often prove
+ to be the case from what was observed with the two species of Lobelia and
+ with the individuals of the same species of Nicotiana. The species
+ belonging to distinct genera in the same family certainly differ in this
+ respect. The effects of cross- and self-fertilisation may be confined
+ either to the growth or to the fertility of the offspring, but generally
+ extends to both qualities. There does not seem to exist any close
+ correspondence between the degree to which their offspring profit by this
+ process; but we may easily err on this head, as there are two means for
+ ensuring cross-fertilisation which are not externally perceptible, namely,
+ self-sterility and the prepotent fertilising influence of pollen from
+ another individual. Lastly, it has been shown in a former chapter that the
+ effect produced by cross and self-fertilisation on the fertility of the
+ parent-plants does not always correspond with that produced on the height,
+ vigour, and fertility of their offspring. The same remark applies to
+ crossed and self-fertilised seedlings when these are used as the
+ parent-plants. This want of correspondence probably depends, at least in
+ part, on the number of seeds produced being chiefly determined by the
+ number of the pollen-tubes which reach the ovules, and this will be
+ governed by the reaction between the pollen and the stigmatic secretion or
+ tissues; whereas the growth and constitutional vigour of the offspring
+ will be chiefly determined, not only by the number of pollen-tubes
+ reaching the ovules, but by the nature of the reaction between the
+ contents of the pollen-grains and ovules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are two other important conclusions which may be deduced from my
+ observations: firstly, that the advantages of cross-fertilisation do not
+ follow from some mysterious virtue in the mere union of two distinct
+ individuals, but from such individuals having been subjected during
+ previous generations to different conditions, or to their having varied in
+ a manner commonly called spontaneous, so that in either case their sexual
+ elements have been in some degree differentiated. And secondly, that the
+ injury from self-fertilisation follows from the want of such
+ differentiation in the sexual elements. These two propositions are fully
+ established by my experiments. Thus, when plants of the Ipomoea and of the
+ Mimulus, which had been self-fertilised for the seven previous generations
+ and had been kept all the time under the same conditions, were
+ intercrossed one with another, the offspring did not profit in the least
+ by the cross. Mimulus offers another instructive case, showing that the
+ benefit of a cross depends on the previous treatment of the progenitors:
+ plants which had been self-fertilised for the eight previous generations
+ were crossed with plants which had been intercrossed for the same number
+ of generations, all having been kept under the same conditions as far as
+ possible; seedlings from this cross were grown in competition with others
+ derived from the same self-fertilised mother-plant crossed by a fresh
+ stock; and the latter seedlings were to the former in height as 100 to 52,
+ and in fertility as 100 to 4. An exactly parallel experiment was tried on
+ Dianthus, with this difference, that the plants had been self-fertilised
+ only for the three previous generations, and the result was similar though
+ not so strongly marked. The foregoing two cases of the offspring of
+ Ipomoea and Eschscholtzia, derived from a cross with a fresh stock, being
+ as much superior to the intercrossed plants of the old stock, as these
+ latter were to the self-fertilised offspring, strongly supports the same
+ conclusion. A cross with a fresh stock or with another variety seems to be
+ always highly beneficial, whether or not the mother-plants have been
+ intercrossed or self-fertilised for several previous generations. The fact
+ that a cross between two flowers on the same plant does no good or very
+ little good, is likewise a strong corroboration of our conclusion; for the
+ sexual elements in the flowers on the same plant can rarely have been
+ differentiated, though this is possible, as flower-buds are in one sense
+ distinct individuals, sometimes varying and differing from one another in
+ structure or constitution. Thus the proposition that the benefit from
+ cross-fertilisation depends on the plants which are crossed having been
+ subjected during previous generations to somewhat different conditions, or
+ to their having varied from some unknown cause as if they had been thus
+ subjected, is securely fortified on all sides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before proceeding any further, the view which has been maintained by
+ several physiologists must be noticed, namely, that all the evils from
+ breeding animals too closely, and no doubt, as they would say, from the
+ self-fertilisation of plants, is the result of the increase of some morbid
+ tendency or weakness of constitution common to the closely related
+ parents, or to the two sexes of hermaphrodite plants. Undoubtedly injury
+ has often thus resulted; but it is a vain attempt to extend this view to
+ the numerous cases given in my Tables. It should be remembered that the
+ same mother-plant was both self-fertilised and crossed, so that if she had
+ been unhealthy she would have transmitted half her morbid tendencies to
+ her crossed offspring. But plants appearing perfectly healthy, some of
+ them growing wild, or the immediate offspring of wild plants, or vigorous
+ common garden-plants, were selected for experiment. Considering the number
+ of species which were tried, it is nothing less than absurd to suppose
+ that in all these cases the mother-plants, though not appearing in any way
+ diseased, were weak or unhealthy in so peculiar a manner that their
+ self-fertilised seedlings, many hundreds in number, were rendered inferior
+ in height, weight, constitutional vigour and fertility to their crossed
+ offspring. Moreover, this belief cannot be extended to the strongly marked
+ advantages which invariably follow, as far as my experience serves, from
+ intercrossing the individuals of the same variety or of distinct
+ varieties, if these have been subjected during some generations to
+ different conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is obvious that the exposure of two sets of plants during several
+ generations to different conditions can lead to no beneficial results, as
+ far as crossing is concerned, unless their sexual elements are thus
+ affected. That every organism is acted on to a certain extent by a change
+ in its environment, will not, I presume, be disputed. It is hardly
+ necessary to advance evidence on this head; we can perceive the difference
+ between individual plants of the same species which have grown in somewhat
+ more shady or sunny, dry or damp places. Plants which have been propagated
+ for some generations under different climates or at different seasons of
+ the year transmit different constitutions to their seedlings. Under such
+ circumstances, the chemical constitution of their fluids and the nature of
+ their tissues are often modified. (12/8. Numerous cases together with
+ references are given in my &lsquo;Variation under Domestication&rsquo; chapter 23 2nd
+ edition volume 2 page 264. With respect to animals, Mr. Brackenridge &lsquo;A
+ Contribution to the Theory of Diathesis&rsquo; Edinburgh 1869, has well shown
+ that the different organs of animals are excited into different degrees of
+ activity by differences of temperature and food, and become to a certain
+ extent adapted to them.) Many other such facts could be adduced. In short,
+ every alteration in the function of a part is probably connected with some
+ corresponding, though often quite imperceptible change in structure or
+ composition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whatever affects an organism in any way, likewise tends to act on its
+ sexual elements. We see this in the inheritance of newly acquired
+ modifications, such as those from the increased use or disuse of a part,
+ and even from mutilations if followed by disease. (12/9. &lsquo;Variation under
+ Domestication&rsquo; chapter 12 2nd edition volume 1 page 466.) We have abundant
+ evidence how susceptible the reproductive system is to changed conditions,
+ in the many instances of animals rendered sterile by confinement; so that
+ they will not unite, or if they unite do not produce offspring, though the
+ confinement may be far from close; and of plants rendered sterile by
+ cultivation. But hardly any cases afford more striking evidence how
+ powerfully a change in the conditions of life acts on the sexual elements,
+ than those already given, of plants which are completely self-sterile in
+ one country, and when brought to another, yield, even in the first
+ generation, a fair supply of self-fertilised seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it may be said, granting that changed conditions act on the sexual
+ elements, how can two or more plants growing close together, either in
+ their native country or in a garden, be differently acted on, inasmuch as
+ they appear to be exposed to exactly the same conditions? Although this
+ question has been already considered, it deserves further consideration
+ under several points of view. In my experiments with Digitalis purpurea,
+ some flowers on a wild plant were self-fertilised, and others were crossed
+ with pollen from another plant growing within two or three feet&rsquo;s
+ distance. The crossed and self-fertilised plants raised from the seeds
+ thus obtained, produced flower-stems in number as 100 to 47, and in
+ average height as 100 to 70. Therefore the cross between these two plants
+ was highly beneficial; but how could their sexual elements have been
+ differentiated by exposure to different conditions? If the progenitors of
+ the two plants had lived on the same spot during the last score of
+ generations, and had never been crossed with any plant beyond the distance
+ of a few feet, in all probability their offspring would have been reduced
+ to the same state as some of the plants in my experiments,&mdash;such as
+ the intercrossed plants of the ninth generation of Ipomoea,&mdash;or the
+ self-fertilised plants of the eighth generation of Mimulus,&mdash;or the
+ offspring from flowers on the same plant,&mdash;and in this case a cross
+ between the two plants of Digitalis would have done no good. But seeds are
+ often widely dispersed by natural means, and one of the above two plants
+ or one of their ancestors may have come from a distance, from a more shady
+ or sunny, dry or moist place, or from a different kind of soil containing
+ other organic or inorganic matter. We know from the admirable researches
+ of Messrs. Lawes and Gilbert that different plants require and consume
+ very different amounts of inorganic matter. (12/10. &lsquo;Journal of the Royal
+ Agricultural Society of England&rsquo; volume 24 part 1.) But the amount in the
+ soil would probably not make so great a difference to the several
+ individuals of any particular species as might at first be expected; for
+ the surrounding species with different requirements would tend, from
+ existing in greater or lesser numbers, to keep each species in a sort of
+ equilibrium, with respect to what it could obtain from the soil. So it
+ would be even with respect to moisture during dry seasons; and how
+ powerful is the influence of a little more or less moisture in the soil on
+ the presence and distribution of plants, is often well shown in old
+ pasture fields which still retain traces of former ridges and furrows.
+ Nevertheless, as the proportional numbers of the surrounding plants in two
+ neighbouring places is rarely exactly the same, the individuals of the
+ same species will be subjected to somewhat different conditions with
+ respect to what they can absorb from the soil. It is surprising how the
+ free growth of one set of plants affects others growing mingled with them;
+ I allowed the plants on rather more than a square yard of turf which had
+ been closely mown for several years, to grow up; and nine species out of
+ twenty were thus exterminated; but whether this was altogether due to the
+ kinds which grew up robbing the others of nutriment, I do not know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeds often lie dormant for several years in the ground, and germinate
+ when brought near the surface by any means, as by burrowing animals. They
+ would probably be affected by the mere circumstance of having long lain
+ dormant; for gardeners believe that the production of double flowers and
+ of fruit is thus influenced. Seeds, moreover, which were matured during
+ different seasons, will have been subjected during the whole course of
+ their development to different degrees of heat and moisture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was shown in the last chapter that pollen is often carried by insects
+ to a considerable distance from plant to plant. Therefore one of the
+ parents or ancestors of our two plants of Digitalis may have been crossed
+ by a distant plant growing under somewhat different conditions. Plants
+ thus crossed often produce an unusually large number of seeds; a striking
+ instance of this fact is afforded by the Bignonia, previously mentioned,
+ which was fertilised by Fritz Muller with pollen from some adjoining
+ plants and set hardly any seed, but when fertilised with pollen from a
+ distant plant, was highly fertile. Seedlings from a cross of this kind
+ grow with great vigour, and transmit their vigour to their descendants.
+ These, therefore, in the struggle for life, will generally beat and
+ exterminate the seedlings from plants which have long grown near together
+ under the same conditions, and will thus tend to spread.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When two varieties which present well-marked differences are crossed,
+ their descendants in the later generations differ greatly from one another
+ in external characters; and this is due to the augmentation or
+ obliteration of some of these characters, and to the reappearance of
+ former ones through reversion; and so it will be, as we may feel almost
+ sure, with any slight differences in the constitution of their sexual
+ elements. Anyhow, my experiments indicate that crossing plants which have
+ been long subjected to almost though not quite the same conditions, is the
+ most powerful of all the means for retaining some degree of
+ differentiation in the sexual elements, as shown by the superiority in the
+ later generations of the intercrossed over the self-fertilised seedlings.
+ Nevertheless, the continued intercrossing of plants thus treated does tend
+ to obliterate such differentiation, as may be inferred from the lessened
+ benefit derived from intercrossing such plants, in comparison with that
+ from a cross with a fresh stock. It seems probable, as I may add, that
+ seeds have acquired their endless curious adaptations for wide
+ dissemination, not only that the seedlings would thus be enabled to find
+ new and fitting homes, but that the individuals which have been long
+ subjected to the same conditions should occasionally intercross with a
+ fresh stock. (12/11. See Professor Hildebrand&rsquo;s excellent treatise
+ &lsquo;Verbreitungsmittel der Pflanzen&rsquo; 1873.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the foregoing several considerations we may, I think, conclude that
+ in the above case of the Digitalis, and even in that of plants which have
+ grown for thousands of generations in the same district, as must often
+ have occurred with species having a much restricted range, we are apt to
+ over-estimate the degree to which the individuals have been subjected to
+ absolutely the same conditions. There is at least no difficulty in
+ believing that such plants have been subjected to sufficiently distinct
+ conditions to differentiate their sexual elements; for we know that a
+ plant propagated for some generations in another garden in the same
+ district serves as a fresh stock and has high fertilising powers. The
+ curious cases of plants which can fertilise and be fertilised by any other
+ individual of the same species, but are altogether sterile with their own
+ pollen, become intelligible, if the view here propounded is correct,
+ namely, that the individuals of the same species growing in a state of
+ nature near together, have not really been subjected during several
+ previous generations to quite the same conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some naturalists assume that there is an innate tendency in all beings to
+ vary and to advance in organisation, independently of external agencies;
+ and they would, I presume, thus explain the slight differences which
+ distinguish all the individuals of the same species both in external
+ characters and in constitution, as well as the greater differences in both
+ respects between nearly allied varieties. No two individuals can be found
+ quite alike; thus if we sow a number of seeds from the same capsule under
+ as nearly as possible the same conditions, they germinate at different
+ rates and grow more or less vigorously. They resist cold and other
+ unfavourable conditions differently. They would in all probability, as we
+ know to be the case with animals of the same species, be somewhat
+ differently acted on by the same poison, or by the same disease. They have
+ different powers of transmitting their characters to their offspring; and
+ many analogous facts could be given. (12/12. Vilmorin as quoted by Verlot
+ &lsquo;Des Varieties&rsquo; pages 32, 38, 39.) Now, if it were true that plants
+ growing near together in a state of nature had been subjected during many
+ previous generations to absolutely the same conditions, such differences
+ as those just specified would be quite inexplicable; but they are to a
+ certain extent intelligible in accordance with the views just advanced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As most of the plants on which I experimented were grown in my garden or
+ in pots under glass, a few words must be added on the conditions to which
+ they were exposed, as well as on the effects of cultivation. When a
+ species is first brought under culture, it may or may not be subjected to
+ a change of climate, but it is always grown in ground broken up, and more
+ or less manured; it is also saved from competition with other plants. The
+ paramount importance of this latter circumstance is proved by the
+ multitude of species which flourish and multiply in a garden, but cannot
+ exist unless they are protected from other plants. When thus saved from
+ competition they are able to get whatever they require from the soil,
+ probably often in excess; and they are thus subjected to a great change of
+ conditions. It is probably in chief part owing to this cause that all
+ plants with rare exceptions vary after being cultivated for some
+ generations. The individuals which have already begun to vary will
+ intercross one with another by the aid of insects; and this accounts for
+ the extreme diversity of character which many of our long cultivated
+ plants exhibit. But it should be observed that the result will be largely
+ determined by the degree of their variability and by the frequency of the
+ intercrosses; for if a plant varies very little, like most species in a
+ state of nature, frequent intercrosses tend to give uniformity of
+ character to it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have attempted to show that with plants growing naturally in the same
+ district, except in the unusual case of each individual being surrounded
+ by exactly the same proportional numbers of other species having certain
+ powers of absorption, each will be subjected to slightly different
+ conditions. This does not apply to the individuals of the same species
+ when cultivated in cleared ground in the same garden. But if their flowers
+ are visited by insects, they will intercross; and this will give to their
+ sexual elements during a considerable number of generations a sufficient
+ amount of differentiation for a cross to be beneficial. Moreover, seeds
+ are frequently exchanged or procured from other gardens having a different
+ kind of soil; and the individuals of the same cultivated species will thus
+ be subjected to a change of conditions. If the flowers are not visited by
+ our native insects, or very rarely so, as in the case of the common and
+ sweet pea, and apparently in that of the tobacco when kept in a hothouse,
+ any differentiation in the sexual elements caused by intercrosses will
+ tend to disappear. This appears to have occurred with the plants just
+ mentioned, for they were not benefited by being crossed one with another,
+ though they were greatly benefited by a cross with a fresh stock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have been led to the views just advanced with respect to the causes of
+ the differentiation of the sexual elements and of the variability of our
+ garden plants, by the results of my various experiments, and more
+ especially by the four cases in which extremely inconstant species, after
+ having been self-fertilised and grown under closely similar conditions for
+ several generations, produced flowers of a uniform and constant tint.
+ These conditions were nearly the same as those to which plants, growing in
+ a garden clear of weeds, are subjected, if they are propagated by
+ self-fertilised seeds on the same spot. The plants in pots were, however,
+ exposed to less severe fluctuations of climate than those out of doors;
+ but their conditions, though closely uniform for all the individuals of
+ the same generation, differed somewhat in the successive generations. Now,
+ under these circumstances, the sexual elements of the plants which were
+ intercrossed in each generation retained sufficient differentiation during
+ several years for their offspring to be superior to the self-fertilised,
+ but this superiority gradually and manifestly decreased, as was shown by
+ the difference in the result between a cross with one of the intercrossed
+ plants and with a fresh stock. These intercrossed plants tended also in a
+ few cases to become somewhat more uniform in some of their external
+ characters than they were at first. With respect to the plants which were
+ self-fertilised in each generation, their sexual elements apparently lost,
+ after some years, all differentiation, for a cross between them did no
+ more good than a cross between the flowers on the same plant. But it is a
+ still more remarkable fact, that although the seedlings of Mimulus,
+ Ipomoea, Dianthus, and Petunia which were first raised, varied excessively
+ in the colour of their flowers, their offspring, after being
+ self-fertilised and grown under uniform conditions for some generations,
+ bore flowers almost as uniform in tint as those on a natural species. In
+ one case also the plants themselves became remarkably uniform in height.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The conclusion that the advantages of a cross depend altogether on the
+ differentiation of the sexual elements, harmonises perfectly with the fact
+ that an occasional and slight change in the conditions of life is
+ beneficial to all plants and animals. (12/13. I have given sufficient
+ evidence on this head in my &lsquo;Variation under Domestication&rsquo; chapter 18
+ volume 2 2nd edition page 127.) But the offspring from a cross between
+ organisms which have been exposed to different conditions, profit in an
+ incomparably higher degree than do young or old beings from a mere change
+ in the conditions. In this latter case we never see anything like the
+ effect which generally follows from a cross with another individual,
+ especially from a cross with a fresh stock. This might, perhaps, have been
+ expected, for the blending together of the sexual elements of two
+ differentiated beings will affect the whole constitution at a very early
+ period of life, whilst the organisation is highly flexible. We have,
+ moreover, reason to believe that changed conditions generally act
+ differently on the several parts or organs of the same individual (12/14.
+ See, for instance, Brackenridge &lsquo;Theory of Diathesis&rsquo; Edinburgh 1869.);
+ and if we may further believe that these now slightly differentiated parts
+ react on one another, the harmony between the beneficial effects on the
+ individual due to changed conditions, and those due to the interaction of
+ differentiated sexual elements, becomes still closer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That wonderfully accurate observer, Sprengel, who first showed how
+ important a part insects play in the fertilisation of flowers, called his
+ book &lsquo;The Secret of Nature Displayed;&rsquo; yet he only occasionally saw that
+ the object for which so many curious and beautiful adaptations have been
+ acquired, was the cross-fertilisation of distinct plants; and he knew
+ nothing of the benefits which the offspring thus receive in growth,
+ vigour, and fertility. But the veil of secrecy is as yet far from lifted;
+ nor will it be, until we can say why it is beneficial that the sexual
+ elements should be differentiated to a certain extent, and why, if the
+ differentiation be carried still further, injury follows. It is an
+ extraordinary fact that with many species, flowers fertilised with their
+ own pollen are either absolutely or in some degree sterile; if fertilised
+ with pollen from another flower on the same plant, they are sometimes,
+ though rarely, a little more fertile; if fertilised with pollen from
+ another individual or variety of the same species, they are fully fertile;
+ but if with pollen from a distinct species, they are sterile in all
+ possible degrees, until utter sterility is reached. We thus have a long
+ series with absolute sterility at the two ends;&mdash;at one end due to
+ the sexual elements not having been sufficiently differentiated, and at
+ the other end to their having been differentiated in too great a degree,
+ or in some peculiar manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fertilisation of one of the higher plants depends, in the first place,
+ on the mutual action of the pollen-grains and the stigmatic secretion or
+ tissues, and afterwards on the mutual action of the contents of the
+ pollen-grains and ovules. Both actions, judging from the increased
+ fertility of the parent-plants and from the increased powers of growth in
+ the offspring, are favoured by some degree of differentiation in the
+ elements which interact and unite so as to form a new being. Here we have
+ some analogy with chemical affinity or attraction, which comes into play
+ only between atoms or molecules of a different nature. As Professor Miller
+ remarks: &ldquo;Generally speaking, the greater the difference in the properties
+ of two bodies, the more intense is their tendency to mutual chemical
+ action...But between bodies of a similar character the tendency to unite
+ is feeble.&rdquo; (12/15. &lsquo;Elements of Chemistry&rsquo; 4th edition 1867 part 1 page
+ 11. Dr. Frankland informs me that similar views with respect to chemical
+ affinity are generally accepted by chemists.) This latter proposition
+ accords well with the feeble effects of a plant&rsquo;s own pollen on the
+ fertility of the mother-plant and on the growth of the offspring; and the
+ former proposition accords well with the powerful influence in both ways
+ of pollen from an individual which has been differentiated by exposure to
+ changed conditions, or by so-called spontaneous variation. But the analogy
+ fails when we turn to the negative or weak effects of pollen from one
+ species on a distinct species; for although some substances which are
+ extremely dissimilar, for instance, carbon and chlorine, have a very
+ feeble affinity for each other, yet it cannot be said that the weakness of
+ the affinity depends in such cases on the extent to which the substances
+ differ. It is not known why a certain amount of differentiation is
+ necessary or favourable for the chemical affinity or union of two
+ substances, any more than for the fertilisation or union of two organisms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Herbert Spencer has discussed this whole subject at great length, and
+ after stating that all the forces throughout nature tend towards an
+ equilibrium, remarks, &ldquo;that the need of this union of sperm-cell and
+ germ-ccell is the need for overthrowing this equilibrium and
+ re-establishing active molecular change in the detached germ&mdash;a
+ result which is probably effected by mixing the slightly-different
+ physiological units of slightly-different individuals.&rdquo; (12/16.
+ &lsquo;Principles of Biology&rsquo; volume 1 page 274 1864. In my &lsquo;Origin of Species&rsquo;
+ published in 1859, I spoke of the good effects from slight changes in the
+ condition of life and from cross-fertilisation, and of the evil effects
+ from great changes in the conditions and from crossing widely distinct
+ forms (i.e., species), as a series of facts &ldquo;connected together by some
+ common but unknown bond, which is essentially related to the principle of
+ life.&rdquo;) But we must not allow this highly generalised view, or the analogy
+ of chemical affinity, to conceal from us our ignorance. We do not know
+ what is the nature or degree of the differentiation in the sexual elements
+ which is favourable for union, and what is injurious for union, as in the
+ case of distinct species. We cannot say why the individuals of certain
+ species profit greatly, and others very little by being crossed. There are
+ some few species which have been self-fertilised for a vast number of
+ generations, and yet are vigorous enough to compete successfully with a
+ host of surrounding plants. We can form no conception why the advantage
+ from a cross is sometimes directed exclusively to the vegetative system,
+ and sometimes to the reproductive system, but commonly to both. It is
+ equally inconceivable why some individuals of the same species should be
+ sterile, whilst others are fully fertile with their own pollen; why a
+ change of climate should either lessen or increase the sterility of
+ self-sterile species; and why the individuals of some species should be
+ even more fertile with pollen from a distinct species than with their own
+ pollen. And so it is with many other facts, which are so obscure that we
+ stand in awe before the mystery of life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under a practical point of view, agriculturists and horticulturists may
+ learn something from the conclusions at which we have arrived. Firstly, we
+ see that the injury from the close breeding of animals and from the
+ self-fertilisation of plants, does not necessarily depend on any tendency
+ to disease or weakness of constitution common to the related parents, and
+ only indirectly on their relationship, in so far as they are apt to
+ resemble each other in all respects, including their sexual nature. And,
+ secondly, that the advantages of cross-fertilisation depend on the sexual
+ elements of the parents having become in some degree differentiated by the
+ exposure of their progenitors to different conditions, or from their
+ having intercrossed with individuals thus exposed, or, lastly, from what
+ we call in our ignorance spontaneous variation. He therefore who wishes to
+ pair closely related animals ought to keep them under conditions as
+ different as possible. Some few breeders, guided by their keen powers of
+ observation, have acted on this principle, and have kept stocks of the
+ same animals at two or more distant and differently situated farms. They
+ have then coupled the individuals from these farms with excellent results.
+ (12/17. &lsquo;Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication&rsquo; chapter 17
+ 2nd edition volume 2 pages 98, 105.) This same plan is also unconsciously
+ followed whenever the males, reared in one place, are let out for
+ propagation to breeders in other places. As some kinds of plants suffer
+ much more from self-fertilisation than do others, so it probably is with
+ animals from too close interbreeding. The effects of close interbreeding
+ on animals, judging again from plants, would be deterioration in general
+ vigour, including fertility, with no necessary loss of excellence of form;
+ and this seems to be the usual result.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a common practice with horticulturists to obtain seeds from another
+ place having a very different soil, so as to avoid raising plants for a
+ long succession of generations under the same conditions; but with all the
+ species which freely intercross by aid of insects or the wind, it would be
+ an incomparably better plan to obtain seeds of the required variety, which
+ had been raised for some generations under as different conditions as
+ possible, and sow them in alternate rows with seeds matured in the old
+ garden. The two stocks would then intercross, with a thorough blending of
+ their whole organisations, and with no loss of purity to the variety; and
+ this would yield far more favourable results than a mere exchange of
+ seeds. We have seen in my experiments how wonderfully the offspring
+ profited in height, weight, hardiness, and fertility, by crosses of this
+ kind. For instance, plants of Ipomoea thus crossed were to the
+ intercrossed plants of the same stock, with which they grew in
+ competition, as 100 to 78 in height, and as 100 to 51 in fertility; and
+ plants of Eschscholtzia similarly compared were as 100 to 45 in fertility.
+ In comparison with self-fertilised plants the results are still more
+ striking; thus cabbages derived from a cross with a fresh stock were to
+ the self-fertilised as 100 to 22 in weight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Florists may learn from the four cases which have been fully described,
+ that they have the power of fixing each fleeting variety of colour, if
+ they will fertilise the flowers of the desired kind with their own pollen
+ for half-a-dozen generations, and grow the seedlings under the same
+ conditions. But a cross with any other individual of the same variety must
+ be carefully prevented, as each has its own peculiar constitution. After a
+ dozen generations of self-fertilisation, it is probable that the new
+ variety would remain constant even if grown under somewhat different
+ conditions; and there would no longer be any necessity to guard against
+ intercrosses between the individuals of the same variety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to mankind, my son George has endeavoured to discover by a
+ statistical investigation whether the marriages of first cousins are at
+ all injurious, although this is a degree of relationship which would not
+ be objected to in our domestic animals; and he has come to the conclusion
+ from his own researches and those of Dr. Mitchell that the evidence as to
+ any evil thus caused is conflicting, but on the whole points to its being
+ very small. From the facts given in this volume we may infer that with
+ mankind the marriages of nearly related persons, some of whose parents and
+ ancestors had lived under very different conditions, would be much less
+ injurious than that of persons who had always lived in the same place and
+ followed the same habits of life. Nor can I see reason to doubt that the
+ widely different habits of life of men and women in civilised nations,
+ especially amongst the upper classes, would tend to counterbalance any
+ evil from marriages between healthy and somewhat closely related persons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under a theoretical point of view it is some gain to science to know that
+ numberless structures in hermaphrodite plants, and probably in
+ hermaphrodite animals, are special adaptations for securing an occasional
+ cross between two individuals; and that the advantages from such a cross
+ depend altogether on the beings which are united, or their progenitors,
+ having had their sexual elements somewhat differentiated, so that the
+ embryo is benefited in the same manner as is a mature plant or animal by a
+ slight change in its conditions of life, although in a much higher degree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another and more important result may be deduced from my observations.
+ Eggs and seeds are highly serviceable as a means of dissemination, but we
+ now know that fertile eggs can be produced without the aid of the male.
+ There are also many other methods by which organisms can be propagated
+ asexually. Why then have the two sexes been developed, and why do males
+ exist which cannot themselves produce offspring? The answer lies, as I can
+ hardly doubt, in the great good which is derived from the fusion of two
+ somewhat differentiated individuals; and with the exception of the lowest
+ organisms this is possible only by means of the sexual elements, these
+ consisting of cells separated from the body, containing the germs of every
+ part, and capable of being fused completely together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has been shown in the present volume that the offspring from the union
+ of two distinct individuals, especially if their progenitors have been
+ subjected to very different conditions, have an immense advantage in
+ height, weight, constitutional vigour and fertility over the
+ self-fertilised offspring from one of the same parents. And this fact is
+ amply sufficient to account for the development of the sexual elements,
+ that is, for the genesis of the two sexes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a different question why the two sexes are sometimes combined in the
+ same individual and are sometimes separated. As with many of the lowest
+ plants and animals the conjugation of two individuals which are either
+ quite similar or in some degree different, is a common phenomenon, it
+ seems probable, as remarked in the last chapter, that the sexes were
+ primordially separate. The individual which receives the contents of the
+ other, may be called the female; and the other, which is often smaller and
+ more locomotive, may be called the male; though these sexual names ought
+ hardly to be applied as long as the whole contents of the two forms are
+ blended into one. The object gained by the two sexes becoming united in
+ the same hermaphrodite form probably is to allow of occasional or frequent
+ self-fertilisation, so as to ensure the propagation of the species, more
+ especially in the case of organisms affixed for life to the same spot.
+ There does not seem to be any great difficulty in understanding how an
+ organism, formed by the conjugation of two individuals which represented
+ the two incipient sexes, might have given rise by budding first to a
+ monoecious and then to an hermaphrodite form; and in the case of animals
+ even without budding to an hermaphrodite form, for the bilateral structure
+ of animals perhaps indicates that they were aboriginally formed by the
+ fusion of two individuals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a more difficult problem why some plants and apparently all the
+ higher animals, after becoming hermaphrodites, have since had their sexes
+ re-separated. This separation has been attributed by some naturalists to
+ the advantages which follow from a division of physiological labour. The
+ principle is intelligible when the same organ has to perform at the same
+ time diverse functions; but it is not obvious why the male and female
+ glands when placed in different parts of the same compound or simple
+ individual, should not perform their functions equally well as when placed
+ in two distinct individuals. In some instances the sexes may have been
+ re-separated for the sake of preventing too frequent self-fertilisation;
+ but this explanation does not seem probable, as the same end might have
+ been gained by other and simpler means, for instance dichogamy. It may be
+ that the production of the male and female reproductive elements and the
+ maturation of the ovules was too great a strain and expenditure of vital
+ force for a single individual to withstand, if endowed with a highly
+ complex organisation; and that at the same time there was no need for all
+ the individuals to produce young, and consequently that no injury, on the
+ contrary, good resulted from half of them, or the males, failing to
+ produce offspring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is another subject on which some light is thrown by the facts given
+ in this volume, namely, hybridisation. It is notorious that when distinct
+ species of plants are crossed, they produce with the rarest exceptions
+ fewer seeds than the normal number. This unproductiveness varies in
+ different species up to sterility so complete that not even an empty
+ capsule is formed; and all experimentalists have found that it is much
+ influenced by the conditions to which the crossed species are subjected.
+ The pollen of each species is strongly prepotent over that of any other
+ species, so that if a plant&rsquo;s own pollen is placed on the stigma some time
+ after foreign pollen has been applied to it, any effect from the latter is
+ quite obliterated. It is also notorious that not only the parent species,
+ but the hybrids raised from them are more or less sterile; and that their
+ pollen is often in a more or less aborted condition. The degree of
+ sterility of various hybrids does not always strictly correspond with the
+ degree of difficulty in uniting the parent forms. When hybrids are capable
+ of breeding inter se, their descendants are more or less sterile, and they
+ often become still more sterile in the later generations; but then close
+ interbreeding has hitherto been practised in all such cases. The more
+ sterile hybrids are sometimes much dwarfed in stature, and have a feeble
+ constitution. Other facts could be given, but these will suffice for us.
+ Naturalists formerly attributed all these results to the difference
+ between species being fundamentally distinct from that between the
+ varieties of the same species; and this is still the verdict of some
+ naturalists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The results of my experiments in self-fertilising and cross-fertilising
+ the individuals or the varieties of the same species, are strikingly
+ analogous with those just given, though in a reversed manner. With the
+ majority of species flowers fertilised with their own pollen yield fewer,
+ sometimes much fewer seeds, than those fertilised with pollen from another
+ individual or variety. Some self-fertilised flowers are absolutely
+ sterile; but the degree of their sterility is largely determined by the
+ conditions to which the parent plants have been exposed, as was well
+ exemplified in the case of Eschscholtzia and Abutilon. The effects of
+ pollen from the same plant are obliterated by the prepotent influence of
+ pollen from another individual or variety, although the latter may have
+ been placed on the stigma some hours afterwards. The offspring from
+ self-fertilised flowers are themselves more or less sterile, sometimes
+ highly sterile, and their pollen is sometimes in an imperfect condition;
+ but I have not met with any case of complete sterility in self-fertilised
+ seedlings, as is so common with hybrids. The degree of their sterility
+ does not correspond with that of the parent-plants when first
+ self-fertilised. The offspring of self-fertilised plants suffer in
+ stature, weight, and constitutional vigour more frequently and in a
+ greater degree than do the hybrid offspring of the greater number of
+ crossed species. Decreased height is transmitted to the next generation,
+ but I did not ascertain whether this applies to decreased fertility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have elsewhere shown that by uniting in various ways dimorphic or
+ trimorphic heterostyled plants, which belong to the same undoubted
+ species, we get another series of results exactly parallel with those from
+ crossing distinct species. (12/18. &lsquo;Journal of the Linnean Society Botany&rsquo;
+ volume 10 1867 page 393.) Plants illegitimately fertilised with pollen
+ from a distinct plant belonging to the same form, yield fewer, often much
+ fewer seeds, than they do when legitimately fertilised with pollen from a
+ plant belonging to a distinct form. They sometimes yield no seed, not even
+ an empty capsule, like a species fertilised with pollen from a distinct
+ genus. The degree of sterility is much affected by the conditions to which
+ the plants have been subjected. (12/19. &lsquo;Journal of the Linnean Society
+ Botany&rsquo; volume 8 1864 page 180.) The pollen from a distinct form is
+ strongly prepotent over that from the same form, although the former may
+ have been placed on the stigma many hours afterwards. The offspring from a
+ union between plants of the same form are more or less sterile, like
+ hybrids, and have their pollen in a more or less aborted condition; and
+ some of the seedlings are as barren and as dwarfed as the most barren
+ hybrid. They also resemble hybrids in several other respects, which need
+ not here be specified in detail,&mdash;such as their sterility not
+ corresponding in degree with that of the parent plants,&mdash;the unequal
+ sterility of the latter, when reciprocally united,&mdash;and the varying
+ sterility of the seedlings raised from the same seed-capsule.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We thus have two grand classes of cases giving results which correspond in
+ the most striking manner with those which follow from the crossing of
+ so-called true and distinct species. With respect to the difference
+ between seedlings raised from cross and self-fertilised flowers, there is
+ good evidence that this depends altogether on whether the sexual elements
+ of the parents have been sufficiently differentiated, by exposure to
+ different conditions or by spontaneous variation. It is probable that
+ nearly the same conclusion may be extended to heterostyled plants; but
+ this is not the proper place for discussing the origin of the long-styled,
+ short-styled and mid-styled forms, which all belong to the same species as
+ certainly as do the two sexes of the same species. We have therefore no
+ right to maintain that the sterility of species when first crossed and of
+ their hybrid offspring, is determined by some cause fundamentally
+ different from that which determines the sterility of the individuals both
+ of ordinary and of heterostyled plants when united in various ways.
+ Nevertheless, I am aware that it will take many years to remove this
+ prejudice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is hardly anything more wonderful in nature than the sensitiveness
+ of the sexual elements to external influences, and the delicacy of their
+ affinities. We see this in slight changes in the conditions of life being
+ favourable to the fertility and vigour of the parents, while certain other
+ and not great changes cause them to be quite sterile without any apparent
+ injury to their health. We see how sensitive the sexual elements of those
+ plants must be, which are completely sterile with their own pollen, but
+ are fertile with that of any other individual of the same species. Such
+ plants become either more or less self-sterile if subjected to changed
+ conditions, although the change may be far from great. The ovules of a
+ heterostyled trimorphic plant are affected very differently by pollen from
+ the three sets of stamens belonging to the same species. With ordinary
+ plants the pollen of another variety or merely of another individual of
+ the same variety is often strongly prepotent over its own pollen, when
+ both are placed at the same time on the same stigma. In those great
+ families of plants containing many thousand allied species, the stigma of
+ each distinguishes with unerring certainty its own pollen from that of
+ every other species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There can be no doubt that the sterility of distinct species when first
+ crossed, and of their hybrid offspring, depends exclusively on the nature
+ or affinities of their sexual elements. We see this in the want of any
+ close correspondence between the degree of sterility and the amount of
+ external difference in the species which are crossed; and still more
+ clearly in the wide difference in the results of crossing reciprocally the
+ same two species;&mdash;that is, when species A is crossed with pollen
+ from B, and then B is crossed with pollen from A. Bearing in mind what has
+ just been said on the extreme sensitiveness and delicate affinities of the
+ reproductive system, why should we feel any surprise at the sexual
+ elements of those forms, which we call species, having been differentiated
+ in such a manner that they are incapable or only feebly capable of acting
+ on one another? We know that species have generally lived under the same
+ conditions, and have retained their own proper characters, for a much
+ longer period than varieties. Long-continued domestication eliminates, as
+ I have shown in my &lsquo;Variation under Domestication,&rsquo; the mutual sterility
+ which distinct species lately taken from a state of nature almost always
+ exhibit when intercrossed; and we can thus understand the fact that the
+ most different domestic races of animals are not mutually sterile. But
+ whether this holds good with cultivated varieties of plants is not known,
+ though some facts indicate that it does. The elimination of sterility
+ through long-continued domestication may probably be attributed to the
+ varying conditions to which our domestic animals have been subjected; and
+ no doubt it is owing to this same cause that they withstand great and
+ sudden changes in their conditions of life with far less loss of fertility
+ than do natural species. From these several considerations it appears
+ probable that the difference in the affinities of the sexual elements of
+ distinct species, on which their mutual incapacity for breeding together
+ depends, is caused by their having been habituated for a very long period
+ each to its own conditions, and to the sexual elements having thus
+ acquired firmly fixed affinities. However this may be, with the two great
+ classes of cases before us, namely, those relating to the
+ self-fertilisation and cross-fertilisation of the individuals of the same
+ species, and those relating to the illegitimate and legitimate unions of
+ heterostyled plants, it is quite unjustifiable to assume that the
+ sterility of species when first crossed and of their hybrid offspring,
+ indicates that they differ in some fundamental manner from the varieties
+ or individuals of the same species.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ INDEX.
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Abutilon darwinii, self-sterile in Brazil.
+ moderately self-fertile in England.
+ fertilised by birds.
+
+ Acacia sphaerocephala.
+
+ Acanthaceae.
+
+ Aconitum napellus.
+
+ Adlumia cirrhosa.
+
+ Adonis aestivalis.
+ measurements.
+ relative heights of crossed and self-fertilised plants.
+ self-fertile.
+
+ Ajuga reptans.
+
+ Allium cepa (blood-red var.)
+
+ Anagallis collina (var. grandiflora).
+ measurements.
+ seeds.
+
+ Anderson, J., on the Calceolaria.
+ removing the corollas.
+
+ Anemone.
+
+ Anemophilous plants.
+ often diclinous.
+
+ Antirrhinum majus (red var.)
+ perforated corolla.
+ &mdash;(white var.).
+ &mdash;(peloric var.).
+
+ Apium petroselinum.
+ result of experiments.
+
+ Argemone ochroleuca.
+
+ Aristolochia.
+
+ Aristotle on bees frequenting flowers of the same species.
+
+ Arum maculatum.
+
+ Bailey, Mr., perforation of corolla.
+
+ Bartonia aurea.
+ measurements.
+ result of experiments.
+
+ Bartsia odontites.
+
+ Beal, W.J., sterility of Kalmia latifolia.
+ on nectar in Ribes aureum.
+
+ Bean, the common.
+
+ Bees distinguish colours.
+ frequent the flowers of the same species.
+ guided by coloured corolla.
+ powers of vision and discrimination.
+ memory.
+ unattracted by odour of certain flowers.
+ industry.
+ profit by the corolla perforated by humble-bees.
+ skill in working.
+ habit.
+ foresight.
+
+ Bees, humble, recognise varieties as of one species.
+ colour not the sole guide.
+ rate of flying.
+ number of flowers visited.
+ corolla perforated by.
+ skill and judgment.
+
+ Belt, Mr., the hairs of Digitalis purpurea.
+ Phaseolus multiflorus.
+ not visited by bees in Nicaragua.
+ humming-birds carrying pollen.
+ secretion of nectar.
+ in Acacia sphaerocephalus and passion-flower.
+ perforation of corolla.
+
+ Bennett, A.W., on Viola tricolor.
+ structure of Impatiens fulva.
+ plants flowering in winter.
+ bees frequenting flowers of same species.
+
+ Bentham, on protection of the stigma in Synaphea.
+
+ Beta vulgaris.
+ measurements.
+ crossed not exceeded by self-fertilised.
+ prepotency of other pollen.
+
+ Bignonia.
+
+ Birds, means of fertilisation.
+
+ Blackley, Mr., on anthers of rye.
+ pollen carried by wind, experiments with a kite.
+
+ Boraginaceae.
+
+ Borago officinalis.
+ measurements.
+ early flowering of crossed.
+ seeds.
+ partially self-sterile.
+
+ Brackenridge, Mr., organism of animals affected by temperature and food.
+ different effect of changed conditions.
+
+ Brassica oleracea.
+ measurements.
+ weight.
+ remarks on experiments.
+ superiority of crossed.
+ period of flowering.
+ seeds.
+ self-fertile.
+ &mdash;napus.
+ &mdash;rapa.
+
+ Brisout, M., insects frequenting flowers of same species.
+
+ Broom.
+
+ Brugmansia.
+ humming-birds boring the flower.
+
+ Bulrush, weight of pollen produced by one plant.
+
+ Bundy, Mr., Ribes perforated by bees.
+
+ Butschli, O., sexual relations.
+
+ Cabbage.
+ affected by pollen of purple bastard.
+ prepotency of other pollen.
+ &mdash;, Ragged Jack.
+
+ Calceolaria.
+
+ Calluna vulgaris.
+
+ Campanula carpathica.
+
+ Campanulaceae.
+
+ Candolle, A. de, on ascending a mountain the flowers of the same species
+ disappear abruptly.
+
+ Canna warscewiczi.
+ result of crossed and self-fertilised.
+ period of flowering.
+ seeds.
+ highly self-fertile.
+
+ Cannaceae.
+
+ Carduus arctioides.
+
+ Carnation.
+
+ Carriere, relative period of the maturity of the sexual elements on same
+ flower.
+
+ Caryophyllaceae.
+
+ Caspary, Professor, on Corydalis cava.
+ Nymphaeaceae.
+ Euryale ferox.
+
+ Cecropia, food-bodies of.
+
+ Centradenia floribunda.
+
+ Cereals, grains of.
+
+ Cheeseman, Mr., on Orchids in New Zealand.
+
+ Chenopodiaceae.
+
+ Cineraria.
+
+ Clarkia elegans.
+ measurements.
+ early flowering of self-fertilised.
+ seeds.
+
+ Cleistogene flowers.
+
+ Coe, Mr., crossing Phaseolus vulgaris.
+
+ Colgate, R., red clover never sucked by hive-bees in New Zealand.
+
+ Colour, uniform, of flowers on plants self-fertilised and grown under
+ similar conditions for several generations.
+
+ Colours of flowers attractive to insects.
+ not the sole guide to bees.
+
+ Compositae.
+
+ Coniferae.
+
+ Convolvulus major.
+ &mdash; tricolor.
+
+ Corolla, removal of.
+ perforation by bees.
+
+ Coronilla.
+
+ Corydalis cava.
+ &mdash; halleri.
+ &mdash; intermedia.
+ &mdash; lutea.
+ &mdash; ochroleuca.
+ &mdash; solida.
+
+ Corylus avellana.
+
+ Cowslip.
+
+ Crinum.
+
+ Crossed plants, greater constitutional vigour of.
+
+ Cross-fertilisation.
+ see Fertilisation.
+
+ Crossing flowers on same plant, effects of.
+
+ Cruciferae.
+
+ Cruger, Dr., secretion of sweet fluid in Marcgraviaceae.
+
+ Cuphea purpurea.
+
+ Cycadiae.
+
+ Cyclamen persicum.
+ measurements.
+ early flowering of crossed.
+ seeds.
+ self-sterile.
+ &mdash; repandum.
+
+ Cytisus laburnum.
+
+ Dandelion, number of pollen grains.
+
+ Darwin, C., self-fertilisation in Pisum sativum.
+ sexual affinities.
+ on Primula.
+ bud variation.
+ constitutional vigour from cross parentage in common pea.
+ hybrids of Gladiolus and Cistus.
+ Phaseolus multiflorus.
+ nectar in Orchids.
+ on cross-fertilisation.
+ inheritance of acquired modifications.
+ change in the conditions of life beneficial to plants and animals.
+
+ Darwin, F., structure of Phaseolus multiflorus.
+ Pteris aquilina.
+ perforation of Lathyrus sylvestris.
+
+ Darwin, G., on marriages with first cousins.
+
+ Decaisne on Delphinium consolida.
+
+ De Candolle, nectar as an excretion.
+
+ Delphinium consolida.
+ measurements.
+ seeds.
+ partially sterile.
+ corolla removed.
+
+ Delpino, Professor, Viola tricolor.
+ Phaseolus multiflorus.
+ intercrossing of sweet-pea.
+ Lobelia ramosa.
+ structure of the Cannaceae.
+ wind and water carrying pollen.
+ Juglans regia.
+ anemophilous plants.
+ fertilisation of Plantago.
+ excretion of nectar.
+ secretion of nectar to defend the plant.
+ anemophilous and entomophilous plants.
+ dioecious plants.
+
+ Denny, Pelargonium zonale.
+
+ Diagram showing mean height of Ipomoea purpurea.
+
+ Dianthus caryophyllus.
+ crossed and self-fertilised.
+ measurements.
+ cross with fresh stock.
+ weight of seed.
+ colour of flowers.
+ remarks on experiments.
+ early flowering of crossed.
+ uniform colour of self-fertilised.
+ seeds.
+ few capsules.
+
+ Dickie, Dr., self-fertilisation in Cannaceae.
+
+ Dictamnus fraxinella.
+
+ Digitalis purpurea.
+ measurements.
+ effects of intercrossing.
+ superiority of crossed.
+ self-sterile.
+
+ Dipsaceae.
+
+ Dobbs, bees frequenting flowers of same species.
+
+ Dodel, Dr. A., sexual reproduction.
+
+ Duhamel on Raphanus sativus.
+
+ Dunal, nectar as an excretion.
+
+ Dyer, Mr., on Lobelia ramosa.
+ on Cineraria.
+
+ Earley, W., self-fertilisation of Lathyrus odoratus.
+
+ Eaton, Reverend A.E., on Pringlea.
+
+ Engelmann, development of sexual forms.
+
+ Engler, Dr., on dichogamous Saxifraga.
+
+ Entomophilous plants.
+
+ Epipactis latifolia, attractive only to wasps.
+
+ Erica tetralix.
+ perforated corolla.
+
+ Erythrina.
+
+ Eschscholtzia californica.
+ measurements.
+ plants raised from Brazilian seed.
+ weight.
+ seeds.
+ experiments on.
+ superiority of self-fertilised over crossed.
+ early flowering.
+ artificially self-fertilised.
+ pollen from other flowers more effective.
+ self-sterile in Brazil.
+
+ Euphrasia officinalis.
+
+ Euryale amazonica.
+ &mdash; ferox.
+
+ Fabricius on Aristolochia.
+
+ Fagopyrum esculentum.
+ early flowering of crossed plant.
+
+ Faivre, Professor, self-fertilisation of Cannaceae.
+
+ Farrer, T.H., papilionaceous flowers.
+ Lupinus luteus.
+ Phaseolus multiflorus.
+ Pisum sativum.
+ cross-fertilisation of Lobelia ramosa.
+ on Coronilla.
+
+ Fermond, M., Phaseolus multiflorus.
+ Phaseolus coccineus hybridus.
+
+ Fertilisation, means of.
+ plants sterile, or partially so without insect-aid.
+ plants fertile without insect-aid.
+ means of cross-fertilisation.
+ humming-birds.
+ Australian flowers fertilised by honey-sucking birds.
+ in New Zealand by the Anthornis melanura.
+ attraction of bright colours.
+ of odours.
+ flowers adapted to certain kinds of insects.
+ large amount of pollen-grains.
+ transport of pollen by insects.
+ structure and conspicuousness of flowers.
+ pollen from a distinct plant.
+ prepotent pollen.
+
+ Fertility, heights and weights, relative, of plants crossed by a fresh
+ stock, self-fertilised, or intercrossed (Table 7/C).
+
+ Fertility of plants as influenced by cross and self-fertilisation (Table
+ 9/D).
+ relative, of crossed and self-fertilised parents (Table 9/E).
+ innate, from a cross with fresh stock (Table 9/F).
+ relative, of flowers crossed with pollen from a distinct plant and their
+ own pollen (Table 9/G).
+ of crossed and self-fertilised flowers.
+
+ Flowering, period of, superiority of crossed over self-fertilised.
+
+ Flowers, white, larger proportion smelling sweetly.
+ structure and conspicuousness of.
+ conspicuous and inconspicuous.
+ papilionaceous.
+ fertilised with pollen from a distinct plant.
+
+ Forsythia viridissima.
+
+ Foxglove.
+ Frankland, Dr., chemical affinity.
+
+ Fraxinus ornus.
+
+ Fumaria capreolata.
+ &mdash; officinalis.
+
+ Galium aparine.
+
+ Gallesio, spontaneous crossing of oranges.
+
+ Galton, Mr., Limnanthes douglasii.
+ report on the tables of measurements.
+ self-fertilised plants.
+ superior vigour of crossed seedlings in Lathyrus odoratus.
+
+ Gartner, excess of pollen injurious.
+ plants fertilising one another at a considerable distance.
+ Lobelia fulgens.
+ sterility of Verbascum nigrum.
+ number of pollen-grains to fertilise Geum urbanum.
+ experiments with pollen.
+
+ Gentry, Mr., perforation of corolla.
+
+ Geraniaceae.
+
+ Geranium phaeum.
+
+ Gerardia pedicularia.
+
+ Germination, period of, and relative weight of seeds from crossed and
+ self-fertilised flowers.
+
+ Gesneria pendulina.
+ measurements.
+ seeds.
+
+ Gesneriaceae.
+
+ Geum urbanum, number of pollen-grains for fertilisation.
+
+ Glaucium luteum.
+
+ Godron, intercrossing of carrot.
+ Primula grandiflora affected by pollen of Primula officinalis.
+ tulips.
+
+ Gould, humming-birds frequenting Impatiens.
+
+ Graminaceae.
+
+ Grant, Mr., bees of different hives visiting different kinds of flowers.
+
+ Gray, Asa, sexual relations of trees in United States.
+ on sexual reproduction.
+
+ Hallet, Major, on selection of grains of cereals.
+
+ Hassall, Mr., number of pollen-grains in Paeony and Dandelion.
+ weight of pollen produced by one plant of Bulrush.
+
+ Heartsease.
+
+ Hedychium.
+
+ Hedysarum onobrychis.
+
+ Heights, relative, of crossed and self-fertilised plants (Table 7/A).
+
+ Heights, weights, and fertility, summary.
+
+ Henschel&rsquo;s experiments with pollen.
+
+ Henslow, Reverend G., cross-fertilisation in Sarothamnus scoparius.
+
+ Herbert on cross-fertilisation.
+ pollen brought from distant plants.
+ spontaneous crossing of rhododendrons.
+
+ Hero, descendants of the plant.
+ its self-fertilisation.
+
+ Heterocentron mexicanum.
+
+ Hibiscus africanus.
+ measurements.
+ result of experiments.
+ early flowering of crossed plant.
+ number of pollen-grains for fertilisation.
+
+ Hildebrand on pollen of Digitalis purpurea.
+ Thunbergia alata.
+ experiments on Eschscholtzia californica.
+ Viola tricolor.
+ Lobelia ramosa.
+ Fagopyrum esculentum.
+ self-fertilisation of Zea mays.
+ Corydalis cava.
+ Hypecoum grandiflorum.
+ and Hypecoum procumbens.
+ sterility of Eschscholtzia.
+ experiments on self-fertilisation.
+ Corydalis lutea.
+ spontaneously self-fertilised flowers.
+ various mechanical structure to check self-fertilisation.
+ early separation of the sexes.
+ on Aristolochia.
+ fertilisation of the Gramineae.
+ wide dissemination of seeds.
+
+ Hoffmann, Professor H., self-fertilised capsules of Papaver somniferum.
+ Adonis aestivalis.
+ spontaneous variability of Phaseolus multiflorus.
+ self-fertilisation of kidney-bean.
+ Papaver alpinum.
+ sterility of Corydalis solida.
+ Linum usitatissimum.
+
+ Honey-dew.
+
+ Hooker, Dr., Euryale ferox and Victoria regia, each producing several
+ flowers at once.
+ on sexual relation of trees in New Zealand.
+
+ Horse-chestnut.
+
+ Humble-bees, see Bees.
+
+ Humboldt, on the grains of cereals.
+
+ Humming-Birds a means of cross-fertilisation.
+
+ Hyacinth.
+
+ Hybrid plants, tendency to revert to their parent forms.
+
+ Hypecoum grandiflorum.
+ &mdash; procumbens.
+
+ Iberis umbellata (var. kermesiana).
+ measurement.
+ cross by fresh stocks.
+ remarks on experiments.
+ superiority of crossed over self-fertilised seedlings.
+ early flowering.
+ number of seeds.
+ highly self-fertile.
+ prepotency of other pollen.
+ &mdash; amara.
+
+ Impatiens frequented by humming-birds.
+ &mdash; barbigera.
+ &mdash; fulva.
+ &mdash; noli-me-tangere.
+ &mdash; pallida.
+
+ Inheritance, force of, in plants.
+
+ Insects, means of cross-fertilisation.
+ attracted by bright colours.
+ by odours.
+ by conspicuous flowers.
+ dark streaks and marks as guides for.
+ flowers adapted to certain kinds.
+
+ Ipomoea purpurea.
+ measurements.
+ flowers on same plant crossed.
+ cross with fresh stock.
+ descendants of Hero.
+ summary of measurements.
+ diagram showing mean heights.
+ summary of observations.
+ of experiments.
+ superiority of crossed.
+ early flowering.
+ effects of intercrossing.
+ uniform colour of self-fertilised.
+ seeds.
+ highly self-fertile.
+ prepotency of other pollen.
+
+ Iris, secretion of saccharine matter from calyx.
+
+ Isotoma.
+
+ Juglans regia.
+
+ Kalmia latifolia.
+
+ Kerner, on protection of the pollen.
+ on the single daily flower of Villarsia parnassifolia.
+ pollen carried by wind.
+
+ Kidney-bean.
+
+ Kitchener, Mr., on the action of the stigma.
+ on Viola tricolor.
+
+ Knight, A., on the sexual intercourse of plants.
+ crossing varieties of peas.
+ sexual reproduction.
+
+ Kohl-rabi, prepotency of pollen.
+
+ Kolreuter on cross-fertilisation.
+ number of pollen-grains necessary for fertilisation.
+ sexual affinities of Nicotiana.
+ Verbascum phoeniceum.
+ experiments with pollen of Hibiscus vesicarius.
+
+ Kuhn adopts the term cleistogene.
+
+ Kurr, on excretion of nectar.
+ removal of corolla.
+
+ Labiatae.
+
+ Lactuca sativa.
+ measurement.
+ prepotency of other pollen.
+
+ Lamium album.
+ &mdash; purpureum.
+
+ Lathyrus odoratus.
+ measurements.
+ remarks on experiments.
+ period of flowering.
+ cross-fertilisation.
+ seeds.
+ self-fertile.
+ &mdash; grandiflorus.
+ &mdash; nissolia.
+ &mdash; sylvestris, perforation of corolla.
+
+ Lawes and Gilbert, Messrs., consumption of inorganic matter by plants.
+
+ Laxton, Mr., crossing varieties of peas.
+
+ Lecoq, Cyclamen repandum.
+ on Fumariaceae.
+ annual plants rarely dioecious.
+
+ Leersia oryzoides.
+
+ Leguminosae.
+ summary on the.
+
+ Leighton, Reverend W.A., on Phaseolus multiflorus.
+ Acacia magnifica.
+
+ Leptosiphon androsaceus.
+
+ Leschenaultia formosa.
+
+ Lettuce.
+
+ Lilium auratum.
+
+ Limnanthes douglasii.
+ measurements.
+ early flowering of crossed.
+ seeds.
+ highly self-fertile.
+ prepotency of other pollen.
+
+ Linaria vulgaris.
+ seeds.
+ self-sterile.
+ &mdash; cymbalaria.
+
+ Lindley on Fumariaceae.
+
+ Link, hypopetalous nectary in Chironia decussata.
+
+ Linum grandiflorum.
+ &mdash; usitatissimum.
+
+ Loasaceae.
+
+ Lobelia erinus.
+ secretion of nectar in sunshine.
+ experiments with bees.
+
+ Lobelia fulgens.
+ measurements.
+ summary of experiments.
+ early flowering of self-fertilised.
+ seeds.
+ sterile unless visited by humble-bees.
+ &mdash; ramosa.
+ measurements.
+ early flowering of crossed.
+ seeds.
+ self-sterile.
+ &mdash; tenuior.
+
+ Loiseleur-Deslongchamp, on the grains of cereals.
+
+ Lotus corniculatus.
+
+ Lubbock, Sir J., cross-fertilisation of flowers.
+ on Viola tricolor.
+ bees distinguishing colours.
+ instinct of bees and insects sucking nectar.
+
+ Lupinus luteus.
+ measurements.
+ early flowering of self-fertilised.
+ self-fertile.
+ prepotency of other pollen.
+ &mdash; pilosus.
+ self-fertile.
+
+ Lychnis dioica.
+
+ MacNab, Mr., on the shorter or longer stamens of rhododendrons.
+
+ Mahonia aquifolium.
+ &mdash; repens.
+
+ Malvaceae.
+
+ Marcgraviaceae.
+
+ Masters, Mr., cross-fertilisation in Pisum sativum.
+ cabbages affected by pollen at a distance.
+
+ Masters, Dr. Maxwell, on honey-dew.
+
+ Measurements, summary of.
+ Table 7/A.
+ Table 7/B.
+ Table 7/C.
+
+ Medicago lupulina.
+
+ Meehan, Mr., fertilising Petunia violacea by night moth.
+
+ Melastomaceae.
+
+ Melilotus officinalis.
+
+ Mercurialis annua.
+
+ Miller, Professor, on chemical affinity.
+
+ Mimulus luteus, effects of crossing.
+ crossed and self-fertilised plants.
+ measurements.
+ cross with a distinct stock.
+ intercrossed on same plant.
+ summary of observations.
+ of experiments.
+ superiority of crossed plants.
+ simultaneous flowering.
+ effects of intercrossing.
+ uniform colour of self-fertilised.
+ seeds.
+ highly self-fertile.
+ prepotency of other pollen.
+ &mdash; roseus.
+
+ Miner, Mr., red clover never sucked by hive-bees in the United States.
+
+ Mirabilis, dwarfed plants raised by using too few pollen-grains.
+ number of grains necessary for fertilisation.
+
+ Mitchell, Dr., on first cousins inter-marrying.
+
+ Monochaetum ensiferum.
+
+ Moore, Mr., on Cinerarias.
+
+ Muller, Fritz, on Posoqueria fragrans.
+ experiments on hybrid Abutilons and Bignonias.
+ large number of Orchidaceous genera sterile in their native home, also
+ Bignonia and Tabernaemontana echinata.
+ sterility of Eschscholtzia californica.
+ Abutilon darwinii.
+ experiments in self-fertilisation.
+ self-sterile plants.
+ incapacity of pollen-tubes to penetrate the stigma.
+ cross-fertilisation by means of birds.
+ imperfectly developed male and female Termites.
+ food-bodies in Cecropia.
+
+ Muller, Hermann, fertilisation of flowers by insects.
+ on Digitalis purpurea.
+ Calceolaria.
+ Linaria vulgaris.
+ Verbascum nigrum.
+ the common cabbage.
+ Papaver dubium.
+ Viola tricolor.
+ structure of Delphinium consolida.
+ of Lupinus lutea.
+ flowers of Pisum sativum.
+ on Sarothamnus scoparius not secreting nectar.
+ Apium petroselinum.
+ Borago officinalis.
+ red clover visited by hive-bees in Germany.
+ insects rarely visiting Fumaria officinalis.
+ comparison of lowland and alpine species.
+ structure of plants adapted to cross and self-fertilisation.
+ large conspicuous flowers more frequently visited by insects than small
+ inconspicuous ones.
+ Solanum generally unattractive to insects.
+ Lamium album.
+ on anemophilous plants.
+ fertilisation of Plantago.
+ secretion of nectar.
+ instinct of bees sucking nectar.
+ bees frequenting flowers of the same species.
+ cause of it.
+ powers of vision and discrimination of bees.
+
+ Muller, Dr. H., hive-bees occasionally perforate the flower of Erica
+ tetralix.
+ calyx and corolla of Rhinanthus alecterolophus bored by Bombus
+ mastrucatus.
+
+ Munro, Mr., some species of Oncidium and Maxillaria sterile with own
+ pollen.
+
+ Myrtaceae.
+
+ Nageli on odours attracting insects.
+ sexual relations.
+
+ Natural selection, effect upon self-sterility and self-fertilisation.
+
+ Naudin on number of pollen-grains necessary for fertilisation.
+ Petunia violacea.
+
+ Nectar regarded as an excretion.
+
+ Nemophila insignis.
+ measurements.
+ early flowering of crossed plant.
+ effects of cross and self-fertilisation.
+ seeds.
+
+ Nepeta glechoma.
+
+ Nicotiana glutinosa.
+ &mdash; tabacum.
+ measurements.
+ cross with fresh stock.
+ measurements.
+ summary of experiments.
+ superiority of crossed plants.
+ early flowering.
+ seeds.
+ experiments on.
+ self-fertile.
+
+ Nolana prostrata.
+ measurements.
+ crossed and self-fertilised plants.
+ number of capsules and seeds.
+ self-fertile.
+
+ Nolanaceae.
+
+ Nymphaea.
+
+ Odours emitted by flowers attractive to insects.
+
+ Ogle, Dr., on Digitalis purpurea.
+ Gesneria.
+ Phaseolus multiflorus.
+ perforation of corolla.
+ case of the Monkshood.
+
+ Onagraceae.
+
+ Onion, prepotency of other pollen.
+
+ Ononis minutissima.
+ measurements.
+ seeds.
+ self-fertile.
+
+ Ophrys apifera.
+ &mdash; muscifera.
+
+ Oranges, spontaneous crossing.
+
+ Orchideae.
+ excretion of saccharine matter.
+
+ Orchis, fly.
+
+ Origanum vulgare.
+ measurements.
+ early flowering of crossed plant.
+ effects of intercrossing.
+
+ Paeony, number of pollen-grains.
+
+ Papaveraceae.
+
+ Papaver alpinum.
+ &mdash; argemonoides.
+ &mdash; bracteatum.
+ &mdash; dubium.
+ &mdash; orientale.
+ &mdash; rhoeas.
+ &mdash; somniferum.
+ &mdash; vagum.
+ measurements.
+ number of capsules.
+ seeds.
+ prepotency of other pollen.
+
+ Papillae of the Viola tricolor attractive to insects.
+
+ Parsley.
+
+ Passiflora alata.
+ &mdash; gracilis.
+ measurements.
+ crossed and self-fertilised.
+ seeds.
+ self-fertile.
+
+ Passifloraceae.
+
+ Pea, common.
+
+ Pelargonium zonale.
+ measurements.
+ effects of intercrossing.
+ almost self-sterile.
+
+ Pentstemon argutus, perforated corolla.
+
+ Petunia violacea.
+ measurements.
+ weight of seed.
+ cross with fresh stock.
+ relative fertility.
+ colour.
+ summary of experiments.
+ superiority of crossed over self-fertilised.
+ early flowering.
+ uniform colour of self-fertilised.
+ seeds.
+ self-sterile.
+
+ Phalaris canariensis.
+ measurements.
+ early flowering of crossed.
+
+ Phaseolus coccineus.
+ &mdash; multiflorus.
+ measurement.
+ partially sterile.
+ crossed and self-fertilised.
+ early flowering of crossed.
+ seeds.
+ perforated by humble-bees.
+ &mdash; vulgaris.
+ self-fertile.
+
+ Pisum sativum.
+ measurements.
+ seldom intercross.
+ summary of experiments.
+ self-fertile.
+
+ Plants, crossed, greater constitutional vigour.
+
+ Pleroma.
+
+ Polemoniaceae.
+
+ Pollen, relative fertility of flowers crossed from a distinct plant, or
+ with their own.
+ difference of results in Nolana prostrata.
+ crossed and self-fertilised plants, again crossed from a distinct plant
+ and their own pollen.
+ sterile with their own.
+ semi-self-sterile.
+ loss of.
+ number of grains in Dandelion, Paeony, and Wistaria sinensis.
+ number necessary for fertilisation.
+ transported from flower to flower.
+ prepotency.
+ aboriginally the sole attraction to insects.
+ quantity produced by anemophilous plants.
+
+ Polyanthus, prepotency over cowslip.
+
+ Polygoneae.
+
+ Posoqueria fragrans.
+
+ Potato.
+
+ Poterium sanguisorba.
+
+ Potts, heads of Anthornis melanura covered with pollen.
+
+ Primrose, Chinese.
+
+ Primula elatior.
+ &mdash; grandiflora.
+ &mdash; mollis.
+ &mdash; officinalis.
+ &mdash; scotica.
+ &mdash; sinensis.
+ measurements.
+ early flowering of crossed.
+ &mdash; veris (var. officinalis).
+ measurements.
+ result of experiments.
+ early flowering of crossed.
+ seeds.
+ self-fertility.
+ prepotency of dark red polyanthus.
+
+ Primulaceae.
+
+ Pringlea.
+
+ Proteaceae of Australia.
+
+ Prunus avium.
+ &mdash; laurocerasus.
+
+ Pteris aquilina.
+
+ Radish.
+
+ Ranunculaceae.
+
+ Ranunculus acris.
+
+ Raphanus sativus.
+
+ Reinke, nectar-secreting glands of Prunus avium.
+
+ Reseda lutea.
+ measurements.
+ result of experiments.
+ self-fertile.
+ &mdash; odorata.
+ measurements.
+ self-fertilised scarcely exceeded by crossed.
+ seeds.
+ want of correspondence between seeds and vigour of offspring.
+ result of experiments.
+ sterile and self-fertile.
+
+ Resedaceae.
+
+ Rheum rhaponticum.
+
+ Rhexia glandulosa.
+
+ Rhododendron, spontaneous crossing.
+
+ Rhododendron azaloides.
+
+ Rhubarb.
+
+ Ribes aureum.
+
+ Riley, Mr., pollen carried by wind.
+ Yucca moth.
+
+ Rodgers, Mr., secretion of nectar in Vanilla.
+
+ Rye, experiment on pollen of.
+
+ Salvia coccinea.
+ measurements.
+ early flowering of crossed.
+ seeds.
+ partially self-sterile.
+ &mdash; glutinosa.
+ &mdash; grahami.
+ &mdash; tenori.
+
+ Sarothamnus scoparius.
+ measurements.
+ superiority of crossed seedlings.
+ seeds.
+ self-sterile.
+
+ Scabiosa atro-purpurea.
+ measurements.
+
+ Scarlet-runner.
+
+ Scott, J., Papaver somniferum.
+ sterility of Verbascum.
+ Oncidium and Maxillaria.
+ on Primula scotica and Cortusa matthioli.
+
+ Scrophulariaceae.
+
+ Self-sterile varieties, appearance of.
+
+ Self-fertilisation, mechanical structure to check.
+
+ Self-sterile plants.
+ wide distribution throughout the vegetable kingdom.
+ difference in plants.
+ cause of self-sterility.
+ affected by changed conditions.
+ necessity of differentiation in the sexual elements.
+
+ Senecio cruentus.
+ &mdash; heritieri.
+ &mdash; maderensis
+ &mdash; populifolius.
+ &mdash; tussilaginis.
+
+ Sharpe, Messrs., precautions against intercrossing.
+
+ Snow-flake.
+
+ Solanaceae.
+
+ Solanum tuberosum.
+
+ Specularia perfoliata.
+ &mdash; speculum.
+ measurements.
+ crossed and self-fertilised.
+ early flowering of crossed.
+ seeds.
+ self-fertile.
+
+ Spencer, Herbert, chemical affinity.
+
+ Spiranthes autumnalis.
+
+ Sprengel, C.K., fertilisation of flowers by insects.
+ Viola tricolor.
+ colours in flowers attract and guide insects.
+ on Aristolochia.
+ Aconitum napellus.
+ importance of insects in fertilising flowers.
+
+ Stachys coccinea.
+
+ Stellaria media.
+
+ Strachey, General, perforated flowers in the Himalaya.
+
+ Strawberry.
+
+ Strelitzia fertilised by the Nectarinideae.
+
+ Structure of plants adapted to cross and self-fertilisation.
+
+ Swale, Mr., garden lupine not visited by bees in New Zealand.
+
+ Sweet-pea.
+
+ Tabernaemontana echinata.
+
+ Tables of measurements of heights, weights, and fertility of plants.
+
+ Termites, imperfectly developed males and females.
+
+ Thunbergia alata.
+
+ Thyme.
+
+ Tinzmann, on Solanum tuberosum.
+
+ Tobacco.
+
+ Transmission of the good effects of a cross to later generations.
+
+ Trees, separated sexes.
+
+ Trifolium arvense.
+ &mdash; incarnatum.
+ &mdash; minus.
+ &mdash; pratense.
+ &mdash; procumbens.
+ &mdash; repens.
+
+ Tropaeolum minus.
+ measurements.
+ early flowering of crossed.
+ seeds.
+ &mdash; tricolor.
+ seeds.
+
+ Tulips.
+
+ Typha.
+
+ Umbelliferae.
+
+ Urban, Ig., fertilisation of Medicago lupulina.
+
+ Vandellia nummularifolia.
+ seeds.
+ self-fertile.
+
+ Vanilla, secretion of nectar.
+
+ Verbascum lychnitis.
+ &mdash; nigrum.
+ &mdash; phoeniceum.
+ &mdash; thapsus.
+ measurements.
+ self-fertile.
+
+ Verlot on Convolvulus tricolor.
+ intercrossing of Nemophila.
+ of Leptosiphon.
+
+ Veronica agrestis.
+ &mdash; chamaedrys.
+ &mdash; hederaefolia.
+
+ Vicia faba.
+ &mdash; hirsuta.
+ &mdash; sativa.
+
+ Victoria regia.
+
+ Villarsia parnassifolia.
+
+ Vilmorin on transmitting character to offspring.
+
+ Vinca major.
+ &mdash; rosea.
+
+ Viola canina.
+ &mdash; tricolor.
+ measurements.
+ superiority of crossed plants.
+ period of flowering.
+ effects of cross-fertilisation.
+ seeds.
+ partially sterile.
+ corolla removed.
+
+ Violaceae.
+
+ Viscaria oculata.
+ measurement.
+ average height of crossed and self-fertilised.
+ simultaneous flowering.
+ seeds.
+ self-fertile.
+
+ Wallace, Mr., the beaks and faces of brush-tongued lories covered with
+ pollen.
+
+ Wasps attracted by Epipactis latifolia.
+
+ Weights, relative, of crossed and self-fertilised plants.
+ and period of germination of seeds.
+
+ Wilder, Mr., fertilisation of flowers with their own pollen.
+
+ Wilson, A.J., superior vigour of crossed seedlings in Brassica
+ campestris ruta baga.
+
+ Wistaria sinensis.
+
+ Yucca moth.
+
+ Zea mays.
+ measurements.
+ difference of height between crossed and self-fertilised.
+ early flowering of crossed.
+ self-fertile.
+ prepotency of other pollen.
+</pre>
+
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Effects of Cross & Self-Fertilisation
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+Title: The Effects of Cross & Self-Fertilisation in the Vegetable Kingdom
+
+Author: Charles Darwin
+
+Release Date: August, 2003 [Etext# 4346]
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+
+
+THE EFFECTS OF CROSS & SELF-FERTILISATION IN THE VEGETABLE KINGDOM.
+
+BY
+
+CHARLES DARWIN, M.A., F.R.S., ETC.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+INTRODUCTORY REMARKS.
+
+Various means which favour or determine the cross-fertilisation of
+plants.--Benefits derived from cross-fertilisation.--Self-fertilisation
+favourable to the propagation of the species.--Brief history of the
+subject.--Object of the experiments, and the manner in which they were
+tried.--Statistical value of the measurements.--The experiments carried
+on during several successive generations.--Nature of the relationship of
+the plants in the later generations.--Uniformity of the conditions to
+which the plants were subjected.--Some apparent and some real causes of
+error.--Amount of pollen employed.--Arrangement of the work.--Importance
+of the conclusions.
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+CONVOLVULACEAE.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea, comparison of the height and fertility of the crossed
+and self-fertilised plants during ten successive generations.--Greater
+constitutional vigour of the crossed plants.--The effects on the
+offspring of crossing different flowers on the same plant, instead of
+crossing distinct individuals.--The effects of a cross with a fresh
+stock.--The descendants of the self-fertilised plant named
+Hero.--Summary on the growth, vigour, and fertility of the successive
+crossed and self-fertilised generations.--Small amount of pollen in the
+anthers of the self-fertilised plants of the later generations, and the
+sterility of their first-produced flowers.--Uniform colour of the
+flowers produced by the self-fertilised plants.--The advantage from a
+cross between two distinct plants depends on their differing in
+constitution.
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+SCROPHULARIACEAE, GESNERIACEAE, LABIATAE, ETC.
+
+Mimulus luteus; height, vigour, and fertility of the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the first four generations.--Appearance of a
+new, tall, and highly self-fertile variety.--Offspring from a cross
+between self-fertilised plants.--Effects of a cross with a fresh
+stock.--Effects of crossing flowers on the same plant.--Summary on
+Mimulus luteus.--Digitalis purpurea, superiority of the crossed
+plants.--Effects of crossing flowers on the same
+plant.--Calceolaria.--Linaria vulgaris.--Verbascum thapsus.--Vandellia
+nummularifolia.--Cleistogene flowers.--Gesneria pendulina.--Salvia
+coccinea.--Origanum vulgare, great increase of the crossed plants by
+stolons.--Thunbergia alata.
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+CRUCIFERAE, PAPAVERACEAE, RESEDACEAE, ETC.
+
+Brassica oleracea, crossed and self-fertilised plants.--Great effect of
+a cross with a fresh stock on the weight of the offspring.--Iberis
+umbellata.--Papaver vagum.--Eschscholtzia californica, seedlings from a
+cross with a fresh stock not more vigorous, but more fertile than the
+self-fertilised seedlings.--Reseda lutea and odorata, many individuals
+sterile with their own pollen.--Viola tricolor, wonderful effects of a
+cross.--Adonis aestivalis.--Delphinium consolida.--Viscaria oculata,
+crossed plants hardly taller, but more fertile than the
+self-fertilised.--Dianthus caryophyllus, crossed and self-fertilised
+plants compared for four generations.--Great effects of a cross with a
+fresh stock.--Uniform colour of the flowers on the self-fertilised
+plants.--Hibiscus africanus.
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+GERANIACEAE, LEGUMINOSAE, ONAGRACEAE, ETC.
+
+Pelargonium zonale, a cross between plants propagated by cuttings does
+no good.--Tropaeolum minus.--Limnanthes douglasii.--Lupinus luteus and
+pilosus.--Phaseolus multiflorus and vulgaris.--Lathyrus odoratus,
+varieties of, never naturally intercross in England.--Pisum sativum,
+varieties of, rarely intercross, but a cross between them highly
+beneficial.--Sarothamnus scoparius, wonderful effects of a
+cross.--Ononis minutissima, cleistogene flowers of.--Summary on the
+Leguminosae.--Clarkia elegans.--Bartonia aurea.--Passiflora
+gracilis.--Apium petroselinum.--Scabiosa atropurpurea.--Lactuca
+sativa.--Specularia speculum.--Lobelia ramosa, advantages of a cross
+during two generations.--Lobelia fulgens.--Nemophila insignis, great
+advantages of a cross.--Borago officinalis.--Nolana prostrata.
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+SOLANACEAE, PRIMULACEAE, POLYGONEAE, ETC.
+
+Petunia violacea, crossed and self-fertilised plants compared for four
+generations.--Effects of a cross with a fresh stock.--Uniform colour of
+the flowers on the self-fertilised plants of the fourth
+generation.--Nicotiana tabacum, crossed and self-fertilised plants of
+equal height.--Great effects of a cross with a distinct sub-variety on
+the height, but not on the fertility, of the offspring.--Cyclamen
+persicum, crossed seedlings greatly superior to the
+self-fertilised.--Anagallis collina.--Primula veris.--Equal-styled
+variety of Primula veris, fertility of, greatly increased by a cross
+with a fresh stock.--Fagopyrum esculentum.--Beta vulgaris.--Canna
+warscewiczi, crossed and self-fertilised plants of equal height.--Zea
+mays.--Phalaris canariensis.
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+SUMMARY OF THE HEIGHTS AND WEIGHTS OF THE CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED
+PLANTS.
+
+Number of species and plants measured.--Tables given.--Preliminary
+remarks on the offspring of plants crossed by a fresh stock.--Thirteen
+cases specially considered.--The effects of crossing a self-fertilised
+plant either by another self-fertilised plant or by an intercrossed
+plant of the old stock.--Summary of the results.--Preliminary remarks on
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants of the same stock.--The
+twenty-six exceptional cases considered, in which the crossed plants did
+not exceed greatly in height the self-fertilised.--Most of these cases
+shown not to be real exceptions to the rule that cross-fertilisation is
+beneficial.--Summary of results.--Relative weights of the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants.
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+DIFFERENCE BETWEEN CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS IN CONSTITUTIONAL
+VIGOUR AND IN OTHER RESPECTS.
+
+Greater constitutional vigour of crossed plants.--The effects of great
+crowding.--Competition with other kinds of plants.--Self-fertilised
+plants more liable to premature death.--Crossed plants generally flower
+before the self-fertilised.--Negative effects of intercrossing flowers
+on the same plant.--Cases described.--Transmission of the good effects
+of a cross to later generations.--Effects of crossing plants of closely
+related parentage.--Uniform colour of the flowers on plants
+self-fertilised during several generations and cultivated under similar
+conditions.
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE EFFECTS OF CROSS-FERTILISATION AND SELF-FERTILISATION ON THE
+PRODUCTION OF SEEDS.
+
+Fertility of plants of crossed and self-fertilised parentage, both lots
+being fertilised in the same manner.--Fertility of the parent-plants
+when first crossed and self-fertilised, and of their crossed and
+self-fertilised offspring when again crossed and
+self-fertilised.--Comparison of the fertility of flowers fertilised with
+their own pollen and with that from other flowers on the same
+plant.--Self-sterile plants.--Causes of self-sterility.--The appearance
+of highly self-fertile varieties.--Self-fertilisation apparently in some
+respects beneficial, independently of the assured production of
+seeds.--Relative weights and rates of germination of seeds from crossed
+and self-fertilised flowers.
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+MEANS OF FERTILISATION.
+
+Sterility and fertility of plants when insects are excluded.--The means
+by which flowers are cross-fertilised.--Structures favourable to
+self-fertilisation.--Relation between the structure and conspicuousness
+of flowers, the visits of insects, and the advantages of
+cross-fertilisation.--The means by which flowers are fertilised with
+pollen from a distinct plant.--Greater fertilising power of such
+pollen.--Anemophilous species.--Conversion of anemophilous species into
+entomophilous.--Origin of nectar.--Anemophilous plants generally have
+their sexes separated.--Conversion of diclinous into hermaphrodite
+flowers.--Trees often have their sexes separated.
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE HABITS OF INSECTS IN RELATION TO THE FERTILISATION OF FLOWERS.
+
+Insects visit the flowers of the same species as long as they
+can.--Cause of this habit.--Means by which bees recognise the flowers of
+the same species.--Sudden secretion of nectar.--Nectar of certain
+flowers unattractive to certain insects.--Industry of bees, and the
+number of flowers visited within a short time.--Perforation of the
+corolla by bees.--Skill shown in the operation.--Hive-bees profit by the
+holes made by humble-bees.--Effects of habit.--The motive for
+perforating flowers to save time.--Flowers growing in crowded masses
+chiefly perforated.
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+GENERAL RESULTS.
+
+Cross-fertilisation proved to be beneficial, and self-fertilisation
+injurious.--Allied species differ greatly in the means by which
+cross-fertilisation is favoured and self-fertilisation avoided.--The
+benefits and evils of the two processes depend on the degree of
+differentiation in the sexual elements.--The evil effects not due to the
+combination of morbid tendencies in the parents.--Nature of the
+conditions to which plants are subjected when growing near together in a
+state of nature or under culture, and the effects of such
+conditions.--Theoretical considerations with respect to the interaction
+of differentiated sexual elements.--Practical lessons.--Genesis of the
+two sexes.--Close correspondence between the effects of
+cross-fertilisation and self-fertilisation, and of the legitimate and
+illegitimate unions of heterostyled plants, in comparison with hybrid
+unions.
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+
+...
+
+
+THE EFFECTS OF CROSS AND SELF-FERTILISATION IN THE VEGETABLE KINGDOM.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+INTRODUCTORY REMARKS.
+
+Various means which favour or determine the cross-fertilisation of plants.
+Benefits derived from cross-fertilisation.
+Self-fertilisation favourable to the propagation of the species.
+Brief history of the subject.
+Object of the experiments, and the manner in which they were tried.
+Statistical value of the measurements.
+The experiments carried on during several successive generations.
+Nature of the relationship of the plants in the later generations.
+Uniformity of the conditions to which the plants were subjected.
+Some apparent and some real causes of error.
+Amount of pollen employed.
+Arrangement of the work.
+Importance of the conclusions.
+
+There is weighty and abundant evidence that the flowers of most kinds of
+plants are constructed so as to be occasionally or habitually
+cross-fertilised by pollen from another flower, produced either by the
+same plant, or generally, as we shall hereafter see reason to believe,
+by a distinct plant. Cross-fertilisation is sometimes ensured by the
+sexes being separated, and in a large number of cases by the pollen and
+stigma of the same flower being matured at different times. Such plants
+are called dichogamous, and have been divided into two sub-classes:
+proterandrous species, in which the pollen is mature before the stigma,
+and proterogynous species, in which the reverse occurs; this latter form
+of dichogamy not being nearly so common as the other.
+Cross-fertilisation is also ensured, in many cases, by mechanical
+contrivances of wonderful beauty, preventing the impregnation of the
+flowers by their own pollen. There is a small class of plants, which I
+have called dimorphic and trimorphic, but to which Hildebrand has given
+the more appropriate name of heterostyled; this class consists of plants
+presenting two or three distinct forms, adapted for reciprocal
+fertilisation, so that, like plants with separate sexes, they can hardly
+fail to be intercrossed in each generation. The male and female organs
+of some flowers are irritable, and the insects which touch them get
+dusted with pollen, which is thus transported to other flowers. Again,
+there is a class, in which the ovules absolutely refuse to be fertilised
+by pollen from the same plant, but can be fertilised by pollen from any
+other individual of the same species. There are also very many species
+which are partially sterile with their own pollen. Lastly, there is a
+large class in which the flowers present no apparent obstacle of any
+kind to self-fertilisation, nevertheless these plants are frequently
+intercrossed, owing to the prepotency of pollen from another individual
+or variety over the plant's own pollen.
+
+As plants are adapted by such diversified and effective means for
+cross-fertilisation, it might have been inferred from this fact alone
+that they derived some great advantage from the process; and it is the
+object of the present work to show the nature and importance of the
+benefits thus derived. There are, however, some exceptions to the rule
+of plants being constructed so as to allow of or to favour
+cross-fertilisation, for some few plants seem to be invariably
+self-fertilised; yet even these retain traces of having been formerly
+adapted for cross-fertilisation. These exceptions need not make us doubt
+the truth of the above rule, any more than the existence of some few
+plants which produce flowers, and yet never set seed, should make us
+doubt that flowers are adapted for the production of seed and the
+propagation of the species.
+
+We should always keep in mind the obvious fact that the production of
+seed is the chief end of the act of fertilisation; and that this end can
+be gained by hermaphrodite plants with incomparably greater certainty by
+self-fertilisation, than by the union of the sexual elements belonging
+to two distinct flowers or plants. Yet it is as unmistakably plain that
+innumerable flowers are adapted for cross-fertilisation, as that the
+teeth and talons of a carnivorous animal are adapted for catching prey;
+or that the plumes, wings, and hooks of a seed are adapted for its
+dissemination. Flowers, therefore, are constructed so as to gain two
+objects which are, to a certain extent, antagonistic, and this explains
+many apparent anomalies in their structure. The close proximity of the
+anthers to the stigma in a multitude of species favours, and often
+leads, to self-fertilisation; but this end could have been gained far
+more safely if the flowers had been completely closed, for then the
+pollen would not have been injured by the rain or devoured by insects,
+as often happens. Moreover, in this case, a very small quantity of
+pollen would have been sufficient for fertilisation, instead of millions
+of grains being produced. But the openness of the flower and the
+production of a great and apparently wasteful amount of pollen are
+necessary for cross-fertilisation. These remarks are well illustrated by
+the plants called cleistogene, which bear on the same stock two kinds of
+flowers. The flowers of the one kind are minute and completely closed,
+so that they cannot possibly be crossed; but they are abundantly
+fertile, although producing an extremely small quantity of pollen. The
+flowers of the other kind produce much pollen and are open; and these
+can be, and often are, cross-fertilised. Hermann Muller has also made
+the remarkable discovery that there are some plants which exist under
+two forms; that is, produce on distinct stocks two kinds of
+hermaphrodite flowers. The one form bears small flowers constructed for
+self-fertilisation; whilst the other bears larger and much more
+conspicuous flowers plainly constructed for cross-fertilisation by the
+aid of insects; and without their aid these produce no seed.
+
+The adaptation of flowers for cross-fertilisation is a subject which has
+interested me for the last thirty-seven years, and I have collected a
+large mass of observations, but these are now rendered superfluous by
+the many excellent works which have been lately published. In the year
+1857 I wrote a short paper on the fertilisation of the kidney bean (1/1.
+'Gardeners' Chronicle' 1857 page 725 and 1858 pages 824 and 844. 'Annals
+and Magazine of Natural History' 3rd series volume 2 1858 page 462.);
+and in 1862 my work 'On the Contrivances by which British and Foreign
+Orchids are Fertilised by Insects' appeared. It seemed to me a better
+plan to work out one group of plants as carefully as I could, rather
+than to publish many miscellaneous and imperfect observations. My
+present work is the complement of that on Orchids, in which it was shown
+how admirably these plants are constructed so as to permit of, or to
+favour, or to necessitate cross-fertilisation. The adaptations for
+cross-fertilisation are perhaps more obvious in the Orchideae than in
+any other group of plants, but it is an error to speak of them, as some
+authors have done, as an exceptional case. The lever-like action of the
+stamens of Salvia (described by Hildebrand, Dr. W. Ogle, and others), by
+which the anthers are depressed and rubbed on the backs of bees, shows
+as perfect a structure as can be found in any orchid. Papilionaceous
+flowers, as described by various authors--for instance, by Mr. T.H.
+Farrer--offer innumerable curious adaptations for cross-fertilisation.
+The case of Posoqueria fragrans (one of the Rubiaceae), is as wonderful
+as that of the most wonderful orchid. The stamens, according to Fritz
+Muller, are irritable, so that as soon as a moth visits a flower, the
+anthers explode and cover the insect with pollen; one of the filaments
+which is broader than the others then moves and closes the flower for
+about twelve hours, after which time it resumes its original position.
+(1/2. 'Botanische Zeitung' 1866 page 129.) Thus the stigma cannot be
+fertilised by pollen from the same flower, but only by that brought by a
+moth from some other flower. Endless other beautiful contrivances for
+this same purpose could be specified.
+
+Long before I had attended to the fertilisation of flowers, a remarkable
+book appeared in 1793 in Germany, 'Das Entdeckte Geheimniss der Natur,'
+by C.K. Sprengel, in which he clearly proved by innumerable
+observations, how essential a part insects play in the fertilisation of
+many plants. But he was in advance of his age, and his discoveries were
+for a long time neglected. Since the appearance of my book on Orchids,
+many excellent works on the fertilisation of flowers, such as those by
+Hildebrand, Delpino, Axell and Hermann Muller, and numerous shorter
+papers, have been published. (1/3. Sir John Lubbock has given an
+interesting summary of the whole subject in his 'British Wild Flowers
+considered in relation to Insects' 1875. Hermann Muller's work 'Die
+Befruchtung der Blumen durch Insekten' 1873, contains an immense number
+of original observations and generalisations. It is, moreover,
+invaluable as a repertory with references to almost everything which has
+been published on the subject. His work differs from that of all others
+in specifying what kinds of insects, as far as known, visit the flowers
+of each species. He likewise enters on new ground, by showing not only
+that flowers are adapted for their own good to the visits of certain
+insects; but that the insects themselves are excellently adapted for
+procuring nectar or pollen from certain flowers. The value of H.
+Muller's work can hardly be over-estimated, and it is much to be desired
+that it should be translated into English. Severin Axell's work is
+written in Swedish, so that I have not been able to read it.) A list
+would occupy several pages, and this is not the proper place to give
+their titles, as we are not here concerned with the means, but with the
+results of cross-fertilisation. No one who feels interest in the
+mechanism by which nature effects her ends, can read these books and
+memoirs without the most lively interest.
+
+From my own observations on plants, guided to a certain extent by the
+experience of the breeders of animals, I became convinced many years ago
+that it is a general law of nature that flowers are adapted to be
+crossed, at least occasionally, by pollen from a distinct plant.
+Sprengel at times foresaw this law, but only partially, for it does not
+appear that he was aware that there was any difference in power between
+pollen from the same plant and from a distinct plant. In the
+introduction to his book (page 4) he says, as the sexes are separated in
+so many flowers, and as so many other flowers are dichogamous, "it
+appears that nature has not willed that any one flower should be
+fertilised by its own pollen." Nevertheless, he was far from keeping
+this conclusion always before his mind, or he did not see its full
+importance, as may be perceived by anyone who will read his observations
+carefully; and he consequently mistook the meaning of various
+structures. But his discoveries are so numerous and his work so
+excellent, that he can well afford to bear a small amount of blame. A
+most capable judge, H. Muller, likewise says: "It is remarkable in how
+very many cases Sprengel rightly perceived that pollen is necessarily
+transported to the stigmas of other flowers of the same species by the
+insects which visit them, and yet did not imagine that this
+transportation was of any service to the plants themselves." (1/4. 'Die
+Befruchtung der Blumen' 1873 page 4. His words are: "Es ist merkwurdig,
+in wie zahlreichen Fallen Sprengel richtig erkannte, dass durch die
+Besuchenden Insekten der Bluthenstaub mit Nothwendigkeit auf die Narben
+anderer Bluthen derselben Art ubertragen wird, ohne auf die Vermuthung
+zu kommen, dass in dieser Wirkung der Nutzen des Insektenbesuches fur
+die Pflanzen selbst gesucht werden musse.")
+
+Andrew Knight saw the truth much more clearly, for he remarks, "Nature
+intended that a sexual intercourse should take place between
+neighbouring plants of the same species." (1/5. 'Philosophical
+Transactions' 1799 page 202.) After alluding to the various means by
+which pollen is transported from flower to flower, as far as was then
+imperfectly known, he adds, "Nature has something more in view than that
+its own proper males would fecundate each blossom." In 1811 Kolreuter
+plainly hinted at the same law, as did afterwards another famous
+hybridiser of plants, Herbert. (1/6. Kolreuter 'Mem. de l'Acad. de St.
+Petersbourg' tome 3 1809 published 1811 page 197. After showing how well
+the Malvaceae are adapted for cross-fertilisation, he asks, "An id
+aliquid in recessu habeat, quod hujuscemodi flores nunquam proprio suo
+pulvere, sed semper eo aliarum suae speciei impregnentur, merito
+quaeritur? Certe natura nil facit frustra." Herbert 'Amaryllidaceae,
+with a Treatise on Cross-bred Vegetables' 1837.) But none of these
+distinguished observers appear to have been sufficiently impressed with
+the truth and generality of the law, so as to insist on it and impress
+their beliefs on others.
+
+In 1862 I summed up my observations on Orchids by saying that nature
+"abhors perpetual self-fertilisation." If the word perpetual had been
+omitted, the aphorism would have been false. As it stands, I believe
+that it is true, though perhaps rather too strongly expressed; and I
+should have added the self-evident proposition that the propagation of
+the species, whether by self-fertilisation or by cross-fertilisation, or
+asexually by buds, stolons, etc. is of paramount importance. Hermann
+Muller has done excellent service by insisting repeatedly on this latter
+point.
+
+It often occurred to me that it would be advisable to try whether
+seedlings from cross-fertilised flowers were in any way superior to
+those from self-fertilised flowers. But as no instance was known with
+animals of any evil appearing in a single generation from the closest
+possible interbreeding, that is between brothers and sisters, I thought
+that the same rule would hold good with plants; and that it would be
+necessary at the sacrifice of too much time to self-fertilise and
+intercross plants during several successive generations, in order to
+arrive at any result. I ought to have reflected that such elaborate
+provisions favouring cross-fertilisation, as we see in innumerable
+plants, would not have been acquired for the sake of gaining a distant
+and slight advantage, or of avoiding a distant and slight evil.
+Moreover, the fertilisation of a flower by its own pollen corresponds to
+a closer form of interbreeding than is possible with ordinary bi-sexual
+animals; so that an earlier result might have been expected.
+
+I was at last led to make the experiments recorded in the present volume
+from the following circumstance. For the sake of determining certain
+points with respect to inheritance, and without any thought of the
+effects of close interbreeding, I raised close together two large beds
+of self-fertilised and crossed seedlings from the same plant of Linaria
+vulgaris. To my surprise, the crossed plants when fully grown were
+plainly taller and more vigorous than the self-fertilised ones. Bees
+incessantly visit the flowers of this Linaria and carry pollen from one
+to the other; and if insects are excluded, the flowers produce extremely
+few seeds; so that the wild plants from which my seedlings were raised
+must have been intercrossed during all previous generations. It seemed
+therefore quite incredible that the difference between the two beds of
+seedlings could have been due to a single act of self-fertilisation; and
+I attributed the result to the self-fertilised seeds not having been
+well ripened, improbable as it was that all should have been in this
+state, or to some other accidental and inexplicable cause. During the
+next year, I raised for the same purpose as before two large beds close
+together of self-fertilised and crossed seedlings from the carnation,
+Dianthus caryophyllus. This plant, like the Linaria, is almost sterile
+if insects are excluded; and we may draw the same inference as before,
+namely, that the parent-plants must have been intercrossed during every
+or almost every previous generation. Nevertheless, the self-fertilised
+seedlings were plainly inferior in height and vigour to the crossed.
+
+My attention was now thoroughly aroused, for I could hardly doubt that
+the difference between the two beds was due to the one set being the
+offspring of crossed, and the other of self-fertilised flowers.
+Accordingly I selected almost by hazard two other plants, which happened
+to be in flower in the greenhouse, namely, Mimulus luteus and Ipomoea
+purpurea, both of which, unlike the Linaria and Dianthus, are highly
+self-fertile if insects are excluded. Some flowers on a single plant of
+both species were fertilised with their own pollen, and others were
+crossed with pollen from a distinct individual; both plants being
+protected by a net from insects. The crossed and self-fertilised seeds
+thus produced were sown on opposite sides of the same pots, and treated
+in all respects alike; and the plants when fully grown were measured and
+compared. With both species, as in the cases of the Linaria and
+Dianthus, the crossed seedlings were conspicuously superior in height
+and in other ways to the self-fertilised. I therefore determined to
+begin a long series of experiments with various plants, and these were
+continued for the following eleven years; and we shall see that in a
+large majority of cases the crossed beat the self-fertilised plants.
+Several of the exceptional cases, moreover, in which the crossed plants
+were not victorious, can be explained.
+
+It should be observed that I have spoken for the sake of brevity, and
+shall continue to do so, of crossed and self-fertilised seeds,
+seedlings, or plants; these terms implying that they are the product of
+crossed or self-fertilised flowers. Cross-fertilisation always means a
+cross between distinct plants which were raised from seeds and not from
+cuttings or buds. Self-fertilisation always implies that the flowers in
+question were impregnated with their own pollen.
+
+My experiments were tried in the following manner. A single plant, if it
+produced a sufficiency of flowers, or two or three plants were placed
+under a net stretched on a frame, and large enough to cover the plant
+(together with the pot, when one was used) without touching it. This
+latter point is important, for if the flowers touch the net they may be
+cross-fertilised by bees, as I have known to happen; and when the net is
+wet the pollen may be injured. I used at first "white cotton net," with
+very fine meshes, but afterwards a kind of net with meshes one-tenth of
+an inch in diameter; and this I found by experience effectually excluded
+all insects excepting Thrips, which no net will exclude. On the plants
+thus protected several flowers were marked, and were fertilised with
+their own pollen; and an equal number on the same plants, marked in a
+different manner, were at the same time crossed with pollen from a
+distinct plant. The crossed flowers were never castrated, in order to
+make the experiments as like as possible to what occurs under nature
+with plants fertilised by the aid of insects. Therefore, some of the
+flowers which were crossed may have failed to be thus fertilised, and
+afterwards have been self-fertilised. But this and some other sources of
+error will presently be discussed. In some few cases of spontaneously
+self-fertile species, the flowers were allowed to fertilise themselves
+under the net; and in still fewer cases uncovered plants were allowed to
+be freely crossed by the insects which incessantly visited them. There
+are some great advantages and some disadvantages in my having
+occasionally varied my method of proceeding; but when there was any
+difference in the treatment, it is always so stated under the head of
+each species.
+
+Care was taken that the seeds were thoroughly ripened before being
+gathered. Afterwards the crossed and self-fertilised seeds were in most
+cases placed on damp sand on opposite sides of a glass tumbler covered
+by a glass plate, with a partition between the two lots; and the glass
+was placed on the chimney-piece in a warm room. I could thus observe the
+germination of the seeds. Sometimes a few would germinate on one side
+before any on the other, and these were thrown away. But as often as a
+pair germinated at the same time, they were planted on opposite sides of
+a pot, with a superficial partition between the two; and I thus
+proceeded until from half-a-dozen to a score or more seedlings of
+exactly the same age were planted on the opposite sides of several pots.
+If one of the young seedlings became sickly or was in any way injured,
+it was pulled up and thrown away, as well as its antagonist on the
+opposite side of the same pot.
+
+As a large number of seeds were placed on the sand to germinate, many
+remained after the pairs had been selected, some of which were in a
+state of germination and others not so; and these were sown crowded
+together on the opposite sides of one or two rather larger pots, or
+sometimes in two long rows out of doors. In these cases there was the
+most severe struggle for life among the crossed seedlings on one side of
+the pot, and the self-fertilised seedlings on the other side, and
+between the two lots which grew in competition in the same pot. A vast
+number soon perished, and the tallest of the survivors on both sides
+when fully grown were measured. Plants treated in this manner, were
+subjected to nearly the same conditions as those growing in a state of
+nature, which have to struggle to maturity in the midst of a host of
+competitors.
+
+On other occasions, from the want of time, the seeds, instead of being
+allowed to germinate on damp sand, were sown on the opposite sides of
+pots, and the fully grown plants measured. But this plan is less
+accurate, as the seeds sometimes germinated more quickly on one side
+than on the other. It was however necessary to act in this manner with
+some few species, as certain kinds of seeds would not germinate well
+when exposed to the light; though the glasses containing them were kept
+on the chimney-piece on one side of a room, and some way from the two
+windows which faced the north-east. (1/7. This occurred in the plainest
+manner with the seeds of Papaver vagum and Delphinium consolida, and
+less plainly with those of Adonis aestivalis and Ononis minutissima.
+Rarely more than one or two of the seeds of these four species
+germinated on the bare sand, though left there for some weeks; but when
+these same seeds were placed on earth in pots, and covered with a thin
+layer of sand, they germinated immediately in large numbers.)
+
+The soil in the pots in which the seedlings were planted, or the seeds
+sown, was well mixed, so as to be uniform in composition. The plants on
+the two sides were always watered at the same time and as equally as
+possible; and even if this had not been done, the water would have
+spread almost equally to both sides, as the pots were not large. The
+crossed and self-fertilised plants were separated by a superficial
+partition, which was always kept directed towards the chief source of
+the light, so that the plants on both sides were equally illuminated. I
+do not believe it possible that two sets of plants could have been
+subjected to more closely similar conditions, than were my crossed and
+self-fertilised seedlings, as grown in the above described manner.
+
+In comparing the two sets, the eye alone was never trusted. Generally
+the height of every plant on both sides was carefully measured, often
+more than once, namely, whilst young, sometimes again when older, and
+finally when fully or almost fully grown. But in some cases, which are
+always specified, owing to the want of time, only one or two of the
+tallest plants on each side were measured. This plan, which is not a
+good one, was never followed (except with the crowded plants raised from
+the seeds remaining after the pairs had been planted) unless the tallest
+plants on each side seemed fairly to represent the average difference
+between those on both sides. It has, however, some great advantages, as
+sickly or accidentally injured plants, or the offspring of ill-ripened
+seeds, are thus eliminated. When the tallest plants alone on each side
+were measured, their average height of course exceeds that of all the
+plants on the same side taken together. But in the case of the much
+crowded plants raised from the remaining seeds, the average height of
+the tallest plants was less than that of the plants in pairs, owing to
+the unfavourable conditions to which they were subjected from being
+greatly crowded. For our purpose, however, of the comparison of the
+crossed and self-fertilised plants, their absolute height signifies
+little.
+
+As the plants were measured by an ordinary English standard divided into
+inches and eighths of an inch, I have not thought it worth while to
+change the fractions into decimals. The average or mean heights were
+calculated in the ordinary rough method by adding up the measurements of
+all, and dividing the product by the number of plants measured; the
+result being here given in inches and decimals. As the different species
+grow to various heights, I have always for the sake of easy comparison
+given in addition the average height of the crossed plants of each
+species taken as 100, and have calculated the average height of the
+self-fertilised plant in relation to this standard. With respect to the
+crowded plants raised from the seeds remaining after the pairs had been
+planted, and of which only some of the tallest on each side were
+measured, I have not thought it worth while to complicate the results by
+giving separate averages for them and for the pairs, but have added up
+all their heights, and thus obtained a single average.
+
+I long doubted whether it was worth while to give the measurements of
+each separate plant, but have decided to do so, in order that it may be
+seen that the superiority of the crossed plants over the
+self-fertilised, does not commonly depend on the presence of two or
+three extra fine plants on the one side, or of a few very poor plants on
+the other side. Although several observers have insisted in general
+terms on the offspring from intercrossed varieties being superior to
+either parent-form, no precise measurements have been given (1/8. A
+summary of these statements, with references, may be found in my
+'Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication' chapter 17 2nd
+edition 1875 volume 2 page 109.); and I have met with no observations on
+the effects of crossing and self-fertilising the individuals of the same
+variety. Moreover, experiments of this kind require so much time--mine
+having been continued during eleven years--that they are not likely soon
+to be repeated.
+
+As only a moderate number of crossed and self-fertilised plants were
+measured, it was of great importance to me to learn how far the averages
+were trustworthy. I therefore asked Mr. Galton, who has had much
+experience in statistical researches, to examine some of my tables of
+measurements, seven in number, namely, those of Ipomoea, Digitalis,
+Reseda lutea, Viola, Limnanthes, Petunia, and Zea. I may premise that if
+we took by chance a dozen or score of men belonging to two nations and
+measured them, it would I presume be very rash to form any judgment from
+such small numbers on their average heights. But the case is somewhat
+different with my crossed and self-fertilised plants, as they were of
+exactly the same age, were subjected from first to last to the same
+conditions, and were descended from the same parents. When only from two
+to six pairs of plants were measured, the results are manifestly of
+little or no value, except in so far as they confirm and are confirmed
+by experiments made on a larger scale with other species. I will now
+give the report on the seven tables of measurements, which Mr. Galton
+has had the great kindness to draw up for me.
+
+["I have examined the measurements of the plants with care, and by many
+statistical methods, to find out how far the means of the several sets
+represent constant realities, such as would come out the same so long as
+the general conditions of growth remained unaltered. The principal
+methods that were adopted are easily explained by selecting one of the
+shorter series of plants, say of Zea mays, for an example."
+
+TABLE 1/1. Zea mays (young plants). (Mr. Galton.)
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed, as recorded by Mr. Darwin.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised, as recorded by Mr. Darwin.
+
+Column 4: Crossed, in Separate Pots, arranged in order of magnitude.
+
+Column 5: Self-fertilised, in Separate Pots, arranged in order of magnitude.
+
+Column 6: Crossed, in a Single Series, arranged in order of magnitude.
+
+Column 7: Self-fertilised, in a Single Series, arranged in order of
+magnitude.
+
+Column 8: Difference, in a Single Series, arranged in order of magnitude.
+
+Pot 1 : 23 4/8 : 17 3/8 :: 23 4/8 : 20 3/8 :: 23 4/8 : 20 3/8 : -3 1/8.
+Pot 1 : 12 : 20 3/8 :: 21 : 20 :: 23 2/8 : 20 : -3 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 21 : 20 :: 12 : 17 3/8 :: 23 : 20 : -3.
+Pot 1 : - : - :: - : - :: 22 1/8 : 18 5/8 : -3 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 22 : 20 :: 22 : 20 :: 22 1/8 : 18 5/8 : -3 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 19 1/8 : 18 3/8 :: 21 4/8 : 18 5/8 :: 22 : 18 3/8 : -3 5/8.
+Pot 2 : 21 4/8 : 18 5/8 :: 19 1/8 : 18 3/8 :: 21 5/8 : 18 : -3 5/8.
+Pot 2 : - : - :: - : - :: 21 4/8 : 18 : -3 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 22 1/8 : 18 5/8 :: 23 2/8 : 18 5/8 :: 21 : 18 : -3.
+Pot 2 : 20 3/8 : 15 2/8 :: 22 1/8 : 18 :: 21 : 17 3/8 : -3 5/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 18 2/8 : 16 4/8 :: 21 5/8 : 16 4/8 :: 20 3/8 : 16 4/8 : -3 7/8.
+Pot 3 : 21 5/8 : 18 :: 20 3/8 : 16 2/8 :: 19 1/8 : 16 2/8 : -2 7/8.
+Pot 3 : 23 2/8 : 16 2/8 :: 18 2/8 : 15 2/8 :: 18 2/8 : 15 4/8 : -2 6/8.
+Pot 3 : - : - :: - : - :: 12 : 15 2/8 : +3 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 21 : 18 :: 23 : 18 :: 12 : 12 6/8 : +0 6/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 22 1/8 : 12 6/8 :: 22 1/8 : 18.
+Pot 4 : 23 : 15 4/8 :: 21 : 15 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 12 : 18 :: 12 : 12 6/8.
+
+"The observations as I received them are shown in Table 1/1, Columns 2
+and 3, where they certainly have no prima facie appearance of
+regularity. But as soon as we arrange them the in order of their
+magnitudes, as in columns 4 and 5, the case is materially altered. We
+now see, with few exceptions, that the largest plant on the crossed side
+in each pot exceeds the largest plant on the self-fertilised side, that
+the second exceeds the second, the third the third, and so on. Out of
+the fifteen cases in the table, there are only two exceptions to this
+rule. We may therefore confidently affirm that a crossed series will
+always be found to exceed a self-fertilised series, within the range of
+the conditions under which the present experiment has been made."
+
+TABLE 1/2.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised.
+
+Column 4: Difference.
+
+Pot 1 : 18 7/8 : 19 2/8 : +0 3/8.
+Pot 2 : 20 7/8 : 19 : -1 7/8.
+Pot 3 : 21 1/8 : 16 7/8 : -4 2/8.
+Pot 4 : 19 6/8 : 16 : -3 6/8.
+
+"Next as regards the numerical estimate of this excess. The mean values
+of the several groups are so discordant, as is shown in Table 1/2, that
+a fairly precise numerical estimate seems impossible. But the
+consideration arises, whether the difference between pot and pot may not
+be of much the same order of importance as that of the other conditions
+upon which the growth of the plants has been modified. If so, and only
+on that condition, it would follow that when all the measurements,
+either of the crossed or the self-fertilised plants, were combined into
+a single series, that series would be statistically regular. The
+experiment is tried in Table 1/1, columns 7 and 8, where the regularity
+is abundantly clear, and justifies us in considering its mean as
+perfectly reliable. I have protracted these measurements, and revised
+them in the usual way, by drawing a curve through them with a free hand,
+but the revision barely modifies the means derived from the original
+observations. In the present, and in nearly all the other cases, the
+difference between the original and revised means is under 2 per cent of
+their value. It is a very remarkable coincidence that in the seven kinds
+of plants, whose measurements I have examined, the ratio between the
+heights of the crossed and of the self-fertilised ranges in five cases
+within very narrow limits. In Zea mays it is as 100 to 84, and in the
+others it ranges between 100 to 76 and 100 to 86."
+
+"The determination of the variability (measured by what is technically
+called the 'probable error') is a problem of more delicacy than that of
+determining the means, and I doubt, after making many trials, whether it
+is possible to derive useful conclusions from these few observations. We
+ought to have measurements of at least fifty plants in each case, in
+order to be in a position to deduce fair results. One fact, however,
+bearing on variability, is very evident in most cases, though not in Zea
+mays, namely, that the self-fertilised plants include the larger number
+of exceptionally small specimens, while the crossed are more generally
+full grown."
+
+"Those groups of cases in which measurements have been made of a few of
+the tallest plants that grew in rows, each of which contained a
+multitude of plants, show very clearly that the crossed plants exceed
+the self-fertilised in height, but they do not tell by inference
+anything about their respective mean values. If it should happen that a
+series is known to follow the law of error or any other law, and if the
+number of individuals in the series is known, it would be always
+possible to reconstruct the whole series when a fragment of it has been
+given. But I find no such method to be applicable in the present case.
+The doubt as to the number of plants in each row is of minor importance;
+the real difficulty lies in our ignorance of the precise law followed by
+the series. The experience of the plants in pots does not help us to
+determine that law, because the observations of such plants are too few
+to enable us to lay down more than the middle terms of the series to
+which they belong with any sort of accuracy, whereas the cases we are
+now considering refer to one of its extremities. There are other special
+difficulties which need not be gone into, as the one already mentioned
+is a complete bar."]
+
+Mr. Galton sent me at the same time graphical representations which he
+had made of the measurements, and they evidently form fairly regular
+curves. He appends the words "very good" to those of Zea and Limnanthes.
+He also calculated the average height of the crossed and self-fertilised
+plants in the seven tables by a more correct method than that followed
+by me, namely, by including the heights, as estimated in accordance with
+statistical rules, of a few plants which died before they were measured;
+whereas I merely added up the heights of the survivors, and divided the
+sum by their number. The difference in our results is in one way highly
+satisfactory, for the average heights of the self-fertilised plants, as
+deduced by Mr. Galton, is less than mine in all the cases excepting one,
+in which our averages are the same; and this shows that I have by no
+means exaggerated the superiority of the crossed over the
+self-fertilised plants.
+
+After the heights of the crossed and self-fertilised plants had been
+taken, they were sometimes cut down close to the ground, and an equal
+number of both weighed. This method of comparison gives very striking
+results, and I wish that it had been oftener followed. Finally a record
+was often kept of any marked difference in the rate of germination of
+the crossed and self-fertilised seeds,--of the relative periods of
+flowering of the plants raised from them,--and of their productiveness,
+that is, of the number of seed-capsules which they produced and of the
+average number of seeds which each capsule contained.
+
+When I began my experiments I did not intend to raise crossed and
+self-fertilised plants for more than a single generation; but as soon as
+the plants of the first generation were in flower I thought that I would
+raise one more generation, and acted in the following manner. Several
+flowers on one or more of the self-fertilised plants were again
+self-fertilised; and several flowers on one or more of the crossed
+plants were fertilised with pollen from another crossed plant of the
+same lot. Having thus once begun, the same method was followed for as
+many as ten successive generations with some of the species. The seeds
+and seedlings were always treated in exactly the same manner as already
+described. The self-fertilised plants, whether originally descended from
+one or two mother-plants, were thus in each generation as closely
+interbred as was possible; and I could not have improved on my plan. But
+instead of crossing one of the crossed plants with another crossed
+plant, I ought to have crossed the self-fertilised plants of each
+generation with pollen taken from a non-related plant--that is, one
+belonging to a distinct family or stock of the same species and variety.
+This was done in several cases as an additional experiment, and gave
+very striking results. But the plan usually followed was to put into
+competition and compare intercrossed plants, which were almost always
+the offspring of more or less closely related plants, with the
+self-fertilised plants of each succeeding generation;--all having been
+grown under closely similar conditions. I have, however, learnt more by
+this method of proceeding, which was begun by an oversight and then
+necessarily followed, than if I had always crossed the self-fertilised
+plants of each succeeding generation with pollen from a fresh stock.
+
+I have said that the crossed plants of the successive generations were
+almost always inter-related. When the flowers on an hermaphrodite plant
+are crossed with pollen taken from a distinct plant, the seedlings thus
+raised may be considered as hermaphrodite brothers or sisters; those
+raised from the same capsule being as close as twins or animals of the
+same litter. But in one sense the flowers on the same plant are distinct
+individuals, and as several flowers on the mother-plant were crossed by
+pollen taken from several flowers on the father-plant, such seedlings
+would be in one sense half-brothers or sisters, but more closely related
+than are the half-brothers and sisters of ordinary animals. The flowers
+on the mother-plant were, however, commonly crossed by pollen taken from
+two or more distinct plants; and in these cases the seedlings might be
+called with more truth half-brothers or sisters. When two or three
+mother-plants were crossed, as often happened, by pollen taken from two
+or three father-plants (the seeds being all intermingled), some of the
+seedlings of the first generation would be in no way related, whilst
+many others would be whole or half-brothers and sisters. In the second
+generation a large number of the seedlings would be what may be called
+whole or half first-cousins, mingled with whole and half-brothers and
+sisters, and with some plants not at all related. So it would be in the
+succeeding generations, but there would also be many cousins of the
+second and more remote degrees. The relationship will thus have become
+more and more inextricably complex in the later generations; with most
+of the plants in some degree and many of them closely related.
+
+I have only one other point to notice, but this is one of the highest
+importance; namely, that the crossed and self-fertilised plants were
+subjected in the same generation to as nearly similar and uniform
+conditions as was possible. In the successive generations they were
+exposed to slightly different conditions as the seasons varied, and they
+were raised at different periods. But in other respects all were treated
+alike, being grown in pots in the same artificially prepared soil, being
+watered at the same time, and kept close together in the same greenhouse
+or hothouse. They were therefore not exposed during successive years to
+such great vicissitudes of climate as are plants growing out of doors.
+
+ON SOME APPARENT AND REAL CAUSES OF ERROR IN MY EXPERIMENTS.
+
+It has been objected to such experiments as mine, that covering plants
+with a net, although only for a short time whilst in flower, may affect
+their health and fertility. I have seen no such effect except in one
+instance with a Myosotis, and the covering may not then have been the
+real cause of injury. But even if the net were slightly injurious, and
+certainly it was not so in any high degree, as I could judge by the
+appearance of the plants and by comparing their fertility with that of
+neighbouring uncovered plants, it would not have vitiated my
+experiments; for in all the more important cases the flowers were
+crossed as well as self-fertilised under a net, so that they were
+treated in this respect exactly alike.
+
+As it is impossible to exclude such minute pollen-carrying insects as
+Thrips, flowers which it was intended to fertilise with their own pollen
+may sometimes have been afterwards crossed with pollen brought by these
+insects from another flower on the same plant; but as we shall hereafter
+see, a cross of this kind does not produce any effect, or at most only a
+slight one. When two or more plants were placed near one another under
+the same net, as was often done, there is some real though not great
+danger of the flowers which were believed to be self-fertilised being
+afterwards crossed with pollen brought by Thrips from a distinct plant.
+I have said that the danger is not great because I have often found that
+plants which are self-sterile, unless aided by insects, remained sterile
+when several plants of the same species were placed under the same net.
+If, however, the flowers which had been presumably self-fertilised by me
+were in any case afterwards crossed by Thrips with pollen brought from a
+distinct plant, crossed seedlings would have been included amongst the
+self-fertilised; but it should be especially observed that this
+occurrence would tend to diminish and not to increase any superiority in
+average height, fertility, etc., of the crossed over the self-fertilised
+plants.
+
+As the flowers which were crossed were never castrated, it is probable
+or even almost certain that I sometimes failed to cross-fertilise them
+effectually, and that they were afterwards spontaneously
+self-fertilised. This would have been most likely to occur with
+dichogamous species, for without much care it is not easy to perceive
+whether their stigmas are ready to be fertilised when the anthers open.
+But in all cases, as the flowers were protected from wind, rain, and the
+access of insects, any pollen placed by me on the stigmatic surface
+whilst it was immature, would generally have remained there until the
+stigma was mature; and the flowers would then have been crossed as was
+intended. Nevertheless, it is highly probable that self-fertilised
+seedlings have sometimes by this means got included amongst the crossed
+seedlings. The effect would be, as in the former case, not to exaggerate
+but to diminish any average superiority of the crossed over the
+self-fertilised plants.
+
+Errors arising from the two causes just named, and from others,--such as
+some of the seeds not having been thoroughly ripened, though care was
+taken to avoid this error--the sickness or unperceived injury of any of
+the plants,--will have been to a large extent eliminated, in those cases
+in which many crossed and self-fertilised plants were measured and an
+average struck. Some of these causes of error will also have been
+eliminated by the seeds having been allowed to germinate on bare damp
+sand, and being planted in pairs; for it is not likely that ill-matured
+and well-matured, or diseased and healthy seeds, would germinate at
+exactly the same time. The same result will have been gained in the
+several cases in which only a few of the tallest, finest, and healthiest
+plants on each side of the pots were measured.
+
+Kolreuter and Gartner have proved that with some plants several, even as
+many as from fifty to sixty, pollen-grains are necessary for the
+fertilisation of all the ovules in the ovarium. (1/9. 'Kentniss der
+Befruchtung' 1844 page 345. Naudin 'Nouvelles Archives du Museum' tome 1
+page 27.) Naudin also found in the case of Mirabilis that if only one or
+two of its very large pollen-grains were placed on the stigma, the
+plants raised from such seeds were dwarfed. I was therefore careful to
+give an amply sufficient supply of pollen, and generally covered the
+stigma with it; but I did not take any special pains to place exactly
+the same amount on the stigmas of the self-fertilised and crossed
+flowers. After having acted in this manner during two seasons, I
+remembered that Gartner thought, though without any direct evidence,
+that an excess of pollen was perhaps injurious; and it has been proved
+by Spallanzani, Quatrefages, and Newport, that with various animals an
+excess of the seminal fluid entirely prevents fertilisation. (1/10.
+'Transactions of the Philosophical Society' 1853 pages 253-258.) It was
+therefore necessary to ascertain whether the fertility of the flowers
+was affected by applying a rather small and an extremely large quantity
+of pollen to the stigma. Accordingly a very small mass of pollen-grains
+was placed on one side of the large stigma in sixty-four flowers of
+Ipomoea purpurea, and a great mass of pollen over the whole surface of
+the stigma in sixty-four other flowers. In order to vary the experiment,
+half the flowers of both lots were on plants produced from
+self-fertilised seeds, and the other half on plants from crossed seeds.
+The sixty-four flowers with an excess of pollen yielded sixty-one
+capsules; and excluding four capsules, each of which contained only a
+single poor seed, the remainder contained on an average 5.07 seeds per
+capsule. The sixty-four flowers with only a little pollen placed on one
+side of the stigma yielded sixty-three capsules, and excluding one from
+the same cause as before, the remainder contained on an average 5.129
+seeds. So that the flowers fertilised with little pollen yielded rather
+more capsules and seeds than did those fertilised with an excess; but
+the difference is too slight to be of any significance. On the other
+hand, the seeds produced by the flowers with an excess of pollen were a
+little heavier of the two; for 170 of them weighed 79.67 grains, whilst
+170 seeds from the flowers with very little pollen weighed 79.20 grains.
+Both lots of seeds having been placed on damp sand presented no
+difference in their rate of germination. We may therefore conclude that
+my experiments were not affected by any slight difference in the amount
+of pollen used; a sufficiency having been employed in all cases.
+
+The order in which our subject will be treated in the present volume is
+as follows. A long series of experiments will first be given in Chapters
+2 to 6. Tables will afterwards be appended, showing in a condensed form
+the relative heights, weights, and fertility of the offspring of the
+various crossed and self-fertilised species. Another table exhibits the
+striking results from fertilising plants, which during several
+generations had either been self-fertilised or had been crossed with
+plants kept all the time under closely similar conditions, with pollen
+taken from plants of a distinct stock and which had been exposed to
+different conditions. In the concluding chapters various related points
+and questions of general interest will be discussed.
+
+Anyone not specially interested in the subject need not attempt to read
+all the details (marked []); though they possess, I think, some value,
+and cannot be all summarised. But I would suggest to the reader to take
+as an example the experiments on Ipomoea in Chapter 2; to which may be
+added those on Digitalis, Origanum, Viola, or the common cabbage, as in
+all these cases the crossed plants are superior to the self-fertilised
+in a marked degree, but not in quite the same manner. As instances of
+self-fertilised plants being equal or superior to the crossed, the
+experiments on Bartonia, Canna, and the common pea ought to be read; but
+in the last case, and probably in that of Canna, the want of any
+superiority in the crossed plants can be explained.
+
+Species were selected for experiment belonging to widely distinct
+families, inhabiting various countries. In some few cases several genera
+belonging to the same family were tried, and these are grouped together;
+but the families themselves have been arranged not in any natural order,
+but in that which was the most convenient for my purpose. The
+experiments have been fully given, as the results appear to me of
+sufficient value to justify the details. Plants bearing hermaphrodite
+flowers can be interbred more closely than is possible with bisexual
+animals, and are therefore well-fitted to throw light on the nature and
+extent of the good effects of crossing, and on the evil effects of close
+interbreeding or self-fertilisation. The most important conclusion at
+which I have arrived is that the mere act of crossing by itself does no
+good. The good depends on the individuals which are crossed differing
+slightly in constitution, owing to their progenitors having been
+subjected during several generations to slightly different conditions,
+or to what we call in our ignorance spontaneous variation. This
+conclusion, as we shall hereafter see, is closely connected with various
+important physiological problems, such as the benefit derived from
+slight changes in the conditions of life, and this stands in the closest
+connection with life itself. It throws light on the origin of the two
+sexes and on their separation or union in the same individual, and
+lastly on the whole subject of hybridism, which is one of the greatest
+obstacles to the general acceptance and progress of the great principle
+of evolution.
+
+In order to avoid misapprehension, I beg leave to repeat that throughout
+this volume a crossed plant, seedling, or seed, means one of crossed
+PARENTAGE, that is, one derived from a flower fertilised with pollen
+from a distinct plant of the same species. And that a self-fertilised
+plant, seedling, or seed, means one of self-fertilised PARENTAGE, that
+is, one derived from a flower fertilised with pollen from the same
+flower, or sometimes, when thus stated, from another flower on the same
+plant.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+CONVOLVULACEAE.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea, comparison of the height and fertility of the crossed
+and self-fertilised plants during ten successive generations.
+Greater constitutional vigour of the crossed plants.
+The effects on the offspring of crossing different flowers on the same
+plant, instead of crossing distinct individuals.
+The effects of a cross with a fresh stock.
+The descendants of the self-fertilised plant named Hero.
+Summary on the growth, vigour, and fertility of the successive crossed
+and self-fertilised generations.
+Small amount of pollen in the anthers of the self-fertilised plants of
+the later generations, and the sterility of their first-produced
+flowers.
+Uniform colour of the flowers produced by the self-fertilised plants.
+The advantage from a cross between two distinct plants depends on their
+differing in constitution.
+
+A plant of Ipomoea purpurea, or as it is often called in England the
+convolvulus major, a native of South America, grew in my greenhouse. Ten
+flowers on this plant were fertilised with pollen from the same flower;
+and ten other flowers on the same plant were crossed with pollen from a
+distinct plant. The fertilisation of the flowers with their own pollen
+was superfluous, as this convolvulus is highly self-fertile; but I acted
+in this manner to make the experiments correspond in all respects.
+Whilst the flowers are young the stigma projects beyond the anthers; and
+it might have been thought that it could not be fertilised without the
+aid of humble-bees, which often visit the flowers; but as the flower
+grows older the stamens increase in length, and their anthers brush
+against the stigma, which thus receives some pollen. The number of seeds
+produced by the crossed and self-fertilised flowers differed very
+little.
+
+[Crossed and self-fertilised seeds obtained in the above manner were
+allowed to germinate on damp sand, and as often as pairs germinated at
+the same time they were planted in the manner described in the
+Introduction (Chapter 1), on the opposite sides of two pots. Five pairs
+were thus planted; and all the remaining seeds, whether or not in a
+state of germination, were planted on the opposite sides of a third pot,
+so that the young plants on both sides were here greatly crowded and
+exposed to very severe competition. Rods of iron or wood of equal
+diameter were given to all the plants to twine up; and as soon as one of
+each pair reached the summit both were measured. A single rod was placed
+on each side of the crowded pot, Number 3, and only the tallest plant on
+each side was measured.
+
+TABLE 2/1. Ipomoea purpurea (First Generation.).
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Seedlings from Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Seedlings from Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 87 4/8 : 69.
+Pot 1 : 87 4/8 : 66.
+Pot 1 : 89 : 73.
+
+Pot 2 : 88 : 68 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 87 : 60 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 77 : 57.
+Plants crowded; the tallest one measured on each side.
+
+Total : 516 : 394.
+
+The average height of the six crossed plants is here 86 inches, whilst
+that of the six self-fertilised plants is only 65.66 inches, so that the
+crossed plants are to the self-fertilised in height as 100 to 76. It
+should be observed that this difference is not due to a few of the
+crossed plants being extremely tall, or to a few of the self-fertilised
+being extremely short, but to all the crossed plants attaining a greater
+height than their antagonists. The three pairs in Pot 1 were measured at
+two earlier periods, and the difference was sometimes greater and
+sometimes less than that at the final measuring. But it is an
+interesting fact, of which I have seen several other instances, that one
+of the self-fertilised plants, when nearly a foot in height, was half an
+inch taller than the crossed plant; and again, when two feet high, it
+was 1 3/8 of an inch taller, but during the ten subsequent days the
+crossed plant began to gain on its antagonist, and ever afterward
+asserted its supremacy, until it exceeded its self-fertilised opponent
+by 16 inches.
+
+The five crossed plants in Pots 1 and 2 were covered with a net, and
+produced 121 capsules; the five self-fertilised plants produced
+eighty-four capsules, so that the numbers of capsules were as 100 to 69.
+Of the 121 capsules on the crossed plants sixty-five were the product of
+flowers crossed with pollen from a distinct plant, and these contained
+on an average 5.23 seeds per capsule; the remaining fifty-six capsules
+were spontaneously self-fertilised. Of the eighty-four capsules on the
+self-fertilised plants, all the product of renewed self-fertilisation,
+fifty-five (which were alone examined) contained on an average 4.85
+seeds per capsule. Therefore the cross-fertilised capsules, compared
+with the self-fertilised capsules, yielded seeds in the proportion of
+100 to 93. The crossed seeds were relatively heavier than the
+self-fertilised seeds. Combining the above data (i.e., number of
+capsules and average number of contained seeds), the crossed plants,
+compared with the self-fertilised, yielded seeds in the ratio of 100 to
+64.
+
+These crossed plants produced, as already stated, fifty-six
+spontaneously self-fertilised capsules, and the self-fertilised plants
+produced twenty-nine such capsules. The former contained on an average,
+in comparison with the latter, seeds in the proportion of 100 to 99.
+
+In Pot 3, on the opposite sides of which a large number of crossed and
+self-fertilised seeds had been sown and the seedlings allowed to
+struggle together, the crossed plants had at first no great advantage.
+At one time the tallest crossed was 25 1/8 inches high, and the tallest
+self-fertilised plants 21 3/8. But the difference afterwards became much
+greater. The plants on both sides, from being so crowded, were poor
+specimens. The flowers were allowed to fertilise themselves
+spontaneously under a net; the crossed plants produced thirty-seven
+capsules, the self-fertilised plants only eighteen, or as 100 to 47. The
+former contained on an average 3.62 seeds per capsule; and the latter
+3.38 seeds, or as 100 to 93. Combining these data (i.e., number of
+capsules and average number of seeds), the crowded crossed plants
+produced seeds compared with the self-fertilised as 100 to 45. These
+latter seeds, however, were decidedly heavier, a hundred weighing 41.64
+grains, than those from the capsules on the crossed plants, of which a
+hundred weighed 36.79 grains; and this probably was due to the fewer
+capsules borne by the self-fertilised plants having been better
+nourished. We thus see that the crossed plants in this the first
+generation, when grown under favourable conditions, and when grown under
+unfavourable conditions from being much crowded, greatly exceeded in
+height, and in the number of capsules produced, and slightly in the
+number of seeds per capsule, the self-fertilised plants.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+
+Flowers on the crossed plants of the last generation (Table 2/1) were
+crossed by pollen from distinct plants of the same generation; and
+flowers on the self-fertilised plants were fertilised by pollen from the
+same flower. The seeds thus produced were treated in every respect as
+before, and we have in Table 2/2 the result.
+
+TABLE 2/2. Ipomoea purpurea (Second Generation.).
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 87 : 67 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 83 : 68 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 83 : 80 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 85 4/8 : 61 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 89 : 79.
+Pot 2 : 77 4/8 : 41.
+
+Total : 505 : 398.
+
+Here again every single crossed plant is taller than its antagonist. The
+self-fertilised plant in Pot 1, which ultimately reached the unusual
+height of 80 4/8 inches, was for a long time taller than the opposed
+crossed plant, though at last beaten by it. The average height of the
+six crossed plants is 84.16 inches, whilst that of the six
+self-fertilised plants is 66.33 inches, or as 100 to 79.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE THIRD GENERATION.
+
+Seeds from the crossed plants of the last generation (Table 2/2) again
+crossed, and from the self-fertilised plants again self-fertilised, were
+treated in all respects exactly as before, with the following result:--
+
+TABLE 2/3. Ipomoea purpurea (Third Generation.).
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 74 : 56 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 72 : 51 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 73 4/8 : 54.
+
+Pot 2 : 82 : 59.
+Pot 2 : 81 : 30.
+Pot 2 : 82 : 66.
+
+Total : 464.5 : 317.
+
+Again all the crossed plants are higher than their antagonists: their
+average height is 77.41 inches, whereas that of the self-fertilised is
+52.83 inches, or as 100 to 68.
+
+I attended closely to the fertility of the plants of this third
+generation. Thirty flowers on the crossed plants were crossed with
+pollen from other crossed plants of the same generation, and the
+twenty-six capsules thus produced contained, on an average, 4.73 seeds;
+whilst thirty flowers on the self-fertilised plants, fertilised with the
+pollen from the same flower, produced twenty-three capsules, each
+containing 4.43 seeds. Thus the average number of seeds in the crossed
+capsules was to that in the self-fertilised capsules as 100 to 94. A
+hundred of the crossed seeds weighed 43.27 grains, whilst a hundred of
+the self-fertilised seeds weighed only 37.63 grains. Many of these
+lighter self-fertilised seeds placed on damp sand germinated before the
+crossed; thus thirty-six of the former germinated whilst only thirteen
+of the latter or crossed seeds germinated. In Pot 1 the three crossed
+plants produced spontaneously under the net (besides the twenty-six
+artificially cross-fertilised capsules) seventy-seven self-fertilised
+capsules containing on an average 4.41 seeds; whilst the three
+self-fertilised plants produced spontaneously (besides the twenty-three
+artificially self-fertilised capsules) only twenty-nine self-fertilised
+capsules, containing on an average 4.14 seeds. Therefore the average
+number of seeds in the two lots of spontaneously self-fertilised
+capsules was as 100 to 94. Taking into consideration the number of
+capsules together with the average number of seeds, the crossed plants
+(spontaneously self-fertilised) produced seeds in comparison with the
+self-fertilised plants (spontaneously self-fertilised) in the proportion
+of 100 to 35. By whatever method the fertility of these plants is
+compared, the crossed are more fertile than the self-fertilised plants.
+
+I tried in several ways the comparative vigour and powers of growth of
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants of this third generation. Thus,
+four self-fertilised seeds which had just germinated were planted on one
+side of a pot, and after an interval of forty-eight hours, four crossed
+seeds in the same state of germination were planted on the opposite
+side; and the pot was kept in the hothouse. I thought that the advantage
+thus given to the self-fertilised seedlings would have been so great
+that they would never have been beaten by the crossed ones. They were
+not beaten until all had grown to a height of 18 inches; and the degree
+to which they were finally beaten is shown in Table 2/4. We here see
+that the average height of the four crossed plants is 76.62, and of the
+four self-fertilised plants 65.87 inches, or as 100 to 86; therefore
+less than when both sides started fair.
+
+TABLE 2/4. Ipomoea purpurea (Third Generation, the self-fertilised
+plants having had a start of forty-eight hours).
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 3 : 78 4/8 : 73 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 77 4/8 : 53.
+Pot 3 : 73 : 61 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 77 4/8 : 75 4/8.
+
+Total : 306.5 : 263.5.
+
+Crossed and self-fertilised seeds of the third generation were also sown
+out of doors late in the summer, and therefore under unfavourable
+conditions, and a single stick was given to each lot of plants to twine
+up. The two lots were sufficiently separate so as not to interfere with
+each other's growth, and the ground was clear of weeds. As soon as they
+were killed by the first frost (and there was no difference in their
+hardiness), the two tallest crossed plants were found to be 24.5 and
+22.5 inches, whilst the two tallest self-fertilised plants were only 15
+and 12.5 inches in height, or as 100 to 59.
+
+I likewise sowed at the same time two lots of the same seeds in a part
+of the garden which was shady and covered with weeds. The crossed
+seedlings from the first looked the most healthy, but they twined up a
+stick only to a height of 7 1/4 inches; whilst the self-fertilised were
+not able to twine at all; and the tallest of them was only 3 1/2 inches
+in height.
+
+Lastly, two lots of the same seeds were sown in the midst of a bed of
+candy-tuft (Iberis) growing vigorously. The seedlings came up, but all
+the self-fertilised ones soon died excepting one, which never twined and
+grew to a height of only 4 inches. Many of the crossed seedlings, on the
+other hand, survived; and some twined up the stems of the Iberis to the
+height of 11 inches. These cases prove that the crossed seedlings have
+an immense advantage over the self-fertilised, both when growing
+isolated under very unfavourable conditions, and when put into
+competition with each other or with other plants, as would happen in a
+state of nature.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FOURTH GENERATION.
+
+Seedlings raised as before from the crossed and self-fertilised plants
+of the third generation in Table 2/3, gave results as follows:--
+
+TABLE 2/5. Ipomoea purpurea (Fourth Generation).
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 84 : 80.
+Pot 1 : 47 : 44 1/2.
+
+Pot 2 : 83 : 73 1/2.
+Pot 2 : 59 : 51 1/2.
+
+Pot 3 : 82 : 56 1/2.
+Pot 3 : 65 1/2 : 63.
+Pot 3 : 68 : 52.
+
+Total : 488.5 : 421.0.
+
+Here the average height of the seven crossed plants is 69.78 inches, and
+that of the seven self-fertilised plants 60.14; or as 100 to 86. This
+smaller difference relatively to that in the former generations, may be
+attributed to the plants having been raised during the depth of winter,
+and consequently to their not having grown vigorously, as was shown by
+their general appearance and from several of them never reaching the
+summits of the rods. In Pot 2, one of the self-fertilised plants was for
+a long time taller by two inches than its opponent, but was ultimately
+beaten by it, so that all the crossed plants exceeded their opponents in
+height. Of twenty-eight capsules produced by the crossed plants
+fertilised by pollen from a distinct plant, each contained on an average
+4.75 seeds; of twenty-seven self-fertilised capsules on the
+self-fertilised plants, each contained on an average 4.47 seeds; so that
+the proportion of seeds in the crossed and self-fertilised capsules was
+as 100 to 94.
+
+Some of the same seeds, from which the plants in Table 2/5 had been
+raised, were planted, after they had germinated on damp sand, in a
+square tub, in which a large Brugmansia had long been growing. The soil
+was extremely poor and full of roots; six crossed seeds were planted in
+one corner, and six self-fertilised seeds in the opposite corner. All
+the seedlings from the latter soon died excepting one, and this grew to
+the height of only 1 1/2 inches. Of the crossed plants three survived,
+and they grew to the height of 2 1/2 inches, but were not able to twine
+round a stick; nevertheless, to my surprise, they produced some small
+miserable flowers. The crossed plants thus had a decided advantage over
+the self-fertilised plants under this extremity of bad conditions.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FIFTH GENERATION.
+
+These were raised in the same manner as before, and when measured gave
+the following results:--
+
+TABLE 2/6. Ipomoea purpurea (Fifth Generation).
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 96 : 73.
+Pot 1 : 86 : 78.
+Pot 1 : 69 : 29.
+
+Pot 2 : 84 : 51.
+Pot 2 : 84 : 84.
+Pot 2 : 76 1/4 : 59.
+
+Total : 495.25 : 374.00.
+
+The average height of the six crossed plants is 82.54 inches, and that
+of the six self-fertilised plants 62.33 inches, or as 100 to 75. Every
+crossed plant exceeded its antagonist in height. In Pot 1 the middle
+plant on the crossed side was slightly injured whilst young by a blow,
+and was for a time beaten by its opponent, but ultimately recovered the
+usual superiority. The crossed plants produced spontaneously a vast
+number more capsules than did the self-fertilised plants; and the
+capsules of the former contained on an average 3.37 seeds, whilst those
+of the latter contained only 3.0 per capsule, or as 100 to 89. But
+looking only to the artificially fertilised capsules, those on the
+crossed plants again crossed contained on an average 4.46 seeds, whilst
+those on the self-fertilised plants again self-fertilised contained 4.77
+seeds; so that the self-fertilised capsules were the more fertile of the
+two, and of this unusual fact I can offer no explanation.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SIXTH GENERATION.
+
+These were raised in the usual manner, with the following result. I
+should state that there were originally eight plants on each side; but
+as two of the self-fertilised became extremely unhealthy and never grew
+to near their full height, these as well as their opponents have been
+struck out of the list. If they had been retained, they would have made
+the average height of the crossed plants unfairly greater than that of
+the self-fertilised. I have acted in the same manner in a few other
+instances, when one of a pair plainly became very unhealthy.
+
+TABLE 2/7. Ipomoea purpurea (Sixth Generation).
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 93 : 50 1/2.
+Pot 1 : 91 : 65.
+
+Pot 2 : 79 : 50.
+Pot 2 : 86 1/2 : 87.
+Pot 2 : 88 : 62.
+
+Pot 3 : 87 1/2 : 64 1/2.
+
+Total : 525 : 379.
+
+The average height of the six crossed plants is here 87.5, and of the
+six self-fertilised plants 63.16, or as 100 to 72. This large difference
+was chiefly due to most of the plants, especially the self-fertilised
+ones, having become unhealthy towards the close of their growth, and
+they were severely attacked by aphides. From this cause nothing can be
+inferred with respect to their relative fertility. In this generation we
+have the first instance of a self-fertilised plant in Pot 2 exceeding
+(though only by half an inch) its crossed opponent. This victory was
+fairly won after a long struggle. At first the self-fertilised plant was
+several inches taller than its opponent, but when the latter was 4 1/2
+feet high it had grown equal; it then grew a little taller than the
+self-fertilised plant, but was ultimately beaten by it to the extent of
+half an inch, as shown in Table 2/7. I was so much surprised at this
+case that I saved the self-fertilised seeds of this plant, which I will
+call the "Hero," and experimented on its descendants, as will hereafter
+be described.
+
+Besides the plants included in Table 2/7, nine crossed and nine
+self-fertilised plants of the same lot were raised in two other pots, 4
+and 5. These pots had been kept in the hothouse, but from want of room
+were, whilst the plants were young, suddenly moved during very cold
+weather into the coldest part of the greenhouse. They all suffered
+greatly, and never quite recovered. After a fortnight only two of the
+nine self-fertilised seedlings were alive, whilst seven of the crossed
+survived. The tallest of these latter plants when measured was 47 inches
+in height, whilst the tallest of the two surviving self-fertilised
+plants was only 32 inches. Here again we see how much more vigorous the
+crossed plants are than the self-fertilised.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SEVENTH GENERATION.
+
+These were raised as heretofore with the following result:--
+
+TABLE 2/8. Ipomoea purpurea (Seventh Generation).
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 84 4/8 : 74 6/8.
+Pot 1 : 84 6/8 : 84.
+Pot 1 : 76 2/8 : 55 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 84 4/8 : 65.
+Pot 2 : 90 : 51 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 82 2/8 : 80 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 83 : 67 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 86 : 60 2/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 84 2/8 : 75 2/8.
+
+Total : 755.50 : 614.25.
+
+Each of these nine crossed plants is higher than its opponent, though in
+one case only by three-quarters of an inch. Their average height is
+83.94 inches, and that of the self-fertilised plants 68.25, or as 100 to
+81. These plants, after growing to their full height, became very
+unhealthy and infested with aphides, just when the seeds were setting,
+so that many of the capsules failed, and nothing can be said on their
+relative fertility.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE EIGHTH GENERATION.
+
+As just stated, the plants of the last generation, from which the
+present ones were raised, were very unhealthy and their seeds of
+unusually small size; and this probably accounts for the two lots
+behaving differently to what they did in any of the previous or
+succeeding generations. Many of the self-fertilised seeds germinated
+before the crossed ones, and these were of course rejected. When the
+crossed seedlings in Table 2/9 had grown to a height of between 1 and 2
+feet, they were all, or almost all, shorter than their self-fertilised
+opponents, but were not then measured. When they had acquired an average
+height of 32.28 inches, that of the self-fertilised plants was 40.68, or
+as 100 to 122. Moreover, every one of the self-fertilised plants, with a
+single exception, exceeded its crossed opponent. When, however, the
+crossed plants had grown to an average height of 77.56 inches, they just
+exceeded (namely, by .7 of an inch) the average height of the
+self-fertilised plants; but two of the latter were still taller than
+their crossed opponents. I was so much astonished at this whole case,
+that I tied string to the summits of the rods; the plants being thus
+allowed to continue climbing upwards. When their growth was complete
+they were untwined, stretched straight, and measured. The crossed plants
+had now almost regained their accustomed superiority, as may be seen in
+Table 2/9.
+
+The average height of the eight crossed plants is here 113.25 inches,
+and that of the self-fertilised plants 96.65, or as 100 to 85.
+Nevertheless two of the self-fertilised plants, as may be seen in Table
+2/9, were still higher than their crossed opponents. The latter
+manifestly had much thicker stems and many more lateral branches, and
+looked altogether more vigorous than the self-fertilised plants, and
+generally flowered before them. The earlier flowers produced by these
+self-fertilised plants did not set any capsules, and their anthers
+contained only a small amount of pollen; but to this subject I shall
+return. Nevertheless capsules produced by two other self-fertilised
+plants of the same lot, not included in Table 2/9, which had been highly
+favoured by being grown in separate pots, contained the large average
+number of 5.1 seeds per capsule.
+
+TABLE 2/9. Ipomoea purpurea (Eighth Generation).
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 111 6/8 : 96.
+Pot 1 : 127 : 54.
+Pot 1 : 130 6/8 : 93 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 97 2/8 : 94.
+Pot 2 : 89 4/8 : 125 6/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 103 6/8 : 115 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 100 6/8 : 84 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 147 4/8 : 109 6/8.
+
+Total : 908.25 : 773.25.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE NINTH GENERATION.
+
+The plants of this generation were raised in the same manner as before,
+with the result shown in Table 2/10.
+
+The fourteen crossed plants average in height 81.39 inches and the
+fourteen self-fertilised plants 64.07, or as 100 to 79. One
+self-fertilised plant in Pot 3 exceeded, and one in Pot 4 equalled in
+height, its opponent. The self-fertilised plants showed no sign of
+inheriting the precocious growth of their parents; this having been due,
+as it would appear, to the abnormal state of the seeds from the
+unhealthiness of their parents. The fourteen self-fertilised plants
+yielded only forty spontaneously self-fertilised capsules, to which must
+be added seven, the product of ten flowers artificially self-fertilised.
+On the other hand, the fourteen crossed plants yielded 152 spontaneously
+self-fertilised capsules; but thirty-six flowers on these plants were
+crossed (yielding thirty-three capsules), and these flowers would
+probably have produced about thirty spontaneously self-fertilised
+capsules. Therefore an equal number of the crossed and self-fertilised
+plants would have produced capsules in the proportion of about 182 to
+47, or as 100 to 26. Another phenomenon was well pronounced in this
+generation, but I believe had occurred previously to a slight extent;
+namely, that most of the flowers on the self-fertilised plants were
+somewhat monstrous. The monstrosity consisted in the corolla being
+irregularly split so that it did not open properly, with one or two of
+the stamens slightly foliaceous, coloured, and firmly coherent to the
+corolla. I observed this monstrosity in only one flower on the crossed
+plants. The self-fertilised plants, if well nourished, would almost
+certainly, in a few more generations, have produced double flowers, for
+they had already become in some degree sterile. (2/1. See on this
+subject 'Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication' chapter 18
+2nd edition volume 2 page 152.)
+
+TABLE 2/10. Ipomoea purpurea (Ninth Generation).
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 83 4/8 : 57.
+Pot 1 : 85 4/8 : 71.
+Pot 1 : 83 4/8 : 48 3/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 83 2/8 : 45.
+Pot 2 : 64 2/8 : 43 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 64 3/8 : 38 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 79 : 63.
+Pot 3 : 88 1/8 : 71.
+Pot 3 : 61 : 89 4/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 82 4/8 : 82 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 90 : 76 1/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 89 4/8 : 67.
+Pot 5 : 92 4/8 : 74 2/8.
+Pot 5 : 92 4/8 : 70.
+Crowded plants.
+
+Total : 1139.5 : 897.0.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE TENTH GENERATION.
+
+Six plants were raised in the usual manner from the crossed plants of
+the last generation (Table 2/10) again intercrossed, and from the
+self-fertilised again self-fertilised. As one of the crossed plants in
+Pot 1 in Table 2/11 became much diseased, having crumpled leaves, and
+producing hardly any capsules, it and its opponent have been struck out
+of the table.
+
+TABLE 2/11. Ipomoea purpurea (Tenth Generation).
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 92 3/8 : 47 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 94 4/8 : 34 6/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 87 : 54 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 89 5/8 : 49 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 105 : 66 2/8.
+
+Total : 468.5 : 252.0.
+
+The five crossed plants average 93.7 inches, and the five
+self-fertilised only 50.4, or as 100 to 54. This difference, however, is
+so great that it must be looked at as in part accidental. The six
+crossed plants (the diseased one here included) yielded spontaneously
+101 capsules, and the six self-fertilised plants 88, the latter being
+chiefly produced by one of the plants. But as the diseased plant, which
+yielded hardly any seed, is here included, the ratio of 101 to 88 does
+not fairly give the relative fertility of the two lots. The stems of the
+six crossed plants looked so much finer than those of the six
+self-fertilised plants, that after the capsules had been gathered and
+most of the leaves had fallen off, they were weighed. Those of the
+crossed plants weighed 2,693 grains, whilst those of the self-fertilised
+plants weighed only 1,173 grains, or as 100 to 44; but as the diseased
+and dwarfed crossed plant is here included, the superiority of the
+former in weight was really greater.]
+
+THE EFFECTS ON THE OFFSPRING OF CROSSING DIFFERENT FLOWERS ON THE SAME
+PLANT, INSTEAD OF CROSSING DISTINCT INDIVIDUALS.
+
+In all the foregoing experiments, seedlings from flowers crossed by
+pollen from a distinct plant (though in the later generations more or
+less closely related) were put into competition with, and almost
+invariably proved markedly superior in height to the offspring from
+self-fertilised flowers. I wished, therefore, to ascertain whether a
+cross between two flowers on the same plant would give to the offspring
+any superiority over the offspring from flowers fertilised with their
+own pollen. I procured some fresh seed and raised two plants, which were
+covered with a net; and several of their flowers were crossed with
+pollen from a distinct flower on the same plant. Twenty-nine capsules
+thus produced contained on an average 4.86 seeds per capsule; and 100 of
+these seeds weighed 36.77 grains. Several other flowers were fertilised
+with their own pollen, and twenty-six capsules thus produced contained
+on an average 4.42 seeds per capsule; 100 of which weighed 42.61 grains.
+So that a cross of this kind appears to have increased slightly the
+number of seeds per capsule, in the ratio of 100 to 91; but these
+crossed seeds were lighter than the self-fertilised in the ratio of 86
+to 100. I doubt, however, from other observations, whether these results
+are fully trustworthy. The two lots of seeds, after germinating on sand,
+were planted in pairs on the opposite sides of nine pots, and were
+treated in every respect like the plants in the previous experiments.
+The remaining seeds, some in a state of germination and some not so,
+were sown on the opposite sides of a large pot (Number 10); and the four
+tallest plants on each side of this pot were measured. The result is
+shown in Table 2/12.
+
+TABLE 2/12. Ipomoea purpurea.
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 82 : 77 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 75 : 87.
+Pot 1 : 65 : 64.
+Pot 1 : 76 : 87 2/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 78 4/8 : 84.
+Pot 2 : 43 : 86 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 65 4/8 : 90 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 61 2/8 : 86.
+Pot 3 : 85 : 69 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 89 : 87 4/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 83 : 80 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 73 4/8 : 88 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 67 : 84 4/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 78 : 66 4/8.
+Pot 5 : 76 6/8 : 77 4/8.
+Pot 5 : 57 : 81 4/8.
+
+Pot 6 : 70 4/8 : 80.
+Pot 6 : 79 : 82 4/8.
+Pot 6 : 79 6/8 : 55 4/8.
+
+Pot 7 : 76 : 77.
+Pot 7 : 84 4/8 : 83 4/8.
+Pot 7 : 79 : 73 4/8.
+
+Pot 8 : 73 : 76 4/8.
+Pot 8 : 67 : 82.
+Pot 8 : 83 : 80 4/8.
+
+Pot 9 : 73 2/8 : 78 4/8.
+Pot 9 : 78 : 67 4/8.
+
+Pot 10 : 34 : 82 4/8.
+Pot 10 : 82 : 36 6/8.
+Pot 10 : 84 6/8 : 69 4/8.
+Pot 10 : 71 : 75 2/8.
+Crowded plants.
+
+Total : 2270.25 : 2399.75.
+
+The average height of the thirty-one crossed plants is 73.23 inches, and
+that of the thirty-one self-fertilised plants 77.41 inches; or as 100 to
+106. Looking to each pair, it may be seen that only thirteen of the
+crossed plants, whilst eighteen of the self-fertilised plants exceed
+their opponents. A record was kept with respect to the plant which
+flowered first in each pot; and only two of the crossed flowered before
+one of the self-fertilised in the same pot; whilst eight of the
+self-fertilised flowered first. It thus appears that the crossed plants
+are slightly inferior in height and in earliness of flowering to the
+self-fertilised. But the inferiority in height is so small, namely as
+100 to 106, that I should have felt very doubtful on this head, had I
+not cut down all the plants (except those in the crowded pot Number 10)
+close to the ground and weighed them. The twenty-seven crossed plants
+weighed 16 1/2 ounces, and the twenty-seven self-fertilised plants 20
+1/2 ounces; and this gives a ratio of 100 to 124.
+
+A self-fertilised plant of the same parentage as those in Table 2/12 had
+been raised in a separate pot for a distinct purpose; and it proved
+partially sterile, the anthers containing very little pollen. Several
+flowers on this plant were crossed with the little pollen which could be
+obtained from the other flowers on the same plant; and other flowers
+were self-fertilised. From the seeds thus produced four crossed and four
+self-fertilised plants were raised, which were planted in the usual
+manner on the opposite sides of two pots. All these four crossed plants
+were inferior in height to their opponents; they averaged 78.18 inches,
+whilst the four self-fertilised plants averaged 84.8 inches; or as 100
+to 108. (2/2. From one of these self-fertilised plants, spontaneously
+self-fertilised, I gathered twenty-four capsules, and they contained on
+an average only 3.2 seeds per capsule; so that this plant had apparently
+inherited some of the sterility of its parent.) This case, therefore,
+confirms the last. Taking all the evidence together, we must conclude
+that these strictly self-fertilised plants grew a little taller, were
+heavier, and generally flowered before those derived from a cross
+between two flowers on the same plant. These latter plants thus present
+a wonderful contrast with those derived from a cross between two
+distinct individuals.
+
+THE EFFECTS ON THE OFFSPRING OF A CROSS WITH A DISTINCT OR FRESH STOCK
+BELONGING TO THE SAME VARIETY.
+
+From the two foregoing series of experiments we see, firstly, the good
+effects during several successive generations of a cross between
+distinct plants, although these were in some degree inter-related and
+had been grown under nearly the same conditions; and, secondly, the
+absence of all such good effects from a cross between flowers on the
+same plant; the comparison in both cases being made with the offspring
+of flowers fertilised with their own pollen. The experiments now to be
+given show how powerfully and beneficially plants, which have been
+intercrossed during many successive generations, having been kept all
+the time under nearly uniform conditions, are affected by a cross with
+another plant belonging to the same variety, but to a distinct family or
+stock, which had grown under different conditions.
+
+[Several flowers on the crossed plants of the ninth generation in Table
+2/10, were crossed with pollen from another crossed plant of the same
+lot. The seedlings thus raised formed the tenth intercrossed generation,
+and I will call them the "INTERCROSSED PLANTS." Several other flowers on
+the same crossed plants of the ninth generation were fertilised (not
+having been castrated) with pollen taken from plants of the same
+variety, but belonging to a distinct family, which had been grown in a
+distant garden at Colchester, and therefore under somewhat different
+conditions. The capsules produced by this cross contained, to my
+surprise, fewer and lighter seeds than did the capsules of the
+intercrossed plants; but this, I think, must have been accidental. The
+seedlings raised from them I will call the "COLCHESTER-CROSSED." The two
+lots of seeds, after germinating on sand, were planted in the usual
+manner on the opposite sides of five pots, and the remaining seeds,
+whether or not in a state of germination, were thickly sown on the
+opposite sides of a very large pot, Number 6 in Table 2/13. In three of
+the six pots, after the young plants had twined a short way up their
+sticks, one of the Colchester-crossed plants was much taller than any
+one of the intercrossed plants on the opposite side of the same pot; and
+in the three other pots somewhat taller. I should state that two of the
+Colchester-crossed plants in Pot 4, when about two-thirds grown, became
+much diseased, and were, together with their intercrossed opponents,
+rejected. The remaining nineteen plants, when almost fully grown, were
+measured, with the following result:
+
+TABLE 2/13. Ipomoea purpurea.
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Colchester-Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Intercrossed Plants of the Tenth Generation.
+
+Pot 1 : 87 : 78.
+Pot 1 : 87 4/8 : 68 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 85 1/8 : 94 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 93 6/8 : 60.
+Pot 2 : 85 4/8 : 87 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 90 5/8 : 45 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 84 2/8 : 70 1/8.
+Pot 3 : 92 4/8 : 81 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 85 : 86 2/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 95 6/8 : 65 1/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 90 4/8 : 85 6/8.
+Pot 5 : 86 6/8 : 63.
+Pot 5 : 84 : 62 6/8.
+
+Pot 6 : 90 4/8 : 43 4/8.
+Pot 6 : 75 : 39 6/8.
+Pot 6 : 71 : 30 2/8.
+Pot 6 : 83 6/8 : 86.
+Pot 6 : 63 : 53.
+Pot 6 : 65 : 48 6/8.
+Crowded plants in a very large pot.
+
+Total : 1596.50 : 1249.75.
+
+In sixteen out of these nineteen pairs, the Colchester-crossed plant
+exceeded in height its intercrossed opponent. The average height of the
+Colchester-crossed is 84.03 inches, and that of the intercrossed 65.78
+inches; or as 100 to 78. With respect to the fertility of the two lots,
+it was too troublesome to collect and count the capsules on all the
+plants; so I selected two of the best pots, 5 and 6, and in these the
+Colchester-crossed produced 269 mature and half-mature capsules, whilst
+an equal number of the intercrossed plants produced only 154 capsules;
+or as 100 to 57. By weight the capsules from the Colchester-crossed
+plants were to those from the intercrossed plants as 100 to 51; so that
+the former probably contained a somewhat larger average number of
+seeds.]
+
+We learn from this important experiment that plants in some degree
+related, which had been intercrossed during the nine previous
+generations, when they were fertilised with pollen from a fresh stock,
+yielded seedlings as superior to the seedlings of the tenth intercrossed
+generation, as these latter were to the self-fertilised plants of the
+corresponding generation. For if we look to the plants of the ninth
+generation in Table 2/10 (and these offer in most respects the fairest
+standard of comparison) we find that the intercrossed plants were in
+height to the self-fertilised as 100 to 79, and in fertility as 100 to
+26; whilst the Colchester-crossed plants are in height to the
+intercrossed as 100 to 78, and in fertility as 100 to 51.
+
+[THE DESCENDANTS OF THE SELF-FERTILISED PLANT, NAMED HERO, WHICH
+APPEARED IN THE SIXTH SELF-FERTILISED GENERATION.
+
+In the five generations before the sixth, the crossed plant of each pair
+was taller than its self-fertilised opponent; but in the sixth
+generation (Table 2/7, Pot 2) the Hero appeared, which after a long and
+dubious struggle conquered its crossed opponent, though by only half an
+inch. I was so much surprised at this fact, that I resolved to ascertain
+whether this plant would transmit its powers of growth to its seedlings.
+Several flowers on Hero were therefore fertilised with their own pollen,
+and the seedlings thus raised were put into competition with
+self-fertilised and intercrossed plants of the corresponding generation.
+The three lots of seedlings thus all belong to the seventh generation.
+Their relative heights are shown in Tables 2/14 and 2/15.
+
+TABLE 2/14. Ipomoea purpurea.
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants of the Seventh Generation, Children of
+Hero.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants of the Seventh Generation.
+
+Pot 1 : 74 : 89 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 60 : 61.
+Pot 1 : 55 2/8 : 49.
+
+Pot 2 : 92 : 82.
+Pot 2 : 91 6/8 : 56.
+Pot 2 : 74 2/8 : 38.
+
+Total : 447.25 : 375.50.
+
+The average height of the six self-fertilised children of Hero is 74.54
+inches, whilst that of the ordinary self-fertilised plants of the
+corresponding generation is only 62.58 inches, or as 100 to 84.
+
+TABLE 2/15. Ipomoea purpurea.
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants of the Seventh Generation, Children of
+Hero.
+
+Column 3: Intercrossed Plants of the Seventh Generation.
+
+Pot 3 : 92 : 76 6/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 87 : 89.
+Pot 4 : 87 6/8 : 86 6/8.
+
+Total : 266.75 : 252.50.
+
+Here the average height of the three self-fertilised children of Hero is
+88.91 inches, whilst that of the intercrossed plants is 84.16; or as 100
+to 95. We thus see that the self-fertilised children of Hero certainly
+inherit the powers of growth of their parents; for they greatly exceed
+in height the self-fertilised offspring of the other self-fertilised
+plants, and even exceed by a trifle the intercrossed plants,--all of the
+corresponding generation.
+
+Several flowers on the self-fertilised children of Hero in Table 2/14
+were fertilised with pollen from the same flower; and from the seeds
+thus produced, self-fertilised plants of the eighth generation
+(grandchildren of Hero) were raised. Several other flowers on the same
+plants were crossed with pollen from the other children of Hero. The
+seedlings raised from this cross may be considered as the offspring of
+the union of brothers and sisters. The result of the competition between
+these two sets of seedlings (namely self-fertilised and the offspring of
+brothers and sisters) is given in Table 2/16.
+
+TABLE 2/16. Ipomoea purpurea.
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Self-fertilised Grandchildren of Hero, from the
+Self-fertilised Children. Eighth Generation.
+
+Column 3: Grandchildren from a cross between the self-fertilised
+children of Hero. Eighth Generation.
+
+Pot 1 : 86 6/8 : 95 6/8.
+Pot 1 : 90 3/8 : 95 3/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 96 : 85.
+Pot 2 : 77 2/8 : 93.
+
+Pot 3 : 73 : 86 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 66 : 82 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 84 4/8 : 70 6/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 88 1/8 : 66 3/8.
+Pot 4 : 84 : 15 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 36 2/8 : 38.
+Pot 4 : 74 : 78 3/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 90 1/8 : 82 6/8.
+Pot 5 : 90 5/8 : 83 6/8.
+
+Total : 1037.00 : 973.16.
+
+The average height of the thirteen self-fertilised grandchildren of Hero
+is 79.76 inches, and that of the grandchildren from a cross between the
+self-fertilised children is 74.85; or as 100 to 94. But in Pot 4 one of
+the crossed plants grew only to a height of 15 1/2 inches; and if this
+plant and its opponent are struck out, as would be the fairest plan, the
+average height of the crossed plants exceeds only by a fraction of an
+inch that of the self-fertilised plants. It is therefore clear that a
+cross between the self-fertilised children of Hero did not produce any
+beneficial effect worth notice; and it is very doubtful whether this
+negative result can be attributed merely to the fact of brothers and
+sisters having been united, for the ordinary intercrossed plants of the
+several successive generations must often have been derived from the
+union of brothers and sisters (as shown in Chapter 1), and yet all of
+them were greatly superior to the self-fertilised plants. We are
+therefore driven to the suspicion, which we shall soon see strengthened,
+that Hero transmitted to its offspring a peculiar constitution adapted
+for self-fertilisation.
+
+It would appear that the self-fertilised descendants of Hero have not
+only inherited from Hero a power of growth equal to that of the ordinary
+intercrossed plants, but have become more fertile when self-fertilised
+than is usual with the plants of the present species. The flowers on the
+self-fertilised grandchildren of Hero in Table 2.16 (the eighth
+generation of self-fertilised plants) were fertilised with their own
+pollen and produced plenty of capsules, ten of which (though this is too
+few a number for a safe average) contained 5.2 seeds per capsule,--a
+higher average than was observed in any other case with the
+self-fertilised plants. The anthers produced by these self-fertilised
+grandchildren were also as well developed and contained as much pollen
+as those on the intercrossed plants of the corresponding generation;
+whereas this was not the case with the ordinary self-fertilised plants
+of the later generations. Nevertheless some few of the flowers produced
+by the grandchildren of Hero were slightly monstrous, like those of the
+ordinary self-fertilised plants of the later generations. In order not
+to recur to the subject of fertility, I may add that twenty-one
+self-fertilised capsules, spontaneously produced by the
+great-grandchildren of Hero (forming the ninth generation of
+self-fertilised plants), contained on an average 4.47 seeds; and this is
+as high an average as the self-fertilised flowers of any generation
+usually yielded.
+
+Several flowers on the self-fertilised grandchildren of Hero in Table
+2/16 were fertilised with pollen from the same flower; and the seedlings
+raised from them (great-grandchildren of Hero) formed the ninth
+self-fertilised generation. Several other flowers were crossed with
+pollen from another grandchild, so that they may be considered as the
+offspring of brothers and sisters, and the seedlings thus raised may be
+called the INTERCROSSED great-grandchildren. And lastly, other flowers
+were fertilised with pollen from a distinct stock, and the seedlings
+thus raised may be called the COLCHESTER-CROSSED great-grandchildren. In
+my anxiety to see what the result would be, I unfortunately planted the
+three lots of seeds (after they had germinated on sand) in the hothouse
+in the middle of winter, and in consequence of this the seedlings
+(twenty in number of each kind) became very unhealthy, some growing only
+a few inches in height, and very few to their proper height. The result,
+therefore, cannot be fully trusted; and it would be useless to give the
+measurements in detail. In order to strike as fair an average as
+possible, I first excluded all the plants under 50 inches in height,
+thus rejecting all the most unhealthy plants. The six self-fertilised
+thus left were on an average 66.86 inches high; the eight intercrossed
+plants 63.2 high; and the seven Colchester-crossed 65.37 high; so that
+there was not much difference between the three sets, the
+self-fertilised plants having a slight advantage. Nor was there any
+great difference when only the plants under 36 inches in height were
+excluded. Nor again when all the plants, however much dwarfed and
+unhealthy, were included. In this latter case the Colchester-crossed
+gave the lowest average of all; and if these plants had been in any
+marked manner superior to the other two lots, as from my former
+experience I fully expected they would have been, I cannot but think
+that some vestige of such superiority would have been evident,
+notwithstanding the very unhealthy condition of most of the plants. No
+advantage, as far as we can judge, was derived from intercrossing two of
+the grandchildren of Hero, any more than when two of the children were
+crossed. It appears therefore that Hero and its descendants have varied
+from the common type, not only in acquiring great power of growth, and
+increased fertility when subjected to self-fertilisation, but in not
+profiting from a cross with a distinct stock; and this latter fact, if
+trustworthy, is a unique case, as far as I have observed in all my
+experiments.]
+
+SUMMARY ON THE GROWTH, VIGOUR, AND FERTILITY OF THE SUCCESSIVE
+GENERATIONS OF THE CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF Ipomoea
+purpurea, TOGETHER WITH SOME MISCELLANEOUS OBSERVATIONS.
+
+In Table 2/17, we see the average or mean heights of the ten successive
+generations of the intercrossed and self-fertilised plants, grown in
+competition with each other; and in the right hand column we have the
+ratios of the one to the other, the height of the intercrossed plants
+being taken at 100. In the bottom line the mean height of the
+seventy-three intercrossed plants is shown to be 85.84 inches, and that
+of the seventy-three self-fertilised plants 66.02 inches, or as 100 to
+77.
+
+TABLE 2/17. Ipomoea purpurea. Summary of measurements of the ten
+generations.
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Name of Generation.
+
+Column 2: Number of Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Average Height of Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 4: Number of Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Column 5: Average Height of Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Column 6: n in Ratio between Average Heights of Crossed and
+Self-fertilised Plants, expressed as 100 to n.
+
+First generation Table 2/1 : 6 : 86.00 : 6 : 65.66 : 76.
+
+Second generation Table 2/2 : 6 : 84.16 : 6 : 66.33 : 79.
+
+Third generation Table 2/3 : 6 : 77.41 : 6 : 52.83 : 68.
+
+Fourth generation Table 2/5 : 7 : 69.78 : 7 : 60.14 : 86.
+
+Fifth generation Table 2/6 : 6 : 82.54 : 6 : 62.33 : 75.
+
+Sixth generation Table 2/7 : 6 : 87.50 : 6 : 63.16 : 72.
+
+Seventh generation Table 2/8 : 9 : 83.94 : 9 : 68.25 : 81.
+
+Eighth generation Table 2/9 : 8 : 113.25 : 8 : 96.65 : 85.
+
+Ninth generation Table 2/10 : 14 : 81.39 : 14 : 64.07 : 79.
+
+Tenth generation Table 2/11 : 5 : 93.70 : 5 : 50.40 : 54.
+
+All ten generations together : 73 : 85.84 : 73 : 66.02 : 77.
+
+(DIAGRAM 2/1. Diagram showing the mean heights of the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of Ipomoea purpurea in the ten generations; the
+mean height of the crossed plants being taken as 100. On the right hand,
+the mean heights of the crossed and self-fertilised plants of all the
+generations taken together are shown (as eleven pairs of unequal
+vertical lines.))
+
+The mean height of the self-fertilised plants in each of the ten
+generations is also shown in the diagram 2/1, that of the intercrossed
+plants being taken at 100, and on the right side we see the relative
+heights of the seventy-three intercrossed plants, and of the
+seventy-three self-fertilised plants. The difference in height between
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants will perhaps be best appreciated
+by an illustration: If all the men in a country were on an average 6
+feet high, and there were some families which had been long and closely
+interbred, these would be almost dwarfs, their average height during ten
+generations being only 4 feet 8 1/4 inches.
+
+It should be especially observed that the average difference between the
+crossed and self-fertilised plants is not due to a few of the former
+having grown to an extraordinary height, or to a few of the
+self-fertilised being extremely short, but to all the crossed plants
+having surpassed their self-fertilised opponents, with the few following
+exceptions. The first occurred in the sixth generation, in which the
+plant named "Hero" appeared; two in the eighth generation, but the
+self-fertilised plants in this generation were in an anomalous
+condition, as they grew at first at an unusual rate and conquered for a
+time the opposed crossed plants; and two exceptions in the ninth
+generation, though one of these plants only equalled its crossed
+opponent. Therefore, of the seventy-three crossed plants, sixty-eight
+grew to a greater height than the self-fertilised plants, to which they
+were opposed.
+
+In the right-hand column of figures, the difference in height between
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants in the successive generations is
+seen to fluctuate much, as might indeed have been expected from the
+small number of plants measured in each generation being insufficient to
+give a fair average. It should be remembered that the absolute height of
+the plants goes for nothing, as each pair was measured as soon as one of
+them had twined up to the summit of its rod. The great difference in the
+tenth generation, namely, 100 to 54, no doubt was partly accidental,
+though, when these plants were weighed, the difference was even greater,
+namely, 100 to 44. The smallest amount of difference occurred in the
+fourth and the eighth generations, and this was apparently due to both
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants having become unhealthy, which
+prevented the former attaining their usual degree of superiority. This
+was an unfortunate circumstance, but my experiments were not thus
+vitiated, as both lots of plants were exposed to the same conditions,
+whether favourable or unfavourable.
+
+There is reason to believe that the flowers of this Ipomoea, when
+growing out of doors, are habitually crossed by insects, so that the
+first seedlings which I raised from purchased seeds were probably the
+offspring of a cross. I infer that this is the case, firstly from
+humble-bees often visiting the flowers, and from the quantity of pollen
+left by them on the stigmas of such flowers; and, secondly, from the
+plants raised from the same lot of seed varying greatly in the colour of
+their flowers, for as we shall hereafter see, this indicates much
+intercrossing. (2/3. Verlot says 'Sur la Production des Varits' 1865
+page 66, that certain varieties of a closely allied plant, the
+Convolvulus tricolor, cannot be kept pure unless grown at a distance
+from all other varieties.) It is, therefore, remarkable that the plants
+raised by me from flowers which were, in all probability,
+self-fertilised for the first time after many generations of crossing,
+should have been so markedly inferior in height to the intercrossed
+plants as they were, namely, as 76 to 100. As the plants which were
+self-fertilised in each succeeding generation necessarily became much
+more closely interbred in the later than in the earlier generations, it
+might have been expected that the difference in height between them and
+the crossed plants would have gone on increasing; but, so far is this
+from being the case, that the difference between the two sets of plants
+in the seventh, eighth, and ninth generations taken together is less
+than in the first and second generations together. When, however, we
+remember that the self-fertilised and crossed plants are all descended
+from the same mother-plant, that many of the crossed plants in each
+generation were related, often closely related, and that all were
+exposed to the same conditions, which, as we shall hereafter find, is a
+very important circumstance, it is not at all surprising that the
+difference between them should have somewhat decreased in the later
+generations. It is, on the contrary, an astonishing fact, that the
+crossed plants should have been victorious, even to a slight degree,
+over the self-fertilised plants of the later generations.
+
+The much greater constitutional vigour of the crossed than of the
+self-fertilised plants, was proved on five occasions in various ways;
+namely, by exposing them, while young, to a low temperature or to a
+sudden change of temperature, or by growing them, under very
+unfavourable conditions, in competition with full-grown plants of other
+kinds.
+
+With respect to the productiveness of the crossed and self-fertilised
+plants of the successive generations, my observations unfortunately were
+not made on any uniform plan, partly from the want of time, and partly
+from not having at first intended to observe more than a single
+generation. A summary of the results is here given in a tabulated form,
+the fertility of the crossed plants being taken as 100.
+
+TABLE 2/18. Ratio of productiveness of crossed and self-fertilised
+plants. Ipomoea purpurea.
+
+FIRST GENERATION OF CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS GROWING IN
+COMPETITION WITH ONE ANOTHER.
+
+Sixty-five capsules produced from flowers on five crossed plants
+fertilised by pollen from a distinct plant, and fifty-five capsules
+produced from flowers on five self-fertilised plants fertilised by their
+own pollen, contained seeds in the proportion of : 100 to 93.
+
+Fifty-six spontaneously self-fertilised capsules on the above five
+crossed plants, and twenty-five spontaneously self-fertilised capsules
+on the above five self-fertilised plants, yielded seeds in the
+proportion of : 100 to 99.
+
+Combining the total number of capsules produced by these plants, and the
+average number of seeds in each, the above crossed and self-fertilised
+plants yielded seeds in the proportion of : 100 to 64.
+
+Other plants of this first generation grown under unfavourable
+conditions and spontaneously self-fertilised, yielded seeds in the
+proportion of : 100 to 45.
+
+THIRD GENERATION OF CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS.
+
+Crossed capsules compared with self-fertilised capsules contained seeds
+in the ratio of : 100 to 94.
+
+An equal number of crossed and self-fertilised plants, both
+spontaneously self-fertilised, produced capsules in the ratio of : 100
+to 38.
+
+And these capsules contained seeds in the ratio of : 100 to 94.
+
+Combining these data, the productiveness of the crossed to the
+self-fertilised plants, both spontaneously self-fertilised, was as : 100
+to 35.
+
+FOURTH GENERATION OF CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS.
+
+Capsules from flowers on the crossed plants fertilised by pollen from
+another plant, and capsules from flowers on the self-fertilised plants
+fertilised with their own pollen, contained seeds in the proportion of :
+100 to 94.
+
+FIFTH GENERATION OF CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS.
+
+The crossed plants produced spontaneously a vast number more pods (not
+actually counted) than the self-fertilised, and these contained seeds in
+the proportion of : 100 to 89.
+
+NINTH GENERATION OF CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS.
+
+Fourteen crossed plants, spontaneously self-fertilised, and fourteen
+self-fertilised plants spontaneously self-fertilised, yielded capsules
+(the average number of seeds per capsule not having been ascertained) in
+the proportion of : 100 to 26.
+
+PLANTS DERIVED FROM A CROSSED WITH A FRESH STOCK COMPARED WITH
+INTERCROSSED PLANTS.
+
+The offspring of intercrossed plants of the ninth generation, crossed by
+a fresh stock, compared with plants of the same stock intercrossed
+during ten generations, both sets of plants left uncovered and naturally
+fertilised, produced capsules by weight as : 100 to 51.
+
+We see in this table that the crossed plants are always in some degree
+more productive than the self-fertilised plants, by whatever standard
+they are compared. The degree differs greatly; but this depends chiefly
+on whether an average was taken of the seeds alone, or of the capsules
+alone, or of both combined. The relative superiority of the crossed
+plants is chiefly due to their producing a much greater number of
+capsules, and not to each capsule containing a larger average number of
+seeds. For instance, in the third generation the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants produced capsules in the ratio of 100 to 38,
+whilst the seeds in the capsules on the crossed plants were to those on
+the self-fertilised plants only as 100 to 94. In the eighth generation
+the capsules on two self-fertilised plants (not included in table 2/18),
+grown in separate pots and thus not subjected to any competition,
+yielded the large average of 5.1 seeds. The smaller number of capsules
+produced by the self-fertilised plants may be in part, but not
+altogether, attributed to their lessened size or height; this being
+chiefly due to their lessened constitutional vigour, so that they were
+not able to compete with the crossed plants growing in the same pots.
+The seeds produced by the crossed flowers on the crossed plants were not
+always heavier than the self-fertilised seeds on the self-fertilised
+plants. The lighter seeds, whether produced from crossed or
+self-fertilised flowers, generally germinated before the heavier seeds.
+I may add that the crossed plants, with very few exceptions, flowered
+before their self-fertilised opponents, as might have been expected from
+their greater height and vigour.
+
+The impaired fertility of the self-fertilised plants was shown in
+another way, namely, by their anthers being smaller than those in the
+flowers on the crossed plants. This was first observed in the seventh
+generation, but may have occurred earlier. Several anthers from flowers
+on the crossed and self-fertilised plants of the eighth generation were
+compared under the microscope; and those from the former were generally
+longer and plainly broader than the anthers of the self-fertilised
+plants. The quantity of pollen contained in one of the latter was, as
+far as could be judged by the eye, about half of that contained in one
+from a crossed plant. The impaired fertility of the self-fertilised
+plants of the eighth generation was also shown in another manner, which
+may often be observed in hybrids--namely, by the first-formed flowers
+being sterile. For instance, the fifteen first flowers on a
+self-fertilised plant of one of the later generations were carefully
+fertilised with their own pollen, and eight of them dropped off; at the
+same time fifteen flowers on a crossed plant growing in the same pot
+were self-fertilised, and only one dropped off. On two other crossed
+plants of the same generation, several of the earliest flowers were
+observed to fertilise themselves and to produce capsules. In the plants
+of the ninth, and I believe of some previous generations, very many of
+the flowers, as already stated, were slightly monstrous; and this
+probably was connected with their lessened fertility.
+
+All the self-fertilised plants of the seventh generation, and I believe
+of one or two previous generations, produced flowers of exactly the same
+tint, namely, of a rich dark purple. So did all the plants, without any
+exception, in the three succeeding generations of self-fertilised
+plants; and very many were raised on account of other experiments in
+progress not here recorded. My attention was first called to this fact
+by my gardener remarking that there was no occasion to label the
+self-fertilised plants, as they could always be known by their colour.
+The flowers were as uniform in tint as those of a wild species growing
+in a state of nature; whether the same tint occurred, as is probable, in
+the earlier generations, neither my gardener nor self could recollect.
+The flowers on the plants which were first raised from purchased seed,
+as well as during the first few generations, varied much in the depth of
+the purple tint; many were more or less pink, and occasionally a white
+variety appeared. The crossed plants continued to the tenth generation
+to vary in the same manner as before, but to a much less degree, owing,
+probably, to their having become more or less closely inter-related. We
+must therefore attribute the extraordinary uniformity of colour in the
+flowers on the plants of the seventh and succeeding self-fertilised
+generations, to inheritance not having been interfered with by crosses
+during several preceding generations, in combination with the conditions
+of life having been very uniform.
+
+A plant appeared in the sixth self-fertilised generation, named the
+Hero, which exceeded by a little in height its crossed antagonist, and
+which transmitted its powers of growth and increased self-fertility to
+its children and grandchildren. A cross between the children of Hero did
+not give to the grandchildren any advantage over the self-fertilised
+grandchildren raised from the self-fertilised children. And as far as my
+observations can be trusted, which were made on very unhealthy plants,
+the great-grandchildren raised from intercrossing the grandchildren had
+no advantage over the seedlings from the grandchildren the product of
+continued self-fertilisation; and what is far more remarkable, the
+great-grandchildren raised by crossing the grandchildren with a fresh
+stock, had no advantage over either the intercrossed or self-fertilised
+great-grandchildren. It thus appears that Hero and its descendants
+differed in constitution in an extraordinary manner from ordinary plants
+of the present species.
+
+Although the plants raised during ten successive generations from
+crosses between distinct yet inter-related plants almost invariably
+exceeded in height, constitutional vigour, and fertility their
+self-fertilised opponents, it has been proved that seedlings raised by
+intercrossing flowers on the same plant are by no means superior, on the
+contrary are somewhat inferior in height and weight, to seedlings raised
+from flowers fertilised with their own pollen. This is a remarkable
+fact, which seems to indicate that self-fertilisation is in some manner
+more advantageous than crossing, unless the cross brings with it, as is
+generally the case, some decided and preponderant advantage; but to this
+subject I shall recur in a future chapter.
+
+The benefits which so generally follow from a cross between two plants
+apparently depend on the two differing somewhat in constitution or
+character. This is shown by the seedlings from the intercrossed plants
+of the ninth generation, when crossed with pollen from a fresh stock,
+being as superior in height and almost as superior in fertility to the
+again intercrossed plants, as these latter were to seedlings from
+self-fertilised plants of the corresponding generation. We thus learn
+the important fact that the mere act of crossing two distinct plants,
+which are in some degree inter-related and which have been long
+subjected to nearly the same conditions, does little good as compared
+with that from a cross between plants belonging to different stocks or
+families, and which have been subjected to somewhat different
+conditions. We may attribute the good derived from the crossing of the
+intercrossed plants during the ten successive generations to their still
+differing somewhat in constitution or character, as was indeed proved by
+their flowers still differing somewhat in colour. But the several
+conclusions which may be deduced from the experiments on Ipomoea will be
+more fully considered in the final chapters, after all my other
+observations have been given.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+SCROPHULARIACEAE, GESNERIACEAE, LABIATAE, ETC.
+
+Mimulus luteus; height, vigour, and fertility of the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the first four generations.
+Appearance of a new, tall, and highly self-fertile variety.
+Offspring from a cross between self-fertilised plants.
+Effects of a cross with a fresh stock.
+Effects of crossing flowers on the same plant.
+Summary on Mimulus luteus.
+Digitalis purpurea, superiority of the crossed plants.
+Effects of crossing flowers on the same plant.
+Calceolaria.
+Linaria vulgaris.
+Verbascum thapsus.
+Vandellia nummularifolia.
+Cleistogene flowers.
+Gesneria pendulina.
+Salvia coccinea.
+Origanum vulgare, great increase of the crossed plants by stolons.
+Thunbergia alata.
+
+In the family of the Scrophulariaceae I experimented on species in the
+six following genera: Mimulus, Digitalis, Calceolaria, Linaria,
+Verbascum, and Vandellia.
+
+[3/2. SCROPHULARIACEAE.--Mimulus luteus.
+
+The plants which I raised from purchased seed varied greatly in the
+colour of their flowers, so that hardly two individuals were quite
+alike; the corolla being of all shades of yellow, with the most
+diversified blotches of purple, crimson, orange, and coppery brown. But
+these plants differed in no other respect. (3/1. I sent several
+specimens with variously coloured flowers to Kew, and Dr. Hooker informs
+me that they all consisted of Mimulus luteus. The flowers with much red
+have been named by horticulturists as var. Youngiana.) The flowers are
+evidently well adapted for fertilisation by the agency of insects; and
+in the case of a closely allied species, Mimulus rosea, I have watched
+bees entering the flowers, thus getting their backs well dusted with
+pollen; and when they entered another flower the pollen was licked off
+their backs by the two-lipped stigma, the lips of which are irritable
+and close like a forceps on the pollen-grains. If no pollen is enclosed
+between the lips, these open again after a time. Mr. Kitchener has
+ingeniously explained the use of these movements, namely, to prevent the
+self-fertilisation of the flower. (3/2. 'A Year's Botany' 1874 page
+118.) If a bee with no pollen on its back enters a flower it touches the
+stigma, which quickly closes, and when the bee retires dusted with
+pollen, it can leave none on the stigma of the same flower. But as soon
+as it enters any other flower, plenty of pollen is left on the stigma,
+which will be thus cross-fertilised. Nevertheless, if insects are
+excluded, the flowers fertilise themselves perfectly and produce plenty
+of seed; but I did not ascertain whether this is effected by the stamens
+increasing in length with advancing age, or by the bending down of the
+pistil. The chief interest in my experiments on the present species,
+lies in the appearance in the fourth self-fertilised generation of a
+variety which bore large peculiarly-coloured flowers, and grew to a
+greater height than the other varieties; it likewise became more highly
+self-fertile, so that this variety resembles the plant named Hero, which
+appeared in the sixth self-fertilised generation of Ipomoea.
+
+Some flowers on one of the plants raised from the purchased seeds were
+fertilised with their own pollen; and others on the same plant were
+crossed with pollen from a distinct plant. The seeds from twelve
+capsules thus produced were placed in separate watch-glasses for
+comparison; and those from the six crossed capsules appeared to the eye
+hardly more numerous than those from the six self-fertilised capsules.
+But when the seeds were weighed, those from the crossed capsules
+amounted to 1.02 grain, whilst those from the self-fertilised capsules
+were only .81 grain; so that the former were either heavier or more
+numerous than the latter, in the ratio of 100 to 79.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FIRST GENERATION.
+
+Having ascertained, by leaving crossed and self-fertilised seed on damp
+sand, that they germinated simultaneously, both kinds were thickly sown
+on opposite sides of a broad and rather shallow pan; so that the two
+sets of seedlings, which came up at the same time, were subjected to the
+same unfavourable conditions. This was a bad method of treatment, but
+this species was one of the first on which I experimented. When the
+crossed seedlings were on an average half an inch high, the
+self-fertilised ones were only a quarter of an inch high. When grown to
+their full height under the above unfavourable conditions, the four
+tallest crossed plants averaged 7.62, and the four tallest
+self-fertilised 5.87 inches in height; or as 100 to 77. Ten flowers on
+the crossed plants were fully expanded before one on the self-fertilised
+plants. A few of these plants of both lots were transplanted into a
+large pot with plenty of good earth, and the self-fertilised plants, not
+now being subjected to severe competition, grew during the following
+year as tall as the crossed plants; but from a case which follows it is
+doubtful whether they would have long continued equal. Some flowers on
+the crossed plants were crossed with pollen from another plant, and the
+capsules thus produced contained a rather greater weight of seed than
+those on the self-fertilised plants again self-fertilised.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+
+Seeds from the foregoing plants, fertilised in the manner just stated,
+were sown on the opposite sides of a small pot (1) and came up crowded.
+The four tallest crossed seedlings, at the time of flowering, averaged 8
+inches in height, whilst the four tallest self-fertilised plants
+averaged only 4 inches. Crossed seeds were sown by themselves in a
+second small pot, and self-fertilised seeds were sown by themselves in a
+third small pot so that there was no competition whatever between these
+two lots. Nevertheless the crossed plants grew from 1 to 2 inches higher
+on an average than the self-fertilised. Both lots looked equally
+vigorous, but the crossed plants flowered earlier and more profusely
+than the self-fertilised. In Pot 1, in which the two lots competed with
+each other, the crossed plants flowered first and produced a large
+number of capsules, whilst the self-fertilised produced only nineteen.
+The contents of twelve capsules from the crossed flowers on the crossed
+plants, and of twelve capsules from self-fertilised flowers on the
+self-fertilised plants, were placed in separate watch-glasses for
+comparison; and the crossed seeds seemed more numerous by half than the
+self-fertilised.
+
+The plants on both sides of Pot 1, after they had seeded, were cut down
+and transplanted into a large pot with plenty of good earth, and on the
+following spring, when they had grown to a height of between 5 and 6
+inches, the two lots were equal, as occurred in a similar experiment in
+the last generation. But after some weeks the crossed plants exceeded
+the self-fertilised ones on the opposite side of the same pot, though
+not nearly to so great a degree as before, when they were subjected to
+very severe competition.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE THIRD GENERATION.
+
+Crossed seeds from the crossed plants, and self-fertilised seeds from
+the self-fertilised plants of the last generation, were sown thickly on
+opposite sides of a small pot, Number 1. The two tallest plants on each
+side were measured after they had flowered, and the two crossed ones
+were 12 and 7 1/2 inches, and the two self-fertilised ones 8 and 5 1/2
+inches in height; that is, in the ratio of 100 to 69. Twenty flowers on
+the crossed plants were again crossed and produced twenty capsules; ten
+of which contained 1.33 grain weight of seeds. Thirty flowers on the
+self-fertilised plants were again self-fertilised and produced
+twenty-six capsules; ten of the best of which (many being very poor)
+contained only .87 grain weight of seeds; that is, in the ratio of 100
+to 65 by weight.
+
+The superiority of the crossed over the self-fertilised plants was
+proved in various ways. Self-fertilised seeds were sown on one side of a
+pot, and two days afterwards crossed seeds on the opposite side. The two
+lots of seedlings were equal until they were above half an inch high;
+but when fully grown the two tallest crossed plants attained a height of
+12 1/2 and 8 3/4 inches, whilst the two tallest self-fertilised plants
+were only 8 and 5 1/2 inches high.
+
+In a third pot, crossed seeds were sown four days after the
+self-fertilised, and the seedlings from the latter had at first, as
+might have been expected, an advantage; but when the two lots were
+between 5 and 6 inches in height, they were equal, and ultimately the
+three tallest crossed plants were 11, 10, and 8 inches, whilst the three
+tallest self-fertilised were 12, 8 1/2, and 7 1/2 inches in height. So
+that there was not much difference between them, the crossed plants
+having an average advantage of only the third of an inch. The plants
+were cut down, and without being disturbed were transplanted into a
+larger pot. Thus the two lots started fair on the following spring, and
+now the crossed plants showed their inherent superiority, for the two
+tallest were 13 inches, whilst the two tallest self-fertilised plants
+were only 11 and 8 1/2 inches in height; or as 100 to 75. The two lots
+were allowed to fertilise themselves spontaneously: the crossed plants
+produced a large number of capsules, whilst the self-fertilised produced
+very few and poor ones. The seeds from eight of the capsules on the
+crossed plants weighed .65 grain, whilst those from eight of the
+capsules on the self-fertilised plants weighed only .22 grain; or as 100
+to 34.
+
+The crossed plants in the above three pots, as in almost all the
+previous experiments, flowered before the self-fertilised. This occurred
+even in the third pot in which the crossed seeds were sown four days
+after the self-fertilised seeds.
+
+Lastly, seeds of both lots were sown on opposite sides of a large pot in
+which a Fuchsia had long been growing, so that the earth was full of
+roots. Both lots grew miserably; but the crossed seedlings had an
+advantage at all times, and ultimately attained to a height of 3 1/2
+inches, whilst the self-fertilised seedlings never exceeded 1 inch. The
+several foregoing experiments prove in a decisive manner the superiority
+in constitutional vigour of the crossed over the self-fertilised plants.
+
+In the three generations now described and taken together, the average
+height of the ten tallest crossed plants was 8.19 inches, and that of
+the ten tallest self-fertilised plants 5.29 inches (the plants having
+been grown in small pots), or as 100 to 65.
+
+In the next or fourth self-fertilised generation, several plants of a
+new and tall variety appeared, which increased in the later
+self-fertilised generations, owing to its great self-fertility, to the
+complete exclusion of the original kinds. The same variety also appeared
+amongst the crossed plants, but as it was not at first regarded with any
+particular attention, I know not how far it was used for raising the
+intercrossed plants; and in the later crossed generations it was rarely
+present. Owing to the appearance of this tall variety, the comparison of
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants of the fifth and succeeding
+generations was rendered unfair, as all the self-fertilised and only a
+few or none of the crossed plants consisted of it. Nevertheless, the
+results of the later experiments are in some respects well worth giving.
+
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FOURTH GENERATION.
+
+Seeds of the two kinds, produced in the usual way from the two sets of
+plants of the third generation, were sown on opposite sides of two pots
+(1 and 2); but the seedlings were not thinned enough and did not grow
+well. Many of the self-fertilised plants, especially in one of the pots,
+consisted of the new and tall variety above referred to, which bore
+large and almost white flowers marked with crimson blotches. I will call
+it the WHITE VARIETY. I believe that it first appeared amongst both the
+crossed and self-fertilised plants of the last generation; but neither
+my gardener nor myself could remember any such variety in the seedlings
+raised from the purchased seed. It must therefore have arisen either
+through ordinary variation, or, judging from its appearance amongst both
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants, more probably through reversion
+to a formerly existing variety.
+
+In Pot 1 the tallest crossed plant was 8 1/2 inches, and the tallest
+self-fertilised 5 inches in height. In Pot 2, the tallest crossed plant
+was 6 1/2 inches, and the tallest self-fertilised plant, which consisted
+of the white variety, 7 inches in height; and this was the first
+instance in my experiments on Mimulus in which the tallest
+self-fertilised plant exceeded the tallest crossed. Nevertheless, the
+two tallest crossed plants taken together were to the two tallest
+self-fertilised plants in height as 100 to 80. As yet the crossed plants
+were superior to the self-fertilised in fertility; for twelve flowers on
+the crossed plants were crossed and yielded ten capsules, the seeds of
+which weighed 1.71 grain. Twenty flowers on the self-fertilised plants
+were self-fertilised, and produced fifteen capsules, all appearing poor;
+and the seeds from ten of them weighed only .68 grain, so that from an
+equal number of capsules the crossed seeds were to the self-fertilised
+in weight as 100 to 40.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FIFTH GENERATION.
+
+Seeds from both lots of the fourth generation, fertilised in the usual
+manner, were sown on opposite sides of three pots. When the seedlings
+flowered, most of the self-fertilised plants were found to consist of
+the tall white variety. Several of the crossed plants in Pot 1 likewise
+belonged to this variety, as did a very few in Pots 2 and 3. The tallest
+crossed plant in Pot 1 was 7 inches, and the tallest self-fertilised
+plant on the opposite side 8 inches; in Pots 2 and 3 the tallest crossed
+were 4 1/2 and 5 1/2, and the tallest self-fertilised 7 and 6 1/2 inches
+in height; so that the average height of the tallest plants in the two
+lots was as 100 for the crossed to 126 for the self-fertilised; and thus
+we have a complete reversal of what occurred in the four previous
+generations. Nevertheless, in all three pots the crossed plants retained
+their habit of flowering before the self-fertilised. The plants were
+unhealthy from being crowded and from the extreme heat of the season,
+and were in consequence more or less sterile; but the crossed plants
+were somewhat less sterile than the self-fertilised plants.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SIXTH GENERATION.
+
+Seeds from plants of the fifth generation crossed and self-fertilised in
+the usual manner were sown on opposite sides of several pots. On the
+self-fertilised side every single plant belonged to the tall white
+variety. On the crossed side some plants belonged to this variety, but
+the greater number approached in character to the old and shorter kinds
+with smaller yellowish flowers blotched with coppery brown. When the
+plants on both sides were from 2 to 3 inches in height they were equal,
+but when fully grown the self-fertilised were decidedly the tallest and
+finest plants, but, from want of time, they were not actually measured.
+In half the pots the first plant which flowered was a self-fertilised
+one, and in the other half a crossed one. And now another remarkable
+change was clearly perceived, namely, that the self-fertilised plants
+had become more self-fertile than the crossed. The pots were all put
+under a net to exclude insects, and the crossed plants produced
+spontaneously only fifty-five capsules, whilst the self-fertilised
+plants produced eighty-one capsules, or as 100 to 147. The seeds from
+nine capsules of both lots were placed in separate watch-glasses for
+comparison, and the self-fertilised appeared rather the more numerous.
+Besides these spontaneously self-fertilised capsules, twenty flowers on
+the crossed plants again crossed yielded sixteen capsules; twenty-five
+flowers on the self-fertilised plants again self-fertilised yielded
+seventeen capsules, and this is a larger proportional number of capsules
+than was produced by the self-fertilised flowers on the self-fertilised
+plants in the previous generations. The contents of ten capsules of both
+these lots were compared in separate watch-glasses, and the seeds from
+the self-fertilised appeared decidedly more numerous than those from the
+crossed plants.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SEVENTH GENERATION.
+
+Crossed and self-fertilised seeds from the crossed and self-fertilised
+plants of the sixth generation were sown in the usual manner on opposite
+sides of three pots, and the seedlings were well and equally thinned.
+Every one of the self-fertilised plants (and many were raised) in this,
+as well as in the eighth and ninth generations, belonged to the tall
+white variety. Their uniformity of character, in comparison with the
+seedlings first raised from the purchased seed, was quite remarkable. On
+the other hand, the crossed plants differed much in the tints of their
+flowers, but not, I think, to so great a degree as those first raised. I
+determined this time to measure the plants on both sides carefully. The
+self-fertilised seedlings came up rather before the crossed, but both
+lots were for a time of equal height. When first measured, the average
+height of the six tallest crossed plants in the three pots was 7.02, and
+that of the six tallest self-fertilised plants 8.97 inches, or as 100 to
+128. When fully grown the same plants were again measured, with the
+result shown in Table 3/18.
+
+TABLE 3/18. Mimulus luteus (Seventh Generation).
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 11 2/8 : 19 1/8.
+Pot 1 : 11 7/8 : 18.
+
+Pot 2 : 12 6/8 : 18 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 11 2/8 : 14 6/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 9 6/8 : 12 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 11 6/8 : 11.
+
+Total : 68.63 : 93.88.
+
+The average height of the six crossed is here 11.43, and that of the six
+self-fertilised 15.64, or as 100 to 137.
+
+As it is now evident that the tall white variety transmitted its
+characters faithfully, and as the self-fertilised plants consisted
+exclusively of this variety, it was manifest that they would always
+exceed in height the crossed plants which belonged chiefly to the
+original shorter varieties. This line of experiment was therefore
+discontinued, and I tried whether intercrossing two self-fertilised
+plants of the sixth generation, growing in distinct pots, would give
+their offspring any advantage over the offspring of flowers on one of
+the same plants fertilised with their own pollen. These latter seedlings
+formed the seventh generation of self-fertilised plants, like those in
+the right hand column in Table 3/18; the crossed plants were the product
+of six previous self-fertilised generations with an intercross in the
+last generation. The seeds were allowed to germinate on sand, and were
+planted in pairs on opposite sides of four pots, all the remaining seeds
+being sown crowded on opposite sides of Pot 5 in Table 3/19; the three
+tallest on each side in this latter pot being alone measured. All the
+plants were twice measured--the first time whilst young, and the average
+height of the crossed plants to that of the self-fertilised was then as
+100 to 122. When fully grown they were again measured, as in Table 3/19.
+
+TABLE 3/19. Mimulus luteus.
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Intercrossed Plants from Self-fertilised Plants of the Sixth
+Generation.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants of the Seventh Generation.
+
+Pot 1 : 12 6/8 : 15 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 10 4/8 : 11 5/8.
+Pot 1 : 10 : 11.
+Pot 1 : 14 5/8 : 11.
+
+Pot 2 : 10 2/8 : 11 3/8.
+Pot 2 : 7 6/8 : 11 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 12 1/8 : 8 5/8.
+Pot 2 : 7 : 14 3/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 13 5/8 : 10 3/8.
+Pot 3 : 12 2/8 : 11 6/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 7 1/8 : 14 6/8.
+Pot 4 : 8 2/8 : 7.
+Pot 4 : 7 2/8 : 8.
+
+Pot 5 : 8 5/8 : 10 2/8
+Pot 5 : 9 : 9 3/8.
+Pot 5 : 8 2/8 : 9 2/8.
+Crowded.
+
+Total : 159.38 : 175.50.
+
+The average height of the sixteen intercrossed plants is here 9.96
+inches, and that of the sixteen self-fertilised plants 10.96, or as 100
+to 110; so that the intercrossed plants, the progenitors of which had
+been self-fertilised for the six previous generations, and had been
+exposed during the whole time to remarkably uniform conditions, were
+somewhat inferior in height to the plants of the seventh self-fertilised
+generation. But as we shall presently see that a similar experiment made
+after two additional generations of self-fertilisation gave a different
+result, I know not how far to trust the present one. In three of the
+five pots in Table 3/19 a self-fertilised plant flowered first, and in
+the other two a crossed plant. These self-fertilised plants were
+remarkably fertile, for twenty flowers fertilised with their own pollen
+produced no less than nineteen very fine capsules!
+
+THE EFFECTS OF A CROSS WITH A DISTINCT STOCK.
+
+Some flowers on the self-fertilised plants in Pot 4 in Table 3/19 were
+fertilised with their own pollen, and plants of the eighth
+self-fertilised generation were thus raised, merely to serve as parents
+in the following experiment. Several flowers on these plants were
+allowed to fertilise themselves spontaneously (insects being of course
+excluded), and the plants raised from these seeds formed the ninth
+self-fertilised generation; they consisted wholly of the tall white
+variety with crimson blotches. Other flowers on the same plants of the
+eighth self-fertilised generation were crossed with pollen taken from
+another plant of the same lot; so that the seedlings thus raised were
+the offspring of eight previous generations of self-fertilisation with
+an intercross in the last generation; these I will call the INTERCROSSED
+PLANTS. Lastly, other flowers on the same plants of the eighth
+self-fertilised generation were crossed with pollen taken from plants
+which had been raised from seed procured from a garden at Chelsea. The
+Chelsea plants bore yellow flowers blotched with red, but differed in no
+other respect. They had been grown out of doors, whilst mine had been
+cultivated in pots in the greenhouse for the last eight generations, and
+in a different kind of soil. The seedlings raised from this cross with a
+wholly different stock may be called the CHELSEA-CROSSED. The three lots
+of seeds thus obtained were allowed to germinate on bare sand; and
+whenever a seed in all three lots, or in only two, germinated at the
+same time, they were planted in pots superficially divided into three or
+two compartments. The remaining seeds, whether or not in a state of
+germination, were thickly sown in three divisions in a large pot, 10, in
+Table 3/20. When the plants had grown to their full height they were
+measured, as shown in Table 3/20; but only the three tallest plants in
+each of the three divisions in Pot 10 were measured.
+
+TABLE 3/20. Mimulus luteus.
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Plants from Self-fertilised Plants of the Eighth Generation
+crossed by Chelsea Plants.
+
+Column 3: Plants from an intercross between the Plants of the Eighth
+Self-fertilised Generation.
+
+Column 4: Self-fertilised Plants of the Ninth Generation from Plants of
+the Eighth Self-fertilised Generation.
+
+Pot 1 : 30 7/8 : 14 : 9 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 28 3/8 : 13 6/8 : 10 5/8.
+Pot 1 : -- : 13 7/8 : 10.
+
+Pot 2 : 20 6/8 : 11 4/8 : 11 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 22 2/8 : 12 : 12 3/8.
+Pot 2 : -- : 9 1/8 : --.
+
+Pot 3 : 23 6/8 : 12 2/8 : 8 5/8.
+Pot 3 : 24 1/8 : -- : 11 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 25 6/8 : -- : 6 7/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 22 5/8 : 9 2/8 : 4.
+Pot 4 : 22 : 8 1/8 : 13 3/8.
+Pot 4 : 17 : -- : 11.
+
+Pot 5 : 22 3/8 : 9 : 4 4/8.
+Pot 5 : 19 5/8 : 11 : 13.
+Pot 5 : 23 4/8 : -- : 13 4/8.
+
+Pot 6 : 28 2/8 : 18 6/8 : 12.
+Pot 6 : 22 : 7 : 16 1/8.
+Pot 6 : -- : 12 4/8 : --.
+
+Pot 7 : 12 4/8 : 15 : --.
+Pot 7 : 24 3/8 : 12 3/8 : --.
+Pot 7 : 20 4/8 : 11 2/8 : --.
+Pot 7 : 26 4/8 : 15 2/8 : --.
+
+Pot 8 : 17 2/8 : 13 3/8 : --.
+Pot 8 : 22 6/8 : 14 5/8 : --.
+Pot 8 : 27 : 14 3/8 : --.
+
+Pot 9 : 22 6/8 : 11 6/8 : --.
+Pot 9 : 6 : 17 : --.
+Pot 9 : 20 2/8 : 14 7/8 : --.
+
+Pot 10 : 18 1/8 : 9 2/8 : 10 3/8.
+Pot 10 : 16 5/8 : 8 2/8 : 8 1/8.
+Pot 10 : 17 4/8 : 10 : 11 2/8.
+Crowded plants.
+
+Total : 605.38 : 329.50 : 198.50.
+
+In this table the average height of the twenty-eight Chelsea-crossed
+plants is 21.62 inches; that of the twenty-seven intercrossed plants
+12.2; and that of the nineteen self-fertilised 10.44. But with respect
+to the latter it will be the fairest plan to strike out two dwarfed ones
+(only 4 inches in height), so as not to exaggerate the inferiority of
+the self-fertilised plants; and this will raise the average height of
+the seventeen remaining self-fertilised plants to 11.2 inches. Therefore
+the Chelsea-crossed are to the intercrossed in height as 100 to 56; the
+Chelsea-crossed to the self-fertilised as 100 to 52; and the
+intercrossed to the self-fertilised as 100 to 92. We thus see how
+immensely superior in height the Chelsea-crossed are to the intercrossed
+and to the self-fertilised plants. They began to show their superiority
+when only one inch high. They were also, when fully grown, much more
+branched with larger leaves and somewhat larger flowers than the plants
+of the other two lots, so that if they had been weighed, the ratio would
+certainly have been much higher than that of 100 to 56 and 52.
+
+The intercrossed plants are here to the self-fertilised in height as 100
+to 92; whereas in the analogous experiment given in Table 3/19 the
+intercrossed plants from the self-fertilised plants of the sixth
+generation were inferior in height to the self-fertilised plants in the
+ratio of 100 to 110. I doubt whether this discordance in the results of
+the two experiments can be explained by the self-fertilised plants in
+the present case having been raised from spontaneously self-fertilised
+seeds, whereas in the former case they were raised from artificially
+self-fertilised seeds; nor by the present plants having been
+self-fertilised during two additional generations, though this is a more
+probable explanation.
+
+With respect to fertility, the twenty-eight Chelsea-crossed plants
+produced 272 capsules; the twenty-seven intercrossed plants produced 24;
+and the seventeen self-fertilised plants 17 capsules. All the plants
+were left uncovered so as to be naturally fertilised, and empty capsules
+were rejected.
+
+Therefore 20 Chelsea-crossed plants would have produced 194.29 capsules.
+
+Therefore 20 Intercrossed plants would have produced 17.77 capsules.
+
+Therefore 20 Self-fertilised plants would have produced 20.00 capsules.
+
+The seeds contained in 8 capsules from the Chelsea-crossed plants
+weighed 1.1 grains.
+
+The seeds contained in 8 capsules from the Intercrossed plants weighed
+0.51 grains.
+
+The seeds contained in 8 capsules from the Self-fertilised plants
+weighed 0.33 grains.
+
+If we combine the number of capsules produced together with the average
+weight of contained seeds, we get the following extraordinary ratios:
+
+Weight of seed produced by the same number of Chelsea-crossed and
+intercrossed plants as 100 to 4.
+
+Weight of seed produced by the same number of Chelsea-crossed and
+self-fertilised plants as 100 to 3.
+
+Weight of seeds produced by the same number of intercrossed and
+self-fertilised plants as 100 to 73.
+
+It is also a remarkable fact that the Chelsea-crossed plants exceeded
+the two other lots in hardiness, as greatly as they did in height,
+luxuriance, and fertility. In the early autumn most of the pots were
+bedded out in the open ground; and this always injures plants which have
+been long kept in a warm greenhouse. All three lots consequently
+suffered greatly, but the Chelsea-crossed plants much less than the
+other two lots. On the 3rd of October the Chelsea-crossed plants began
+to flower again, and continued to do so for some time; whilst not a
+single flower was produced by the plants of the other two lots, the
+stems of which were cut almost down to the ground and seemed half dead.
+Early in December there was a sharp frost, and the stems of
+Chelsea-crossed were now cut down; but on the 23rd of December they
+began to shoot up again from the roots, whilst all the plants of the
+other two lots were quite dead.
+
+Although several of the self-fertilised seeds, from which the plants in
+the right hand column in Table 3/20 were raised, germinated (and were of
+course rejected) before any of those of the other two lots, yet in only
+one of the ten pots did a self-fertilised plant flower before the
+Chelsea-crossed or the intercrossed plants growing in the same pots. The
+plants of these two latter lots flowered at the same time, though the
+Chelsea-crossed grew so much taller and more vigorously than the
+intercrossed.
+
+As already stated, the flowers of the plants originally raised from the
+Chelsea seeds were yellow; and it deserves notice that every one of the
+twenty-eight seedlings raised from the tall white variety fertilised,
+without being castrated, with pollen from the Chelsea plants, produced
+yellow flowers; and this shows how prepotent this colour, which is the
+natural one of the species, is over the white colour.
+
+THE EFFECTS ON THE OFFSPRING OF INTERCROSSING FLOWERS ON THE SAME PLANT,
+INSTEAD OF CROSSING DISTINCT INDIVIDUALS.
+
+In all the foregoing experiments the crossed plants were the product of
+a cross between distinct plants. I now selected a very vigorous plant in
+Table 3/20, raised by fertilising a plant of the eighth self-fertilised
+generation with pollen from the Chelsea stock. Several flowers on this
+plant were crossed with pollen from other flowers on the same plant, and
+several other flowers were fertilised with their own pollen. The seed
+thus produced was allowed to germinate on bare sand; and the seedlings
+were planted in the usual manner on the opposite sides of six pots. All
+the remaining seeds, whether or not in a state of germination, were sown
+thickly in Pot 7; the three tallest plants on each side of this latter
+pot being alone measured. As I was in a hurry to learn the result, some
+of these seeds were sown late in the autumn, but the plants grew so
+irregularly during the winter, that one crossed plant was 28 1/2 inches,
+and two others only 4, or less than 4 inches in height, as may be seen
+in Table 3/21. Under such circumstances, as I have observed in many
+other cases, the result is not in the least trustworthy; nevertheless I
+feel bound to give the measurements.
+
+TABLE 3/21. Mimulus luteus.
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Plants raised from a Cross between different Flowers on the
+same Plant.
+
+Column 3: Plants raised from Flowers fertilised with their own Pollen.
+
+Pot 1 : 17 : 17.
+Pot 1 : 9 : 3 1/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 28 2/8 : 19 1/8.
+Pot 2 : 16 4/8 : 6.
+Pot 2 : 13 5/8 : 2.
+
+Pot 3 : 4 : 15 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 2 2/8 : 10.
+
+Pot 4 : 23 4/8 : 6 2/8.
+Pot 4 : 15 4/8 : 7 1/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 7 : 13 4/8.
+
+Pot 6 : 18 3/8 : 1 4/8.
+Pot 6 : 11 : 2.
+
+Pot 7 : 21 : 15 1/8.
+Pot 7 : 11 6/8 : 11.
+Pot 7 : 12 1/8 : 11 2/8.
+Crowded.
+
+Total : 210.88 : 140.75.
+
+The fifteen crossed plants here average 14.05, and the fifteen
+self-fertilised plants 9.38 in height, or as 100 to 67. But if all the
+plants under ten inches in height are struck out, the ratio of the
+eleven crossed plants to the eight self-fertilised plants is as 100 to
+82.
+
+On the following spring, some remaining seeds of the two lots were
+treated in exactly the same manner; and the measurements of the
+seedlings are given in Table 3/22.
+
+TABLE 3/22. Mimulus luteus.
+
+Heights of Plants in inches:
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Plants raised from a Cross between different Flowers on the
+same Plant.
+
+Column 3: Plants raised from Flowers fertilised with their own Pollen.
+
+Pot 1 : 15 1/8 : 19 1/8.
+Pot 1 : 12 : 20 5/8.
+Pot 1 : 10 1/8 : 12 6/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 16 2/8 : 11 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 13 5/8 : 19 3/8.
+Pot 2 : 20 1/8 : 17 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 18 7/8 : 12 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 15 : 15 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 13 7/8 : 17.
+
+Pot 4 : 19 2/8 : 16 2/8.
+Pot 4 : 19 6/8 : 21 5/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 25 3/8 : 22 5/8.
+
+Pot 6 : 15 : 19 5/8.
+Pot 6 : 20 2/8 : 16 2/8.
+Pot 6 : 27 2/8 : 19 5/8.
+
+Pot 7 : 7 6/8 : 7 6/8.
+Pot 7 : 14 : 8.
+Pot 7 : 13 4/8 : 7.
+
+Pot 8 : 18 2/8 : 20 3/8.
+Pot 8 : 18 6/8 : 17 6/8.
+Pot 8 : 18 3/8 : 15 4/8.
+Pot 8 : 18 3/8 : 15 1/8.
+Crowded.
+
+Total : 370.88 : 353.63.
+
+Here the average height of the twenty-two crossed plants is 16.85, and
+that of the twenty-two self-fertilised plants 16.07; or as 100 to 95.
+But if four of the plants in Pot 7, which are much shorter than any of
+the others, are struck out (and this would be the fairest plan), the
+twenty-one crossed are to the nineteen self-fertilised plants in height
+as 100 to 100.6--that is, are equal. All the plants, except the crowded
+ones in Pot 8, after being measured were cut down, and the eighteen
+crossed plants weighed 10 ounces, whilst the same number of
+self-fertilised plants weighed 10 1/4 ounces, or as 100 to 102.5; but if
+the dwarfed plants in Pot 7 had been excluded, the self-fertilised would
+have exceeded the crossed in weight in a higher ratio. In all the
+previous experiments in which seedlings were raised from a cross between
+distinct plants, and were put into competition with self-fertilised
+plants, the former generally flowered first; but in the present case, in
+seven out of the eight pots a self-fertilised plant flowered before a
+crossed one on the opposite side. Considering all the evidence with
+respect to the plants in Table3/ 22, a cross between two flowers on the
+same plant seems to give no advantage to the offspring thus produced,
+the self-fertilised plants being in weight superior. But this conclusion
+cannot be absolutely trusted, owing to the measurements given in Table
+3/21, though these latter, from the cause already assigned, are very
+much less trustworthy than the present ones.]
+
+SUMMARY OF OBSERVATIONS ON Mimulus luteus.
+
+In the three first generations of crossed and self-fertilised plants,
+the tallest plants alone on each side of the several pots were measured;
+and the average height of the ten crossed to that of the ten
+self-fertilised plants was as 100 to 64. The crossed were also much more
+fertile than the self-fertilised, and so much more vigorous that they
+exceeded them in height, even when sown on the opposite side of the same
+pot after an interval of four days. The same superiority was likewise
+shown in a remarkable manner when both kinds of seeds were sown on the
+opposite sides of a pot with very poor earth full of the roots of
+another plant. In one instance crossed and self-fertilised seedlings,
+grown in rich soil and not put into competition with each other,
+attained to an equal height. When we come to the fourth generation the
+two tallest crossed plants taken together exceeded by only a little the
+two tallest self-fertilised plants, and one of the latter beat its
+crossed opponent,--a circumstance which had not occurred in the previous
+generations. This victorious self-fertilised plant consisted of a new
+white-flowered variety, which grew taller than the old yellowish
+varieties. From the first it seemed to be rather more fertile, when
+self-fertilised, than the old varieties, and in the succeeding
+self-fertilised generations became more and more self-fertile. In the
+sixth generation the self-fertilised plants of this variety compared
+with the crossed plants produced capsules in the proportion of 147 to
+100, both lots being allowed to fertilise themselves spontaneously. In
+the seventh generation twenty flowers on one of these plants
+artificially self-fertilised yielded no less than nineteen very fine
+capsules!
+
+This variety transmitted its characters so faithfully to all the
+succeeding self-fertilised generations, up to the last or ninth, that
+all the many plants which were raised presented a complete uniformity of
+character; thus offering a remarkable contrast with the seedlings raised
+from the purchased seeds. Yet this variety retained to the last a latent
+tendency to produce yellow flowers; for when a plant of the eighth
+self-fertilised generation was crossed with pollen from a
+yellow-flowered plant of the Chelsea stock, every single seedling bore
+yellow flowers. A similar variety, at least in the colour of its
+flowers, also appeared amongst the crossed plants of the third
+generation. No attention was at first paid to it, and I know not how far
+it was at first used either for crossing or self-fertilisation. In the
+fifth generation most of the self-fertilised plants, and in the sixth
+and all the succeeding generations every single plant consisted of this
+variety; and this no doubt was partly due to its great and increasing
+self-fertility. On the other hand, it disappeared from amongst the
+crossed plants in the later generations; and this was probably due to
+the continued intercrossing of the several plants. From the tallness of
+this variety, the self-fertilised plants exceeded the crossed plants in
+height in all the generations from the fifth to the seventh inclusive;
+and no doubt would have done so in the later generations, had they been
+grown in competition with one another. In the fifth generation the
+crossed plants were in height to the self-fertilised, as 100 to 126; in
+the sixth, as 100 to 147; and in the seventh generation, as 100 to 137.
+This excess of height may be attributed not only to this variety
+naturally growing taller than the other plants, but to its possessing a
+peculiar constitution, so that it did not suffer from continued
+self-fertilisation.
+
+This variety presents a strikingly analogous case to that of the plant
+called the Hero, which appeared in the sixth self-fertilised generation
+of Ipomoea. If the seeds produced by Hero had been as greatly in excess
+of those produced by the other plants, as was the case with Mimulus, and
+if all the seeds had been mingled together, the offspring of Hero would
+have increased to the entire exclusion of the ordinary plants in the
+later self-fertilised generations, and from naturally growing taller
+would have exceeded the crossed plants in height in each succeeding
+generation.
+
+Some of the self-fertilised plants of the sixth generation were
+intercrossed, as were some in the eighth generation; and the seedlings
+from these crosses were grown in competition with self-fertilised plants
+of the two corresponding generations. In the first trial the
+intercrossed plants were less fertile than the self-fertilised, and less
+tall in the ratio of 100 to 110. In the second trial, the intercrossed
+plants were more fertile than the self-fertilised in the ratio of 100 to
+73, and taller in the ratio of 100 to 92. Notwithstanding that the
+self-fertilised plants in the second trial were the product of two
+additional generations of self-fertilisation, I cannot understand this
+discordance in the results of the two analogous experiments.
+
+The most important of all the experiments on Mimulus are those in which
+flowers on plants of the eighth self-fertilised generation were again
+self-fertilised; other flowers on distinct plants of the same lot were
+intercrossed; and others were crossed with a new stock of plants from
+Chelsea. The Chelsea-crossed seedlings were to the intercrossed in
+height as 100 to 56, and in fertility as 100 to 4; and they were to the
+self-fertilised plants, in height as 100 to 52, and in fertility as 100
+to 3. These Chelsea-crossed plants were also much more hardy than the
+plants of the other two lots; so that altogether the gain from the cross
+with a fresh stock was wonderfully great.
+
+Lastly, seedlings raised from a cross between flowers on the same plant
+were not superior to those from flowers fertilised with their own
+pollen; but this result cannot be absolutely trusted, owing to some
+previous observations, which, however, were made under very unfavourable
+circumstances.
+
+[Digitalis purpurea.
+
+The flowers of the common Foxglove are proterandrous; that is, the
+pollen is mature and mostly shed before the stigma of the same flower is
+ready for fertilisation. This is effected by the larger humble-bees,
+which, whilst in search of nectar, carry pollen from flower to flower.
+The two upper and longer stamens shed their pollen before the two lower
+and shorter ones. The meaning of this fact probably is, as Dr. Ogle
+remarks, that the anthers of the longer stamens stand near to the
+stigma, so that they would be the most likely to fertilise it (3/3.
+'Popular Science Review' January 1870 page 50.); and as it is an
+advantage to avoid self-fertilisation, they shed their pollen first,
+thus lessening the chance. There is, however, but little danger of
+self-fertilisation until the bifid stigma opens; for Hildebrand found
+that pollen placed on the stigma before it had opened produced no
+effect. (3/4. 'Geschlechter-Vertheilung bei den Pflanzen' 1867 page 20.)
+The anthers, which are large, stand at first transversely with respect
+to the tubular corolla, and if they were to dehisce in this position
+they would, as Dr. Ogle also remarks, smear with pollen the whole back
+and sides of an entering humble-bee in a useless manner; but the anthers
+twist round and place themselves longitudinally before they dehisce. The
+lower and inner side of the mouth of the corolla is thickly clothed with
+hairs, and these collect so much of the fallen pollen that I have seen
+the under surface of a humble-bee thickly dusted with it; but this can
+never be applied to the stigma, as the bees in retreating do not turn
+their under surfaces upwards. I was therefore puzzled whether these
+hairs were of any use; but Mr. Belt has, I think, explained their use:
+the smaller kinds of bees are not fitted to fertilise the flowers, and
+if they were allowed to enter easily they would steal much nectar, and
+fewer large bees would haunt the flowers. Humble-bees can crawl into the
+dependent flowers with the greatest ease, using the "hairs as footholds
+while sucking the honey; but the smaller bees are impeded by them, and
+when, having at length struggled through them, they reach the slippery
+precipice above, they are completely baffled." Mr. Belt says that he
+watched many flowers during a whole season in North Wales, and "only
+once saw a small bee reach the nectary, though many were seen trying in
+vain to do so." (3/5. 'The Naturalist in Nicaragua' 1874 page 132. But
+it appears from H. Muller 'Die Befruchtung der Blumen' 1873 page 285,
+that small insects sometimes succeed in entering the flowers.)
+
+I covered a plant growing in its native soil in North Wales with a net,
+and fertilised six flowers each with its own pollen, and six others with
+pollen from a distinct plant growing within the distance of a few feet.
+The covered plant was occasionally shaken with violence, so as to
+imitate the effects of a gale of wind, and thus to facilitate as far as
+possible self-fertilisation. It bore ninety-two flowers (besides the
+dozen artificially fertilised), and of these only twenty-four produced
+capsules; whereas almost all the flowers on the surrounding uncovered
+plants were fruitful. Of the twenty-four spontaneously self-fertilised
+capsules, only two contained their full complement of seed; six
+contained a moderate supply; and the remaining sixteen extremely few
+seeds. A little pollen adhering to the anthers after they had dehisced,
+and accidentally falling on the stigma when mature, must have been the
+means by which the above twenty-four flowers were partially
+self-fertilised; for the margins of the corolla in withering do not curl
+inwards, nor do the flowers in dropping off turn round on their axes, so
+as to bring the pollen-covered hairs, with which the lower surface is
+clothed, into contact with the stigma--by either of which means
+self-fertilisation might be effected.
+
+Seeds from the above crossed and self-fertilised capsules, after
+germinating on bare sand, were planted in pairs on the opposite sides of
+five moderately-sized pots, which were kept in the greenhouse. The
+plants after a time appeared starved, and were therefore, without being
+disturbed, turned out of their pots, and planted in the open ground in
+two close parallel rows. They were thus subjected to tolerably severe
+competition with one another; but not nearly so severe as if they had
+been left in the pots. At the time when they were turned out, their
+leaves were between 5 and 8 inches in length, and the longest leaf on
+the finest plant on each side of each pot was measured, with the result
+that the leaves of the crossed plants exceeded, on an average, those of
+the self-fertilised plants by .4 of an inch.
+
+In the following summer the tallest flower-stem on each plant, when
+fully grown, was measured. There were seventeen crossed plants; but one
+did not produce a flower-stem. There were also, originally, seventeen
+self-fertilised plants, but these had such poor constitutions that no
+less than nine died in the course of the winter and spring, leaving only
+eight to be measured, as in Table 3/23.
+
+TABLE 3/23. Digitalis purpurea.
+
+The tallest Flower-stem on each Plant measured in inches: 0 means that
+the Plant died before a Flower-stem was produced.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 53 6/8 : 27 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 57 4/8 : 55 6/8.
+Pot 1 : 57 6/8 : 0.
+Pot 1 : 65 : 0.
+
+Pot 2 : 34 4/8 : 39.
+Pot 2 : 52 4/8 : 32.
+Pot 2 : 63 6/8 : 21.
+
+Pot 3 : 57 4/8 : 53 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 53 4/8 : 0.
+Pot 3 : 50 6/8 : 0.
+Pot 3 : 37 2/8 : 0.
+
+Pot 4 : 64 4/8 : 34 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 37 4/8 : 23 6/8.
+Pot 4 : -- : 0.
+
+Pot 5 : 53 : 0.
+Pot 5 : 47 6/8 : 0.
+Pot 5 : 34 6/8 : 0.
+
+Total : 821.25 : 287.00.
+
+The average height of the flower-stems of the sixteen crossed plants is
+here 51.33 inches; and that of the eight self-fertilised plants, 35.87;
+or as 100 to 70. But this difference in height does not give at all a
+fair idea of the vast superiority of the crossed plants. These latter
+produced altogether sixty-four flower-stems, each plant producing, on an
+average, exactly four flower-stems, whereas the eight self-fertilised
+plants produced only fifteen flower-stems, each producing an average
+only of 1.87 stems, and these had a less luxuriant appearance. We may
+put the result in another way: the number of flower-stems on the crossed
+plants was to those on an equal number of self-fertilised plants as 100
+to 48.
+
+Three crossed seeds in a state of germination were also planted in three
+separate pots; and three self-fertilised seeds in the same state in
+three other pots. These plants were therefore at first exposed to no
+competition with one another, and when turned out of their pots into the
+open ground they were planted at a moderate distance apart, so that they
+were exposed to much less severe competition than in the last case. The
+longest leaves on the three crossed plants, when turned out, exceeded
+those on the self-fertilised plants by a mere trifle, namely, on an
+average by .17 of an inch. When fully grown the three crossed plants
+produced twenty-six flower-stems; the two tallest of which on each plant
+were on an average 54.04 inches in height. The three self-fertilised
+plants produced twenty-three flower-stems, the two tallest of which on
+each plant had an average height of 46.18 inches. So that the difference
+between these two lots, which hardly competed together, is much less
+than in the last case when there was moderately severe competition,
+namely, as 100 to 85, instead of as 100 to 70.
+
+THE EFFECTS ON THE OFFSPRING OF INTERCROSSING DIFFERENT FLOWERS ON THE
+SAME PLANT, INSTEAD OF CROSSING DISTINCT INDIVIDUALS.
+
+A fine plant growing in my garden (one of the foregoing seedlings) was
+covered with a net, and six flowers were crossed with pollen from
+another flower on the same plant, and six others were fertilised with
+their own pollen. All produced good capsules. The seeds from each were
+placed in separate watch-glasses, and no difference could be perceived
+by the eye between the two lots of seeds; and when they were weighed
+there was no difference of any significance, as the seeds from the
+self-fertilised capsules weighed 7.65 grains, whilst those from the
+crossed capsules weighed 7.7 grains. Therefore the sterility of the
+present species, when insects are excluded, is not due to the impotence
+of pollen on the stigma of the same flower. Both lots of seeds and
+seedlings were treated in exactly the same manner as in Table 3/23,
+excepting that after the pairs of germinating seeds had been planted on
+the opposite sides of eight pots, all the remaining seeds were thickly
+sown on the opposite sides of Pots 9 and 10 in Table 3/24. The young
+plants during the following spring were turned out of their pots,
+without being disturbed, and planted in the open ground in two rows, not
+very close together, so that they were subjected to only moderately
+severe competition with one another. Very differently to what occurred
+in the first experiment, when the plants were subjected to somewhat
+severe mutual competition, an equal number on each side either died or
+did not produce flower-stems. The tallest flower-stems on the surviving
+plants were measured, as shown in Table 3/24.
+
+TABLE 3/24. Digitalis purpurea.
+
+The tallest Flower-stem on each Plant measured in inches: 0 signifies
+that the Plant died, or did not produce a Flower-stem.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Plants raised from a Cross between different Flowers on the
+same Plant.
+
+Column 3: Plants raised from Flowers fertilised with their own Pollen.
+
+Pot 1 : 49 4/8 : 45 5/8.
+Pot 1 : 46 7/8 : 52.
+Pot 1 : 43 6/8 : 0.
+
+Pot 2 : 38 4/8 : 54 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 47 4/8 : 47 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 0 : 32 5/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 54 7/8 : 46 5/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 32 1/8 : 41 3/8.
+Pot 4 : 0 : 29 7/8.
+Pot 4 : 43 7/8 : 37 1/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 46 6/8 : 42 1/8.
+Pot 5 : 40 4/8 : 42 1/8.
+Pot 5 : 43 : 0.
+
+Pot 6 : 48 2/8 : 47 7/8.
+Pot 6 : 46 2/8 : 48 3/8.
+
+Pot 7 : 48 5/8 : 25.
+Pot 7 : 42 : 40 5/8.
+
+Pot 8 : 46 7/8 : 39 1/8.
+
+Pot 9 : 49 : 30 3/8.
+Pot 9 : 50 3/8 : 15.
+Pot 9 : 46 3/8 : 36 7/8.
+Pot 9 : 47 6/8 : 44 1/8.
+Pot 9 : 0 : 31 6/8.
+Crowded Plants.
+
+Pot 10 : 46 4/8 : 47 7/8.
+Pot 10 : 35 2/8 : 0.
+Pot 10 : 24 5/8 : 34 7/8.
+Pot 10 : 41 4/8 : 40 7/8.
+Pot 10 : 17 3/8 : 41 1/8.
+Crowded Plants.
+
+Total : 1078.00 : 995.38.
+
+The average height of the flower-stems on the twenty-five crossed plants
+in all the pots taken together is 43.12 inches, and that of the
+twenty-five self-fertilised plants 39.82, or as 100 to 92. In order to
+test this result, the plants planted in pairs in Pots 1 and 8 were
+considered by themselves, and the average height of the sixteen crossed
+plants is here 44.9, and that of the sixteen self-fertilised plants
+42.03, or as 100 to 94. Again, the plants raised from the thickly sown
+seed in Pots 9 and 10, which were subjected to very severe mutual
+competition, were taken by themselves, and the average height of the
+nine crossed plants is 39.86, and that of the nine self-fertilised
+plants 35.88, or as 100 to 90. The plants in these two latter pots (9
+and 10), after being measured, were cut down close to the ground and
+weighed: the nine crossed plants weighed 57.66 ounces, and the nine
+self-fertilised plants 45.25 ounces, or as 100 to 78. On the whole we
+may conclude, especially from the evidence of weight, that seedlings
+from a cross between flowers on the same plant have a decided, though
+not great, advantage over those from flowers fertilised with their own
+pollen, more especially in the case of the plants subjected to severe
+mutual competition. But the advantage is much less than that exhibited
+by the crossed offspring of distinct plants, for these exceeded the
+self-fertilised plants in height as 100 to 70, and in the number of
+flower-stems as 100 to 48. Digitalis thus differs from Ipomoea, and
+almost certainly from Mimulus, as with these two species a cross between
+flowers on the same plant did no good.
+
+CALCEOLARIA.
+
+A BUSHY GREENHOUSE VARIETY, WITH YELLOW FLOWERS BLOTCHED WITH PURPLE.
+
+The flowers in this genus are constructed so as to favour or almost
+ensure cross-fertilisation (3/6. Hildebrand as quoted by H. Muller 'Die
+Befruchtung der Blumen' 1873 page 277.); and Mr. Anderson remarks that
+extreme care is necessary to exclude insects in order to preserve any
+kind true. (3/7. 'Gardeners' Chronicle' 1853 page 534.) He adds the
+interesting statement, that when the corolla is cut quite away, insects,
+as far as he has seen, never discover or visit the flowers. This plant
+is, however, self-fertile if insects are excluded. So few experiments
+were made by me, that they are hardly worth giving. Crossed and
+self-fertilised seeds were sown on opposite sides of a pot, and after a
+time the crossed seedlings slightly exceeded the self-fertilised in
+height. When a little further grown, the longest leaves on the former
+were very nearly 3 inches in length, whilst those on the self-fertilised
+plants were only 2 inches. Owing to an accident, and to the pot being
+too small, only one plant on each side grew up and flowered; the crossed
+plant was 19 1/2 inches in height, and the self-fertilised one 15
+inches; or as 100 to 77.
+
+Linaria vulgaris.
+
+It has been mentioned in the introductory chapter that two large beds of
+this plant were raised by me many years ago from crossed and
+self-fertilised seeds, and that there was a conspicuous difference in
+height and general appearance between the two lots. The trial was
+afterwards repeated with more care; but as this was one of the first
+plants experimented on, my usual method was not followed. Seeds were
+taken from wild plants growing in this neighbourhood and sown in poor
+soil in my garden. Five plants were covered with a net, the others being
+left exposed to the bees, which incessantly visit the flowers of this
+species, and which, according to H. Muller, are the exclusive
+fertilisers. This excellent observer remarks that, as the stigma lies
+between the anthers and is mature at the same time with them,
+self-fertilisation is possible. (3/8. 'Die Befruchtung' etc. page 279.)
+But so few seeds are produced by protected plants, that the pollen and
+stigma of the same flower seem to have little power of mutual
+interaction. The exposed plants bore numerous capsules forming solid
+spikes. Five of these capsules were examined and appeared to contain an
+equal number of seeds; and these being counted in one capsule, were
+found to be 166. The five protected plants produced altogether only
+twenty-five capsules, of which five were much finer than all the others,
+and these contained an average of 23.6 seeds, with a maximum in one
+capsule of fifty-five. So that the number of seeds in the capsules on
+the exposed plants to the average number in the finest capsules on the
+protected plants was as 100 to 14.
+
+Some of the spontaneously self-fertilised seeds from under the net, and
+some seeds from the uncovered plants naturally fertilised and almost
+certainly intercrossed by the bees, were sown separately in two large
+pots of the same size; so that the two lots of seedlings were not
+subjected to any mutual competition. Three of the crossed plants when in
+full flower were measured, but no care was taken to select the tallest
+plants; their heights were 7 4/8, 7 2/8, and 6 4/8 inches; averaging
+7.08 in height. The three tallest of all the self-fertilised plants were
+then carefully selected, and their heights were 6 3/8, 5 5/8, and 5 2/8,
+averaging 5.75 in height. So that the naturally crossed plants were to
+the spontaneously self-fertilised plants in height, at least as much as
+100 to 81.
+
+Verbascum thapsus.
+
+The flowers of this plant are frequented by various insects, chiefly by
+bees, for the sake of the pollen. Hermann Muller, however, has shown
+('Die Befruchtung' etc. page 277) that V. nigrum secretes minute drops
+of nectar. The arrangement of the reproductive organs, though not at all
+complex, favours cross-fertilisation; and even distinct species are
+often crossed, for a greater number of naturally produced hybrids have
+been observed in this genus than in almost any other. (3/9. I have given
+a striking case of a large number of such hybrids between Verbascum
+thapsus and lychnitis found growing wild: 'Journal of Linnean Society
+Botany' volume 10 page 451.) Nevertheless the present species is
+perfectly self-fertile, if insects are excluded; for a plant protected
+by a net was as thickly loaded with fine capsules as the surrounding
+uncovered plants. Verbascum lychnitis is rather less self-fertile, for
+some protected plants did not yield quite so many capsules as the
+adjoining uncovered plants.
+
+Plants of Verbascum thapsus had been raised for a distinct purpose from
+self-fertilised seeds; and some flowers on these plants were again
+self-fertilised, yielding seed of the second self-fertilised generation;
+and other flowers were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant. The
+seeds thus produced were sown on the opposite sides of four large pots.
+They germinated, however, so irregularly (the crossed seedlings
+generally coming up first) that I was able to save only six pairs of
+equal age. These when in full flower were measured, as in Table 3/25.
+
+TABLE 3/25. Verbascum thapsus.
+
+Heights of Plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants of the Second Generation.
+
+Pot 1 : 76 : 53 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 54 : 66.
+
+Pot 3 : 62 : 75.
+Pot 3 : 60 5/8 : 30 4/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 73 : 62.
+Pot 4 : 66 4/8 : 52.
+
+Total : 392.13 : 339.00.
+
+We here see that two of the self-fertilised plants exceed in height
+their crossed opponents. Nevertheless the average height of the six
+crossed plants is 65.34 inches, and that of the six self-fertilised
+plants 56.5 inches; or as 100 to 86.
+
+Vandellia nummularifolia.
+
+Seeds were sent to me by Mr. J. Scott from Calcutta of this small Indian
+weed, which bears perfect and cleistogene flowers. (3/10. The convenient
+term of CLEISTOGENE was proposed by Kuhn in an article on the present
+genus in 'Bot. Zeitung' 1867 page 65.) The latter are extremely small,
+imperfectly developed, and never expand, yet yield plenty of seeds. The
+perfect and open flowers are also small, of a white colour with purple
+marks; they generally produce seed, although the contrary has been
+asserted; and they do so even if protected from insects. They have a
+rather complicated structure, and appear to be adapted for
+cross-fertilisation, but were not carefully examined by me. They are not
+easy to fertilise artificially, and it is possible that some of the
+flowers which I thought that I had succeeded in crossing were afterwards
+spontaneously self-fertilised under the net. Sixteen capsules from the
+crossed perfect flowers contained on an average ninety-three seeds (with
+a maximum in one capsule of 137), and thirteen capsules from the
+self-fertilised perfect flowers contained sixty-two seeds (with a
+maximum in one capsule of 135); or as 100 to 67. But I suspect that this
+considerable excess was accidental, as on one occasion nine crossed
+capsules were compared with seven self-fertilised capsules (both
+included in the above number), and they contained almost exactly the
+same average number of seed. I may add that fifteen capsules from
+self-fertilised cleistogene flowers contained on an average sixty-four
+seeds, with a maximum in one of eighty-seven.
+
+Crossed and self-fertilised seeds from the perfect flowers, and other
+seeds from the self-fertilised cleistogene flowers, were sown in five
+pots, each divided superficially into three compartments. The seedlings
+were thinned at an early age, so that twenty plants were left in each of
+the three divisions. The crossed plants when in full flower averaged 4.3
+inches, and the self-fertilised plants from the perfect flowers 4.27
+inches in height; or as 100 to 99. The self-fertilised plants from the
+cleistogene flowers averaged 4.06 inches in height; so that the crossed
+were in height to these latter plants as 100 to 94.
+
+I determined to compare again the growth of plants raised from crossed
+and self-fertilised perfect flowers, and obtained two fresh lots of
+seeds. These were sown on opposite sides of five pots, but they were not
+sufficiently thinned, so that they grew rather crowded. When fully
+grown, all those above 2 inches in height were selected, all below this
+standard being rejected; the former consisted of forty-seven crossed and
+forty-one self-fertilised plants; thus a greater number of the crossed
+than of the self-fertilised plants grew to a height of above 2 inches.
+Of the crossed plants, the twenty-four tallest were on an average 3.6
+inches in height; whilst the twenty-four tallest self-fertilised plants
+were 3.38 inches in average height; or as 100 to 94. All these plants
+were then cut down close to the ground, and the forty-seven crossed
+plants weighed 1090.3 grains, and the forty-one self-fertilised plants
+weighed 887.4 grains. Therefore an equal number of crossed and
+self-fertilised would have been to each other in weight as 100 to 97.
+From these several facts we may conclude that the crossed plants had
+some real, though very slight, advantage in height and weight over the
+self-fertilised plants, when grown in competition with one another.
+
+The crossed plants were, however, inferior in fertility to the
+self-fertilised. Six of the finest plants were selected out of the
+forty-seven crossed plants, and six out of the forty-one self-fertilised
+plants; and the former produced 598 capsules, whilst the latter or
+self-fertilised plants produced 752 capsules. All these capsules were
+the product of cleistogene flowers, for the plants did not bear during
+the whole of this season any perfect flowers. The seeds were counted in
+ten cleistogene capsules produced by crossed plants, and their average
+number was 46.4 per capsule; whilst the number in ten cleistogene
+capsules produced by the self-fertilised plants was 49.4; or as 100 to
+106.
+
+3. GESNERIACEAE.--Gesneria pendulina.
+
+In Gesneria the several parts of the flower are arranged on nearly the
+same plan as in Digitalis, and most or all of the species are
+dichogamous. (3/11. Dr. Ogle 'Popular Science Review' January 1870 page
+51.) Plants were raised from seed sent me by Fritz Muller from South
+Brazil. Seven flowers were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant,
+and produced seven capsules containing by weight 3.01 grains of seeds.
+Seven flowers on the same plants were fertilised with their own pollen,
+and their seven capsules contained exactly the same weight of seeds.
+Germinating seeds were planted on opposite sides of four pots, and when
+fully grown measured to the tips of their leaves.
+
+TABLE 3/26. Gesneria pendulina.
+
+Heights of Plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 42 2/8 : 39.
+Pot 1 : 24 4/8 : 27 3/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 33 : 30 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 27 : 19 2/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 33 4/8 : 31 7/8.
+Pot 3 : 29 4/8 : 28 6/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 30 6/8 : 29 6/8.
+Pot 4 : 36 : 26 3/8.
+
+Total : 256.50 : 233.13.
+
+The average height of the eight crossed plants is 32.06 inches, and that
+of the eight self-fertilised plants 29.14; or as 100 to 90.
+
+4. LABIATAE.--Salvia coccinea. (3/12. The admirable mechanical
+adaptations in this genus for favouring or ensuring cross-fertilisation,
+have been fully described by Sprengel, Hildebrand, Delpino, H. Muller,
+Ogle, and others, in their several works.)
+
+This species, unlike most of the others in the same genus, yields a good
+many seeds when insects are excluded. I gathered ninety-eight capsules
+produced by flowers spontaneously self-fertilised under a net, and they
+contained on an average 1.45 seeds, whilst flowers artificially
+fertilised with their own pollen, in which case the stigma will have
+received plenty of pollen, yielded on an average 3.3 seeds, or more than
+twice as many. Twenty flowers were crossed with pollen from a distinct
+plant, and twenty-six were self-fertilised. There was no great
+difference in the proportional number of flowers which produced capsules
+by these two processes, or in the number of the contained seeds, or in
+the weight of an equal number of seeds.
+
+Seeds of both kinds were sown rather thickly on opposite sides of three
+pots. When the seedlings were about 3 inches in height, the crossed
+showed a slight advantage over the self-fertilised. When two-thirds
+grown, the two tallest plants on each side of each pot were measured;
+the crossed averaged 16.37 inches, and the self-fertilised 11.75 in
+height; or as 100 to 71. When the plants were fully grown and had done
+flowering, the two tallest plants on each side were again measured, with
+the results shown in Table 3/27.
+
+TABLE 3/27. Salvia coccinea.
+
+Heights of Plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 32 6/8 : 25.
+Pot 1 : 20 : 18 6/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 32 3/8 : 20 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 24 4/8 : 19 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 29 4/8 : 25.
+Pot 3 : 28 : 18.
+
+Total : 167.13 : 127.00.
+
+It may be here seen that each of the six tallest crossed plants exceeds
+in height its self-fertilised opponent; the former averaged 27.85
+inches, whilst the six tallest self-fertilised plants averaged 21.16
+inches; or as 100 to 76. In all three pots the first plant which
+flowered was a crossed one. All the crossed plants together produced 409
+flowers, whilst all the self-fertilised together produced only 232
+flowers; or as 100 to 57. So that the crossed plants in this respect
+were far more productive than the self-fertilised.
+
+Origanum vulgare.
+
+This plant exists, according to H. Muller, under two forms; one
+hermaphrodite and strongly proterandrous, so that it is almost certain
+to be fertilised by pollen from another flower; the other form is
+exclusively female, has a smaller corolla, and must of course be
+fertilised by pollen from a distinct plant in order to yield any seeds.
+The plants on which I experimented were hermaphrodites; they had been
+cultivated for a long period as a pot-herb in my kitchen garden, and
+were, like so many long-cultivated plants, extremely sterile. As I felt
+doubtful about the specific name I sent specimens to Kew, and was
+assured that the species was Origanum vulgare. My plants formed one
+great clump, and had evidently spread from a single root by stolons. In
+a strict sense, therefore, they all belonged to the same individual. My
+object in experimenting on them was, firstly, to ascertain whether
+crossing flowers borne by plants having distinct roots, but all derived
+asexually from the same individual, would be in any respect more
+advantageous than self-fertilisation; and, secondly, to raise for future
+trial seedlings which would constitute really distinct individuals.
+Several plants in the above clump were covered by a net, and about two
+dozen seeds (many of which, however, were small and withered) were
+obtained from the flowers thus spontaneously self-fertilised. The
+remainder of the plants were left uncovered and were incessantly visited
+by bees, so that they were doubtless crossed by them. These exposed
+plants yielded rather more and finer seed (but still very few) than did
+the covered plants. The two lots of seeds thus obtained were sown on
+opposite sides of two pots; the seedlings were carefully observed from
+their first growth to maturity, but they did not differ at any period in
+height or in vigour, the importance of which latter observation we shall
+presently see. When fully grown, the tallest crossed plant in one pot
+was a very little taller than the tallest self-fertilised plant on the
+opposite side, and in the other pot exactly the reverse occurred. So
+that the two lots were in fact equal; and a cross of this kind did no
+more good than crossing two flowers on the same plant of Ipomoea or
+Mimulus.
+
+The plants were turned out of the two pots without being disturbed and
+planted in the open ground, in order that they might grow more
+vigorously. In the following summer all the self-fertilised and some of
+the quasi-crossed plants were covered by a net. Many flowers on the
+latter were crossed by me with pollen from a distinct plant, and others
+were left to be crossed by the bees. These quasi-crossed plants produced
+rather more seed than did the original ones in the great clump when left
+to the action of the bees. Many flowers on the self-fertilised plants
+were artificially self-fertilised, and others were allowed to fertilise
+themselves spontaneously under the net, but they yielded altogether very
+few seeds. These two lots of seeds--the product of a cross between
+distinct seedlings, instead of as in the last case between plants
+multiplied by stolons, and the product of self-fertilised flowers--were
+allowed to germinate on bare sand, and several equal pairs were planted
+on opposite sides of two LARGE pots. At a very early age the crossed
+plants showed some superiority over the self-fertilised, which was ever
+afterwards retained. When the plants were fully grown, the two tallest
+crossed and the two tallest self-fertilised plants in each pot were
+measured, as shown in Table 3/28. I regret that from want of time I did
+not measure all the pairs; but the tallest on each side seemed fairly to
+represent the average difference between the two lots.
+
+TABLE 3/28. Origanum vulgare.
+
+Heights of Plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants (two tallest in each pot).
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants (two tallest in each pot).
+
+Pot 1 : 26 : 24.
+Pot 1 : 21 : 21.
+
+Pot 2 : 17 : 12.
+Pot 2 : 16 : 11 4/8.
+
+Total : 80.0 : 68.5.
+
+The average height of the crossed plants is here 20 inches, and that of
+the self-fertilised 17.12; or as 100 to 86. But this excess of height by
+no means gives a fair idea of the vast superiority in vigour of the
+crossed over the self-fertilised plants. The crossed flowered first and
+produced thirty flower-stems, whilst the self-fertilised produced only
+fifteen, or half the number. The pots were then bedded out, and the
+roots probably came out of the holes at the bottom and thus aided their
+growth. Early in the following summer the superiority of the crossed
+plants, owing to their increase by stolons, over the self-fertilised
+plants was truly wonderful. In Pot 1, and it should be remembered that
+very large pots had been used, the oval clump of crossed plants was 10
+by 4 1/2 inches across, with the tallest stem, as yet young, 5 1/2
+inches in height; whilst the clump of self-fertilised plants, on the
+opposite side of the same pot, was only 3 1/2 by 2 1/2 inches across,
+with the tallest young stem 4 inches in height. In Pot 2, the clump of
+crossed plants was 18 by 9 inches across, with the tallest young stem 8
+1/2 inches in height; whilst the clump of self-fertilised plants on the
+opposite side of the same pot was 12 by 4 1/2 inches across, with the
+tallest young stem 6 inches in height. The crossed plants during this
+season, as during the last, flowered first. Both the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants being left freely exposed to the visits of bees,
+manifestly produced much more seed than their grand-parents,--the plants
+of the original clump still growing close by in the same garden, and
+equally left to the action of the bees.
+
+5. ACANTHACEAE.--Thunbergia alata.
+
+It appears from Hildebrand's description ('Botanische Zeitung' 1867 page
+285) that the conspicuous flowers of this plant are adapted for
+cross-fertilisation. Seedlings were twice raised from purchased seed;
+but during the early summer, when first experimented on, they were
+extremely sterile, many of the anthers containing hardly any pollen.
+Nevertheless, during the autumn these same plants spontaneously produced
+a good many seeds. Twenty-six flowers during the two years were crossed
+with pollen from a distinct plant, but they yielded only eleven
+capsules; and these contained very few seeds! Twenty-eight flowers were
+fertilised with pollen from the same flower, and these yielded only ten
+capsules, which, however, contained rather more seed than the crossed
+capsules. Eight pairs of germinating seeds were planted on opposite
+sides of five pots; and exactly half the crossed and half the
+self-fertilised plants exceeded their opponents in height. Two of the
+self-fertilised plants died young, before they were measured, and their
+crossed opponents were thrown away. The six remaining pairs of these
+grew very unequally, some, both of the crossed and self-fertilised
+plants, being more than twice as tall as the others. The average height
+of the crossed plants was 60 inches, and that of the self-fertilised
+plants 65 inches, or as 100 to 108. A cross, therefore, between distinct
+individuals here appears to do no good; but this result deduced from so
+few plants in a very sterile condition and growing very unequally,
+obviously cannot be trusted.]
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+CRUCIFERAE, PAPAVERACEAE, RESEDACEAE, ETC.
+
+Brassica oleracea, crossed and self-fertilised plants.
+Great effect of a cross with a fresh stock on the weight of the
+offspring.
+Iberis umbellata.
+Papaver vagum.
+Eschscholtzia californica, seedlings from a cross with a fresh stock not
+more vigorous, but more fertile than the self-fertilised seedlings.
+Reseda lutea and odorata, many individuals sterile with their own pollen.
+Viola tricolor, wonderful effects of a cross.
+Adonis aestivalis.
+Delphinium consolida.
+Viscaria oculata, crossed plants hardly taller, but more fertile than
+the self-fertilised.
+Dianthus caryophyllus, crossed and self-fertilised plants compared for
+four generations.
+Great effects of a cross with a fresh stock.
+Uniform colour of the flowers on the self-fertilised plants.
+Hibiscus africanus.
+
+[6. CRUCIFERAE.--Brassica oleracea.
+
+VAR. CATTELL'S EARLY BARNES CABBAGE.
+
+The flowers of the common cabbage are adapted, as shown by H. Muller,
+for cross-fertilisation, and should this fail, for self-fertilisation.
+(4/1. 'Die Befruchtung' etc. page 139.) It is well known that the
+varieties are crossed so largely by insects, that it is impossible to
+raise pure kinds in the same garden, if more than one kind is in flower
+at the same time. Cabbages, in one respect, were not well fitted for my
+experiments, as, after they had formed heads, they were often difficult
+to measure. The flower-stems also differ much in height; and a poor
+plant will sometimes throw up a higher stem than that of a fine plant.
+In the later experiments, the fully-grown plants were cut down and
+weighed, and then the immense advantage from a cross became manifest.
+
+A single plant of the above variety was covered with a net just before
+flowering, and was crossed with pollen from another plant of the same
+variety growing close by; and the seven capsules thus produced contained
+on an average 16.3 seeds, with a maximum of twenty in one capsule. Some
+flowers were artificially self-fertilised, but their capsules did not
+contain so many seeds as those from flowers spontaneously
+self-fertilised under the net, of which a considerable number were
+produced. Fourteen of these latter capsules contained on an average 4.1
+seeds, with a maximum in one of ten seeds; so that the seeds in the
+crossed capsules were in number to those in the self-fertilised capsules
+as 100 to 25. The self-fertilised seeds, fifty-eight of which weighed
+3.88 grains, were, however, a little finer than those from the crossed
+capsules, fifty-eight of which weighed 3.76 grains. When few seeds are
+produced, these seem often to be better nourished and to be heavier than
+when many are produced.
+
+The two lots of seeds in an equal state of germination were planted,
+some on opposite sides of a single pot, and some in the open ground. The
+young crossed plants in the pot at first exceeded by a little in height
+the self-fertilised; then equalled them; were then beaten; and lastly
+were again victorious. The plants, without being disturbed, were turned
+out of the pot, and planted in the open ground; and after growing for
+some time, the crossed plants, which were all of nearly the same height,
+exceeded the self-fertilised ones by 2 inches. When they flowered, the
+flower-stems of the tallest crossed plant exceeded that of the tallest
+self-fertilised plant by 6 inches. The other seedlings which were
+planted in the open ground stood separate, so that they did not compete
+with one another; nevertheless the crossed plants certainly grew to a
+rather greater height than the self-fertilised; but no measurements were
+made. The crossed plants which had been raised in the pot, and those
+planted in the open ground, all flowered a little before the
+self-fertilised plants.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+
+Some flowers on the crossed plants of the last generation were again
+crossed with pollen from another crossed plant, and produced fine
+capsules. The flowers on the self-fertilised plants of the last
+generation were allowed to fertilise themselves spontaneously under a
+net, and they produced some remarkably fine capsules. The two lots of
+seeds thus produced germinated on sand, and eight pairs were planted on
+opposite sides of four pots. These plants were measured to the tips of
+their leaves on the 20th of October of the same year, and the eight
+crossed plants averaged in height 8.4 inches, whilst the self-fertilised
+averaged 8.53 inches, so that the crossed were a little inferior in
+height, as 100 to 101.5. By the 5th of June of the following year these
+plants had grown much bulkier, and had begun to form heads. The crossed
+had now acquired a marked superiority in general appearance, and
+averaged 8.02 inches in height, whilst the self-fertilised averaged 7.31
+inches; or as 100 to 91. The plants were then turned out of their pots
+and planted undisturbed in the open ground. By the 5th of August their
+heads were fully formed, but several had grown so crooked that their
+heights could hardly be measured with accuracy. The crossed plants,
+however, were on the whole considerably taller than the self-fertilised.
+In the following year they flowered; the crossed plants flowering before
+the self-fertilised in three of the pots, and at the same time in Pot 2.
+The flower-stems were now measured, as shown in Table 4/29.
+
+TABLE 3/29. Brassica oleracea.
+
+Measured in inches to tops of flower-stems: 0 signifies that a
+Flower-stem was not formed.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 49 2/8 : 44.
+Pot 1 : 39 4/8 : 41.
+
+Pot 2 : 37 4/8 : 38.
+Pot 2 : 33 4/8 : 35 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 47 : 51 1/8.
+Pot 3 : 40 : 41 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 42 : 46 4/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 43 6/8 : 20 2/8.
+Pot 4 : 37 2/8 : 33 3/8.
+Pot 4 : 0 : 0.
+
+Total : 369.75 : 351.00.
+
+The nine flower-stems on the crossed plants here average 41.08 inches,
+and the nine on the self-fertilised plants 39 inches in height, or as
+100 to 95. But this small difference, which, moreover, depended almost
+wholly on one of the self-fertilised plants being only 20 inches high,
+does not in the least show the vast superiority of the crossed over the
+self-fertilised plants. Both lots, including the two plants in Pot 4,
+which did not flower, were now cut down close to the ground and weighed,
+but those in Pot 2 were excluded, for they had been accidentally injured
+by a fall during transplantation, and one was almost killed. The eight
+crossed plants weighed 219 ounces, whilst the eight self-fertilised
+plants weighed only 82 ounces, or as 100 to 37; so that the superiority
+of the former over the latter in weight was great.
+
+THE EFFECTS OF A CROSS WITH A FRESH STOCK.
+
+Some flowers on a crossed plant of the last or second generation were
+fertilised, without being castrated, by pollen taken from a plant of the
+same variety, but not related to my plants, and brought from a nursery
+garden (whence my seeds originally came) having a different soil and
+aspect. The flowers on the self-fertilised plants of the last or second
+generation (Table 4/29) were allowed to fertilise themselves
+spontaneously under a net, and yielded plenty of seeds. These latter and
+the crossed seeds, after germinating on sand, were planted in pairs on
+the opposite sides of six large pots, which were kept at first in a cool
+greenhouse. Early in January their heights were measured to the tips of
+their leaves. The thirteen crossed plants averaged 13.16 inches in
+height, and the twelve (for one had died) self-fertilised plants
+averaged 13.7 inches, or as 100 to 104; so that the self-fertilised
+plants exceeded by a little the crossed plants.
+
+TABLE 3/30. Brassica oleracea.
+
+Weights in ounces of plants after they had formed heads.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants from Pollen of fresh Stock.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants of the Third Generation.
+
+Pot 1 : 130 : 18 2/4.
+
+Pot 2 : 74 : 34 3/4.
+
+Pot 3 : 121 : 17 2/4.
+
+Pot 4 : 127 2/4 : 14.
+
+Pot 5 : 90 : 11 2/4.
+
+Pot 6 : 106 2/4 : 46.
+
+Total : 649.00 : 142.25.
+
+Early in the spring the plants were gradually hardened, and turned out
+of their pots into the open ground without being disturbed. By the end
+of August the greater number had formed fine heads, but several grew
+extremely crooked, from having been drawn up to the light whilst in the
+greenhouse. As it was scarcely possible to measure their heights, the
+finest plant on each side of each pot was cut down close to the ground
+and weighed. In Table 4/30 we have the result.
+
+The six finest crossed plants average 108.16 ounces, whilst the six
+finest self-fertilised plants average only 23.7 ounces, or as 100 to 22.
+This difference shows in the clearest manner the enormous benefit which
+these plants derived from a cross with another plant belonging to the
+same sub-variety, but to a fresh stock, and grown during at least the
+three previous generations under somewhat different conditions.
+
+THE OFFSPRING FROM A CUT-LEAVED, CURLED, AND VARIEGATED WHITE-GREEN
+CABBAGE CROSSED WITH A CUT-LEAVED, CURLED, AND VARIEGATED CRIMSON-GREEN
+CABBAGE, COMPARED WITH THE SELF-FERTILISED OFFSPRING FROM THE TWO
+VARIETIES.
+
+These trials were made, not for the sake of comparing the growth of the
+crossed and self-fertilised seedlings, but because I had seen it stated
+that these varieties would not naturally intercross when growing
+uncovered and near one another. This statement proved quite erroneous;
+but the white-green variety was in some degree sterile in my garden,
+producing little pollen and few seeds. It was therefore no wonder that
+seedlings raised from the self-fertilised flowers of this variety were
+greatly exceeded in height by seedlings from a cross between it and the
+more vigorous crimson-green variety; and nothing more need be said about
+this experiment.
+
+The seedlings from the reciprocal cross, that is, from the crimson-green
+variety fertilised with pollen from the white-green variety, offer a
+somewhat more curious case. A few of these crossed seedlings reverted to
+a pure green variety with their leaves less cut and curled, so that they
+were altogether in a much more natural state, and these plants grew more
+vigorously and taller than any of the others. Now it is a strange fact
+that a much larger number of the self-fertilised seedlings from the
+crimson-green variety than of the crossed seedlings thus reverted; and
+as a consequence the self-fertilised seedlings grew taller by 2 1/2
+inches on an average than the crossed seedlings, with which they were
+put into competition. At first, however, the crossed seedlings exceeded
+the self-fertilised by an average of a quarter of an inch. We thus see
+that reversion to a more natural condition acted more powerfully in
+favouring the ultimate growth of these plants than did a cross; but it
+should be remembered that the cross was with a semi-sterile variety
+having a feeble constitution.
+
+Iberis umbellata.
+
+VAR. KERMESIANA.
+
+This variety produced plenty of spontaneously self-fertilised seed under
+a net. Other plants in pots in the greenhouse were left uncovered, and
+as I saw small flies visiting the flowers, it seemed probable that they
+would be intercrossed. Consequently seeds supposed to have been thus
+crossed and spontaneously self-fertilised seeds were sown on opposite
+sides of a pot. The self-fertilised seedlings grew from the first
+quicker than the supposed crossed seedlings, and when both lots were in
+full flower the former were from 5 to 6 inches higher than the crossed!
+I record in my notes that the self-fertilised seeds from which these
+self-fertilised plants were raised were not so well ripened as the
+crossed; and this may possibly have caused the great difference in their
+growth, in a somewhat analogous manner as occurred with the
+self-fertilised plants of the eighth generation of Ipomoea raised from
+unhealthy parents. It is a curious circumstance, that two other lots of
+the above seeds were sown in pure sand mixed with burnt earth, and
+therefore without any organic matter; and here the supposed crossed
+seedlings grew to double the height of the self-fertilised, before both
+lots died, as necessarily occurred at an early period. We shall
+hereafter meet with another case apparently analogous to this of Iberis
+in the third generation of Petunia.
+
+The above self-fertilised plants were allowed to fertilise themselves
+again under a net, yielding self-fertilised plants of the second
+generation, and the supposed crossed plants were crossed by pollen of a
+distinct plant; but from want of time this was done in a careless
+manner, namely, by smearing one head of expanded flowers over another. I
+should have thought that this would have succeeded, and perhaps it did
+so; but the fact of 108 of the self-fertilised seeds weighing 4.87
+grains, whilst the same number of the supposed crossed seeds weighed
+only 3.57 grains, does not look like it. Five seedlings from each lot of
+seeds were raised, and the self-fertilised plants, when fully grown,
+exceeded in average height by a trifle (namely .4 of an inch) the five
+probably crossed plants. I have thought it right to give this case and
+the last, because had the supposed crossed plants proved superior to the
+self-fertilised in height, I should have assumed without doubt that the
+former had really been crossed. As it is, I do not know what to
+conclude.
+
+Being much surprised at the two foregoing trials, I determined to make
+another, in which there should be no doubt about the crossing. I
+therefore fertilised with great care (but as usual without castration)
+twenty-four flowers on the supposed crossed plants of the last
+generation with pollen from distinct plants, and thus obtained
+twenty-one capsules. The self-fertilised plants of the last generation
+were allowed to fertilise themselves again under a net, and the
+seedlings reared from these seeds formed the third self-fertilised
+generation. Both lots of seeds, after germinating on bare sand, were
+planted in pairs on the opposite sides of two pots. All the remaining
+seeds were sown crowded on opposite sides of a third pot; but as all the
+self-fertilised seedlings in this latter pot died before they grew to
+any considerable height, they were not measured. The plants in Pots 1
+and 2 were measured when between 7 and 8 inches in height, and the
+crossed exceeded the self-fertilised in average height by 1.57 inches.
+When fully grown they were again measured to the summits of their
+flower-heads, with the following result:--
+
+TABLE 4/31. Iberis umbellata.
+
+Heights of plants to the summits of their flower-heads, in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants of the Third Generation.
+
+Pot 1 : 18 : 19.
+Pot 1 : 21 : 21.
+Pot 1 : 18 2/8 : 19 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 19 : 16 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 18 4/8 : 7 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 17 6/8 : 14 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 21 3/8 : 16 4/8.
+
+Total : 133.88 : 114.75.
+
+The average height of the seven crossed plants is here 19.12 inches, and
+that of the seven self-fertilised plants 16.39, or as 100 to 86. But as
+the plants on the self-fertilised side grew very unequally, this ratio
+cannot be fully trusted, and is probably too high. In both pots a
+crossed plant flowered before any one of the self-fertilised. These
+plants were left uncovered in the greenhouse; but from being too much
+crowded they were not very productive. The seeds from all seven plants
+of both lots were counted; the crossed produced 206, and the
+self-fertilised 154; or as 100 to 75.
+
+CROSS BY A FRESH STOCK.
+
+From the doubts caused by the two first trials, in which it was not
+known with certainty that the plants had been crossed; and from the
+crossed plants in the last experiment having been put into competition
+with plants self-fertilised for three generations, which moreover grew
+very unequally, I resolved to repeat the trial on a larger scale, and in
+a rather different manner. I obtained seeds of the same crimson variety
+of Iberis umbellata from another nursery garden, and raised plants from
+them. Some of these plants were allowed to fertilise themselves
+spontaneously under a net; others were crossed by pollen taken from
+plants raised from seed sent me by Dr. Durando from Algiers, where the
+parent-plants had been cultivated for some generations. These latter
+plants differed in having pale pink instead of crimson flowers, but in
+no other respect. That the cross had been effective (though the flowers
+on the crimson mother-plant had NOT been castrated) was well shown when
+the thirty crossed seedlings flowered, for twenty-four of them produced
+pale pink flowers, exactly like those of their father; the six others
+having crimson flowers exactly like those of their mother and like those
+of all the self-fertilised seedlings. This case offers a good instance
+of a result which not rarely follows from crossing varieties having
+differently coloured flowers; namely, that the colours do not blend, but
+resemble perfectly those either of the father or mother plant. The seeds
+of both lots, after germinating on sand, were planted on opposite sides
+of eight pots. When fully grown, the plants were measured to the summits
+of the flower-heads, as shown in Table 4/32.
+
+TABLE 4/32. Iberis umbellata.
+
+Height of Plants to the summits of the flower-heads, measured in inches:
+0 signifies that the Plant died.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Plants from a Cross with a fresh Stock.
+
+Column 3: Plants from Spontaneously Self-fertilised Seeds.
+
+Pot 1 : 18 6/8 : 17 3/8.
+Pot 1 : 17 5/8 : 16 7/8.
+Pot 1 : 17 6/8 : 13 1/8.
+Pot 1 : 20 1/8 : 15 3/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 20 2/8 : 0.
+Pot 2 : 15 7/8 : 16 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 17 : 15 2/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 19 2/8 : 13 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 18 1/8 : 14 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 15 2/8 : 13 4/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 17 1/8 : 16 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 18 7/8 : 14 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 17 5/8 : 16.
+Pot 4 : 15 6/8 : 15 3/8.
+Pot 4 : 14 4/8 : 14 7/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 18 1/8 : 16 4/8.
+Pot 5 : 14 7/8 : 16 2/8.
+Pot 5 : 16 2/8 : 14 2/8.
+Pot 5 : 15 5/8 : 14 2/8.
+Pot 5 : 12 4/8 : 16 1/8.
+
+Pot 6 : 18 6/8 : 16 1/8.
+Pot 6 : 18 6/8 : 15.
+Pot 6 : 17 3/8 : 15 2/8.
+
+Pot 7 : 18 : 16 3/8.
+Pot 7 : 16 4/8 : 14 4/8.
+Pot 7 : 18 2/8 : 13 5/8.
+
+Pot 8 : 20 6/8 : 15 6/8.
+Pot 8 : 17 7/8 : 16 3/8.
+Pot 8 : 13 5/8 : 20 2/8.
+Pot 8 : 19 2/8 : 15 6/8.
+
+Total : 520.38 : 449.88.
+
+The average height of the thirty crossed plants is here 17.34, and that
+of the twenty-nine self-fertilised plants (one having died) 15.51, or as
+100 to 89. I am surprised that the difference did not prove somewhat
+greater, considering that in the last experiment it was as 100 to 86;
+but this latter ratio, as before explained, was probably too great. It
+should, however, be observed that in the last experiment (Table 4/31),
+the crossed plants competed with plants of the third self-fertilised
+generation; whilst in the present case, plants derived from a cross with
+a fresh stock competed with self-fertilised plants of the first
+generation.
+
+The crossed plants in the present case, as in the last, were more
+fertile than the self-fertilised, both lots being left uncovered in the
+greenhouse. The thirty crossed plants produced 103 seed-bearing
+flowers-heads, as well as some heads which yielded no seeds; whereas the
+twenty-nine self-fertilised plants produced only 81 seed-bearing heads;
+therefore thirty such plants would have produced 83.7 heads. We thus get
+the ratio of 100 to 81, for the number of seed-bearing flower-heads
+produced by the crossed and self-fertilised plants. Moreover, a number
+of seed-bearing heads from the crossed plants, compared with the same
+number from the self-fertilised, yielded seeds by weight, in the ratio
+of 100 to 92. Combining these two elements, namely, the number of
+seed-bearing heads and the weight of seeds in each head, the
+productiveness of the crossed to the self-fertilised plants was as 100
+to 75.
+
+The crossed and self-fertilised seeds, which remained after the above
+pairs had been planted, (some in a state of germination and some not
+so), were sown early in the year out of doors in two rows. Many of the
+self-fertilised seedlings suffered greatly, and a much larger number of
+them perished than of the crossed. In the autumn the surviving
+self-fertilised plants were plainly less well-grown than the crossed
+plants.
+
+7. PAPAVERACEAE.--Papaver vagum.
+
+A SUB-SPECIES OF Papaver dubium, FROM THE SOUTH OF FRANCE.
+
+The poppy does not secrete nectar, but the flowers are highly
+conspicuous and are visited by many pollen-collecting bees, flies and
+beetles. The anthers shed their pollen very early, and in the case of
+Papaver rhoeas, it falls on the circumference of the radiating stigmas,
+so that this species must often be self-fertilised; but with Papaver
+dubium the same result does not follow (according to H. Muller 'Die
+Befruchtung' page 128), owing to the shortness of the stamens, unless
+the flower happens to stand inclined. The present species, therefore,
+does not seem so well fitted for self-fertilisation as most of the
+others. Nevertheless Papaver vagum produced plenty of capsules in my
+garden when insects were excluded, but only late in the season. I may
+here add that Papaver somniferum produces an abundance of spontaneously
+self-fertilised capsules, as Professor H. Hoffmann likewise found to be
+the case. (4/2. 'Zur Speciesfrage' 1875 page 53.) Some species of
+Papaver cross freely when growing in the same garden, as I have known to
+be the case with Papaver bracteatum and orientale.
+
+Plants of Papaver vagum were raised from seeds sent me from Antibes
+through the kindness of Dr. Bornet. Some little time after the flowers
+had expanded, several were fertilised with their own pollen, and others
+(not castrated) with pollen from a distinct individual; but I have
+reason to believe, from observations subsequently made, that these
+flowers had been already fertilised by their own pollen, as this process
+seems to take place soon after their expansion. (4/3. Mr. J. Scott found
+'Report on the Experimental Culture of the Opium Poppy' Calcutta 1874
+page 47, in the case of Papaver somniferum, that if he cut away the
+stigmatic surface before the flower had expanded, no seeds were
+produced; but if this was done "on the second day, or even a few hours
+after the expansion of the flower on the first day, a partial
+fertilisation had already been effected, and a few good seeds were
+almost invariably produced." This proves at how early a period
+fertilisation takes place.) I raised, however, a few seedlings of both
+lots, and the self-fertilised rather exceeded the crossed plants in
+height.
+
+Early in the following year I acted differently, and fertilised seven
+flowers, very soon after their expansion, with pollen from another
+plant, and obtained six capsules. From counting the seeds in a
+medium-sized one, I estimated that the average number in each was at
+least 120. Four out of twelve capsules, spontaneously self-fertilised at
+the same time, were found to contain no good seeds; and the remaining
+eight contained on an average 6.6 seeds per capsule. But it should be
+observed that later in the season the same plants produced under a net
+plenty of very fine spontaneously self-fertilised capsules.
+
+The above two lots of seeds, after germinating on sand, were planted in
+pairs on opposite sides of five pots. The two lots of seedlings, when
+half an inch in height, and again when 6 inches high, were measured to
+the tips of their leaves, but presented no difference. When fully grown,
+the flower-stalks were measured to the summits of the seed capsules,
+with the following result:--
+
+TABLE 4/33. Papaver vagum.
+
+Heights of flower-stalks to the summits of the seed capsules measured in
+inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 24 2/8 : 21.
+Pot 1 : 30 : 26 5/8.
+Pot 1 : 18 4/8 : 16.
+
+Pot 2 : 14 4/8 : 15 3/8.
+Pot 2 : 22 : 20 1/8.
+Pot 2 : 19 5/8 : 14 1/8.
+Pot 2 : 21 5/8 : 16 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 20 6/8 : 19 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 20 2/8 : 13 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 20 6/8 : 18.
+
+Pot 4 : 25 3/8 : 23 2/8.
+Pot 4 : 24 2/8 : 23.
+
+Pot 5 : 20 : 18 3/8.
+Pot 5 : 27 7/8 : 27.
+Pot 5 : 19 : 21 2/8.
+
+Total : 328.75 : 293.13.
+
+The fifteen crossed plants here average 21.91 inches, and the fifteen
+self-fertilised plants 19.54 inches in height, or as 100 to 89. These
+plants did not differ in fertility, as far as could be judged by the
+number of capsules produced, for there were seventy-five on the crossed
+side and seventy-four on the self-fertilised side.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica.
+
+This plant is remarkable from the crossed seedlings not exceeding in
+height or vigour the self-fertilised. On the other hand, a cross greatly
+increases the productiveness of the flowers on the parent-plant, and is
+indeed sometimes necessary in order that they should produce any seed;
+moreover, plants thus derived are themselves much more fertile than
+those raised from self-fertilised flowers; so that the whole advantage
+of a cross is confined to the reproductive system. It will be necessary
+for me to give this singular case in considerable detail.
+
+Twelve flowers on some plants in my flower-garden were fertilised with
+pollen from distinct plants, and produced twelve capsules; but one of
+these contained no good seed. The seeds of the eleven good capsules
+weighed 17.4 grains. Eighteen flowers on the same plants were fertilised
+with their own pollen and produced twelve good capsules, which contained
+13.61 grains weight of seed. Therefore an equal number of crossed and
+self-fertilised capsules would have yielded seed by weight as 100 to 71.
+(4/4. Professor Hildebrand experimented on plants in Germany on a larger
+scale than I did, and found them much more self-fertile. Eighteen
+capsules, produced by cross-fertilisation, contained on an average
+eighty-five seeds, whilst fourteen capsules from self-fertilised flowers
+contained on an average only nine seeds; that is, as 100 to 11: 'Jahrb.
+fur Wissen Botanik.' B. 7 page 467.) If we take into account of the fact
+that a much greater proportion of flowers produced capsules when crossed
+than when self-fertilised, the relative fertility of the crossed to the
+self-fertilised flowers was as 100 to 52. Nevertheless these plants,
+whilst still protected by the net, spontaneously produced a considerable
+number of self-fertilised capsules.
+
+The seeds of the two lots after germinating on sand were planted in
+pairs on the opposite sides of four large pots. At first there was no
+difference in their growth, but ultimately the crossed seedlings
+exceeded the self-fertilised considerably in height, as shown in Table
+4/34. But I believe from the cases which follow that this result was
+accidental, owing to only a few plants having been measured, and to one
+of the self-fertilised plants having grown only to a height of 15
+inches. The plants had been kept in the greenhouse, and from being drawn
+up to the light had to be tied to sticks in this and the following
+trials. They were measured to the summits of their flower-stems.
+
+TABLE 4/34. Eschscholtzia californica.
+
+Heights of Plants to the summits of their flower-stems measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 33 4/8 : 25.
+
+Pot 2 : 34 2/8 : 35.
+
+Pot 3 : 29 : 27 2/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 22 : 15.
+
+Total : 118.75 : 102.25.
+
+The four crossed plants here average 29.68 inches, and the four
+self-fertilised 25.56 in height; or as 100 to 86. The remaining seeds
+were sown in a large pot in which a Cineraria had long been growing; and
+in this case again the two crossed plants on the one side greatly
+exceeded in height the two self-fertilised plants on the opposite side.
+The plants in the above four pots from having been kept in the
+greenhouse did not produce on this or any other similar occasion many
+capsules; but the flowers on the crossed plants when again crossed were
+much more productive than the flowers on the self-fertilised plants when
+again self-fertilised. These plants after seeding were cut down and kept
+in the greenhouse; and in the following year, when grown again, their
+relative heights were reversed, as the self-fertilised plants in three
+out of the four pots were now taller than and flowered before the
+crossed plants.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+
+The fact just given with respect to the growth of the cut-down plants
+made me doubtful about my first trial, so I determined to make another
+on a larger scale with crossed and self-fertilised seedlings raised from
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants of the last generation. Eleven
+pairs were raised and grown in competition in the usual manner; and now
+the result was different, for the two lots were nearly equal during
+their whole growth. It would therefore be superfluous to give a table of
+their heights. When fully grown and measured, the crossed averaged
+32.47, and the self-fertilised 32.81 inches in height; or as 100 to 101.
+There was no great difference in the number of flowers and capsules
+produced by the two lots when both were left freely exposed to the
+visits of insects.
+
+PLANTS RAISED FROM BRAZILIAN SEED.
+
+Fritz Muller sent me from South Brazil seeds of plants which were there
+absolutely sterile when fertilised with pollen from the same plant, but
+were perfectly fertile when fertilised with pollen from any other plant.
+The plants raised by me in England from these seeds were examined by
+Professor Asa Gray, and pronounced to belong to E. Californica, with
+which they were identical in general appearance. Two of these plants
+were covered by a net, and were found not to be so completely
+self-sterile as in Brazil. But I shall recur to this subject in another
+part of this work. Here it will suffice to state that eight flowers on
+these two plants, fertilised with pollen from another plant under the
+net, produced eight fine capsules, each containing on an average about
+eighty seeds. Eight flowers on these same plants, fertilised with their
+own pollen, produced seven capsules, which contained on an average only
+twelve seeds, with a maximum in one of sixteen seeds. Therefore the
+cross-fertilised capsules, compared with the self-fertilised, yielded
+seeds in the ratio of about 100 to 15. These plants of Brazilian
+parentage differed also in a marked manner from the English plants in
+producing extremely few spontaneously self-fertilised capsules under a
+net.
+
+Crossed and self-fertilised seeds from the above plants, after
+germinating on bare sand, were planted in pairs on the opposite sides of
+five large pots. The seedlings thus raised were the grandchildren of the
+plants which grew in Brazil; the parents having been grown in England.
+As the grandparents in Brazil absolutely require cross-fertilisation in
+order to yield any seeds, I expected that self-fertilisation would have
+proved very injurious to these seedlings, and that the crossed ones
+would have been greatly superior in height and vigour to those raised
+from self-fertilised flowers. But the result showed that my anticipation
+was erroneous; for as in the last experiment with plants of the English
+stock, so in the present one, the self-fertilised plants exceeded the
+crossed by a little in height. It will be sufficient to state that the
+fourteen crossed plants averaged 44.64, and the fourteen self-fertilised
+45.12 inches in height; or as 100 to 101.
+
+THE EFFECTS OF A CROSS WITH A FRESH STOCK.
+
+I now tried a different experiment. Eight flowers on the self-fertilised
+plants of the last experiment (i.e., grandchildren of the plants which
+grew in Brazil) were again fertilised with pollen from the same plant,
+and produced five capsules, containing on an average 27.4 seeds, with a
+maximum in one of forty-two seeds. The seedlings raised from these seeds
+formed the second SELF-FERTILISED generation of the Brazilian stock.
+
+Eight flowers on one of the crossed plants of the last experiment were
+crossed with pollen from another grandchild, and produced five capsules.
+These contained on an average 31.6 seeds, with a maximum in one of
+forty-nine seeds. The seedlings raised from these seeds may be called
+the INTERCROSSED.
+
+Lastly, eight other flowers on the crossed plants of the last experiment
+were fertilised with pollen from a plant of the English stock, growing
+in my garden, and which must have been exposed during many previous
+generations to very different conditions from those to which the
+Brazilian progenitors of the mother-plant had been subjected. These
+eight flowers produced only four capsules, containing on an average 63.2
+seeds, with a maximum in one of ninety. The plants raised from these
+seeds may be called the ENGLISH-CROSSED. As far as the above averages
+can be trusted from so few capsules, the English-crossed capsules
+contained twice as many seeds as the intercrossed, and rather more than
+twice as many as the self-fertilised capsules. The plants which yielded
+these capsules were grown in pots in the greenhouse, so that their
+absolute productiveness must not be compared with that of plants growing
+out of doors.
+
+The above three lots of seeds, namely, the self-fertilised,
+intercrossed, and English-crossed, were planted in an equal state of
+germination (having been as usual sown on bare sand) in nine large pots,
+each divided into three parts by superficial partitions. Many of the
+self-fertilised seeds germinated before those of the two crossed lots,
+and these were of course rejected. The seedlings thus raised are the
+great-grandchildren of the plants which grew in Brazil. When they were
+from 2 to 4 inches in height, the three lots were equal. They were
+measured when four-fifths grown, and again when fully grown, and as
+their relative heights were almost exactly the same at these two ages, I
+will give only the last measurements. The average height of the nineteen
+English-crossed plants was 45.92 inches; that of the eighteen
+intercrossed plants (for one died), 43.38; and that of the nineteen
+self-fertilised plants, 50.3 inches. So that we have the following
+ratios in height:--
+
+The English-crossed to the self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 109.
+
+The English-crossed to the intercrossed plants, as 100 to 94.
+
+The intercrossed to the self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 116.
+
+After the seed-capsules had been gathered, all these plants were cut
+down close to the ground and weighed. The nineteen English crossed
+plants weighed 18.25 ounces; the intercrossed plants (with their weight
+calculated as if there had been nineteen) weighed 18.2 ounces; and the
+nineteen self-fertilised plants, 21.5 ounces. We have therefore for the
+weights of the three lots of plants the following ratios:--
+
+The English-crossed to the self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 118.
+
+The English-crossed to the intercrossed plants, as 100 to 100.
+
+The intercrossed to the self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 118.
+
+We thus see that in weight, as in height, the self-fertilised plants had
+a decided advantage over the English-crossed and intercrossed plants.
+
+The remaining seeds of the three kinds, whether or not in a state of
+germination, were sown in three long parallel rows in the open ground;
+and here again the self-fertilised seedlings exceeded in height by
+between 2 and 3 inches the seedlings in the two other rows, which were
+of nearly equal heights. The three rows were left unprotected throughout
+the winter, and all the plants were killed, with the exception of two of
+the self-fertilised; so that as far as this little bit of evidence goes,
+some of the self-fertilised plants were more hardy than any of the
+crossed plants of either lot.
+
+We thus see that the self-fertilised plants which were grown in the nine
+pots were superior in height (as 116 to 100), and in weight (as 118 to
+100), and apparently in hardiness, to the intercrossed plants derived
+from a cross between the grandchildren of the Brazilian stock. The
+superiority is here much more strongly marked than in the second trial
+with the plants of the English stock, in which the self-fertilised were
+to the crossed in height as 101 to 100. It is a far more remarkable
+fact--if we bear in mind the effects of crossing plants with pollen from
+a fresh stock in the cases of Ipomoea, Mimulus, Brassica, and
+Iberis--that the self-fertilised plants exceeded in height (as 109 to
+100), and in weight (as 118 to 100), the offspring of the Brazilian
+stock crossed by the English stock; the two stocks having been long
+subjected to widely different conditions.
+
+If we now turn to the fertility of the three lots of plants we find a
+very different result. I may premise that in five out of the nine pots
+the first plant which flowered was one of the English-crossed; in four
+of the pots it was a self-fertilised plant; and in not one did an
+intercrossed plant flower first; so that these latter plants were beaten
+in this respect, as in so many other ways. The three closely adjoining
+rows of plants growing in the open ground flowered profusely, and the
+flowers were incessantly visited by bees, and certainly thus
+intercrossed. The manner in which several plants in the previous
+experiments continued to be almost sterile as long as they were covered
+by a net, but set a multitude of capsules immediately that they were
+uncovered, proves how effectually the bees carry pollen from plant to
+plant. My gardener gathered, at three successive times, an equal number
+of ripe capsules from the plants of the three lots, until he had
+collected forty-five from each lot. It is not possible to judge from
+external appearance whether or not a capsule contains any good seeds; so
+that I opened all the capsules. Of the forty-five from the
+English-crossed plants, four were empty; of those from the intercrossed,
+five were empty; and of those from the self-fertilised, nine were empty.
+The seeds were counted in twenty-one capsules taken by chance out of
+each lot, and the average number of seeds in the capsules from the
+English-crossed plants was 67; from the intercrossed, 56; and from the
+self-fertilised, 48.52. It therefore follows that:--
+
+The forty-five capsules (the four empty ones included) from the
+English-crossed plants contained 2747 seeds.
+
+The forty-five capsules (the five empty ones included) from the
+intercrossed plants contained 2240 seeds.
+
+The forty-five capsules (the nine empty ones included) from the
+self-fertilised plants contained 1746.7 seeds.
+
+The reader should remember that these capsules are the product of
+cross-fertilisation, effected by the bees; and that the difference in
+the number of the contained seeds must depend on the constitution of the
+plants;--that is, on whether they were derived from a cross with a
+distinct stock, or from a cross between plants of the same stock, or
+from self-fertilisation. From the above facts we obtain the following
+ratios:--
+
+Number of seeds contained in an equal number of naturally fertilised
+capsules produced:--
+
+By the English-crossed and self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 63.
+
+By the English-crossed and intercrossed plants, as 100 to 81.
+
+By the intercrossed and self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 78.
+
+But to have ascertained the productiveness of the three lots of plants,
+it would have been necessary to know how many capsules were produced by
+the same number of plants. The three long rows, however, were not of
+quite equal lengths, and the plants were much crowded, so that it would
+have been extremely difficult to have ascertained how many capsules were
+produced by them, even if I had been willing to undertake so laborious a
+task as to collect and count all the capsules. But this was feasible
+with the plants grown in pots in the greenhouse; and although these were
+much less fertile than those growing out of doors, their relative
+fertility appeared, after carefully observing them, to be the same. The
+nineteen plants of the English-crossed stock in the pots produced
+altogether 240 capsules; the intercrossed plants (calculated as
+nineteen) produced 137.22 capsules; and the nineteen self-fertilised
+plants, 152 capsules. Now, knowing the number of seeds contained in
+forty-five capsules of each lot, it is easy to calculate the relative
+numbers of seeds produced by an equal number of the plants of the three
+lots.
+
+Number of seeds produced by an equal number of naturally-fertilised
+plants:--
+
+Plants of English-crossed and self-fertilised parentage, as 100 to 40
+seeds.
+
+Plants of English-crossed and intercrossed parentage, as 100 to 45
+seeds.
+
+Plants of intercrossed and self-fertilised parentage, as 100 to 89
+seeds.
+
+The superiority in productiveness of the intercrossed plants (that is,
+the product of a cross between the grandchildren of the plants which
+grew in Brazil) over the self-fertilised, small as it is, is wholly due
+to the larger average number of seeds contained in the capsules; for the
+intercrossed plants produced fewer capsules in the greenhouse than did
+the self-fertilised plants. The great superiority in productiveness of
+the English-crossed over the self-fertilised plants is shown by the
+larger number of capsules produced, the larger average number of
+contained seeds, and the smaller number of empty capsules. As the
+English-crossed and intercrossed plants were the offspring of crosses in
+every previous generation (as must have been the case from the flowers
+being sterile with their own pollen), we may conclude that the great
+superiority in productiveness of the English-crossed over the
+intercrossed plants is due to the two parents of the former having been
+long subjected to different conditions.
+
+The English-crossed plants, though so superior in productiveness, were,
+as we have seen, decidedly inferior in height and weight to the
+self-fertilised, and only equal to, or hardly superior to, the
+intercrossed plants. Therefore, the whole advantage of a cross with a
+distinct stock is here confined to productiveness, and I have met with
+no similar case.
+
+8. RESEDACEAE.--Reseda lutea.
+
+Seeds collected from wild plants growing in this neighbourhood were sown
+in the kitchen-garden; and several of the seedlings thus raised were
+covered with a net. Of these, some were found (as will hereafter be more
+fully described) to be absolutely sterile when left to fertilise
+themselves spontaneously, although plenty of pollen fell on their
+stigmas; and they were equally sterile when artificially and repeatedly
+fertilised with their own pollen; whilst other plants produced a few
+spontaneously self-fertilised capsules. The remaining plants were left
+uncovered, and as pollen was carried from plant to plant by the hive and
+humble-bees which incessantly visit the flowers, they produced an
+abundance of capsules. Of the necessity of pollen being carried from one
+plant to another, I had ample evidence in the case of this species and
+of R. odorata; for those plants, which set no seeds or very few as long
+as they were protected from insects, became loaded with capsules
+immediately that they were uncovered.
+
+Seeds from the flowers spontaneously self-fertilised under the net, and
+from flowers naturally crossed by the bees, were sown on opposite sides
+of five large pots. The seedlings were thinned as soon as they appeared
+above ground, so that an equal number were left on the two sides. After
+a time the pots were plunged into the open ground. The same number of
+plants of crossed and self-fertilised parentage were measured up to the
+summits of their flower-stems, with the result given in Table 4/35.
+Those which did not produce flower-stems were not measured.
+
+TABLE 4/35. Reseda lutea, in pots.
+
+Heights of plants to the summits of the flower-stems measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 21 : 12 7/8.
+Pot 1 : 14 2/8 : 16.
+Pot 1 : 19 1/8 : 11 7/8.
+Pot 1 : 7 : 15 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 15 1/8 : 19 1/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 20 4/8 : 12 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 17 3/8 : 16 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 23 7/8 : 16 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 17 1/8 : 13 3/8.
+Pot 2 : 20 6/8 : 13 5/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 16 1/8 : 14 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 17 6/8 : 19 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 16 2/8 : 20 7/8.
+Pot 3 : 10 : 7 7/8.
+Pot 3 : 10 : 17 6/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 22 1/8 : 9.
+Pot 4 : 19 : 11 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 18 7/8 : 11.
+Pot 4 : 16 4/8 : 16.
+Pot 4 : 19 2/8 : 16 3/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 25 2/8 : 14 6/8.
+Pot 5 : 22 : 16.
+Pot 5 : 8 6/8 : 14 3/8.
+Pot 5 : 14 2/8 : 14 2/8.
+
+Total : 412.25 : 350.86.
+
+The average height of the twenty-four crossed plants is here 17.17
+inches, and that of the same number of self-fertilised plants 14.61; or
+as 100 to 85. Of the crossed plants all but five flowered, whilst
+several of the self-fertilised did not do so. The above pairs, whilst
+still in flower, but with some capsules already formed, were afterwards
+cut down and weighed. The crossed weighed 90.5 ounces; and an equal
+number of the self-fertilised only 19 ounces, or as 100 to 21; and this
+is an astonishing difference.
+
+Seeds of the same two lots were also sown in two adjoining rows in the
+open ground. There were twenty crossed plants in the one row and
+thirty-two self-fertilised plants in the other row, so that the
+experiment was not quite fair; but not so unfair as it at first appears,
+for the plants in the same row were not crowded so much as seriously to
+interfere with each other's growth, and the ground was bare on the
+outside of both rows. These plants were better nourished than those in
+the pots and grew to a greater height. The eight tallest plants in each
+row were measured in the same manner as before, with the following
+result:--
+
+TABLE 4/36. Reseda lutea, growing in the open ground.
+
+Heights of plants to the summits of the flower-stems measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+ 28 : 33 2/8.
+ 27 3/8 : 23.
+ 27 5/8 : 21 5/8.
+ 28 6/8 : 20 4/8.
+ 29 7/8 : 21 5/8.
+ 26 6/8 : 22.
+ 26 2/8 : 21 2/8.
+ 30 1/8 : 21 7/8.
+
+Total : 224.75 : 185.13
+
+The average height of the crossed plants, whilst in full flower, was
+here 28.09, and that of the self-fertilised 23.14 inches; or as 100 to
+82. It is a singular fact that the tallest plant in the two rows, was
+one of the self-fertilised. The self-fertilised plants had smaller and
+paler green leaves than the crossed. All the plants in the two rows were
+afterwards cut down and weighed. The twenty crossed plants weighed 65
+ounces, and twenty self-fertilised (by calculation from the actual
+weight of the thirty-two self-fertilised plants) weighed 26.25 ounces;
+or as 100 to 40. Therefore the crossed plants did not exceed in weight
+the self-fertilised plants in nearly so great a degree as those growing
+in the pots, owing probably to the latter having been subjected to more
+severe mutual competition. On the other hand, they exceeded the
+self-fertilised in height in a slightly greater degree.
+
+Reseda odorata.
+
+Plants of the common mignonette were raised from purchased seed, and
+several of them were placed under separate nets. Of these some became
+loaded with spontaneously self-fertilised capsules; others produced a
+few, and others not a single one. It must not be supposed that these
+latter plants produced no seed because their stigmas did not receive any
+pollen, for they were repeatedly fertilised with pollen from the same
+plant with no effect; but they were perfectly fertile with pollen from
+any other plant. Spontaneously self-fertilised seeds were saved from one
+of the highly self-fertile plants, and other seeds were collected from
+the plants growing outside the nets, which had been crossed by the bees.
+These seeds after germinating on sand were planted in pairs on the
+opposite sides of five pots. The plants were trained up sticks, and
+measured to the summits of their leafy stems--the flower-stems not being
+included. We here have the result:--
+
+TABLE 4/37. Reseda odorata (seedlings from a highly self-fertile plant).
+
+Heights of plants to the summits of the leafy stems, flower-stems not
+included, measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 20 7/8 : 22 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 34 7/8 : 28 5/8.
+Pot 1 : 26 6/8 : 23 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 32 6/8 : 30 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 34 3/8 : 28 5/8.
+Pot 2 : 34 5/8 : 30 5/8.
+Pot 2 : 11 6/8 : 23.
+Pot 2 : 33 3/8 : 30 1/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 17 7/8 : 4 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 27 : 25.
+Pot 3 : 30 1/8 : 26 3/8.
+Pot 3 : 30 2/8 : 25 1/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 21 5/8 : 22 6/8.
+Pot 4 : 28 : 25 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 32 5/8 : 15 1/8.
+Pot 4 : 32 3/8 : 24 6/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 21 : 11 6/8.
+Pot 5 : 25 2/8 : 19 7/8.
+Pot 5 : 26 6/8 : 10 4/8.
+
+Total : 522.25 : 428.50.
+
+The average height of the nineteen crossed plants is here 27.48, and
+that of the nineteen self-fertilised 22.55 inches; or as 100 to 82. All
+these plants were cut down in the early autumn and weighed: the crossed
+weighed 11.5 ounces, and the self-fertilised 7.75 ounces, or as 100 to
+67. These two lots having been left freely exposed to the visits of
+insects, did not present any difference to the eye in the number of
+seed-capsules which they produced.
+
+The remainder of the same two lots of seeds were sown in two adjoining
+rows in the open ground; so that the plants were exposed to only
+moderate competition. The eight tallest on each side were measured, as
+shown in Table 4/38.
+
+TABLE 4/38. Reseda odorata, growing in the open ground.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+ 24 4/8 : 26 5/8.
+ 27 2/8 : 25 7/8.
+ 24 : 25.
+ 26 6/8 : 28 3/8.
+ 25 : 29 7/8.
+ 26 2/8 : 25 7/8.
+ 27 2/8 : 26 7/8.
+ 25 1/8 : 28 2/8.
+
+Total : 206.13 : 216.75
+
+The average height of the eight crossed plants is 25.76, and that of the
+eight self-fertilised 27.09; or as 100 to 105.
+
+We here have the anomalous result of the self-fertilised plants being a
+little taller than the crossed; of which fact I can offer no
+explanation. It is of course possible, but not probable, that the labels
+may have been interchanged by accident.
+
+Another experiment was now tried: all the self-fertilised capsules,
+though very few in number, were gathered from one of the
+semi-self-sterile plants under a net; and as several flowers on this
+same plant had been fertilised with pollen from a distinct individual,
+crossed seeds were thus obtained. I expected that the seedlings from
+this semi-self-sterile plant would have profited in a higher degree from
+a cross, than did the seedlings from the fully self-fertile plants. But
+my anticipation was quite wrong, for they profited in a less degree. An
+analogous result followed in the case of Eschscholtzia, in which the
+offspring of the plants of Brazilian parentage (which were partially
+self-sterile) did not profit more from a cross, than did the plants of
+the far more self-fertile English stock. The above two lots of crossed
+and self-fertilised seeds from the same plant of Reseda odorata, after
+germinating on sand, were planted on opposite sides of five pots, and
+measured as in the last case, with the result in Table 4/39.
+
+TABLE 4/39. Reseda odorata (seedlings from a semi-self-sterile plant).
+
+Heights of plants to the summits of the leafy stems, flower-stems not
+included, measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 33 4/8 : 31.
+Pot 1 : 30 6/8 : 28.
+Pot 1 : 29 6/8 : 13 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 20 : 32.
+
+Pot 2 : 22 : 21 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 33 4/8 : 26 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 31 2/8 : 25 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 32 4/8 : 30 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 30 1/8 : 17 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 32 1/8 : 29 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 31 4/8 : 24 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 32 2/8 : 34 2/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 19 1/8 : 20 6/8.
+Pot 4 : 30 1/8 : 32 6/8.
+Pot 4 : 24 3/8 : 31 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 30 6/8 : 36 6/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 34 6/8 : 24 5/8.
+Pot 5 : 37 1/8 : 34.
+Pot 5 : 31 2/8 : 22 2/8.
+Pot 5 : 33 : 37 1/8.
+
+Total : 599.75 : 554.25.
+
+The average height of the twenty crossed plants is here 29.98, and that
+of the twenty self-fertilised 27.71 inches; or as 100 to 92. These
+plants were then cut down and weighed; and the crossed in this case
+exceeded the self-fertilised in weight by a mere trifle, namely, in the
+ratio of 100 to 99. The two lots, left freely exposed to insects, seemed
+to be equally fertile.
+
+The remainder of the seed was sown in two adjoining rows in the open
+ground; and the eight tallest plants in each row were measured, with the
+result in Table 4/40.
+
+TABLE 4/40. Reseda odorata, (seedlings from a semi-self-sterile plant,
+planted in the open ground).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+ 28 2/8 : 22 3/8.
+ 22 4/8 : 24 3/8.
+ 25 7/8 : 23 4/8.
+ 25 3/8 : 21 4/8.
+ 29 4/8 : 22 5/8.
+ 27 1/8 : 27 3/8.
+ 22 4/8 : 27 3/8.
+ 26 2/8 : 19 2/8.
+
+Total : 207.38 : 188.38.
+
+The average height of the eight crossed plants is here 25.92, and that
+of the eight self-fertilised plants 23.54 inches; or as 100 to 90.
+
+9. VIOLACEAE.--Viola tricolor.
+
+Whilst the flowers of the common cultivated heartsease are young, the
+anthers shed their pollen into a little semi-cylindrical passage, formed
+by the basal portion of the lower petal, and surrounded by papillae. The
+pollen thus collected lies close beneath the stigma, but can seldom gain
+access into its cavity, except by the aid of insects, which pass their
+proboscides down this passage into the nectary. (4/5. The flowers of
+this plant have been fully described by Sprengel, Hildebrand, Delpino,
+and H. Muller. The latter author sums up all the previous observations
+in his 'Befruchtung der Blumen' and in 'Nature' November 20, 1873 page
+44. See also Mr. A.W. Bennett in 'Nature' May 15, 1873 page 50 and some
+remarks by Mr. Kitchener ibid page 143. The facts which follow on the
+effects of covering up a plant of V. tricolor have been quoted by Sir J.
+Lubbock in his 'British Wild Flowers' etc. page 62.) Consequently when I
+covered up a large plant of a cultivated variety, it set only eighteen
+capsules, and most of these contained very few good seeds--several from
+only one to three; whereas an equally fine uncovered plant of the same
+variety, growing close by, produced 105 fine capsules. The few flowers
+which produce capsules when insects are excluded, are perhaps fertilised
+by the curling inwards of the petals as their wither, for by this means
+pollen-grains adhering to the papillae might be inserted into the cavity
+of the stigma. But it is more probable that their fertilisation is
+effected, as Mr. Bennett suggests, by Thrips and certain minute beetles
+which haunt the flowers, and which cannot be excluded by any net.
+Humble-bees are the usual fertilisers; but I have more than once seen
+flies (Rhingia rostrata) at work, with the under sides of their bodies,
+heads and legs dusted with pollen; and having marked the flowers which
+they visited, I found them after a few days fertilised. (4/6. I should
+add that this fly apparently did not suck the nectar, but was attracted
+by the papillae which surround the stigma. Hermann Muller also saw a
+small bee, an Andrena, which could not reach the nectar, repeatedly
+inserting its proboscis beneath the stigma, where the papillae are
+situated; so that these papillae must be in some way attractive to
+insects. A writer asserts 'Zoologist' volume 3-4 page 1225, that a moth
+(Plusia) frequently visits the flowers of the pansy. Hive-bees do not
+ordinarily visit them, but a case has been recorded 'Gardeners'
+Chronicle' 1844 page 374, of these bees doing so. Hermann Muller has
+also seen the hive-bee at work, but only on the wild small-flowered
+form. He gives a list 'Nature' 1873 page 45, of all the insects which he
+has seen visiting both the large and small-flowered forms. From his
+account, I suspect that the flowers of plants in a state of nature are
+visited more frequently by insects than those of the cultivated
+varieties. He has seen several butterflies sucking the flowers of wild
+plants, and this I have never observed in gardens, though I have watched
+the flowers during many years.) It is curious for how long a time the
+flowers of the heartsease and of some other plants may be watched
+without an insect being seen to visit them. During the summer of 1841, I
+observed many times daily for more than a fortnight some large clumps of
+heartsease growing in my garden, before I saw a single humble-bee at
+work. During another summer I did the same, but at last saw some
+dark-coloured humble-bees visiting on three successive days almost every
+flower in several clumps; and almost all these flowers quickly withered
+and produced fine capsules. I presume that a certain state of the
+atmosphere is necessary for the secretion of nectar, and that as soon as
+this occurs the insects discover the fact by the odour emitted, and
+immediately frequent the flowers.
+
+As the flowers require the aid of insects for their complete
+fertilisation, and as they are not visited by insects nearly so often as
+most other nectar-secreting flowers, we can understand the remarkable
+fact discovered by H. Muller and described by him in 'Nature,' namely,
+that this species exists under two forms. One of these bears conspicuous
+flowers, which, as we have seen, require the aid of insects, and are
+adapted to be cross-fertilised by them; whilst the other form has much
+smaller and less conspicuously coloured flowers, which are constructed
+on a slightly different plan, favouring self-fertilisation, and are thus
+adapted to ensure the propagation of the species. The self-fertile form,
+however, is occasionally visited, and may be crossed by insects, though
+this is rather doubtful.
+
+In my first experiments on Viola tricolor I was unsuccessful in raising
+seedlings, and obtained only one full-grown crossed and self-fertilised
+plant. The former was 12 1/2 inches and the latter 8 inches in height.
+On the following year several flowers on a fresh plant were crossed with
+pollen from another plant, which was known to be a distinct seedling;
+and to this point it is important to attend. Several other flowers on
+the same plant were fertilised with their own pollen. The average number
+of seeds in the ten crossed capsules was 18.7, and in the twelve
+self-fertilised capsules 12.83; or as 100 to 69. These seeds, after
+germinating on bare sand, were planted in pairs on the opposite sides of
+five pots. They were first measured when about a third of their full
+size, and the crossed plants then averaged 3.87 inches, and the
+self-fertilised only 2.00 inches in height; or as 100 to 52. They were
+kept in the greenhouse, and did not grow vigorously. Whilst in flower
+they were again measured to the summits of their stems (see Table 4/41),
+with the following result:--
+
+TABLE 4/41. Viola tricolor.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 8 2/8 : 0 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 7 4/8 : 2 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 5 : 1 2/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 5 : 6.
+Pot 2 : 4 : 4.
+Pot 2 : 4 4/8 : 3 1/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 9 4/8 : 3 1/8.
+Pot 3 : 3 3/8 : 1 7/8.
+Pot 3 : 8 4/8 : 0 5/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 4 7/8 : 2 1/8.
+Pot 4 : 4 2/8 : 1 6/8.
+Pot 4 : 4 : 2 1/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 6 : 3.
+Pot 5 : 3 3/8 : 1 4/8.
+
+Total : 78.13 : 33.25.
+
+The average height of the fourteen crossed plants is here 5.58 inches,
+and that of the fourteen self-fertilised 2.37; or as 100 to 42. In four
+out of the five pots, a crossed plant flowered before any one of the
+self-fertilised; as likewise occurred with the pair raised during the
+previous year. These plants without being disturbed were now turned out
+of their pots and planted in the open ground, so as to form five
+separate clumps. Early in the following summer (1869) they flowered
+profusely, and being visited by humble-bees set many capsules, which
+were carefully collected from all the plants on both sides. The crossed
+plants produced 167 capsules, and the self-fertilised only 17; or as 100
+to 10. So that the crossed plants were more than twice the height of the
+self-fertilised, generally flowered first, and produced ten times as
+many naturally fertilised capsules.
+
+By the early part of the summer of 1870 the crossed plants in all the
+five clumps had grown and spread so much more than the self-fertilised,
+that any comparison between them was superfluous. The crossed plants
+were covered with a sheet of bloom, whilst only a single self-fertilised
+plant, which was much finer than any of its brethren, flowered. The
+crossed and self-fertilised plants had now grown all matted together on
+the respective sides of the superficial partitions still separating
+them; and in the clump which included the finest self-fertilised plant,
+I estimated that the surface covered by the crossed plants was about
+nine times as large as that covered by the self-fertilised plants. The
+extraordinary superiority of the crossed over the self-fertilised plants
+in all five clumps, was no doubt due to the crossed plants at first
+having had a decided advantage over the self-fertilised, and then
+robbing them more and more of their food during the succeeding seasons.
+But we should remember that the same result would follow in a state of
+nature even to a greater degree; for my plants grew in ground kept clear
+of weeds, so that the self-fertilised had to compete only with the
+crossed plants; whereas the whole surface of the ground is naturally
+covered with various kinds of plants, all of which have to struggle
+together for existence.
+
+The ensuing winter was very severe, and in the following spring (1871)
+the plants were again examined. All the self-fertilised were now dead,
+with the exception of a single branch on one plant, which bore on its
+summit a minute rosette of leaves about as large as a pea. On the other
+hand, all the crossed plants without exception were growing vigorously.
+So that the self-fertilised plants, besides their inferiority in other
+respects, were more tender.
+
+Another experiment was now tried for the sake of ascertaining how far
+the superiority of the crossed plants, or to speak more correctly, the
+inferiority of the self-fertilised plants, would be transmitted to their
+offspring. The one crossed and one self-fertilised plant, which were
+first raised, had been turned out of their pot and planted in the open
+ground. Both produced an abundance of very fine capsules, from which
+fact we may safely conclude that they had been cross-fertilised by
+insects. Seeds from both, after germinating on sand, were planted in
+pairs on the opposite sides of three pots. The naturally crossed
+seedlings derived from the crossed plants flowered in all three pots
+before the naturally crossed seedlings derived from the self-fertilised
+plants. When both lots were in full flower, the two tallest plants on
+each side of each pot were measured, and the result is shown in Table
+4/42.
+
+TABLE 4/42. Viola tricolor: seedlings from crossed and self-fertilised
+plants, the parents of both sets having been left to be naturally
+fertilised.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Naturally Crossed Plants from artificially crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Naturally Crossed Plants from Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 12 1/8 : 9 6/8.
+Pot 1 : 11 6/8 : 8 3/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 13 2/8 : 9 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 10 : 11 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 14 4/8 : 11 1/8.
+Pot 3 : 13 6/8 : 11 3/8.
+
+Total : 75.38 : 61.88.
+
+The average height of the six tallest plants derived from the crossed
+plants is 12.56 inches; and that of the six tallest plants derived from
+the self-fertilised plants is 10.31 inches; or as 100 to 82. We here see
+a considerable difference in height between the two sets, though very
+far from equalling that in the previous trials between the offspring
+from crossed and self-fertilised flowers. This difference must be
+attributed to the latter set of plants having inherited a weak
+constitution from their parents, the offspring of self-fertilised
+flowers; notwithstanding that the parents themselves had been freely
+intercrossed with other plants by the aid of insects.
+
+10. RANUNCULACEAE.--Adonis aestivalis.
+
+The results of my experiments on this plant are hardly worth giving, as
+I remark in my notes made at the time, "seedlings, from some unknown
+cause, all miserably unhealthy." Nor did they ever become healthy; yet I
+feel bound to give the present case, as it is opposed to the general
+results at which I have arrived. Fifteen flowers were crossed and all
+produced fruit, containing on an average 32.5 seeds; nineteen flowers
+were fertilised with their own pollen, and they likewise all yielded
+fruit, containing a rather larger average of 34.5 seeds; or as 100 to
+106. Seedlings were raised from these seeds. In one of the pots all the
+self-fertilised plants died whilst quite young; in the two others, the
+measurements were as follows:
+
+TABLE 4/43. Adonis aestivalis.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 14 : 13 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 13 4/8 : 13 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 16 2/8 : 15 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 13 2/8 : 15.
+
+Total : 57.00 : 57.25.
+
+The average height of the four crossed plants is 14.25, and that of the
+four self-fertilised plants 14.31; or as 100 to 100.4; so that they were
+in fact of equal height. According to Professor H. Hoffman, this plant
+is proterandrous (4/7. 'Zur Speciesfrage' 1875 page 11.); nevertheless
+it yields plenty of seeds when protected from insects.
+
+Delphinium consolida.
+
+It has been said in the case of this plant, as of so many others, that
+the flowers are fertilised in the bud, and that distinct plants or
+varieties can never naturally intercross. (4/8. Decaisne
+'Comptes-Rendus' July 1863 page 5.) But this is an error, as we may
+infer, firstly from the flowers being proterandrous,--the mature stamens
+bending up, one after the other, into the passage which leads to the
+nectary, and afterwards the mature pistils bending in the same
+direction; secondly, from the number of humble-bees which visit the
+flowers (4/9. Their structure is described by H. Muller 'Befruchtung'
+etc., page 122.); and thirdly, from the greater fertility of the flowers
+when crossed with pollen from a distinct plant than when spontaneously
+self-fertilised. In the year 1863 I enclosed a large branch in a net,
+and crossed five flowers with pollen from a distinct plant; these
+yielded capsules containing on an average 35.2 very fine seeds, with a
+maximum of forty-two in one capsule. Thirty-two other flowers on the
+same branch produced twenty-eight spontaneously self-fertilised
+capsules, containing on an average 17.2 seeds, with a maximum in one of
+thirty-six seeds. But six of these capsules were very poor, yielding
+only from one to five seeds; if these are excluded, the remaining
+twenty-two capsules give an average of 20.9 seeds, though many of these
+seeds were small. The fairest ratio, therefore, for the number of seeds
+produced by a cross and by spontaneous self-fertilisation is as 100 to
+59. These seeds were not sown, as I had too many other experiments in
+progress.
+
+In the summer of 1867, which was a very unfavourable one, I again
+crossed several flowers under a net with pollen from a distinct plant,
+and fertilised other flowers on the same plant with their own pollen.
+The former yielded a much larger proportion of capsules than the latter;
+and many of the seeds in the self-fertilised capsules, though numerous,
+were so poor that an equal number of seeds from the crossed and
+self-fertilised capsules were in weight as 100 to 45. The two lots were
+allowed to germinate on sand, and pairs were planted on the opposite
+sides of four pots. When nearly two-thirds grown they were measured, as
+shown in Table 4/44.
+
+TABLE 4/44. Delphinium consolida.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 11 : 11.
+
+Pot 2 : 19 : 16 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 16 2/8 : 11 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 26 : 22.
+
+Pot 4 : 9 4/8 : 8 2/8.
+Pot 4 : 8 : 6 4/8.
+
+Total : 89.75 : 75.50.
+
+The six crossed plants here average 14.95, and the six self-fertilised
+12.50 inches in height; or as 100 to 84. When fully grown they were
+again measured, but from want of time only a single plant on each side
+was measured; so that I have thought it best to give the earlier
+measurements. At the later period the three tallest crossed plants still
+exceeded considerably in height the three tallest self-fertilised, but
+not in quite so great a degree as before. The pots were left uncovered
+in the greenhouse, but whether the flowers were intercrossed by bees or
+self-fertilised I do not know. The six crossed plants produced 282
+mature and immature capsules, whilst the six self-fertilised plants
+produced only 159; or as 100 to 56. So that the crossed plants were very
+much more productive than the self-fertilised.
+
+11. CARYOPHYLLACEAE.--Viscaria oculata.
+
+Twelve flowers were crossed with pollen from another plant, and yielded
+ten capsules, containing by weight 5.77 grains of seeds. Eighteen
+flowers were fertilised with their own pollen and yielded twelve
+capsules, containing by weight 2.63 grains. Therefore the seeds from an
+equal number of crossed and self-fertilised flowers would have been in
+weight as 100 to 38. I had previously selected a medium-sized capsule
+from each lot, and counted the seeds in both; the crossed one contained
+284, and the self-fertilised one 126 seeds; or as 100 to 44. These seeds
+were sown on opposite sides of three pots, and several seedlings raised;
+but only the tallest flower-stem of one plant on each side was measured.
+The three on the crossed side averaged 32.5 inches, and the three on the
+self-fertilised side 34 inches in height; or as 100 to 104. But this
+trial was on much too small a scale to be trusted; the plants also grew
+so unequally that one of the three flower-stems on the crossed plants
+was very nearly twice as tall as that on one of the others; and one of
+the three flower-stems on the self-fertilised plants exceeded in an
+equal degree one of the others.
+
+In the following year the experiment was repeated on a larger scale: ten
+flowers were crossed on a new set of plants and yielded ten capsules
+containing by weight 6.54 grains of seed. Eighteen spontaneously
+self-fertilised capsules were gathered, of which two contained no seed;
+the other sixteen contained by weight 6.07 grains of seed. Therefore the
+weight of seed from an equal number of crossed and spontaneously
+self-fertilised flowers (instead of artificially fertilised as in the
+previous case) was as 100 to 58.
+
+The seeds after germinating on sand were planted in pairs on the
+opposite sides of four pots, with all the remaining seeds sown crowded
+in the opposite sides of a fifth pot; in this latter pot only the
+tallest plant on each side was measured. Until the seedlings had grown
+about 5 inches in height no difference could be perceived in the two
+lots. Both lots flowered at nearly the same time. When they had almost
+done flowering, the tallest flower-stem on each plant was measured, as
+shown in Table 4/45.
+
+TABLE 4/45. Viscaria oculata.
+
+Tallest flower-stem on each plant measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 19 : 32 3/8.
+Pot 1 : 33 : 38.
+Pot 1 : 41 : 38.
+Pot 1 : 41 : 28 7/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 37 4/8 : 36.
+Pot 2 : 36 4/8 : 32 3/8.
+Pot 2 : 38 : 35 6/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 44 4/8 : 36.
+Pot 3 : 39 4/8 : 20 7/8.
+Pot 3 : 39 : 30 5/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 30 2/8 : 36.
+Pot 4 : 31 : 39.
+Pot 4 : 33 1/8 : 29.
+Pot 4 : 24 : 38 4/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 30 2/8 : 32.
+Crowded.
+
+Total : 517.63 : 503.36.
+
+The fifteen crossed plants here average 34.5, and the fifteen
+self-fertilised 33.55 inches in height; or as 100 to 97. So that the
+excess of height of the crossed plants is quite insignificant. In
+productiveness, however, the difference was much more plainly marked.
+All the capsules were gathered from both lots of plants (except from the
+crowded and unproductive ones in Pot 5), and at the close of the season
+the few remaining flowers were added in. The fourteen crossed plants
+produced 381, whilst the fourteen self-fertilised plants produced only
+293 capsules and flowers; or as 100 to 77.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus.
+
+The common carnation is strongly proterandrous, and therefore depends to
+a large extent upon insects for fertilisation. I have seen only
+humble-bees visiting the flowers, but I dare say other insects likewise
+do so. It is notorious that if pure seed is desired, the greatest care
+is necessary to prevent the varieties which grow in the same garden from
+intercrossing. (4/10. 'Gardeners' Chronicle' 1847 page 268.) The pollen
+is generally shed and lost before the two stigmas in the same flower
+diverge and are ready to be fertilised. I was therefore often forced to
+use for self-fertilisation pollen from the same plant instead of from
+the same flower. But on two occasions, when I attended to this point, I
+was not able to detect any marked difference in the number of seeds
+produced by these two forms of self-fertilisation.
+
+Several single-flowered carnations were planted in good soil, and were
+all covered with a net. Eight flowers were crossed with pollen from a
+distinct plant and yielded six capsules, containing on an average 88.6
+seeds, with a maximum in one of 112 seeds. Eight other flowers were
+self-fertilised in the manner above described, and yielded seven
+capsules containing on an average 82 seeds, with a maximum in one of 112
+seeds. So that there was very little difference in the number of seeds
+produced by cross-fertilisation and self-fertilisation, namely, as 100
+to 92. As these plants were covered by a net, they produced
+spontaneously only a few capsules containing any seeds, and these few
+may perhaps be attributed to the action of Thrips and other minute
+insects which haunt the flowers. A large majority of the spontaneously
+self-fertilised capsules produced by several plants contained no seeds,
+or only a single one. Excluding these latter capsules, I counted the
+seeds in eighteen of the finest ones, and these contained on an average
+18 seeds. One of the plants was spontaneously self-fertile in a higher
+degree than any of the others. On another occasion a single covered-up
+plant produced spontaneously eighteen capsules, but only two of these
+contained any seed, namely 10 and 15.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FIRST GENERATION.
+
+The many seeds obtained from the above crossed and artificially
+self-fertilised flowers were sown out of doors, and two large beds of
+seedlings, closely adjoining one another, thus raised. This was the
+first plant on which I experimented, and I had not then formed any
+regular scheme of operation. When the two lots were in full flower, I
+measured roughly a large number of plants but record only that the
+crossed were on an average fully 4 inches taller than the
+self-fertilised. Judging from subsequent measurements, we may assume
+that the crossed plants were about 28 inches, and the self-fertilised
+about 24 inches in height; and this will give us a ratio of 100 to 86.
+Out of a large number of plants, four of the crossed ones flowered
+before any one of the self-fertilised plants.
+
+Thirty flowers on these crossed plants of the first generation were
+again crossed with pollen from a distinct plant of the same lot, and
+yielded twenty-nine capsules, containing on an average 55.62 seeds, with
+a maximum in one of 110 seeds.
+
+Thirty flowers on the self-fertilised plants were again self-fertilised;
+eight of them with pollen from the same flower, and the remainder with
+pollen from another flower on the same plant; and these produced
+twenty-two capsules, containing on an average 35.95 seeds, with a
+maximum in one of sixty-one seeds. We thus see, judging by the number of
+seeds per capsule, that the crossed plants again crossed were more
+productive than the self-fertilised again self-fertilised, in the ratio
+of 100 to 65. Both the crossed and self-fertilised plants, from having
+grown much crowded in the two beds, produced less fine capsules and
+fewer seeds than did their parents.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+
+The crossed and self-fertilised seeds from the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the last generation were sown on opposite
+sides of two pots; but the seedlings were not thinned enough, so that
+both lots grew very irregularly, and most of the self-fertilised plants
+after a time died from being smothered. My measurements were, therefore,
+very incomplete. From the first the crossed seedlings appeared the
+finest, and when they were on an average, by estimation, 5 inches high,
+the self-fertilised plants were only 4 inches. In both pots the crossed
+plants flowered first. The two tallest flower-stems on the crossed
+plants in the two pots were 17 and 16 1/2 inches in height; and the two
+tallest flower-stems on the self-fertilised plants 10 1/2 and 9 inches;
+so that their heights were as 100 to 58. But this ratio, deduced from
+only two pairs, obviously is not in the least trustworthy, and would not
+have been given had it not been otherwise supported. I state in my notes
+that the crossed plants were very much more luxuriant than their
+opponents, and seemed to be twice as bulky. This latter estimate may be
+believed from the ascertained weights of the two lots in the next
+generation. Some flowers on these crossed plants were again crossed with
+pollen from another plant of the same lot, and some flowers on the
+self-fertilised plants again self-fertilised; and from the seeds thus
+obtained the plants of the next generation were raised.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE THIRD GENERATION.
+
+The seeds just alluded to were allowed to germinate on bare sand, and
+were planted in pairs on the opposite sides of four pots. When the
+seedlings were in full flower, the tallest stem on each plant was
+measured to the base of the calyx. The measurements are given in Table
+4/46. In Pot 1 the crossed and self-fertilised plants flowered at the
+same time; but in the other three pots the crossed flowered first. These
+latter plants also continued flowering much later in the autumn than the
+self-fertilised.
+
+TABLE 4/46. Dianthus caryophyllus (third generation).
+
+Tallest flower-stem on each plant measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 28 6/8 : 30.
+Pot 1 : 27 3/8 : 26.
+
+Pot 2 : 29 : 30 7/8.
+Pot 2 : 29 4/8 : 27 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 28 4/8 : 31 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 23 4/8 : 24 5/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 27 : 30.
+Pot 4 : 33 4/8 : 25.
+
+Total : 227.13 : 225.75.
+
+The average height of the eight crossed plants is here 28.39 inches, and
+of the eight self-fertilised 28.21; or as 100 to 99. So that there was
+no difference in height worth speaking of; but in general vigour and
+luxuriance there was an astonishing difference, as shown by their
+weights. After the seed-capsules had been gathered, the eight crossed
+and the eight self-fertilised plants were cut down and weighed; the
+former weighed 43 ounces, and the latter only 21 ounces; or as 100 to
+49.
+
+These plants were all kept under a net, so that the capsules which they
+produced must have been all spontaneously self-fertilised. The eight
+crossed plants produced twenty-one such capsules, of which only twelve
+contained any seed, averaging 8.5 per capsule. On the other hand, the
+eight self-fertilised plants produced no less than thirty-six capsules,
+of which I examined twenty-five, and, with the exception of three, all
+contained seeds, averaging 10.63 seeds per capsule. Thus the
+proportional number of seeds per capsule produced by the plants of
+crossed origin to those produced by the plants of self-fertilised origin
+(both lots being spontaneously self-fertilised) was as 100 to 125. This
+anomalous result is probably due to some of the self-fertilised plants
+having varied so as to mature their pollen and stigmas more nearly at
+the same time than is proper to the species; and we have already seen
+that some plants in the first experiment differed from the others in
+being slightly more self-fertile.
+
+THE EFFECTS OF A CROSS WITH A FRESH STOCK.
+
+Twenty flowers on the self-fertilised plants of the last or third
+generation, in Table 4/46, were fertilised with their own pollen, but
+taken from other flowers on the same plants. These produced fifteen
+capsules, which contained (omitting two with only three and six seeds)
+on an average 47.23 seeds, with a maximum of seventy in one. The
+self-fertilised capsules from the self-fertilised plants of the first
+generation yielded the much lower average of 35.95 seeds; but as these
+latter plants grew extremely crowded, nothing can be inferred with
+respect to this difference in their self-fertility. The seedlings raised
+from the above seeds constitute the plants of the fourth self-fertilised
+generation in Table 4/47.
+
+Twelve flowers on the same plants of the third self-fertilised
+generation, in Table 4/46, were crossed with pollen from the crossed
+plants in the same table. These crossed plants had been intercrossed for
+the three previous generations; and many of them, no doubt, were more or
+less closely inter-related, but not so closely as in some of the
+experiments with other species; for several carnation plants had been
+raised and crossed in the earlier generations. They were not related, or
+only in a distant degree, to the self-fertilised plants. The parents of
+both the self-fertilised and crossed plants had been subjected to as
+nearly as possible the same conditions during the three previous
+generations. The above twelve flowers produced ten capsules, containing
+on an average 48.66 seeds, with a maximum in one of seventy-two seeds.
+The plants raised from these seeds may be called the INTERCROSSED.
+
+Lastly, twelve flowers on the same self-fertilised plants of the third
+generation were crossed with pollen from plants which had been raised
+from seeds purchased in London. It is almost certain that the plants
+which produced these seeds had grown under very different conditions to
+those to which my self-fertilised and crossed plants had been subjected;
+and they were in no degree related. The above twelve flowers thus
+crossed all produced capsules, but these contained the low average of
+37.41 seeds per capsule, with a maximum in one of sixty-four seeds. It
+is surprising that this cross with a fresh stock did not give a much
+higher average number of seeds; for, as we shall immediately see, the
+plants raised from these seeds, which may be called the LONDON-CROSSED,
+benefited greatly by the cross, both in growth and fertility.
+
+The above three lots of seeds were allowed to germinate on bare sand.
+Many of the London-crossed germinated before the others, and were
+rejected; and many of the intercrossed later than those of the other two
+lots. The seeds after thus germinating were planted in ten pots, made
+tripartite by superficial divisions; but when only two kinds of seeds
+germinated at the same time, they were planted on the opposite sides of
+other pots; and this is indicated by blank spaces in one of the three
+columns in Table 4/47. A 0 in the table signifies that the seedling died
+before it was measured; and a + signifies that the plant did not produce
+a flower-stem, and therefore was not measured. It deserves notice that
+no less than eight out of the eighteen self-fertilised plants either
+died or did not flower; whereas only three out of the eighteen
+intercrossed, and four out of the twenty London-crossed plants, were in
+this predicament. The self-fertilised plants had a decidedly less
+vigorous appearance than the plants of the other two lots, their leaves
+being smaller and narrower. In only one pot did a self-fertilised plant
+flower before one of the two kinds of crossed plants, between which
+there was no marked difference in the period of flowering. The plants
+were measured to the base of the calyx, after they had completed their
+growth, late in the autumn.
+
+TABLE 4/47. Dianthus caryophyllus.
+
+Heights of plants to the base of the calyx, measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: London-Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Intercrossed Plants.
+
+Column 4: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 39 5/8 : 25 1/8 : 29 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 30 7/8 : 21 6/8 : +.
+
+Pot 2 : 36 2/8 : : 22 3/8.
+Pot 2 : 0 : : +.
+
+Pot 3 : 28 5/8 : 30 2/8 : .
+Pot 3 : + : 23 1/8 : .
+
+Pot 4 : 33 4/8 : 35 5/8 : 30.
+Pot 4 : 28 7/8 : 32 : 24 4/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 28 : 34 4/8 : +.
+Pot 5 : 0 : 24 2/8 : +.
+
+Pot 6 : 32 5/8 : 24 7/8 : 30 3/8.
+Pot 6 : 31 : 26 : 24 4/8.
+
+Pot 7 : 41 7/8 : 29 7/8 : 27 7/8.
+Pot 7 : 34 7/8 : 26 4/8 : 27.
+
+Pot 8 : 34 5/8 : 29 : 26 6/8.
+Pot 8 : 28 5/8 : 0 : +.
+
+Pot 9 : 25 5/8 : 28 5/8 : +.
+Pot 9 : 0 : + : 0.
+
+Pot 10 : 38 : 28 4/8 : 22 7/8.
+Pot 10 : 32 1/8 : + : 0.
+
+Total : 525.13 : 420.00 : 265.50.
+
+The average height of the sixteen London-crossed plants in Table 4/47 is
+32.82 inches; that of the fifteen intercrossed plants, 28 inches; and
+that of the ten self-fertilised plants, 26.55.
+
+So that in height we have the following ratios:--
+
+The London-crossed to the self-fertilised as 100 to 81.
+
+The London-crossed to the intercrossed as 100 to 85.
+
+The intercrossed to the self-fertilised as 100 to 95.
+
+These three lots of plants, which it should be remembered were all
+derived on the mother-side from plants of the third self-fertilised
+generation, fertilised in three different ways, were left exposed to the
+visits of insects, and their flowers were freely crossed by them. As the
+capsules of each lot became ripe they were gathered and kept separate,
+the empty or bad ones being thrown away. But towards the middle of
+October, when the capsules could no longer ripen, all were gathered and
+were counted, whether good or bad. The capsules were then crushed, and
+the seed cleaned by sieves and weighed. For the sake of uniformity the
+results are given from calculation, as if there had been twenty plants
+in each lot.
+
+The sixteen London-crossed plants actually produced 286 capsules;
+therefore twenty such plants would have produced 357.5 capsules; and
+from the actual weight of the seeds, the twenty plants would have
+yielded 462 grains weight of seeds.
+
+The fifteen intercrossed plants actually produced 157 capsules;
+therefore twenty of them would have produced 209.3 capsules and the
+seeds would have weighed 208.48 grains.
+
+The ten self-fertilised plants actually produced 70 capsules, therefore
+twenty of them would have produced 140 capsules; and the seeds would
+have weighed 153.2 grains.
+
+From these data we get the following ratios:--
+
+NUMBER OF CAPSULES PRODUCED BY AN EQUAL NUMBER OF PLANTS OF THE THREE
+LOTS.
+
+NUMBER OF CAPSULES:
+
+The London-crossed to the self-fertilised as 100 to 39.
+
+The London-crossed to the intercrossed as 100 to 45.
+
+The intercrossed to the self-fertilised as 100 to 67.
+
+WEIGHT OF SEEDS PRODUCED BY AN EQUAL NUMBER OF PLANTS OF THE THREE LOTS.
+
+WEIGHT OF SEED:
+
+The London-crossed to the self-fertilised as 100 to 33.
+
+The London-crossed to the intercrossed as 100 to 45.
+
+The intercrossed to the self-fertilised as 100 to 73.
+
+We thus see how greatly the offspring from the self-fertilised plants of
+the third generation crossed by a fresh stock, had their fertility
+increased, whether tested by the number of capsules produced or by the
+weight of the contained seeds; this latter being the more trustworthy
+method. Even the offspring from the self-fertilised plants crossed by
+one of the crossed plants of the same stock, notwithstanding that both
+lots had been long subjected to the same conditions, had their fertility
+considerably increased, as tested by the same two methods.
+
+In conclusion it may be well to repeat in reference to the fertility of
+these three lots of plants, that their flowers were left freely exposed
+to the visits of insects and were undoubtedly crossed by them, as may be
+inferred from the large number of good capsules produced. These plants
+were all the offspring of the same mother-plants, and the strongly
+marked difference in their fertility must be attributed to the nature of
+the pollen employed in fertilising their parents; and the difference in
+the nature of the pollen must be attributed to the different treatment
+to which the pollen-bearing parents had been subjected during several
+previous generations.
+
+COLOUR OF THE FLOWERS.
+
+The flowers produced by the self-fertilised plants of the last or fourth
+generation were as uniform in tint as those of a wild species, being of
+a pale pink or rose colour. Analogous cases with Mimulus and Ipomoea,
+after several generations of self-fertilisation, have been already
+given. The flowers of the intercrossed plants of the fourth generation
+were likewise nearly uniform in colour. On the other hand, the flowers
+of the London-crossed plants, or those raised from a cross with the
+fresh stock which bore dark crimson flowers, varied extremely in colour,
+as might have been expected, and as is the general rule with seedling
+carnations. It deserves notice that only two or three of the
+London-crossed plants produced dark crimson flowers like those of their
+fathers, and only a very few of a pale pink like those of their mothers.
+The great majority had their petals longitudinally and variously striped
+with the two colours,--the groundwork tint being, however, in some cases
+darker than that of the mother-plants.
+
+12. MALVACEAE.--Hibiscus africanus.
+
+Many flowers on this Hibiscus were crossed with pollen from a distinct
+plant, and many others were self-fertilised. A rather larger
+proportional number of the crossed than of the self-fertilised flowers
+yielded capsules, and the crossed capsules contained rather more seeds.
+The self-fertilised seeds were a little heavier than an equal number of
+the crossed seeds, but they germinated badly, and I raised only four
+plants of each lot. In three out of the four pots, the crossed plants
+flowered first.
+
+TABLE 4/48. Hibiscus africanus.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 13 4/8 : 16 2/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 14 : 14.
+
+Pot 3 : 8 : 7.
+
+Pot 4 : 17 4/8 : 20 4/8.
+
+Total : 53.00 : 57.75.
+
+The four crossed plants average 13.25, and the four self-fertilised
+14.43 inches in height; or as 100 to 109. Here we have the unusual case
+of self-fertilised plants exceeding the crossed in height; but only four
+pairs were measured, and these did not grow well or equally. I did not
+compare the fertility of the two lots.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+GERANIACEAE, LEGUMINOSAE, ONAGRACEAE, ETC.
+
+Pelargonium zonale, a cross between plants propagated by cuttings does
+no good.
+Tropaeolum minus.
+Limnanthes douglasii.
+Lupinus luteus and pilosus.
+Phaseolus multiflorus and vulgaris.
+Lathyrus odoratus, varieties of, never naturally intercross in England.
+Pisum sativum, varieties of, rarely intercross, but a cross between them
+highly beneficial.
+Sarothamnus scoparius, wonderful effects of a cross.
+Ononis minutissima, cleistogene flowers of.
+Summary on the Leguminosae.
+Clarkia elegans.
+Bartonia aurea.
+Passiflora gracilis.
+Apium petroselinum.
+Scabiosa atropurpurea.
+Lactuca sativa.
+Specularia speculum.
+Lobelia ramosa, advantages of a cross during two generations.
+Lobelia fulgens.
+Nemophila insignis, great advantages of a cross.
+Borago officinalis.
+Nolana prostrata.
+
+13. GERANIACEAE.--Pelargonium zonale.
+
+This plant, as a general rule, is strongly proterandrous, and is
+therefore adapted for cross-fertilisation by the aid of insects. (5/1.
+Mr. J. Denny, a great raiser of new varieties of pelargoniums, after
+stating that this species is proterandrous, adds 'The Florist and
+Pomologist' January 1872 page 11, "there are some varieties, especially
+those with petals of a pink colour, or which possess a weakly
+constitution, where the pistil expands as soon as or even before the
+pollen-bag bursts, and in which also the pistil is frequently short, so
+when it expands it is smothered as it were by the bursting anthers;
+these varieties are great seeders, each pip being fertilised by its own
+pollen. I would instance Christine as an example of this fact." We have
+here an interesting case of variability in an important functional
+point.) Some flowers on a common scarlet variety were self-fertilised,
+and other flowers were crossed with pollen from another plant; but no
+sooner had I done so, than I remembered that these plants had been
+propagated by cuttings from the same stock, and were therefore parts in
+a strict sense of the same individual. Nevertheless, having made the
+cross I resolved to save the seeds, which, after germinating on sand,
+were planted on the opposite sides of three pots. In one pot the
+quasi-crossed plant was very soon and ever afterwards taller and finer
+than the self-fertilised. In the two other pots the seedlings on both
+sides were for a time exactly equal; but when the self-fertilised plants
+were about 10 inches in height, they surpassed their antagonists by a
+little, and ever afterwards showed a more decided and increasing
+advantage; so that the self-fertilised plants, taken altogether, were
+somewhat superior to the quasi-crossed plants. In this case, as in that
+of the Origanum, if individuals which have been asexually propagated
+from the same stock, and which have been long subjected to the same
+conditions, are crossed, no advantage whatever is gained.
+
+Several flowers on another plant of the same variety were fertilised
+with pollen from the younger flowers on the same plant, so as to avoid
+using the old and long-shed pollen from the same flower, as I thought
+that this latter might be less efficient than fresh pollen. Other
+flowers on the same plant were crossed with fresh pollen from a plant
+which, although closely similar, was known to have arisen as a distinct
+seedling. The self-fertilised seeds germinated rather before the others;
+but as soon as I got equal pairs they were planted on the opposite sides
+of four pots.
+
+TABLE 5/49. Pelargonium zonale.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 22 3/8 : 25 5/8.
+Pot 1 : 19 6/8 : 12 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 15 : 19 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 12 2/8 : 22 3/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 30 5/8 : 19 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 18 4/8 : 7 4/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 38 : 9 1/8.
+
+Total : 156.50 : 116.38.
+
+When the two lots of seedlings were between 4 and 5 inches in height
+they were equal, excepting in Pot 4, in which the crossed plant was much
+the tallest. When between 11 and 14 inches in height, they were measured
+to the tips of their uppermost leaves; the crossed averaged 13.46, and
+the self-fertilised 11.07 inches in height, or as 100 to 82. Five months
+later they were again measured in the same manner, and the results are
+given in Table 5/49.
+
+The seven crossed plants now averaged 22.35, and the seven
+self-fertilised 16.62 inches in height, or as 100 to 74. But from the
+great inequality of the several plants, the result is less trustworthy
+than in most other cases. In Pot 2 the two self-fertilised plants always
+had an advantage, except whilst quite young over the two crossed plants.
+
+As I wished to ascertain how these plants would behave during a second
+growth, they were cut down close to the ground whilst growing freely.
+The crossed plants now showed their superiority in another way, for only
+one out of the seven was killed by the operation, whilst three of the
+self-fertilised plants never recovered. There was, therefore, no use in
+keeping any of the plants excepting those in Pots 1 and 3; and in the
+following year the crossed plants in these two pots showed during their
+second growth nearly the same relative superiority over the
+self-fertilised plants as before.
+
+Tropaeolum minus.
+
+The flowers are proterandrous, and are manifestly adapted for
+cross-fertilisation by insects, as shown by Sprengel and Delpino. Twelve
+flowers on some plants growing out of doors were crossed with pollen
+from a distinct plant and produced eleven capsules, containing
+altogether twenty-four good seeds. Eighteen flowers were fertilised with
+their own pollen and produced only eleven capsules, containing
+twenty-two good seeds; so that a much larger proportion of the crossed
+than of the self-fertilised flowers produced capsules, and the crossed
+capsules contained rather more seed than the self-fertilised in the
+ratio of 100 to 92. The seeds from the self-fertilised capsules were
+however the heavier of the two, in the ratio of 100 to 87.
+
+Seeds in an equal state of germination were planted on the opposite
+sides of four pots, but only the two tallest plants on each side of each
+pot were measured to the tops of their stems. The pots were placed in
+the greenhouse, and the plants trained up sticks, so that they ascended
+to an unusual height. In three of the pots the crossed plants flowered
+first, but in the fourth at the same time with the self-fertilised. When
+the seedlings were between 6 and 7 inches in height, the crossed began
+to show a slight advantage over their opponents. When grown to a
+considerable height the eight tallest crossed plants averaged 44.43, and
+the eight tallest self-fertilised plants 37.34 inches, or as 100 to 84.
+When their growth was completed they were again measured, as shown in
+Table 5/50.
+
+TABLE 5/50. Tropaeolum minus.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 65 : 31.
+Pot 1 : 50 : 45.
+
+Pot 2 : 69 : 42.
+Pot 2 : 35 : 45.
+
+Pot 3 : 70 : 50 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 59 4/8 : 55 4/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 61 4/8 : 37 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 57 4/8 : 61 4/8.
+
+Total : 467.5 : 368.0.
+
+The eight tallest crossed plants now averaged 58.43, and the eight
+tallest self-fertilised plants 46 inches in height, or as 100 to 79.
+
+There was also a great difference in the fertility of the two lots which
+were left uncovered in the greenhouse. On the 17th of September the
+capsules from all the plants were gathered, and the seeds counted. The
+crossed plants yielded 243, whilst the same number of self-fertilised
+plants yielded only 155 seeds, or as 100 to 64.
+
+Limnanthes douglasii.
+
+Several flowers were crossed and self-fertilised in the usual manner,
+but there was no marked difference in the number of seeds which they
+yielded. A vast number of spontaneously self-fertilised capsules were
+also produced under the net. Seedlings were raised in five pots from the
+above seeds, and when the crossed were about 3 inches in height they
+showed a slight advantage over the self-fertilised. When double this
+height, the sixteen crossed and sixteen self-fertilised plants were
+measured to the tips of their leaves; the former averaged 7.3 inches,
+and the self-fertilised 6.07 inches in height, or as 100 to 83. In all
+the pots, excepting 4, a crossed plant flowered before any one of the
+self-fertilised plants. The plants, when fully grown, were again
+measured to the summits of their ripe capsules, with the result in Table
+5/51.
+
+TABLE 5/51. Limnanthes douglasii.
+
+Heights of plants to the summits of their ripe capsules, measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 17 7/8 : 15 1/8.
+Pot 1 : 17 6/8 : 16 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 13 : 11.
+
+Pot 2 : 20 : 14 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 22 : 15 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 21 : 16 1/8.
+Pot 2 : 18 4/8 : 17.
+
+Pot 3 : 15 6/8 : 11 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 17 2/8 : 10 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 14 : 0.
+
+Pot 4 : 20 4/8 : 13 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 14 : 13.
+Pot 4 : 18 : 12 2/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 17 : 14 2/8.
+Pot 5 : 18 5/8 : 14 1/8.
+Pot 5 : 14 2/8 : 12 5/8.
+
+Total : 279.50 : 207.75.
+
+The sixteen crossed plants now averaged 17.46, and the fifteen (for one
+had died) self-fertilised plants 13.85 inches in height, or as 100 to
+79. Mr. Galton considers that a higher ratio would be fairer, namely,
+100 to 76. He made a graphical representation of the above measurements,
+and adds the words "very good" to the curvature thus formed. Both lots
+of plants produced an abundance of seed-capsules, and, as far as could
+be judged by the eye, there was no difference in their fertility.]
+
+14. LEGUMINOSAE.
+
+In this family I experimented on the following six genera, Lupinus,
+Phaseolus, Lathyrus, Pisum, Sarothamnus, and Ononis.
+
+[Lupinus luteus. (5/2. The structure of the flowers of this plant, and
+their manner of fertilisation, have been described by H. Muller
+'Befruchtung' etc. page 243. The flowers do not secrete free nectar, and
+bees generally visit them for their pollen. Mr. Farrer, however, remarks
+'Nature' 1872 page 499, that "there is a cavity at the back and base of
+the vexillum, in which I have not been able to find nectar. But the
+bees, which constantly visit these flowers, certainly go to this cavity
+for what they want, and not to the staminal tube.")
+
+A few flowers were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant, but owing
+to the unfavourable season only two crossed seeds were produced. Nine
+seeds were saved from flowers spontaneously self-fertilised under a net,
+on the same plant which yielded the two crossed seeds. One of these
+crossed seeds was sown in a pot with two self-fertilised seeds on the
+opposite side; the latter came up between two and three days before the
+crossed seed. The second crossed seed was sown in like manner with two
+self-fertilised seeds on the opposite side; these latter also came up
+about a day before the crossed one. In both pots, therefore, the crossed
+seedlings from germinating later, were at first completely beaten by the
+self-fertilised; nevertheless, this state of things was afterwards
+completely reversed. The seeds were sown late in the autumn, and the
+pots, which were much too small, were kept in the greenhouse. The plants
+in consequence grew badly, and the self-fertilised suffered most in both
+pots. The two crossed plants when in flower during the following spring
+were 9 inches in height; one of the self-fertilised plants was 8, and
+the three others only 3 inches in height, being thus mere dwarfs. The
+two crossed plants produced thirteen pods, whilst the four
+self-fertilised plants produced only a single one. Some other
+self-fertilised plants which had been raised separately in larger pots
+produced several spontaneously self-fertilised pods under a net, and
+seeds from these were used in the following experiment.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+
+The spontaneously self-fertilised seeds just mentioned, and crossed
+seeds obtained by intercrossing the two crossed plants of the last
+generation, after germinating on sand, were planted in pairs on the
+opposite sides of three large pots. When the seedlings were only 4
+inches in height, the crossed had a slight advantage over their
+opponents. When grown to their full height, every one of the crossed
+plants exceeded its opponent in height. Nevertheless the self-fertilised
+plants in all three pots flowered before the crossed! The measurements
+are given in Table 5/52.
+
+TABLE 5/52. Lupinus luteus.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 33 2/8 : 24 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 30 4/8 : 18 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 30 : 28.
+
+Pot 2 : 29 4/8 : 26.
+Pot 2 : 30 : 25.
+
+Pot 3 : 30 4/8 : 28.
+Pot 3 : 31 : 27 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 31 4/8 : 24 4/8.
+
+Total : 246.25 : 201.75.
+
+The eight crossed plants here average 30.78, and the eight
+self-fertilised 25.21 inches in height; or as 100 to 82. These plants
+were left uncovered in the greenhouse to set their pods, but they
+produced very few good ones, perhaps in part owing to few bees visiting
+them. The crossed plants produced nine pods, containing on an average
+3.4 seeds, and the self-fertilised plants seven pods, containing on an
+average 3 seeds, so that the seeds from an equal number of plants were
+as 100 to 88.
+
+Two other crossed seedlings, each with two self-fertilised seedlings on
+the opposite sides of the same large pot, were turned out of their pots
+early in the season, without being disturbed, into open ground of good
+quality. They were thus subjected to but little competition with one
+another, in comparison with the plants in the above three pots. In the
+autumn the two crossed plants were about 3 inches taller than the four
+self-fertilised plants; they looked also more vigorous and produced many
+more pods.
+
+Two other crossed and self-fertilised seeds of the same lot, after
+germinating on sand, were planted on the opposite sides of a large pot,
+in which a Calceolaria had long been growing, and were therefore exposed
+to unfavourable conditions: the two crossed plants ultimately attained a
+height of 20 1/2 and 20 inches, whilst the two self-fertilised were only
+18 and 9 1/2 inches high.
+
+Lupinus pilosus.
+
+From a series of accidents I was again unfortunate in obtaining a
+sufficient number of crossed seedlings; and the following results would
+not be worth giving, did they not strictly accord with those just given
+with respect to Lupinus luteus. I raised at first only a single crossed
+seedling, which was placed in competition with two self-fertilised ones
+on the opposite side of the same pot. These plants, without being
+disturbed, were soon afterwards turned into the open ground. By the
+autumn the crossed plant had grown to so large a size that it almost
+smothered the two self-fertilised plants, which were mere dwarfs; and
+the latter died without maturing a single pod. Several self-fertilised
+seeds had been planted at the same time separately in the open ground;
+and the two tallest of these were 33 and 32 inches, whereas the one
+crossed plant was 38 inches in height. This latter plant also produced
+many more pods than did any one of the self-fertilised plants, although
+growing separately. A few flowers on the one crossed plant were crossed
+with pollen from one of the self-fertilised plants, for I had no other
+crossed plant from which to obtain pollen. One of the self-fertilised
+plants having been covered by a net produced plenty of spontaneously
+self-fertilised pods.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+
+From crossed and self-fertilised seeds obtained in the manner just
+described, I succeeded in raising to maturity only a pair of plants,
+which were kept in a pot in the greenhouse. The crossed plant grew to a
+height of 33 inches, and the self-fertilised to that of 26 1/2 inches.
+The former produced, whilst still kept in the greenhouse, eight pods,
+containing on an average 2.77 seeds; and the latter only two pods,
+containing on an average 2.5 seeds. The average height of the two
+crossed plants of the two generations taken together was 35.5, and that
+of the three self-fertilised plants of the same two generations 30.5; or
+as 100 to 86. (5/3. We here see that both Lupinus luteus and pilosus
+seed freely when insects are excluded; but Mr. Swale, of Christchurch,
+in New Zealand, informs me 'Gardeners' Chronicle' 1858 page 828, that
+the garden varieties of the lupine are not there visited by any bees,
+and that they seed less freely than any other introduced leguminous
+plant, with the exception of red clover. He adds "I have, for amusement,
+during the summer, released the stamens with a pin, and a pod of seed
+has always rewarded me for my trouble, the adjoining flowers not so
+served having all proved blind." I do not know to what species this
+statement refers.)
+
+Phaseolus multiflorus.
+
+This plant, the scarlet-runner of English gardeners and the Phaseolus
+coccineus of Lamarck, originally came from Mexico, as I am informed by
+Mr. Bentham. The flowers are so constructed that hive and humble-bees,
+which visit them incessantly, almost always alight on the left
+wing-petal, as they can best suck the nectar from this side. Their
+weight and movements depress the petal, and this causes the stigma to
+protrude from the spirally-wound keel, and a brush of hairs round the
+stigma pushes out the pollen before it. The pollen adheres to the head
+or proboscis of the bee which is at work, and is thus placed either on
+the stigma of the same flower, or is carried to another flower. (5/4.
+The flowers have been described by Delpino, and in an admirable manner
+by Mr. Farrer in the 'Annals and Magazine of Natural History' volume 2
+4th series October 1868 page 256. My son Francis has explained 'Nature'
+January 8, 1874 page 189, the use of one peculiarity in their structure,
+namely, a little vertical projection on the single free stamen near its
+base, which seems placed as if to guard the entrance into the two
+nectar-holes in the staminal sheath. He shows that this projection
+prevents the bees reaching the nectar, unless they go to the left side
+of the flower, and it is absolutely necessary for cross-fertilisation
+that they should alight on the left wing-petal.) Several years ago I
+covered some plants under a large net, and these produced on one
+occasion about one-third, and on another occasion about one-eighth, of
+the number of pods which the same number of uncovered plants growing
+close alongside produced. (5/5. 'Gardeners' Chronicle' 1857 page 725 and
+more especially ibid 1858 page 828. Also 'Annals and Magazine of Natural
+History' 3rd series volume 2 1858 page 462.) This lessened fertility was
+not caused by any injury from the net, as I moved the wing-petals of
+several protected flowers, in the same manner as bees do, and these
+produced remarkably fine pods. When the net was taken off, the flowers
+were immediately visited by bees, and it was interesting to observe how
+quickly the plants became covered with young pods. As the flowers are
+much frequented by Thrips, the self-fertilisation of most of the flowers
+under the net may have been due to the action of these minute insects.
+Dr. Ogle likewise covered up a large portion of a plant, and "out of a
+vast number of blossoms thus protected not a single one produced a pod,
+while the unprotected blossoms were for the most part fruitful." Mr.
+Belt gives a more curious case; this plant grows well and flowers in
+Nicaragua; but as none of the native bees visit the flowers, not a
+single pod is ever produced. (5/6. Dr. Ogle 'Popular Science Review'
+1870 page 168. Mr. Belt 'The Naturalist in Nicaragua' 1874 page 70. The
+latter author gives a case 'Nature' 1875 page 26, of a late crop of
+Phaseolus multiflorus near London which "was rendered barren" by the
+humble-bees cutting, as they frequently do, holes at the bases of the
+flowers instead of entering them in the proper manner.)
+
+From the facts now given we may feel nearly sure that individuals of the
+same variety or of different varieties, if growing near each other and
+in flower at the same time, would intercross; but I cannot myself
+advance any direct evidence of such an occurrence, as only a single
+variety is commonly cultivated in England. I have, however, received an
+account from the Reverend W.A. Leighton, that plants raised by him from
+ordinary seed produced seeds differing in an extraordinary manner in
+colour and shape, leading to the belief that their parents must have
+been crossed. In France M. Fermond more than once planted close together
+varieties which ordinarily come true and which bear differently coloured
+flowers and seeds; and the offspring thus raised varied so greatly that
+there could hardly be a doubt that they had intercrossed. (5/7.
+'Fcondation chez les Vgtaux' 1859 pages 34-40. He adds that M.
+Villiers has described a spontaneous hybrid, which he calls Phaseolus
+coccineus hybridus, in the 'Annales de la Soc. R. de Horticulture' June
+1844.) On the other hand, Professor H. Hoffman does not believe in the
+natural crossing of the varieties; for although seedlings raised from
+two varieties growing close together produced plants which yielded seeds
+of a mixed character, he found that this likewise occurred with plants
+separated by a space of from 40 to 150 paces from any other variety; he
+therefore attributes the mixed character of the seed to spontaneous
+variability. (5/8. 'Bestimmung des Werthes von Species und Varietat'
+1869 pages 47-72.) But the above distance would be very far from
+sufficient to prevent intercrossing: cabbages have been known to cross
+at several times this distance; and the careful Gartner gives many
+instances of plants growing at from 600 to 800 yards apart fertilising
+one another. (5/9. 'Kenntnis der Befruchtung' 1844 pages 573, 577.)
+Professor Hoffman even maintains that the flowers of the kidney-bean are
+specially adapted for self-fertilisation. He enclosed several flowers in
+bags; and as the buds often dropped off, he attributes the partial
+sterility of these flowers to the injurious effects of the bags, and not
+to the exclusion of insects. But the only safe method of experimenting
+is to cover up a whole plant, which then never suffers.
+
+Self-fertilised seeds were obtained by moving up and down in the same
+manner as bees do the wing-petals of flowers protected by a net; and
+crossed seeds were obtained by crossing two of the plants under the same
+net. The seeds after germinating on sand were planted on the opposite
+sides of two large pots, and equal-sized sticks were given them to twine
+up. When 8 inches in height, the plants on the two sides were equal. The
+crossed plants flowered before the self-fertilised in both pots. As soon
+as one of each pair had grown to the summit of its stick both were
+measured.
+
+TABLE 5/53. Phaseolus multiflorus.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 87 : 84 6/8.
+Pot 1 : 88 : 87.
+Pot 1 : 82 4/8 : 76.
+
+Pot 2 : 90 : 76 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 82 4/8 : 87 4/8.
+
+Total : 430.00 : 411.75.
+
+The average height of the five crossed plants is 86 inches, and that of
+the five self-fertilised plants 82.35; or as 100 to 96. The pots were
+kept in the greenhouse, and there was little or no difference in the
+fertility of the two lots. Therefore as far as these few observations
+serve, the advantage gained by a cross is very small.
+
+Phaseolus vulgaris.
+
+With respect to this species, I merely ascertained that the flowers were
+highly fertile when insects were excluded, as indeed must be the case,
+for the plants are often forced during the winter when no insects are
+present. Some plants of two varieties (namely Canterbury and Fulmer's
+Forcing Bean) were covered with a net, and they seemed to produce as
+many pods, containing as many beans, as some uncovered plants growing
+alongside; but neither the pods nor the beans were actually counted.
+This difference in self-fertility between Phaseolus vulgaris and
+multifloris is remarkable, as these two species are so closely related
+that Linnaeus thought that they formed one. When the varieties of
+Phaseolus vulgaris grow near one another in the open ground, they
+sometimes cross largely, notwithstanding their capacity for
+self-fertilisation. Mr. Coe has given me a remarkable instance of this
+fact with respect to the negro and a white-seeded and a brown-seeded
+variety, which were all grown together. The diversity of character in
+the seedlings of the second generation raised by me from his plants was
+wonderful. I could add other analogous cases, and the fact is well-known
+to gardeners. (5/10. I have given Mr. Coe's case in the 'Gardeners'
+Chronicle' 1858 page 829. See also for another case ibid page 845.)
+
+Lathyrus odoratus.
+
+Almost everyone who has studied the structure of papilionaceous flowers
+has been convinced that they are specially adapted for
+cross-fertilisation, although many of the species are likewise capable
+of self-fertilisation. The case therefore of Lathyrus odoratus or the
+sweet-pea is curious, for in this country it seems invariably to
+fertilise itself. I conclude that this is so, as five varieties,
+differing greatly in the colour of their flowers but in no other
+respect, are commonly sold and come true; yet on inquiry from two great
+raisers of seed for sale, I find that they take no precautions to insure
+purity--the five varieties being habitually grown close together. (5/11.
+See Mr. W. Earley in 'Nature' 1872 page 242, to the same effect. He
+once, however, saw bees visiting the flowers, and supposed that on this
+occasion they would have been intercrossed.) I have myself purposely
+made similar trials with the same result. Although the varieties always
+come true, yet, as we shall presently see, one of the five well-known
+varieties occasionally gives birth to another, which exhibits all its
+usual characters. Owing to this curious fact, and to the darker-coloured
+varieties being the most productive, these increase, to the exclusion of
+the others, as I was informed by the late Mr. Masters, if there be no
+selection.
+
+In order to ascertain what would be the effect of crossing two
+varieties, some flowers on the Purple sweet-pea, which has a dark
+reddish-purple standard-petal with violet-coloured wing-petals and keel,
+were castrated whilst very young, and were fertilised with pollen of the
+Painted Lady. This latter variety has a pale cherry-coloured standard,
+with almost white wings and keel. On two occasions I raised from a
+flower thus crossed plants perfectly resembling both parent-forms; but
+the greater number resembled the paternal variety. So perfect was the
+resemblance, that I should have suspected some mistake in the label, had
+not the plants, which were at first identical in appearance with the
+father or Painted Lady, later in the season produced flowers blotched
+and streaked with dark purple. This is an interesting example of partial
+reversion in the same individual plant as it grows older. The
+purple-flowered plants were thrown away, as they might possibly have
+been the product of the accidental self-fertilisation of the
+mother-plant, owing to the castration not having been effectual. But the
+plants which resembled in the colour of their flowers the paternal
+variety or Painted Lady were preserved, and their seeds saved. Next
+summer many plants were raised from these seeds, and they generally
+resembled their grandfather the Painted Lady, but most of them had their
+wing-petals streaked and stained with dark pink; and a few had pale
+purple wings with the standard of a darker crimson than is natural to
+the Painted Lady, so that they formed a new sub-variety. Amongst these
+plants a single one appeared having purple flowers like those of the
+grandmother, but with the petals slightly streaked with a paler tint:
+this was thrown away. Seeds were again saved from the foregoing plants,
+and the seedlings thus raised still resembled the Painted Lady, or
+great-grandfather; but they now varied much, the standard petal varying
+from pale to dark red, in a few instances with blotches of white; and
+the wing-petals varied from nearly white to purple, the keel being in
+all nearly white.
+
+As no variability of this kind can be detected in plants raised from
+seeds, the parents of which have grown during many successive
+generations in close proximity, we may infer that they cannot have
+intercrossed. What does occasionally occur is that in a row of plants
+raised from seeds of one variety, another variety true of its kind
+appears; for instance, in a long row of Scarlets (the seeds of which had
+been carefully gathered from Scarlets for the sake of this experiment)
+two Purples and one Painted Lady appeared. Seeds from these three
+aberrant plants were saved and sown in separate beds. The seedlings from
+both the Purples were chiefly Purples, but with some Painted Ladies and
+some Scarlets. The seedlings from the aberrant Painted Lady were chiefly
+Painted Ladies with some Scarlets. Each variety, whatever its parentage
+may have been, retained all its characters perfect, and there was no
+streaking or blotching of the colours, as in the foregoing plants of
+crossed origin. Another variety, however, is often sold, which is
+striped and blotched with dark purple; and this is probably of crossed
+origin, for I found, as well as Mr. Masters, that it did not transmit
+its characters at all truly.
+
+From the evidence now given, we may conclude that the varieties of the
+sweet-pea rarely or never intercross in this country; and this is a
+highly remarkable fact, considering, firstly, the general structure of
+the flowers; secondly, the large quantity of pollen produced, far more
+than is requisite for self-fertilisation; and thirdly, the occasional
+visit of insects. That insects should sometimes fail to cross-fertilise
+the flowers is intelligible, for I have thrice seen humble-bees of two
+kinds, as well as hive-bees, sucking the nectar, and they did not
+depress the keel-petals so as to expose the anthers and stigma; they
+were therefore quite inefficient for fertilising the flowers. One of
+these bees, namely, Bombus lapidarius, stood on one side at the base of
+the standard and inserted its proboscis beneath the single separate
+stamen, as I afterwards ascertained by opening the flower and finding
+this stamen prised up. Bees are forced to act in this manner from the
+slit in the staminal tube being closely covered by the broad membranous
+margin of the single stamen, and from the tube not being perforated by
+nectar-passages. On the other hand, in the three British species of
+Lathyrus which I have examined, and in the allied genus Vicia, two
+nectar-passages are present. Therefore British bees might well be
+puzzled how to act in the case of the sweet-pea. I may add that the
+staminal tube of another exotic species, Lathyrus grandiflorus, is not
+perforated by nectar-passages, and this species has rarely set any pods
+in my garden, unless the wing-petals were moved up and down, in the same
+manner as bees ought to do; and then pods were generally formed, but
+from some cause often dropped off afterwards. One of my sons caught an
+elephant sphinx-moth whilst visiting the flowers of the sweet-pea, but
+this insect would not depress the wing-petals and keel. On the other
+hand, I have seen on one occasion hive-bees, and two or three occasions
+the Megachile willughbiella in the act of depressing the keel; and these
+bees had the under sides of their bodies thickly covered with pollen,
+and could not thus fail to carry pollen from one flower to the stigma of
+another. Why then do not the varieties occasionally intercross, though
+this would not often happen, as insects so rarely act in an efficient
+manner? The fact cannot, as it appears, be explained by the flowers
+being self-fertilised at a very early age; for although nectar is
+sometimes secreted and pollen adheres to the viscid stigma before the
+flowers are fully expanded, yet in five young flowers which were
+examined by me the pollen-tubes were not exserted. Whatever the cause
+may be, we may conclude, that in England the varieties never or very
+rarely intercross. But it does not follow from this, that they would not
+be cross by the aid of other and larger insects in their native country,
+which in botanical works is said to be the south of Europe and the East
+Indies. Accordingly I wrote to Professor Delpino, in Florence, and he
+informs me "that it is the fixed opinion of gardeners there that the
+varieties do intercross, and that they cannot be preserved pure unless
+they are sown separately."
+
+It follows also from the foregoing facts that the several varieties of
+the sweet-pea must have propagated themselves in England by
+self-fertilisation for very many generations, since the time when each
+new variety first appeared. From the analogy of the plants of Mimulus
+and Ipomoea, which had been self-fertilised for several generations, and
+from trials previously made with the common pea, which is in nearly the
+same state as the sweet-pea, it appeared to me very improbable that a
+cross between the individuals of the same variety would benefit the
+offspring. A cross of this kind was therefore not tried, which I now
+regret. But some flowers of the Painted Lady, castrated at an early age,
+were fertilised with pollen from the Purple sweet-pea; and it should be
+remembered that these varieties differ in nothing except in the colour
+of their flowers. The cross was manifestly effectual (though only two
+seeds were obtained), as was shown by the two seedlings, when they
+flowered, closely resembling their father, the Purple pea, excepting
+that they were a little lighter coloured, with their keels slightly
+streaked with pale purple. Seeds from flowers spontaneously
+self-fertilised under a net were at the same time saved from the same
+mother-plant, the Painted Lady. These seeds unfortunately did not
+germinate on sand at the same time with the crossed seeds, so that they
+could not be planted simultaneously. One of the two crossed seeds in a
+state of germination was planted in a pot (Number 1) in which a
+self-fertilised seed in the same state had been planted four days
+before, so that this latter seedling had a great advantage over the
+crossed one. In Pot 2 the other crossed seed was planted two days before
+a self-fertilised one; so that here the crossed seedling had a
+considerable advantage over the self-fertilised one. But this crossed
+seedling had its summit gnawed off by a slug, and was in consequence for
+a time quite beaten by the self-fertilised plant. Nevertheless I allowed
+it to remain, and so great was its constitutional vigour that it
+ultimately beat its uninjured self-fertilised rival. When all four
+plants were almost fully grown they were measured, as here shown:--
+
+TABLE 5/54. Lathyrus odoratus.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 80 : 64 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 78 4/8 : 63.
+
+Total : 158.5 : 127.5.
+
+The two crossed plants here average 79.25, and the two self-fertilised
+63.75 inches in height, or as 100 to 80. Six flowers on these two
+crossed plants were reciprocally crossed with pollen from the other
+plant, and the six pods thus produced contained on an average six peas,
+with a maximum in one of seven. Eighteen spontaneously self-fertilised
+pods from the Painted Lady, which, as already stated, had no doubt been
+self-fertilised for many previous generations, contained on an average
+only 3.93 peas, with a maximum in one of five peas; so that the number
+of peas in the crossed and self-fertilised pods was as 100 to 65. The
+self-fertilised peas were, however, quite as heavy as those from the
+crossed pods. From these two lots of seeds, the plants of the next
+generation were raised.
+
+PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+
+Many of the self-fertilised peas just referred to germinated on sand
+before any of the crossed ones, and were rejected. As soon as I got
+equal pairs, they were planted on the opposite sides of two large pots,
+which were kept in the greenhouse. The seedlings thus raised were the
+grandchildren of the Painted Lady, which was first crossed by the Purple
+variety. When the two lots were from 4 to 6 inches in height there was
+no difference between them. Nor was there any marked difference in the
+period of their flowering. When fully grown they were measured, as
+follows:--
+
+TABLE 5/55. Lathyrus odoratus (Second Generation).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Seedlings from Plants Crossed during the two previous
+Generations.
+
+Column 3: Seedlings from Plants Self-fertilised during many previous
+Generations.
+
+Pot 1 : 72 4/8 : 57 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 71 : 67.
+Pot 1 : 52 2/8 : 56 2/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 81 4/8 : 66 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 45 2/8 : 38 7/8.
+Pot 2 : 55 : 46.
+
+Total : 377.50 : 331.86.
+
+The average height of the six crossed plants is here 62.91, and that of
+the six self-fertilised 55.31 inches; or as 100 to 88. There was not
+much difference in the fertility of the two lots; the crossed plants
+having produced in the greenhouse thirty-five pods, and the
+self-fertilised thirty-two pods.
+
+Seeds were saved from the self-fertilised flowers on these two lots of
+plants, for the sake of ascertaining whether the seedlings thus raised
+would inherit any difference in growth or vigour. It must therefore be
+understood that both lots in the following trial are plants of
+self-fertilised parentage; but that in the one lot the plants were the
+children of plants which had been crossed during two previous
+generations, having been before that self-fertilised for many
+generations; and that in the other lot they were the children of plants
+which had not been crossed for very many previous generations. The seeds
+germinated on sand and were planted in pairs on the opposite sides of
+four pots. They were measured, when fully grown, with the following
+result:--
+
+TABLE 5/56. Lathyrus odoratus.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants from Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants from Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 72 : 65.
+Pot 1 : 72 : 61 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 58 : 64.
+Pot 2 : 68 : 68 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 72 4/8 : 56 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 81 : 60 2/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 77 4/8 : 76 4/8.
+
+Total : 501 : 452.
+
+The average height of the seven self-fertilised plants, the offspring of
+crossed plants, is 71.57, and that of the seven self-fertilised plants,
+the offspring of self-fertilised plants, is 64.57; or as 100 to 90. The
+self-fertilised plants from the self-fertilised produced rather more
+pods--namely, thirty-six--than the self-fertilised plants from the
+crossed, for these produced only thirty-one pods.
+
+A few seeds of the same two lots were sown in the opposite corners of a
+large box in which a Brugmansia had long been growing, and in which the
+soil was so exhausted that seeds of Ipomoea purpurea would hardly
+vegetate; yet the two plants of the sweet-pea which were raised
+flourished well. For a long time the self-fertilised plant from the
+self-fertilised beat the self-fertilised plant from the crossed plant;
+the former flowered first, and was at one time 77 1/2 inches, whilst the
+latter was only 68 1/2 in height; but ultimately the plant from the
+previous cross showed its superiority and attained a height of 108 1/2
+inches, whilst the other was only 95 inches. I also sowed some of the
+same two lots of seeds in poor soil in a shady place in a shrubbery.
+Here again the self-fertilised plants from the self-fertilised for a
+long time exceeded considerably in height those from the previously
+crossed plants; and this may probably be attributed, in the present as
+in the last case, to these seeds having germinated rather sooner than
+those from the crossed plants; but at the close of the season the
+tallest of the self-fertilised plants from the crossed plants was 30
+inches, whilst the tallest of the self-fertilised from the
+self-fertilised was 29 3/8 inches in height.
+
+From the various facts now given we see that plants derived from a cross
+between two varieties of the sweet-pea, which differ in no respect
+except in the colour of their flowers, exceed considerably in height the
+offspring from self-fertilised plants, both in the first and second
+generations. The crossed plants also transmit their superiority in
+height and vigour to their self-fertilised offspring.
+
+Pisum sativum.
+
+The common pea is perfectly fertile when its flowers are protected from
+the visits of insects; I ascertained this with two or three different
+varieties, as did Dr. Ogle with another. But the flowers are likewise
+adapted for cross-fertilisation; Mr. Farrer specifies the following
+points, namely: "The open blossom displaying itself in the most
+attractive and convenient position for insects; the conspicuous
+vexillum; the wings forming an alighting place; the attachment of the
+wings to the keel, by which any body pressing on the former must press
+down the latter; the staminal tube enclosing nectar, and affording by
+means of its partially free stamen with apertures on each side of its
+base an open passage to an insect seeking the nectar; the moist and
+sticky pollen placed just where it will be swept out of the apex of the
+keel against the entering insect; the stiff elastic style so placed that
+on a pressure being applied to the keel it will be pushed upwards out of
+the keel; the hairs on the style placed on that side of the style only
+on which there is space for the pollen, and in such a direction as to
+sweep it out; and the stigma so placed as to meet an entering
+insect,--all these become correlated parts of one elaborate mechanism,
+if we suppose that the fertilisation of these flowers is effected by the
+carriage of pollen from one to the other." (5/12. 'Nature' October 10,
+1872 page 479. Hermann Muller gives an elaborate description of the
+flowers 'Befruchtung' etc. page 247.) Notwithstanding these manifest
+provisions for cross-fertilisation, varieties which have been cultivated
+for very many successive generations in close proximity, although
+flowering at the same time, remain pure. I have elsewhere given evidence
+on this head, and if required could give more. (5/13. 'Variation of
+Animals and Plants under Domestication' chapter 9 2nd edition volume 1
+page 348.) There can hardly be a doubt that some of Knight's varieties,
+which were originally produced by an artificial cross and were very
+vigorous, lasted for at least sixty years, and during all these years
+were self-fertilised; for had it been otherwise, they would not have
+kept true, as the several varieties are generally grown near together.
+Most of the varieties, however, endure for a shorter period; and this
+may be in part due to their weakness of constitution from long-continued
+self-fertilisation.
+
+It is remarkable, considering that the flowers secrete much nectar and
+afford much pollen, how seldom they are visited by insects either in
+England, or, as H. Muller remarks, in North Germany. I have observed the
+flowers for the last thirty years, and in all this time have only thrice
+seen bees of the proper kind at work (one of them being Bombus
+muscorum), such as were sufficiently powerful to depress the keel, so as
+to get the undersides of their bodies dusted with pollen. These bees
+visited several flowers, and could hardly have failed to cross-fertilise
+them. Hive-bees and other small kinds sometimes collect pollen from old
+and already fertilised flowers, but this is of no account. The rarity of
+the visits of efficient bees to this exotic plant is, I believe, the
+chief cause of the varieties so seldom intercrossing. That a cross does
+occasionally take place, as might be expected from what has just been
+stated, is certain, from the recorded cases of the direct action of the
+pollen of one variety on the seed-coats of another. (5/14. 'Variation of
+Animals and Plants under Domestication' chapter 11 2nd edition volume 1
+page 428.) The late Mr. Masters, who particularly attended to the
+raising of new varieties of peas, was convinced that some of them had
+originated from accidental crosses. But as such crosses are rare, the
+old varieties would not often be thus deteriorated, more especially as
+plants departing from the proper type are generally rejected by those
+who collect seed for sale. There is another cause which probably tends
+to render cross-fertilisation rare, namely, the early age at which the
+pollen-tubes are exserted; eight flowers not fully expanded were
+examined, and in seven of these the pollen-tubes were in this state; but
+they had not as yet penetrated the stigma. Although so few insects visit
+the flowers of the pea in this country or in North Germany, and although
+the anthers seem here to open abnormally soon, it does not follow that
+the species in its native country would be thus circumstanced.
+
+Owing to the varieties having been self-fertilised for many generations,
+and to their having been subjected in each generation to nearly the same
+conditions (as will be explained in a future chapter) I did not expect
+that a cross between two such plants would benefit the offspring; and so
+it proved on trial. In 1867 I covered up several plants of the Early
+Emperor pea, which was not then a very new variety, so that it must
+already have been propagated by self-fertilisation for at least a dozen
+generations. Some flowers were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant
+growing in the same row, and others were allowed to fertilise themselves
+under a net. The two lots of seeds thus obtained were sown on opposite
+sides of two large pots, but only four pairs came up at the same time.
+The pots were kept in the greenhouse. The seedlings of both lots when
+between 6 and 7 inches in height were equal. When nearly full-grown they
+were measured, as in Table 5/57.
+
+TABLE 5/57. Pisum sativum.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 35 : 29 6/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 31 4/8 : 51.
+Pot 2 : 35 : 45.
+Pot 2 : 37 : 33.
+
+Total : 138.50 : 158.75.
+
+The average height of the four crossed plants is here 34.62, and that of
+the four self-fertilised plants 39.68, or as 100 to 115. So that the
+crossed plants, far from beating the self-fertilised, were completely
+beaten by them.
+
+There can be no doubt that the result would have been widely different,
+if any two varieties out of the numberless ones which exist had been
+crossed. Notwithstanding that both had been self-fertilised for many
+previous generations, each would almost certainly have possessed its own
+peculiar constitution; and this degree of differentiation would have
+been sufficient to make a cross highly beneficial. I have spoken thus
+confidently of the benefit which would have been derived from crossing
+any two varieties of the pea from the following facts: Andrew Knight in
+speaking of the results of crossing reciprocally very tall and short
+varieties, says, "I had in this experiment a striking instance of the
+stimulative effects of crossing the breeds; for the smallest variety,
+whose height rarely exceeded 2 feet, was increased to 6 feet; whilst the
+height of the large and luxuriant kind was very little diminished."
+(5/15. 'Philosophical Transactions' 1799 page 200.) Recently Mr. Laxton
+has made numerous crosses, and everyone had been astonished at the
+vigour and luxuriance of the new varieties which he has thus raised and
+afterwards fixed by selection. He gave me seed-peas produced from
+crosses between four distinct kinds; and the plants thus raised were
+extraordinarily vigorous, being in each case from 1 to 2 or even 3 feet
+taller than the parent-forms, which were raised at the same time close
+alongside. But as I did not measure their actual height I cannot give
+the exact ratio, but it must have been at least as 100 to 75. A similar
+trial was subsequently made with two other peas from a different cross,
+and the result was nearly the same. For instance, a crossed seedling
+between the Maple and Purple-podded pea was planted in poor soil and
+grew to the extraordinary height of 116 inches; whereas the tallest
+plant of either parent variety, namely, a Purple-podded pea, was only 70
+inches in height; or as 100 to 60.
+
+Sarothamnus scoparius.
+
+Bees incessantly visit the flowers of the common Broom, and these are
+adapted by a curious mechanism for cross-fertilisation. When a bee
+alights on the wing-petals of a young flower, the keel is slightly
+opened and the short stamens spring out, which rub their pollen against
+the abdomen of the bee. If a rather older flower is visited for the
+first time (or if the bee exerts great force on a younger flower), the
+keel opens along its whole length, and the longer as well as the shorter
+stamens, together with the much elongated curved pistil, spring forth
+with violence. The flattened, spoon-like extremity of the pistil rests
+for a time on the back of the bee, and leaves on it the load of pollen
+with which it is charged. As soon as the bee flies away, the pistil
+instantly curls round, so that the stigmatic surface is now upturned and
+occupies a position, in which it would be rubbed against the abdomen of
+another bee visiting the same flower. Thus, when the pistil first
+escapes from the keel, the stigma is rubbed against the back of the bee,
+dusted with pollen from the longer stamens, either of the same or
+another flower; and afterwards against the lower surface of the bee
+dusted with pollen from the shorter stamens, which is often shed a day
+or two before that from the longer stamens. (5/16. These observations
+have been quoted in an abbreviated form by the Reverend G. Henslow, in
+the 'Journal of Linnean Society Botany' volume 9 1866 page 358. Hermann
+Muller has since published a full and excellent account of the flower in
+his 'Befruchtung' etc. page 240.) By this mechanism cross-fertilisation
+is rendered almost inevitable, and we shall immediately see that pollen
+from a distinct plant is more effective than that from the same flower.
+I need only add that, according to H. Muller, the flowers do not secrete
+nectar, and he thinks that bees insert their proboscides only in the
+hope of finding nectar; but they act in this manner so frequently and
+for so long a time that I cannot avoid the belief that they obtain
+something palatable within the flowers.
+
+If the visits of bees are prevented, and if the flowers are not dashed
+by the wind against any object, the keel never opens, so that the
+stamens and pistil remain enclosed. Plants thus protected yield very few
+pods in comparison with those produced by neighbouring uncovered bushes,
+and sometimes none at all. I fertilised a few flowers on a plant growing
+almost in a state of nature with pollen from another plant close
+alongside, and the four crossed capsules contained on an average 9.2
+seeds. This large number no doubt was due to the bush being covered up,
+and thus not exhausted by producing many pods; for fifty pods gathered
+from an adjoining plant, the flowers of which had been fertilised by the
+bees, contained an average of only 7.14 seeds. Ninety-three pods
+spontaneously self-fertilised on a large bush which had been covered up,
+but had been much agitated by the wind, contained an average of 2.93
+seeds. Ten of the finest of these ninety-three capsules yielded an
+average of 4.30 seeds, that is less than half the average number in the
+four artificially crossed capsules. The ratio of 7.14 to 2.93, or as 100
+to 41, is probably the fairest for the number of seeds per pod, yielded
+by naturally-crossed and spontaneously self-fertilised flowers. The
+crossed seeds compared with an equal number of the spontaneously
+self-fertilised seeds were heavier, in the ratio of 100 to 88. We thus
+see that besides the mechanical adaptations for cross-fertilisation, the
+flowers are much more productive with pollen from a distinct plant than
+with their own pollen.
+
+Eight pairs of the above crossed and self-fertilised seeds, after they
+had germinated on sand, were planted (1867) on the opposite sides of two
+large pots. When several of the seedlings were an inch and a half in
+height, there was no marked difference between the two lots. But even at
+this early age the leaves of the self-fertilised seedlings were smaller
+and of not so bright a green as those of the crossed seedlings. The pots
+were kept in the greenhouse, and as the plants on the following spring
+(1868) looked unhealthy and had grown but little, they were plunged,
+still in their pots, into the open ground. The plants all suffered much
+from the sudden change, especially the self-fertilised, and two of the
+latter died. The remainder were measured, and I give the measurements in
+Table 5/58, because I have not seen in any other species so great a
+difference between the crossed and self-fertilised seedlings at so early
+an age.
+
+TABLE 5/58. Sarothamnus scoparius (very young plants).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 4 4/8 : 2 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 6 : 1 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 2 : 1.
+
+Pot 2 : 2 : 1 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 2 4/8 : 1.
+Pot 2 : 0 4/8 : 0 4/8.
+
+Total : 17.5 : 8.0.
+
+The six crossed plants here average 2.91, and the six self-fertilised
+1.33 inches in height; so that the former were more than twice as high
+as the latter, or as 100 to 46.
+
+In the spring of the succeeding year (1869) the three crossed plants in
+Pot 1 had all grown to nearly a foot in height, and they had smothered
+the three little self-fertilised plants so completely that two were
+dead; and the third, only an inch and a half in height, was dying. It
+should be remembered that these plants had been bedded out in their
+pots, so that they were subjected to very severe competition. This pot
+was now thrown away.
+
+The six plants in Pot 2 were all alive. One of the self-fertilised was
+an inch and a quarter taller than any one of the crossed plants; but the
+other two self-fertilised plants were in a very poor condition. I
+therefore resolved to leave these plants to struggle together for some
+years. By the autumn of the same year (1869) the self-fertilised plant
+which had been victorious was now beaten. The measurements are shown in
+Table 5/59.
+
+TABLE 5/59. Pot 2.--Sarothamnus scoparius.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+ : 15 6/8 : 13 1/8.
+ : 9 6/8 : 3.
+ : 8 2/8 : 2 4/8.
+
+The same plants were again measured in the autumn of the following year,
+1870.
+
+TABLE 5/60. Pot 2.--Sarothamnus scoparius.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+ : 26 2/8 : 14 2/8.
+ : 16 4/8 : 11 4/8.
+ : 14 : 9 6/8.
+
+Total : 56.75 : 35.50.
+
+The three crossed plants now averaged 18.91, and the three
+self-fertilised 11.83 inches in height; or as 100 to 63. The three
+crossed plants in Pot 1, as already shown, had beaten the three
+self-fertilised plants so completely, that any comparison between them
+was superfluous.
+
+The winter of 1870-1871 was severe. In the spring the three crossed
+plants in Pot 2 had not even the tips of their shoots in the least
+injured, whereas all three self-fertilised plants were killed half-way
+down to the ground; and this shows how much more tender they were. In
+consequence not one of these latter plants bore a single flower during
+the ensuing summer of 1871, whilst all three crossed plants flowered.
+
+Ononis minutissima.
+
+This plant, of which seeds were sent me from North Italy, produces,
+besides the ordinary papilionaceous flowers, minute, imperfect, closed
+or cleistogene flowers, which can never be cross-fertilised, but are
+highly self-fertile. Some of the perfect flowers were crossed with
+pollen from a distinct plant, and six capsules thus produced yielded on
+an average 3.66 seeds, with a maximum of five in one. Twelve perfect
+flowers were marked and allowed to fertilise themselves spontaneously
+under a net, and they yielded eight capsules, containing on an average
+2.38 seeds, with a maximum of three seeds in one. So that the crossed
+and self-fertilised capsules from the perfect flowers yielded seeds in
+the proportion of 100 to 65. Fifty-three capsules produced by the
+cleistogene flowers contained on an average 4.1 seeds, so that these
+were the most productive of all; and the seeds themselves looked finer
+even than those from the crossed perfect flowers.
+
+The seeds from the crossed perfect flowers and from the self-fertilised
+cleistogene flowers were allowed to germinate on sand; but unfortunately
+only two pairs germinated at the same time. These were planted on the
+opposite sides of the same pot, which was kept in the greenhouse. In the
+summer of the same year, when the seedlings were about 4 1/2 inches in
+height, the two lots were equal. In the autumn of the following year
+(1868) the two crossed plants were of exactly the same height, namely,
+11 4/8 inches, and the two self-fertilised plants 12 6/8 and 7 2/8
+inches; so that one of the self-fertilised exceeded considerably in
+height all the others. By the autumn of 1869 the two crossed plants had
+acquired the supremacy; their height being 16 4/8 and 15 1/8, whilst
+that of the two self-fertilised plants was 14 5/8 and 11 4/8 inches.
+
+By the autumn of 1870, the heights were as follows:--
+
+TABLE 5/61. Ononis minutissima.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+ : 20 3/8 : 17 4/8.
+ : 19 2/8 : 17 2/8.
+
+Total : 39.63 : 34.75.
+
+So that the mean height of the two crossed plants was 19.81, and that of
+the two self-fertilised 17.37 inches; or as 100 to 88. It should be
+remembered that the two lots were at first equal in height; that one of
+the self-fertilised plants then had the advantage, the two crossed
+plants being at last victorious.]
+
+SUMMARY ON THE LEGUMINOSAE.
+
+Six genera in this family were experimented on, and the results are in
+some respects remarkable. The crossed plants of the two species of
+Lupinus were conspicuously superior to the self-fertilised plants in
+height and fertility; and when grown under very unfavourable conditions,
+in vigour. The scarlet-runner (Phaseolus multiflorus) is partially
+sterile if the visits of bees are prevented, and there is reason to
+believe that varieties growing near one another intercross. The five
+crossed plants, however, exceeded in height the five self-fertilised
+only by a little. Phaseolus vulgaris is perfectly self-sterile;
+nevertheless, varieties growing in the same garden sometimes intercross
+largely. The varieties of Lathyrus odoratus, on the other hand, appear
+never to intercross in this country; and though the flowers are not
+often visited by efficient insects, I cannot account for this fact, more
+especially as the varieties are believed to intercross in North Italy.
+Plants raised from a cross between two varieties, differing only in the
+colour of their flowers, grew much taller and were under unfavourable
+conditions more vigorous than the self-fertilised plants; they also
+transmitted, when self-fertilised, their superiority to their offspring.
+The many varieties of the common Pea (Pisum sativum), though growing in
+close proximity, very seldom intercross; and this seems due to the
+rarity in this country of the visits of bees sufficiently powerful to
+effect cross-fertilisation. A cross between the self-fertilised
+individuals of the same variety does no good whatever to the offspring;
+whilst a cross between distinct varieties, though closely allied, does
+great good, of which we have excellent evidence. The flowers of the
+Broom (Sarothamnus) are almost sterile if they are not disturbed and if
+insects are excluded. The pollen from a distinct plant is more effective
+than that from the same flower in producing seeds. The crossed seedlings
+have an enormous advantage over the self-fertilised when grown together
+in close competition. Lastly, only four plants of the Ononis minutissima
+were raised; but as these were observed during their whole growth, the
+advantage of the crossed over the self-fertilised plants may, I think,
+be fully trusted.
+
+[15. ONAGRACEAE.--Clarkia elegans.
+
+Owing to the season being very unfavourable (1867), few of the flowers
+which I fertilised formed capsules; twelve crossed flowers produced only
+four, and eighteen self-fertilised flowers yielded only one capsule. The
+seeds after germinating on sand were planted in three pots, but all the
+self-fertilised plants died in one of them. When the two lots were
+between 4 and 5 inches in height, the crossed began to show a slight
+superiority over the self-fertilised. When in full flower they were
+measured, with the following result:--
+
+TABLE 5/62. Clarkia elegans.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 40 4/8 : 33.
+Pot 1 : 35 : 24.
+Pot 1 : 25 : 23.
+
+Pot 2 : 33 4/8 : 30 4/8.
+
+Total : 134.0 : 110.5.
+
+The average height of the four crossed plants is 33.5, and that of the
+four self-fertilised plants 27.62 inches, or as 100 to 82. The crossed
+plants altogether produced 105 and the self-fertilised plants 63
+capsules; or as 100 to 60. In both pots a self-fertilised plant flowered
+before any one of the crossed plants.
+
+16. LOASACEAE.--Bartonia aurea.
+
+Some flowers were crossed and self-fertilised in the usual manner during
+two seasons; but as I reared on the first occasion only two pairs, the
+results are given together. On both occasions the crossed capsules
+contained slightly more seeds than the self-fertilised. During the first
+year, when the plants were about 7 inches in height, the self-fertilised
+were the tallest, and in the second year the crossed were the tallest.
+When the two lots were in full flower they were measured, as in Table
+5/63.
+
+TABLE 5/63. Bartonia aurea.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 31 : 37.
+
+Pot 2 : 18 4/8 : 20 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 19 4/8 : 40 4/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 25 : 35.
+Pot 4 : 36 : 15 4/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 31 : 18.
+Pot 5 : 16 : 11 4/8.
+
+Pot 6 : 20 : 32 4/8.
+
+Total : 197.0 : 210.5.
+
+The average height of the eight crossed plants is 24.62, and that of the
+eight self-fertilised 26.31 inches; or as 100 to 107. So that the
+self-fertilised had a decided advantage over the crossed. But the plants
+from some cause never grew well, and finally became so unhealthy that
+only three crossed and three self-fertilised plants survived to set any
+capsules, and these were few in number. The two lots seemed to be about
+equally unproductive.
+
+17. PASSIFLORACEAE.--Passiflora gracilis.
+
+This annual species produces spontaneously numerous fruits when insects
+are excluded, and behaves in this respect very differently from most of
+the other species in the genus, which are extremely sterile unless
+fertilised with pollen from a distinct plant. (5/17. 'Variation of
+Animals and Plants under Domestication' chapter 17 2nd edition volume 2
+page 118.) Fourteen fruits from crossed flowers contained on an average
+24.14 seeds. Fourteen fruits (two poor ones being rejected),
+spontaneously self-fertilised under a net, contained on an average 20.58
+seeds per fruit; or as 100 to 85. These seeds were sown on the opposite
+sides of three pots, but only two pairs came up at the same time; and
+therefore a fair judgment cannot be formed.
+
+TABLE 5/64. Passiflora gracilis.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 56 : 38.
+
+Pot 2 : 42 : 64.
+
+Total : 98 : 102.
+
+The mean of the two crossed is 49 inches, and that of the two
+self-fertilised 51 inches; or as 100 to 104.
+
+18. UMBELLIFERAE.--Apium petroselinum.
+
+The Umbelliferae are proterandrous, and can hardly fail to be
+cross-fertilised by the many flies and small Hymenoptera which visit the
+flowers. (5/18. Hermann Muller 'Befruchtung' etc. page 96. According to
+M. Mustel as stated by Godron 'De l'espce' tome 2 page 58 1859,
+varieties of the carrot growing near each other readily intercross.) A
+plant of the common parsley was covered by a net, and it apparently
+produced as many and as fine spontaneously self-fertilised fruits or
+seeds as the adjoining uncovered plants. The flowers on the latter were
+visited by so many insects that they must have received pollen from one
+another. Some of these two lots of seeds were left on sand, but nearly
+all the self-fertilised seeds germinated before the others, so that I
+was forced to throw all away. The remaining seeds were then sown on the
+opposite sides of four pots. At first the self-fertilised seedlings were
+a little taller in most of the pots than the naturally crossed
+seedlings, and this no doubt was due to the self-fertilised seeds having
+germinated first. But in the autumn all the plants were so equal that it
+did not seem worth while to measure them. In two of the pots they were
+absolutely equal; in a third, if there was any difference, it was in
+favour of the crossed plants, and in a somewhat plainer manner in the
+fourth pot. But neither side had any substantial advantage over the
+other; so that in height they may be said to be as 100 to 100.
+
+19. DIPSACEAE.--Scabiosa atro-purpurea.
+
+The flowers, which are proterandrous, were fertilised during the
+unfavourable season of 1867, so that I got few seeds, especially from
+the self-fertilised heads, which were extremely sterile. The crossed and
+self-fertilised plants raised from these seeds were measured before they
+were in full flower, as in Table 5/65.
+
+TABLE 5/65. Scabiosa atro-purpurea.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 14 : 20.
+
+Pot 2 : 15 : 14 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 21 : 14.
+Pot 3 : 18 4/8 : 13.
+
+Total : 68.5 : 61.5.
+
+The four crossed plants averaged 17.12, and the four self-fertilised
+15.37 inches in height; or as 100 to 90. One of the self-fertilised
+plants in Pot 3 was killed by an accident, and its fellow pulled up; so
+that when they were again measured to the summits of their flowers,
+there were only three on each side; the crossed now averaged in height
+32.83, and the self-fertilised 30.16 inches; or as 100 to 92.
+
+20. COMPOSITAE.--Lactuca sativa. (5/19. The Compositae are well-adapted
+for cross-fertilisation, but a nurseryman on whom I can rely, told me
+that he had been in the habit of sowing several kinds of lettuce near
+together for the sake of seed, and had never observed that they became
+crossed. It is very improbable that all the varieties which were thus
+cultivated near together flowered at different times; but two which I
+selected by hazard and sowed near each other did not flower at the same
+time; and my trial failed.)
+
+Three plants of Lettuce (Great London Cos var.) grew close together in
+my garden; one was covered by a net, and produced self-fertilised seeds,
+the other two were allowed to be naturally crossed by insects; but the
+season (1867) was unfavourable, and I did not obtain many seeds. Only
+one crossed and one self-fertilised plant were raised in Pot 1, and
+their measurements are given in Table 5/66. The flowers on this one
+self-fertilised plant were again self-fertilised under a net, not with
+pollen from the same floret, but from other florets on the same head.
+The flowers on the two crossed plants were left to be crossed by
+insects, but the process was aided by some pollen being occasionally
+transported by me from plant to plant. These two lots of seeds, after
+germinating on sand, were planted in pairs on the opposite sides of Pots
+2 and 3, which were at first kept in the greenhouse and then turned out
+of doors. The plants were measured when in full flower. Table 5/66,
+therefore, includes plants belonging to two generations. When the
+seedlings of the two lots were only 5 or 6 inches in height they were
+equal. In Pot 3 one of the self-fertilised plants died before flowering,
+as has occurred in so many other cases.
+
+TABLE 5/66. Lactuca sativa.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 27 : 21 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 25 : 20.
+First generation, planted in open ground.
+
+Pot 2 : 29 4/8 : 24.
+Pot 2 : 17 4/8 : 10.
+Pot 2 : 12 4/8 : 11.
+Second generation, planted in open ground.
+
+Pot 3 : 14 : 9 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 10 4/8 : 0.
+Second generation, kept in the pot.
+
+Total : 136 : 96.
+
+The average height of the seven crossed plants is 19.43, and that of the
+six self-fertilised plants 16 inches; or as 100 to 82.
+
+21. CAMPANULACEAE.--Specularia speculum.
+
+In the closely allied genus, Campanula, in which Specularia was formerly
+included, the anthers shed at an early period their pollen, and this
+adheres to the collecting hairs which surround the pistil beneath the
+stigma; so that without some mechanical aid the flowers cannot be
+fertilised. For instance, I covered up a plant of Campanula carpathica,
+and it did not produce a single capsule, whilst the surrounding
+uncovered plants seeded profusely. On the other hand, the present
+species of Specularia appears to set almost as many capsules when
+covered up, as when left to the visits of the Diptera, which, as far as
+I have seen, are the only insects that frequent the flowers. (5/20. It
+has long been known that another species of the genus, Specularia
+perfoliata, produces cleistogene as well as perfect flowers, and the
+former are of course self-fertile.) I did not ascertain whether the
+naturally crossed and spontaneously self-fertilised capsules contained
+an equal number of seeds, but a comparison of artificially crossed and
+self-fertilised flowers, showed that the former were probably the most
+productive. It appears that this plant is capable of producing a large
+number of self-fertilised capsules owing to the petals closing at night,
+as well as during cold weather. In the act of closing, the margins of
+the petals become reflexed, and their inwardly projecting midribs then
+pass between the clefts of the stigma, and in doing so push the pollen
+from the outside of the pistil on to the stigmatic surfaces. (5/21. Mr.
+Meehan has lately shown 'Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Science
+Philadelphia' May 16, 1876 page 84, that the closing of the flowers of
+Claytonia virginica and Ranunculus bulbosus during the night causes
+their self-fertilisation.)
+
+Twenty flowers were fertilised by me with their own pollen, but owing to
+the bad season, only six capsules were produced; they contained on an
+average 21.7 seeds, with a maximum of forty-eight in one. Fourteen
+flowers were crossed with pollen from another plant, and these produced
+twelve capsules, containing on an average 30 seeds, with a maximum in
+one of fifty-seven seeds; so that the crossed seeds were to the
+self-fertilised from an equal number of capsules as 100 to 72. The
+former were also heavier than an equal number of self-fertilised seeds,
+in the ratio of 100 to 86. Thus, whether we judge by the number of
+capsules produced from an equal number of flowers, or by the average
+number of the contained seeds, or the maximum number in any one capsule,
+or by their weight, crossing does great good in comparison with
+self-fertilisation. The two lots of seeds were sown on the opposite
+sides of four pots; but the seedlings were not sufficiently thinned.
+Only the tallest plant on each side was measured, when fully grown. The
+measurements are given in Table 5/67. In all four pots the crossed
+plants flowered first. When the seedlings were only about an inch and a
+half in height both lots were equal.
+
+TABLE 5/67. Specularia speculum.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Tallest Crossed Plant in each Pot.
+
+Column 3: Tallest Self-fertilised Plant in each Pot.
+
+Pot 1 : 18 : 15 6/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 17 : 19.
+
+Pot 3 : 22 1/8 : 18.
+
+Pot 4 : 20 : 23.
+
+Total : 77.13 : 75.75.
+
+The four tallest crossed plants averaged 19.28, and the four tallest
+self-fertilised 18.93 inches in height; or as 100 to 98. So that there
+was no difference worth speaking of between the two lots in height;
+though other great advantages are derived, as we have seen, from
+cross-fertilisation. From being grown in pots and kept in the
+greenhouse, none of the plants produced any capsules.
+
+Lobelia ramosa. (5/22. I have adopted the name given to this plant in
+the 'Gardeners' Chronicle' 1866. Professor T. Dyer, however, informs me
+that it probably is a white variety of L. tenuior of R. Brown, from W.
+Australia.)
+
+VAR. SNOW-FLAKE.
+
+The well-adapted means by which cross-fertilisation is ensured in this
+genus have been described by several authors. (5/23. See the works of
+Hildebrand and Delpino. Mr. Farrer also has given a remarkably clear
+description of the mechanism by which cross-fertilisation is effected in
+this genus, in the 'Annals and Magazine of Natural History' volume 2 4th
+series 1868 page 260. In the allied genus Isotoma, the curious spike
+which projects rectangularly from the anthers, and which when shaken
+causes the pollen to fall on the back of an entering insect, seems to
+have been developed from a bristle, like one of those which spring from
+the anthers in some of or all the species of Lobelia, as described by
+Mr. Farrer.) The pistil as it slowly increases in length pushes the
+pollen out of the conjoined anthers, by the aid of a ring of bristles;
+the two lobes of the stigma being at this time closed and incapable of
+fertilisation. The extrusion of the pollen is also aided by insects,
+which rub against the little bristles that project from the anthers. The
+pollen thus pushed out is carried by insects to the older flowers, in
+which the stigma of the now freely projecting pistil is open and ready
+to be fertilised. I proved the importance of the gaily-coloured corolla,
+by cutting off the large flowers of Lobelia erinus; and these flowers
+were neglected by the hive-bees which were incessantly visiting the
+other flowers.
+
+A capsule was obtained by crossing a flower of L. ramosa with pollen
+from another plant, and two other capsules from artificially
+self-fertilised flowers. The contained seeds were sown on the opposite
+sides of four pots. Some of the crossed seedlings which came up before
+the others had to be pulled up and thrown away. Whilst the plants were
+very small there was not much difference in height between the two lots;
+but in Pot 3 the self-fertilised were for a time the tallest. When in
+full flower the tallest plant on each side of each pot was measured, and
+the result is shown in Table 5/68. In all four pots a crossed plant
+flowered before any one of its opponents.
+
+TABLE 5/68. Lobelia ramosa (First Generation).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Tallest Crossed Plant in each Pot.
+
+Column 3: Tallest Self-fertilised Plant in each Pot.
+
+Pot 1 : 22 4/8 : 17 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 27 4/8 : 24.
+
+Pot 3 : 16 4/8 : 15.
+
+Pot 4 : 22 4/8 : 17.
+
+Total : 89.0 : 73.5.
+
+The four tallest crossed plants averaged 22.25, and the four tallest
+self-fertilised 18.37 inches in height; or as 100 to 82. I was surprised
+to find that the anthers of a good many of these self-fertilised plants
+did not cohere and did not contain any pollen; and the anthers even of a
+very few of the crossed plants were in the same condition. Some flowers
+on the crossed plants were again crossed, four capsules being thus
+obtained; and some flowers on the self-fertilised plants were again
+self-fertilised, seven capsules being thus obtained. The seeds from both
+lots were weighed, and it was calculated that an equal number of
+capsules would have yielded seed in the proportion by weight of 100 for
+the crossed to 60 for the self-fertilised capsules. So that the flowers
+on the crossed plants again crossed were much more fertile than those on
+the self-fertilised plants again self-fertilised.
+
+PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+
+The above two lots of seeds were placed on damp sand, and many of the
+crossed seeds germinated, as on the last occasion, before the
+self-fertilised, and were rejected. Three or four pairs in the same
+state of germination were planted on the opposite sides of two pots; a
+single pair in a third pot; and all the remaining seeds were sown
+crowded in a fourth pot. When the seedlings were about one and a half
+inches in height, they were equal on both sides of the three first pots;
+but in Pot 4, in which they grew crowded and were thus exposed to severe
+competition, the crossed were about a third taller than the
+self-fertilised. In this latter pot, when the crossed averaged 5 inches
+in height, the self-fertilised were about 4 inches; nor did they look
+nearly such fine plants. In all four pots the crossed plants flowered
+some days before the self-fertilised. When in full flower the tallest
+plant on each side was measured; but before this time the single crossed
+plant in Pot 3, which was taller than its antagonist, had died and was
+not measured. So that only the tallest plant on each side of three pots
+was measured, as in Table 5/69.
+
+TABLE 5/69. Lobelia ramosa (Second Generation).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Tallest Crossed Plant in each Pot.
+
+Column 3: Tallest Self-fertilised Plant in each Pot.
+
+Pot 1 : 27 4/8 : 18 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 21 : 19 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 21 4/8 : 19.
+Crowded.
+
+Total : 70 : 57.
+
+The average height of the three tallest crossed plants is here 23.33,
+and that of the tallest self-fertilised 19 inches; or as 100 to 81.
+Besides this difference in height, the crossed plants were much more
+vigorous and more branched than the self-fertilised plants, and it is
+unfortunate that they were not weighed.
+
+Lobelia fulgens.
+
+This species offers a somewhat perplexing case. In the first generation
+the self-fertilised plants, though few in number, greatly exceeded the
+crossed in height; whilst in the second generation, when the trial was
+made on a much larger scale, the crossed beat the self-fertilised
+plants. As this species is generally propagated by off-sets, some
+seedlings were first raised, in order to have distinct plants. On one of
+these plants several flowers were fertilised with their own pollen; and
+as the pollen is mature and shed long before the stigma of the same
+flower is ready for fertilisation, it was necessary to number each
+flower and keep its pollen in paper with a corresponding number. By this
+means well-matured pollen was used for self-fertilisation. Several
+flowers on the same plant were crossed with pollen from a distinct
+individual, and to obtain this the conjoined anthers of young flowers
+were roughly squeezed, and as it is naturally protruded very slowly by
+the growth of the pistil, it is probable that the pollen used by me was
+hardly mature, certainly less mature than that employed for
+self-fertilisation. I did not at the time think of this source of error,
+but I now suspect that the growth of the crossed plants was thus
+injured. Anyhow the trial was not perfectly fair. Opposed to the belief
+that the pollen used in crossing was not in so good a state as that used
+for self-fertilisation, is the fact that a greater proportional number
+of the crossed than of the self-fertilised flowers produced capsules;
+but there was no marked difference in the amount of seed contained in
+the capsules of the two lots. (5/24. Gartner has shown that certain
+plants of Lobelia fulgens are quite sterile with pollen from the same
+plant, though this pollen is efficient on any other individual; but none
+of the plants on which I experimented, which were kept in the
+greenhouse, were in this peculiar condition.)
+
+As the seeds obtained by the above two methods would not germinate when
+left on bare sand, they were sown on the opposite sides of four pots;
+but I succeeded in raising only a single pair of seedlings of the same
+age in each pot. The self-fertilised seedlings, when only a few inches
+in height, were in most of the pots taller than their opponents; and
+they flowered so much earlier in all the pots, that the height of the
+flower-stems could be fairly compared only in Pots 1 and 2.
+
+TABLE 5/70. Lobelia fulgens (First Generation).
+
+Heights of flower-stems measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Height of Flower-stems on the Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Height of Flower-stems on the Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 33 : 50.
+
+Pot 2 : 36 4/8 : 38 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 21* : 43.
+
+Pot 4 : 12* : 35 6/8.
+
+*Not in full flower.
+
+The mean height of the flower-stems of the two crossed plants in Pots 1
+and 2 is here 34.75 inches, and that of the two self-fertilised plants
+in the same pots 44.25 inches; or as 100 to 127. The self-fertilised
+plants in Pots 3 and 4 were in every respect very much finer than the
+crossed plants.
+
+I was so much surprised at this great superiority of the self-fertilised
+over the crossed plants, that I determined to try how they would behave
+in one of the pots during a second growth. The two plants, therefore, in
+Pot 1 were cut down, and repotted without being disturbed in a much
+larger pot. In the following year the self-fertilised plant showed even
+a greater superiority than before; for the two tallest flower-stems
+produced by the one crossed plant were only 29 4/8 and 30 1/8 inches in
+height, whereas the two tallest stems on the one self-fertilised plant
+were 49 4/8 and 49 6/8 inches; and this gives a ratio of 100 to 167.
+Considering all the evidence, there can be no doubt that these
+self-fertilised plants had a great superiority over the crossed plants.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+
+TABLE 5/71. Lobelia fulgens (Second Generation).
+
+Heights of flower-stems measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 27 3/8 : 32 3/8.
+Pot 1 : 26 : 26 3/8.
+Pot 1 : 24 3/8 : 25 1/8.
+Pot 1 : 24 4/8 : 26 2/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 34 : 36 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 26 6/8 : 28 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 25 1/8 : 30 1/8.
+Pot 2 : 26 : 32 2/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 40 4/8 : 30 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 37 5/8 : 28 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 32 1/8 : 23.
+
+Pot 4 : 34 5/8 : 29 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 32 2/8 : 28 3/8.
+Pot 4 : 29 3/8 : 26.
+Pot 4 : 27 1/8 : 25 2/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 28 1/8 : 29.
+Pot 5 : 27 : 24 6/8.
+Pot 5 : 25 3/8 : 23 2/8.
+Pot 5 : 24 3/8 : 24.
+
+Pot 6 : 33 5/8 : 44 2/8.
+Pot 6 : 32 : 37 6/8.
+Pot 6 : 26 1/8 : 37.
+Pot 6 : 25 : 35.
+
+Pot 7 : 30 6/8 : 27 2/8.
+Pot 7 : 30 3/8 : 19 2/8.
+Pot 7 : 29 2/8 : 21.
+
+Pot 8 : 39 3/8 : 23 1/8.
+Pot 8 : 37 2/8 : 23 4/8.
+Pot 8 : 36 : 25 4/8.
+Pot 8 : 36 : 25 1/8.
+
+Pot 9 : 33 3/8 : 19 3/8.
+Pot 9 : 25 : 16 3/8.
+Pot 9 : 25 3/8 : 19.
+Pot 9 : 21 7/8 : 18 6/8.
+
+Total : 1014.00 : 921.63.
+
+I determined on this occasion to avoid the error of using pollen of not
+quite equal maturity for crossing and self-fertilisation; so that I
+squeezed pollen out of the conjoined anthers of young flowers for both
+operations. Several flowers on the crossed plant in Pot 1 in Table 5/70
+were again crossed with pollen from a distinct plant. Several other
+flowers on the self-fertilised plant in the same pot were again
+self-fertilised with pollen from the anthers of other flowers on the
+SAME PLANT. Therefore the degree of self-fertilisation was not quite so
+close as in the last generation, in which pollen from the SAME FLOWER,
+kept in paper, was used. These two lots of seeds were thinly sown on
+opposite sides of nine pots; and the young seedlings were thinned, an
+equal number of nearly as possible the same age being left on the two
+sides. In the spring of the following year (1870), when the seedlings
+had grown to a considerable size, they were measured to the tips of
+their leaves; and the twenty-three crossed plants averaged 14.04 inches
+in height, whilst the twenty-three self-fertilised seedlings were 13.54
+inches; or as 100 to 96.
+
+In the summer of the same year several of these plants flowered, the
+crossed and self-fertilised plants flowering almost simultaneously, and
+all the flower-stems were measured. Those produced by eleven of the
+crossed plants averaged 30.71 inches, and those by nine of the
+self-fertilised plants 29.43 inches in height; or as 100 to 96.
+
+The plants in these nine pots, after they had flowered, were repotted
+without being disturbed in much larger pots; and in the following year,
+1871, all flowered freely; but they had grown into such an entangled
+mass, that the separate plants on each side could no longer be
+distinguished. Accordingly three or four of the tallest flower-stems on
+each side of each pot were measured; and the measurements in Table 5/71
+are, I think, more trustworthy than the previous ones, from being more
+numerous, and from the plants being well established and growing
+vigorously.
+
+The average height of the thirty-four tallest flower-stems on the
+twenty-three crossed plants is 29.82 inches, and that of the same number
+of flower-stems on the same number of self-fertilised plants is 27.10
+inches, or as 100 to 91. So that the crossed plants now showed a decided
+advantage over their self-fertilised opponents.
+
+22. POLEMONIACEAE.--Nemophila insignis.
+
+Twelve flowers were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant, but
+produced only six capsules, containing on an average 18.3 seeds.
+Eighteen flowers were fertilised with their own pollen and produced ten
+capsules, containing on an average 12.7 seeds, so that the seeds per
+capsule were as 100 to 69. (5/25. Several species of Polemoniaceae are
+known to be proterandrous, but I did not attend to this point in
+Nemophila. Verlot says 'Des Varits' 1865 page 66, that varieties
+growing near one another spontaneously intercross.) The crossed seeds
+weighed a little less than an equal number of self-fertilised seeds, in
+the proportion of 100 to 105; but this was clearly due to some of the
+self-fertilised capsules containing very few seeds, and these were much
+bulkier than the others, from having been better nourished. A subsequent
+comparison of the number of seeds in a few capsules did not show so
+great a superiority on the side of the crossed capsules as in the
+present case.
+
+The seeds were placed on sand, and after germinating were planted in
+pairs on the opposite sides of five pots, which were kept in the
+greenhouse. When the seedlings were from 2 to 3 inches in height, most
+of the crossed had a slight advantage over the self-fertilised. The
+plants were trained up sticks, and thus grew to a considerable height.
+In four out of the five pots a crossed plant flowered before any one of
+the self-fertilised. The plants were first measured to the tips of their
+leaves, before they had flowered and when the crossed were under a foot
+in height. The twelve crossed plants averaged 11.1 inches in height,
+whilst the twelve self-fertilised were less than half of this height,
+namely, 5.45; or as 100 to 49. Before the plants had grown to their full
+height, two of the self-fertilised died, and as I feared that this might
+happen with others, they were again measured to the tops of their stems,
+as shown in Table 5/72.
+
+TABLE 5/72. Nemophila insignis; 0 means that the plant died.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 32 4/8 : 21 2/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 34 4/8 : 23 5/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 33 1/8 : 19.
+Pot 3 : 22 2/8 : 7 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 29 : 17 4/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 35 4/8 : 10 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 33 4/8 : 27.
+
+Pot 5 : 35 : 0.
+Pot 5 : 38 : 18 3/8.
+Pot 5 : 36 : 20 4/8.
+Pot 5 : 37 4/8 : 34.
+Pot 5 : 32 4/8 : 0.
+
+Total : 399.38 : 199.00.
+
+The twelve crossed plants now averaged 33.28, and the ten
+self-fertilised 19.9 inches in height, or as 100 to 60; so that they
+differed somewhat less than before.
+
+The plants in Pots 3 and 5 were placed under a net in the greenhouse,
+two of the crossed plants in the latter pot being pulled up on account
+of the death of two of the self-fertilised; so that altogether six
+crossed and six self-fertilised plants were left to fertilise themselves
+spontaneously. The pots were rather small, and the plants did not
+produce many capsules. The small size of the self-fertilised plants will
+largely account for the fewness of the capsules which they produced. The
+six crossed plants bore 105, and the six self-fertilised only 30
+capsules; or as 100 to 29.
+
+The self-fertilised seeds thus obtained from the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants, after germinating on sand, were planted on the
+opposite sides of four small pots, and treated as before. But many of
+the plants were unhealthy, and their heights were so unequal--some on
+both sides being five times as tall as the others--that the averages
+deduced from the measurements in Table 5/73 are not in the least
+trustworthy. Nevertheless I have felt bound to give them, as they are
+opposed to my general conclusions.
+
+The seven self-fertilised plants from the crossed plants here average
+15.73, and the seven self-fertilised from the self-fertilised 21 inches
+in height; or as 100 to 133. Strictly analogous experiments with Viola
+tricolor and Lathyrus odoratus gave a very different result.
+
+TABLE 5/73. Nemophila insignis.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants from Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants from Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 27 : 27 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 14 : 34 2/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 17 6/8 : 23.
+Pot 2 : 24 4/8 : 32.
+
+Pot 3 : 16 : 7.
+
+Pot 4 : 5 3/8 : 7 2/8.
+Pot 4 : 5 4/8 : 16.
+
+Total : 110.13 : 147.00.
+
+23. BORAGINACEAE.--Borago officinalis.
+
+This plant is frequented by a greater number of bees than any other one
+which I have observed. It is strongly proterandrous (H. Muller
+'Befruchtung' etc. page 267), and the flowers can hardly fail to be
+cross-fertilised; but should this not occur, they are capable of
+self-fertilisation to a limited extent, as some pollen long remains
+within the anthers, and is apt to fall on the mature stigma. In the year
+1863 I covered up a plant, and examined thirty-five flowers, of which
+only twelve yielded any seeds; whereas of thirty-five flowers on an
+exposed plant growing close by, all with the exception of two yielded
+seeds. The covered-up plant, however, produced altogether twenty-five
+spontaneously self-fertilised seeds; the exposed plant producing
+fifty-five seeds, the product, no doubt, of cross-fertilisation.
+
+In the year 1868 eighteen flowers on a protected plant were crossed with
+pollen from a distinct plant, but only seven of these produced fruit;
+and I suspect that I applied pollen to many of the stigmas before they
+were mature. These fruits contained on an average 2 seeds, with a
+maximum in one of three seeds. Twenty-four spontaneously self-fertilised
+fruits were produced by the same plant, and these contained on an
+average 1.2 seeds, with a maximum of two in one fruit. So that the
+fruits from the artificially crossed flowers yielded seeds compared with
+those from the spontaneously self-fertilised flowers, in the ratio of
+100 to 60. But the self-fertilised seeds, as often occurs when few are
+produced, were heavier than the crossed seeds in the ratio of 100 to 90.
+
+These two lots of seeds were sown on opposite sides of two large pots;
+but I succeeded in raising only four pairs of equal age. When the
+seedlings on both sides were about 8 inches in height they were equal.
+When in full flower they were measured, as follows:--
+
+TABLE 5/74. Borago officinalis.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 19 : 13 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 21 : 18 6/8.
+Pot 1 : 16 4/8 : 20 2/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 26 2/8 : 32 2/8.
+
+Total : 82.75 : 84.75.
+
+The average height of the four crossed plants is here 20.68, and that of
+the four self-fertilised 21.18 inches; or as 100 to 102. The
+self-fertilised plants thus exceeded the crossed in height by a little;
+but this was entirely due to the tallness of one of the self-fertilised.
+The crossed plants in both pots flowered before the self-fertilised.
+Therefore I believe if more plants had been raised, the result would
+have been different. I regret that I did not attend to the fertility of
+the two lots.
+
+24. NOLANACEAE.--Nolana prostrata.
+
+In some of the flowers the stamens are considerably shorter than the
+pistil, in others equal to it in length. I suspected, therefore, but
+erroneously as it proved, that this plant was dimorphic, like Primula,
+Linum, etc., and in the year 1862 twelve plants, covered by a net in the
+greenhouse, were subjected to trial. The spontaneously self-fertilised
+flowers yielded 64 grains weight of seeds, but the product of fourteen
+artificially crossed flowers is here included, which falsely increases
+the weight of the self-fertilised seeds. Nine uncovered plants, the
+flowers of which were eagerly visited by bees for their pollen and were
+no doubt intercrossed by them, produced 79 grains weight of seeds:
+therefore twelve plants thus treated would have yielded 105 grains. Thus
+the seeds produced by the flowers on an equal number of plants, when
+crossed by bees, and spontaneously self-fertilised (the product of
+fourteen artificially crossed flowers being, however, included in the
+latter) were in weight as 100 to 61.
+
+In the summer of 1867 the trial was repeated; thirty flowers were
+crossed with pollen from a distinct plant and produced twenty-seven
+capsules, each containing five seeds. Thirty-two flowers were fertilised
+with their own pollen, and produced only six capsules, each with five
+seeds. So that the crossed and self-fertilised capsules contained the
+same number of seeds, though many more capsules were produced by the
+cross-fertilised than by the self-fertilised flowers, in the ratio of
+100 to 21.
+
+An equal number of seeds of both lots were weighed, and the crossed
+seeds were to the self-fertilised in weight as 100 to 82. Therefore a
+cross increases the number of capsules produced and the weight of the
+seeds, but not the number of seeds in each capsule.
+
+These two lots of seeds, after germinating on sand, were planted on the
+opposite sides of three pots. The seedlings when from 6 to 7 inches in
+height were equal. The plants were measured when fully grown, but their
+heights were so unequal in the several pots, that the result cannot be
+fully trusted.
+
+TABLE 5/75. Nolana prostrata.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 8 4/8 : 4 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 6 4/8 : 7 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 10 4/8 : 14 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 18 : 18.
+
+Pot 3 : 20 2/8 : 22 6/8.
+
+Total : 63.75 : 67.00.
+
+The five crossed plants average 12.75, and the five self-fertilised 13.4
+inches in height; or as 100 to 105.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+SOLANACEAE, PRIMULACEAE, POLYGONEAE, ETC.
+
+Petunia violacea, crossed and self-fertilised plants compared for four
+generations.
+Effects of a cross with a fresh stock.
+Uniform colour of the flowers on the self-fertilised plants of the
+fourth generation.
+Nicotiana tabacum, crossed and self-fertilised plants of equal height.
+Great effects of a cross with a distinct sub-variety on the height, but
+not on the fertility, of the offspring.
+Cyclamen persicum, crossed seedlings greatly superior to the self-fertilised.
+Anagallis collina.
+Primula veris.
+Equal-styled variety of Primula veris, fertility of, greatly increased
+by a cross with a fresh stock.
+Fagopyrum esculentum.
+Beta vulgaris.
+Canna warscewiczi, crossed and self-fertilised plants of equal height.
+Zea mays.
+Phalaris canariensis.
+
+25. SOLANACEAE. Petunia violacea.
+
+DINGY PURPLE VARIETY.
+
+The flowers of this plant are so seldom visited during the day by
+insects in this country, that I have never seen an instance; but my
+gardener, on whom I can rely, once saw some humble-bees at work. Mr.
+Meehan says, that in the United States bees bore through the corolla for
+the nectar, and adds that their "fertilisation is carried on by
+night-moths." (6/1. 'Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Science of
+Philadelphia' August 2, 1870 page 90.)
+
+In France M. Naudin, after castrating a large number of flowers whilst
+in bud, left them exposed to the visits of insects, and about a quarter
+produced capsules (6/2. 'Annales des Sc. Nat.' 4th series Bot. Tome 9
+cah. 5); but I am convinced that a much larger proportion of flowers in
+my garden are cross-fertilised by insects, for protected flowers with
+their own pollen placed on the stigma never yielded nearly a full
+complement of seed; whilst those left uncovered produced fine capsules,
+showing that pollen from other plants must have been brought to them,
+probably by moths. Plants growing vigorously and flowering in pots in
+the greenhouse, never yielded a single capsule; and this may be
+attributed, at least in chief part, to the exclusion of moths.
+
+Six flowers on a plant covered by a net were crossed with pollen from a
+distinct plant and produced six capsules, containing by weight 4.44
+grains of seed. Six other flowers were fertilised with their own pollen
+and produced only three capsules, containing only 1.49 grains weight of
+seed. From this it follows that an equal number of crossed and
+self-fertilised capsules would have contained seeds by weight as 100 to
+67. I should not have thought the proportional contents of so few
+capsules worth giving, had not nearly the same result been confirmed by
+several subsequent trials.
+
+Seeds of the two lots were placed on sand, and many of the
+self-fertilised seeds germinated before the crossed, and were rejected.
+Several pairs in an equal state of germination were planted on the
+opposite sides of Pots 1 and 2; but only the tallest plant on each side
+was measured. Seeds were also sown thickly on the two sides of a large
+pot (3), the seedlings being afterwards thinned, so that an equal number
+was left on each side; the three tallest on each side being measured.
+The pots were kept in the greenhouse, and the plants were trained up
+sticks. For some time the young crossed plants had no advantage in
+height over the self-fertilised; but their leaves were larger. When
+fully grown and in flower the plants were measured, as follows:--
+
+TABLE 6/76. Petunia violacea (first generation).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 30 : 20 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 34 4/8 : 27 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 34 : 28 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 30 4/8 : 27 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 25 : 26.
+
+Total : 154 : 130.
+
+The five tallest crossed plants here average 30.8, and the five tallest
+self-fertilised 26 inches in height, or as 100 to 84.
+
+Three capsules were obtained by crossing flowers on the above crossed
+plants, and three other capsules by again self-fertilising flowers on
+the self-fertilised plants. One of the latter capsules appeared as fine
+as any one of the crossed capsules; but the other two contained many
+imperfect seeds. From these two lots of seeds the plants of the
+following generation were raised.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+
+As in the last generation, many of the self-fertilised seeds germinated
+before the crossed.
+
+Seeds in an equal state of germination were planted on the opposite
+sides of three pots. The crossed seedlings soon greatly exceeded in
+height the self-fertilised. In Pot 1, when the tallest crossed plant was
+10 1/2 inches high, the tallest self-fertilised was only 3 1/2 inches;
+in Pot 2 the excess in height of the crossed was not quite so great. The
+plants were treated as in the last generation, and when fully grown
+measured as before. In Pot 3 both the crossed plants were killed at an
+early age by some animal, so that the self-fertilised had no
+competitors. Nevertheless these two self-fertilised plants were
+measured, and are included in Table 6/77. The crossed plants flowered
+long before their self-fertilised opponents in Pots 1 and 2, and before
+those growing separately in Pot 3.
+
+TABLE 6/77. Petunia violacea (Second generation).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 57 2/8 : 13 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 36 2/8 : 8.
+
+Pot 2 : 44 4/8 : 33 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 24 : 28.
+
+Pot 3 : 0 : 46 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 0 : 28 4/8.
+
+Total : 162.0 : 157.5.
+
+The four crossed plants average 40.5, and the six self-fertilised 26.25
+inches in height; or as 100 to 65. But this great inequality is in part
+accidental, owing to some of the self-fertilised plants being very
+short, and to one of the crossed being very tall.
+
+Twelve flowers on these crossed plants were again crossed, and eleven
+capsules were produced; of these, five were poor and six good; the
+latter contained by weight 3.75 grains of seeds. Twelve flowers on the
+self-fertilised plants were again fertilised with their own pollen and
+produced no less than twelve capsules, and the six finest of these
+contained by weight 2.57 grains of seeds. It should however be observed
+that these latter capsules were produced by the plants in Pot 3, which
+were not exposed to any competition. The seeds in the six fine crossed
+capsules to those in the six finest self-fertilised capsules were in
+weight as 100 to 68. From these seeds the plants of the next generation
+were raised.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE THIRD GENERATION.
+
+TABLE 6/78. Petunia violacea (third generation; plants very young).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 1 4/8 : 5 6/8.
+Pot 1 : 1 : 4 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 5 7/8 : 8 3/8.
+Pot 2 : 5 6/8 : 6 7/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 4 : 5 5/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 1 4/8 : 5 3/8.
+
+Total : 19.63 : 36.50.
+
+The above seeds were placed on sand, and after germinating were planted
+in pairs on the opposite sides of four pots; and all the remaining seeds
+were thickly sown on the two sides of a fifth large pot. The result was
+surprising, for the self-fertilised seedlings very early in life beat
+the crossed, and at one time were nearly double their height. At first
+the case appeared like that of Mimulus, in which after the third
+generation a tall and highly self-fertile variety appeared. But as in
+the two succeeding generations the crossed plants resumed their former
+superiority over the self-fertilised, the case must be looked at as an
+anomaly. The sole conjecture which I can form is that the crossed seeds
+had not been sufficiently ripened, and thus produced weakly plants, as
+occurred with Iberis. When the crossed plants were between 3 and 4
+inches in height, the six finest in four of the pots were measured to
+the summits of their stems, and at the same time the six finest of the
+self-fertilised plants. The measurements are given in Table 6/78, and it
+may be here seen that all the self-fertilised plants exceed their
+opponents in height, whereas when subsequently measured the excess of
+the self-fertilised depended chiefly on the unusual tallness of two of
+the plants in Pot 2. The crossed plants here average 3.27, and the
+self-fertilised 6.08 inches in height; or as 100 to 186.
+
+When fully grown they were again measured, as follows:--
+
+TABLE 6/79. Petunia violacea (third generation; plants fully grown).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 41 4/8 : 40 6/8.
+Pot 1 : 48 : 39.
+Pot 1 : 36 : 48.
+
+Pot 2 : 36 : 47.
+Pot 2 : 21 : 80 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 36 2/8 : 86 2/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 52 : 46.
+
+Pot 4 : 57 : 43 6/8.
+
+Total : 327.75 : 431.00.
+
+The eight crossed plants now averaged 40.96, and the eight
+self-fertilised plants 53.87 inches in height, or as 100 to 131; and
+this excess chiefly depended, as already stated, on the unusual tallness
+of two of the self-fertilised plants in Pot 2. The self-fertilised had
+therefore lost some of their former great superiority over the crossed
+plants. In three of the pots the self-fertilised plants flowered first;
+but in Pot 3 at the same time with the crossed.
+
+The case is rendered the more strange, because the crossed plants in the
+fifth pot (not included in the two last tables), in which all the
+remaining seeds had been thickly sown, were from the first finer plants
+than the self-fertilised, and had larger leaves. At the period when the
+two tallest crossed plants in this pot were 6 4/8 and 4 5/8 inches high,
+the two tallest self-fertilised were only 4 inches. When the two crossed
+plants were 12 and 10 inches high, the two self-fertilised were only 8
+inches. These latter plants, as well as many others on the same side of
+this pot never grew any higher, whereas several of the crossed plants
+grew to the height of two feet! On account of this great superiority of
+the crossed plants, the plants on neither side of this pot have been
+included in the two last tables.
+
+Thirty flowers on the crossed plants in Pots 1 and 4 (Table 6/79) were
+again crossed, and produced seventeen capsules. Thirty flowers on the
+self-fertilised plants in the same two pots were again self-fertilised,
+but produced only seven capsules. The contents of each capsule of both
+lots were placed in separate watch-glasses, and the seeds from the
+crossed appeared to the eye to be at least double the number of those
+from the self-fertilised capsules.
+
+In order to ascertain whether the fertility of the self-fertilised
+plants had been lessened by the plants having been self-fertilised for
+the three previous generations, thirty flowers on the crossed plants
+were fertilised with their own pollen. These yielded only five capsules,
+and their seeds being placed in separate watch-glasses did not seem more
+numerous than those from the capsules on the self-fertilised plants
+self-fertilised for the fourth time. So that as far as can be judged
+from so few capsules, the self-fertility of the self-fertilised plants
+had not decreased in comparison with that of the plants which had been
+intercrossed during the three previous generations. It should, however,
+be remembered that both lots of plants had been subjected in each
+generation to almost exactly similar conditions.
+
+Seeds from the crossed plants again crossed, and from the
+self-fertilised again self-fertilised, produced by the plants in Pot 1
+(Table 6/79), in which the three self-fertilised plants were on an
+average only a little taller than the crossed, were used in the
+following experiment. They were kept separate from two similar lots of
+seeds produced by the two plants in Pot 4 in the same table, in which
+the crossed plant was much taller than its self-fertilised opponent.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FOURTH GENERATION (RAISED FROM
+THE PLANTS IN POT 1, TABLE 6/79).
+
+Crossed and self-fertilised seeds from plants of the last generation in
+Pot 1 in Table 6/79, were placed on sand, and after germinating, were
+planted in pairs on the opposite sides of four pots. The seedlings when
+in full flower were measured to the base of the calyx. The remaining
+seeds were sown crowded on the two sides of Pot 5; and the four tallest
+plants on each side of this pot were measured in the same manner.
+
+TABLE 6/80. Petunia violacea (fourth generation; raised from plants of
+the third generation in Pot 1, table 6/79).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 29 2/8 : 30 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 36 2/8 : 34 6/8.
+Pot 1 : 49 : 31 3/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 33 3/8 : 31 5/8.
+Pot 2 : 37 3/8 : 38 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 56 4/8 : 38 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 46 : 45 1/8.
+Pot 3 : 67 2/8 : 45.
+Pot 3 : 54 3/8 : 23 2/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 51 6/8 : 34.
+Pot 4 : 51 7/8 : 0.
+
+Pot 5 : 49 4/8 : 22 3/8.
+Pot 5 : 46 3/8 : 24 2/8.
+Pot 5 : 40 : 24 6/8.
+Pot 5 : 53 : 30.
+Crowded plants.
+
+Total : 701.88 : 453.50.
+
+The fifteen crossed plants average 46.79, and the fourteen (one having
+died) self-fertilised plants 32.39 inches in height; or as 100 to 69. So
+that the crossed plants in this generation had recovered their wonted
+superiority over the self-fertilised plants; though the parents of the
+latter in Pot 1, Table 6/79, were a little taller than their crossed
+opponents.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE FOURTH GENERATION (RAISED FROM
+THE PLANTS IN POT 4, TABLE 6/79).
+
+Two similar lots of seeds, obtained from the plants in Pot 4 in Table
+6/79, in which the single crossed plant was at first shorter, but
+ultimately much taller than its self-fertilised opponent, were treated
+in every way like their brethren of the same generation in the last
+experiment. We have in Table 6/81 the measurements of the present
+plants. Although the crossed plants greatly exceeded in height the
+self-fertilised; yet in three out of the five pots a self-fertilised
+plant flowered before any one of the crossed; in a fourth pot
+simultaneously; and in a fifth (namely Pot 2) a crossed plant flowered
+first.
+
+TABLE 6/81. Petunia violacea (fourth generation; raised from plants of
+the third generation in Pot 4, Table 6/79).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 46 : 30 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 46 : 28.
+
+Pot 2 : 50 6/8 : 25.
+Pot 2 : 40 2/8 : 31 3/8.
+Pot 2 : 37 3/8 : 22 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 54 2/8 : 22 5/8.
+Pot 3 : 61 1/8 : 26 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 45 : 32.
+
+Pot 4 : 30 : 24 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 29 1/8 : 26.
+
+Pot 5 : 37 4/8 : 40 2/8.
+Pot 5 : 63 : 18 5/8.
+Pot 5 : 41 2/8 : 17 4/8.
+Crowded plants.
+
+Total : 581.63 : 349.36.
+
+The thirteen crossed plants here average 44.74, and the thirteen
+self-fertilised plants 26.87 inches in height; or as 100 to 60. The
+crossed parents of these were much taller, relatively to the
+self-fertilised parents, than in the last case; and apparently they
+transmitted some of this superiority to their crossed offspring. It is
+unfortunate that I did not turn these plants out of doors, so as to
+observe their relative fertility, for I compared the pollen from some of
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants in Pot 1, Table 6/81, and there
+was a marked difference in its state; that of the crossed plants
+contained hardly any bad and empty grains, whilst such abounded in the
+pollen of the self-fertilised plants.
+
+THE EFFECTS OF A CROSS WITH A FRESH STOCK.
+
+I procured from a garden in Westerham, whence my plants originally came,
+a fresh plant differing in no respect from mine except in the colour of
+the flowers, which was a fine purple. But this plant must have been
+exposed during at least four generations to very different conditions
+from those to which my plants had been subjected, as these had been
+grown in pots in the greenhouse. Eight flowers on the self-fertilised
+plants in Table 6/81, of the last or fourth self-fertilised generation,
+were fertilised with pollen from this fresh stock; all eight produced
+capsules containing together by weight 5.01 grains of seeds. The plants
+raised from these seeds may be called the Westerham-crossed.
+
+Eight flowers on the crossed plants of the last or fourth generation in
+Table 6/81 were again crossed with pollen from one of the other crossed
+plants, and produced five capsules, containing by weight 2.07 grains of
+seeds. The plants raised from these seeds may be called the
+INTERCROSSED; and these form the fifth intercrossed generation.
+
+Eight flowers on the self-fertilised plants of the same generation in
+Table 6/81 were again self-fertilised, and produced seven capsules,
+containing by weight 2.1 grains of seeds. The SELF-FERTILISED plants
+raised from these seeds form the fifth self-fertilised generation. These
+latter plants and the intercrossed are comparable in all respects with
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants of the four previous generations.
+
+From the foregoing data it is easy to calculate that:
+
+Ten Westerham-crossed capsules would have contained 6.26 grains weight
+of seed.
+
+Ten intercrossed capsules would have contained 4.14 grains weight of
+seed.
+
+Ten self-fertilised capsules would have contained 3.00 grains weight of
+seed.
+
+We thus get the following ratios:--
+
+Seeds from the Westerham-crossed capsules to those from the capsules of
+the fifth self-fertilised generation, in weight as 100 to 48.
+
+Seeds from the Westerham-crossed capsules to those from the capsules of
+the fifth intercrossed generation, in weight as 100 to 66.
+
+Seeds from the intercrossed capsules to those from the self-fertilised
+capsules, in weight as 100 to 72.
+
+So that a cross with pollen from a fresh stock greatly increased the
+productiveness of the flowers on plants which had been self-fertilised
+for the four previous generations, in comparison not only with the
+flowers on the same plants self-fertilised for the fifth time, but with
+the flowers on the crossed plants crossed with pollen from another plant
+of the same old stock for the fifth time.
+
+These three lots of seeds were placed on sand, and were planted in an
+equal state of germination in seven pots, each made tripartite by three
+superficial partitions. Some of the remaining seeds, whether or not in a
+state of germination, were thickly sown in an eighth pot. The pots were
+kept in the greenhouse, and the plants trained up sticks. They were
+first measured to the tops of their stems when coming into flower; and
+the twenty-two Westerham-crossed plants then averaged 25.51 inches; the
+twenty-three intercrossed plants 30.38; and the twenty-three
+self-fertilised plants 23.40 inches in height. We thus get the following
+ratios:--
+
+The Westerham-crossed plants in height to the self-fertilised as 100 to
+91.
+
+The Westerham-crossed plants in height to the intercrossed as 100 to
+119.
+
+The intercrossed plants in height to the self-fertilised as 100 to 77.
+
+These plants were again measured when their growth appeared on a casual
+inspection to be complete. But in this I was mistaken, for after cutting
+them down, I found that the summits of the stems of the
+Westerham-crossed plants were still growing vigorously; whilst the
+intercrossed had almost, and the self-fertilised had quite completed
+their growth. Therefore I do not doubt, if the three lots had been left
+to grow for another month, that the ratios would have been somewhat
+different from those deduced from the measurements in Table 6/82.
+
+TABLE 6/82. Petunia violacea.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Westerham-Crossed Plants (from self-fertilised Plants of
+fourth generation crossed by a fresh stock).
+
+Column 3: Intercrossed Plants (Plants of one and the same stock
+intercrossed for five generations).
+
+Column 4: Self-fertilised Plants (self-fertilised for five generations).
+
+Pot 1 : 64 5/8 : 57 2/8 : 43 6/8.
+Pot 1 : 24 : 64 : 56 3/8.
+Pot 1 : 51 4/8 : 58 6/8 : 31 5/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 48 7/8 : 59 7/8 : 41 5/8.
+Pot 2 : 54 4/8 : 58 2/8 : 41 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 58 1/8 : 53 : 18 2/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 62 : 52 2/8 : 46 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 53 2/8 : 54 6/8 : 45.
+Pot 3 : 62 7/8 : 61 6/8 : 19 4/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 44 4/8 : 58 7/8 : 37 5/8.
+Pot 4 : 49 2/8 : 65 2/8 : 33 2/8.
+Pot 4 : .. : 59 6/8 : 32 2/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 43 1/8 : 35 6/8 : 41 6/8.
+Pot 5 : 53 7/8 : 34 6/8 : 26 4/8.
+Pot 5 : 53 2/8 : 54 6/8 : 0.
+
+Pot 6 : 37 4/8 : 56 : 46 4/8.
+Pot 6 : 61 : 63 5/8 : 29 6/8.
+Pot 6 : 0 : 57 7/8 : 14 4/8.
+
+Pot 7 : 59 6/8 : 51 : 43.
+Pot 7 : 43 4/8 : 49 6/8 : 12 2/8.
+Pot 7 : 50 5/8 : 0 : 0.
+
+Pot 8 : 37 7/8 : 38 5/8 : 21 6/8.
+Pot 8 : 37 2/8 : 44 5/8 : 14 5/8.
+
+Total : 1051.25 : 1190.50 : 697.88.
+
+The twenty-one Westerham-crossed plants now averaged 50.05 inches; the
+twenty-two intercrossed plants, 54.11 inches; and the twenty-one
+self-fertilised plants, 33.23 inches in height. We thus get the
+following ratios:--
+
+The Westerham-crossed plants in height to the self-fertilised as 100 to
+66.
+
+The Westerham-crossed plants in height to the intercrossed as 100 to
+108.
+
+The intercrossed plants in height to the self-fertilised as 100 to 61.
+
+We here see that the Westerham-crossed (the offspring of plants
+self-fertilised for four generations and then crossed with a fresh
+stock) have gained greatly in height, since they were first measured,
+relatively to the plants self-fertilised for five generations. They were
+then as 100 to 91, and now as 100 to 66 in height. The intercrossed
+plants (i.e., those which had been intercrossed for the last five
+generations) likewise exceed in height the self-fertilised plants, as
+occurred in all the previous generations with the exception of the
+abnormal plants of the third generation. On the other hand, the
+Westerham-crossed plants are exceeded in height by the intercrossed; and
+this is a surprising fact, judging from most of the other strictly
+analogous cases. But as the Westerham-crossed plants were still growing
+vigorously, while the intercrossed had almost ceased to grow, there can
+hardly be a doubt that if left to grow for another month they would have
+beaten the intercrossed in height. That they were gaining on them is
+clear, as when measured before they were as 100 to 119, and now as only
+100 to 108 in height. The Westerham-crossed plants had also leaves of a
+darker green, and looked altogether more vigorous than the intercrossed;
+and what is much more important, they produced, as we shall presently
+see, much heavier seed-capsules. So that in fact the offspring from the
+self-fertilised plants of the fourth generation crossed by a fresh stock
+were superior to the intercrossed, as well as to the self-fertilised
+plants of the fifth generation--of which latter fact there could not be
+the least doubt.
+
+These three lots of plants were cut down close to the ground and
+weighed. The twenty-one Westerham-crossed plants weighed 32 ounces; the
+twenty-two intercrossed plants, 34 ounces, and the twenty-one
+self-fertilised plants 7 1/4 ounces. The following ratios are calculated
+for an equal number of plants of each kind. But as the self-fertilised
+plants were just beginning to wither, their relative weight is here
+slightly too small; and as the Westerham-crossed were still growing
+vigorously, their relative weight with time allowed would no doubt have
+greatly increased.
+
+The Westerham-crossed plants in weight to the self-fertilised as 100 to
+22.
+
+The Westerham-crossed plants in weight to the intercrossed as 100 to
+101.
+
+The intercrossed plants in weight to the self-fertilised as 100 to 22.3.
+
+We here see, judging by weight instead of as before by height, that the
+Westerham-crossed and the intercrossed have an immense advantage over
+the self-fertilised. The Westerham-crossed are inferior to the
+intercrossed by a mere trifle; but it is almost certain that if they had
+been allowed to go on growing for another month, the former would have
+completely beaten the latter.
+
+As I had an abundance of seeds of the same three lots, from which the
+foregoing plants had been raised, these were sown in three long parallel
+and adjoining rows in the open ground, so as to ascertain whether under
+these circumstances the results would be nearly the same as before. Late
+in the autumn (November 13) the ten tallest plants were carefully
+selected out of each row, and their heights measured, with the following
+result:--
+
+TABLE 6/83. Petunia violacea (plants growing in the open ground).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Westerham-Crossed Plants (from self-fertilised Plants of the
+fourth generation crossed by a fresh stock).
+
+Column 2: intercrossed Plants (Plants of one and the same stock
+intercrossed for five generations).
+
+Column 3: self-fertilised Plants (self-fertilised for five generations).
+
+ 34 2/8 : 38 : 27 3/8.
+ 36 2/8 : 36 2/8 : 23.
+ 35 2/8 : 39 5/8 : 25.
+ 32 4/8 : 37 : 24 1/8.
+ 37 : 36 : 22 4/8.
+ 36 4/8 : 41 3/8 : 23 3/8.
+ 40 7/8 : 37 2/8 : 21 5/8.
+ 37 2/8 : 40 : 23 4/8.
+ 38 2/8 : 41 2/8 : 21 3/8.
+ 38 5/8 : 36 : 21 2/8.
+
+ 366.76 : 382.76 : 233.13.
+
+The ten Westerham-crossed plants here average 36.67 inches in height;
+the ten intercrossed plants, 38.27 inches; and the ten self-fertilised,
+23.31 inches. These three lots of plants were also weighed; the
+Westerham-crossed plants weighed 28 ounces; the intercrossed plants, 41
+ounces; and the self-fertilised, 14.75 ounces. We thus get the following
+ratios:--
+
+The Westerham-crossed plants in height to the self-fertilised as 100 to
+63.
+
+The Westerham-crossed plants in weight to the self-fertilised as 100 to
+53.
+
+The Westerham-crossed plants in height to the intercrossed as 100 to
+104.
+
+The Westerham-crossed plants in weight to the intercrossed as 100 to
+146.
+
+The intercrossed plants in height to the self-fertilised as 100 to 61.
+
+The intercrossed plants in weight to the self-fertilised as 100 to 36.
+
+Here the relative heights of the three lots are nearly the same (within
+three or four per cent) as with the plants in the pots. In weight there
+is a much greater difference: the Westerham-crossed exceed the
+self-fertilised by much less than they did before; but the
+self-fertilised plants in the pots had become slightly withered, as
+before stated, and were in consequence unfairly light. The
+Westerham-crossed plants are here inferior in weight to the intercrossed
+plants in a much higher degree than in the pots; and this appeared due
+to their being much less branched, owing to their having germinated in
+greater numbers and consequently being much crowded. Their leaves were
+of a brighter green than those of the intercrossed and self-fertilised
+plants.
+
+RELATIVE FERTILITY OF THE THREE LOTS OF PLANTS.
+
+None of the plants in pots in the greenhouse ever produced a capsule;
+and this may be attributed in chief part to the exclusion of moths.
+Therefore the fertility of the three lots could be judged of only by
+that of the plants growing out of doors, which from being left uncovered
+were probably cross-fertilised. The plants in the three rows were
+exactly of the same age and had been subjected to closely similar
+conditions, so that any difference in their fertility must be attributed
+to their different origin; namely, to the one lot being derived from
+plants self-fertilised for four generations and then crossed with a
+fresh stock; to the second lot being derived from plants of the same old
+stock intercrossed for five generations; and to the third lot being
+derived from plants self-fertilised for five generations. All the
+capsules, some nearly mature and some only half-grown, were gathered,
+counted, and weighed from the ten finest plants in each of the three
+rows, of which the measurements and weights have already been given. The
+intercrossed plants, as we have seen, were taller and considerably
+heavier than the plants of the other two lots, and they produced a
+greater number of capsules than did even the Westerham-crossed plants;
+and this may be attributed to the latter having grown more crowded and
+being in consequence less branched. Therefore the average weight of an
+equal number of capsules from each lot of plants seems to be the fairest
+standard of comparison, as their weights will have been determined
+chiefly by the number of the included seeds. As the intercrossed plants
+were taller and heavier than the plants of the other two lots, it might
+have been expected that they would have produced the finest or heaviest
+capsules; but this was very far from being the case.
+
+The ten tallest Westerham-crossed plants produced 111 ripe and unripe
+capsules, weighing 121.2 grains. Therefore 100 of such capsules would
+have weighed 109.18 grains.
+
+The ten tallest intercrossed plants produced 129 capsules, weighing
+76.45 grains. Therefore 100 of these capsules would have weighed 59.26
+grains.
+
+The ten tallest self-fertilised plants produced only 44 capsules,
+weighing 22.35 grains. Therefore 100 of these capsules would have
+weighed 50.79 grains.
+
+From these data we get the following ratios for the fertility of the
+three lots, as deduced from the relative weights of an equal number of
+capsules from the finest plants in each lot:--
+
+Westerham-crossed plants to self-fertilised plants as 100 to 46.
+
+Westerham-crossed plants to intercrossed plants as 100 to 54.
+
+Intercrossed plants to self-fertilised plants as 100 to 86.
+
+We here see how potent the influence of a cross with pollen from a fresh
+stock has been on the fertility of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations, in comparison with plants of the old stock when either
+intercrossed or self-fertilised for five generations; the flowers on all
+these plants having been left to be freely crossed by insects or to
+fertilise themselves. The Westerham-crossed plants were also much taller
+and heavier plants than the self-fertilised, both in the pots and open
+ground; but they were less tall and heavy than the intercrossed plants.
+This latter result, however, would almost certainly have been reversed,
+if the plants had been allowed to grow for another month, as the
+Westerham-crossed were still growing vigorously, whilst the intercrossed
+had almost ceased to grow. This case reminds us of the somewhat
+analogous one of Eschscholtzia, in which plants raised from a cross with
+a fresh stock did not grow higher than the self-fertilised or
+intercrossed plants, but produced a greater number of seed-capsules,
+which contained a far larger average number of seeds.
+
+COLOUR OF THE FLOWERS ON THE ABOVE THREE LOTS OF PLANTS.
+
+The original mother-plant, from which the five successive
+self-fertilised generations were raised, bore dingy purple flowers. At
+no time was any selection practised, and the plants were subjected in
+each generation to extremely uniform conditions. The result was, as in
+some previous cases, that the flowers on all the self-fertilised plants,
+both in the pots and open ground, were absolutely uniform in tint; this
+being a dull, rather peculiar flesh colour. This uniformity was very
+striking in the long row of plants growing in the open ground, and these
+first attracted my attention. I did not notice in which generation the
+original colour began to change and to become uniform, but I have every
+reason to believe that the change was gradual. The flowers on the
+intercrossed plants were mostly of the same tint, but not nearly so
+uniform as those on the self-fertilised plants, and many of them were
+pale, approaching almost to white. The flowers on the plants from the
+cross with the purple-flowered Westerham stock were, as might have been
+expected, much more purple and not nearly so uniform in tint. The
+self-fertilised plants were also remarkably uniform in height, as judged
+by the eye; the intercrossed less so, whilst the Westerham-crossed
+plants varied much in height.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum.
+
+This plant offers a curious case. Out of six trials with crossed and
+self-fertilised plants, belonging to three successive generations, in
+one alone did the crossed show any marked superiority in height over the
+self-fertilised; in four of the trials they were approximately equal;
+and in one (i.e., in the first generation) the self-fertilised plants
+were greatly superior to the crossed. In no case did the capsules from
+flowers fertilised with pollen from a distinct plant yield many more,
+and sometimes they yielded much fewer seeds than the capsules from
+self-fertilised flowers. But when the flowers of one variety were
+crossed with pollen from a slightly different variety, which had grown
+under somewhat different conditions,--that is, by a fresh stock,--the
+seedlings derived from this cross exceeded in height and weight those
+from the self-fertilised flowers in an extraordinary degree.
+
+Twelve flowers on some plants of the common tobacco, raised from
+purchased seeds, were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant of the
+same lot, and these produced ten capsules. Twelve flowers on the same
+plants were fertilised with their own pollen, and produced eleven
+capsules. The seeds in the ten crossed capsules weighed 31.7 grains,
+whilst those in ten of the self-fertilised capsules weighed 47.67
+grains; or as 100 to 150. The much greater productiveness of the
+self-fertilised than of the crossed capsules can hardly be attributed to
+chance, as all the capsules of both lots were very fine and healthy
+ones.
+
+The seeds were placed on sand, and several pairs in an equal state of
+germination were planted on the opposite sides of three pots. The
+remaining seeds were thickly sown on the two sides of Pot 4, so that the
+plants in this pot were much crowded. The tallest plant on each side of
+each pot was measured. Whilst the plants were quite young the four
+tallest crossed plants averaged 7.87 inches, and the four tallest
+self-fertilised 14.87 inches in height; or as 100 to 189. The heights at
+this age are given in the two left columns of Table 6/84.
+
+When in full flower the tallest plants on each side were again measured,
+see the two right hand columns in Table 6/84. But I should state that
+the pots were not large enough, and the plants never grew to their
+proper height. The four tallest crossed plants now averaged 18.5, and
+the four tallest self-fertilised plants 32.75 inches in height; or as
+100 to 178. In all four pots a self-fertilised plant flowered before any
+one of the crossed.
+
+In Pot 4, in which the plants were extremely crowded, the two lots were
+at first equal; and ultimately the tallest crossed plant exceeded by a
+trifle the tallest self-fertilised plant. This recalled to my mind an
+analogous case in the one generation of Petunia, in which the
+self-fertilised plants were throughout their growth taller than the
+crossed in all the pots except in the crowded one. Accordingly another
+trial was made, and some of the same crossed and self-fertilised seeds
+of tobacco were sown thickly on opposite sides of two additional pots;
+the plants being left to grow up much crowded. When they were between 13
+and 14 inches in height there was no difference between the two sides,
+nor was there any marked difference when the plants had grown as tall as
+they could; for in one pot the tallest crossed plant was 26 1/2 inches
+in height, and exceeded by 2 inches the tallest self-fertilised plant,
+whilst in the other pot, the tallest crossed plant was shorter by 3 1/2
+inches than the tallest self-fertilised plant, which was 22 inches in
+height.
+
+TABLE 6/84. Nicotiana tabacum (first generation).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants, May 20, 1868.
+
+Column 3: self-fertilised Plants, May 20, 1868.
+
+Column 4: Crossed Plants, December 6, 1868.
+
+Column 5: self-fertilised Plants, December 6, 1868.
+
+Pot 1 : 15 4/8 : 26 : 40 : 44.
+
+Pot 2 : 3 : 15 : 6 4/8 : 43.
+
+Pot 3 : 8 : 13 4/8 : 16 : 33.
+
+Pot 4 : 5 : 5 : 11 4/8 : 11.
+
+Total : 31.5 : 59.5 : 74.0 : 131.0.
+
+As the plants did not grow to their proper height in the above small
+pots in Table 6/84, four crossed and four self-fertilised plants were
+raised from the same seed, and were planted in pairs on the opposite
+sides of four very large pots containing rich soil; so that they were
+not exposed to at all severe mutual competition. When these plants were
+in flower I neglected to measure them, but record in my notes that all
+four self-fertilised plants exceeded in height the four crossed plants
+by 2 or 3 inches. We have seen that the flowers on the original or
+parent-plants which were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant
+yielded much fewer seeds than those fertilised with their own pollen;
+and the trial just given, as well as that in Table 6/84, show us clearly
+that the plants raised from the crossed seeds were inferior in height to
+those from the self-fertilised seeds; but only when not greatly crowded.
+When crowded and thus subjected to very severe competition, the crossed
+and self-fertilised plants were nearly equal in height.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE SECOND GENERATION.
+
+Twelve flowers on the crossed plants of the last generation growing in
+the four large pots just mentioned, were crossed with pollen from a
+crossed plant growing in one of the other pots; and twelve flowers on
+the self-fertilised plants were fertilised with their own pollen. All
+these flowers of both lots produced fine capsules. Ten of the crossed
+capsules contained by weight 38.92 grains of seeds, and ten of the
+self-fertilised capsules 37.74 grains; or as 100 to 97. Some of these
+seeds in an equal state of germination were planted in pairs on the
+opposite sides of five large pots. A good many of the crossed seeds
+germinated before the self-fertilised, and were of course rejected. The
+plants thus raised were measured when several of them were in full
+flower.
+
+TABLE 6/85. Nicotiana tabacum (second generation).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 14 4/8 : 27 6/8.
+Pot 1 : 78 4/8 : 8 6/8.
+Pot 1 : 9 : 56.
+
+Pot 2 : 60 4/8 : 16 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 44 6/8 : 7.
+Pot 2 : 10 : 50 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 57 1/8 : 87 (A).
+Pot 3 : 1 2/8 : 81 2/8 (B).
+
+Pot 4 : 6 6/8 : 19.
+Pot 4 : 31 : 43 2/8.
+Pot 4 : 69 4/8 : 4.
+
+Pot 5 : 99 4/8 : 9 4/8.
+Pot 5 : 29 2/8 : 3.
+
+Total : 511.63 : 413.75.
+
+The thirteen crossed plants here average 39.35, and the thirteen
+self-fertilised plants 31.82 inches in height; or as 100 to 81. But it
+would be a very much fairer plan to exclude all the starved plants of
+only 10 inches and under in height; and in this case the nine remaining
+crossed plants average 53.84, and the seven remaining self-fertilised
+plants 51.78 inches in height, or as 100 to 96; and this difference is
+so small that the crossed and self-fertilised plants may be considered
+as of equal heights.
+
+In addition to these plants, three crossed plants were planted
+separately in three large pots, and three self-fertilised plants in
+three other large pots, so that they were not exposed to any
+competition; and now the self-fertilised plants exceeded the crossed in
+height by a little, for the three crossed averaged 55.91, and the three
+self-fertilised 59.16 inches; or as 100 to 106.
+
+CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS OF THE THIRD GENERATION.
+
+TABLE 6/86. Nicotiana tabacum (third generation). Seedlings from the
+self-fertilised plant A in pot 3, Table 6/85, of the last or second
+generation.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: From Self-fertilised Plant, crossed by a Crossed Plant.
+
+Column 3: From Self-fertilised Plant again self-fertilised, forming the
+third Self-fertilised generation.
+
+Pot 1 : 100 2/8 : 98.
+Pot 1 : 91 : 79.
+
+Pot 2 : 110 2/8 : 59 1/8.
+Pot 2 : 100 4/8 : 66 6/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 104 : 79 6/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 84 2/8 : 110 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 76 4/8 : 64 1/8.
+
+Total : 666.75 : 557.25.
+
+As I wished to ascertain, firstly, whether those self-fertilised plants
+of the last generation, which greatly exceeded in height their crossed
+opponents, would transmit the same tendency to their offspring, and
+secondly, whether they possessed the same sexual constitution, I
+selected for experiment the two self-fertilised plants marked A and B in
+Pot 3 in Table 6/85, as these two were of nearly equal height, and were
+greatly superior to their crossed opponents. Four flowers on each plant
+were fertilised with their own pollen, and four others on the same
+plants were crossed with pollen from one of the crossed plants growing
+in another pot. This plan differs from that before followed, in which
+seedlings from crossed plants again crossed, have been compared with
+seedlings from self-fertilised plants again self-fertilised. The seeds
+from the crossed and self-fertilised capsules of the above two plants
+were placed in separate watch-glasses and compared, but were not
+weighed; and in both cases those from the crossed capsules seemed to be
+rather less numerous than those from the self-fertilised capsules. These
+seeds were planted in the usual manner, and the heights of the crossed
+and self-fertilised seedlings, when fully grown, are given in Tables
+6/86 and 6/87.
+
+The seven crossed plants in the first of these two tables average 95.25,
+and the seven self-fertilised 79.6 inches in height; or as 100 to 83. In
+half the pots a crossed plant, and in the other half a self-fertilised
+plant flowered first.
+
+We now come to the seedlings raised from the other parent-plant B.
+
+TABLE 6/87. Nicotiana tabacum (third generation). Seedlings from the
+self-fertilised plant B in pot 3, Table 6/85, of the last or second
+generation.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: From Self-fertilised Plant, crossed by a Crossed Plant.
+
+Column 3: From Self-fertilised Plant again self-fertilised, forming the
+third Self-fertilised generation.
+
+Pot 1 : 87 2/8 : 72 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 49 : 14 2/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 98 4/8 : 73.
+Pot 2 : 0 : 110 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 99 : 106 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 15 2/8 : 73 6/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 97 6/8 : 48 6/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 48 6/8 : 81 2/8.
+Pot 5 : 0 : 61 2/8.
+
+Total : 495.50 : 641.75.
+
+The seven crossed plants (for two of them died) here average 70.78
+inches, and the nine self-fertilised plants 71.3 inches in height; or as
+100 to barely 101. In four out of these five pots, a self-fertilised
+plant flowered before any one of the crossed plants. So that,
+differently from the last case, the self-fertilised plants are in some
+respects slightly superior to the crossed.
+
+If we now consider the crossed and self-fertilised plants of the three
+generations, we find an extraordinary diversity in their relative
+heights. In the first generation, the crossed plants were inferior to
+the self-fertilised as 100 to 178; and the flowers on the original
+parent-plants which were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant
+yielded much fewer seeds than the self-fertilised flowers, in the
+proportion of 100 to 150. But it is a strange fact that the
+self-fertilised plants, which were subjected to very severe competition
+with the crossed, had on two occasions no advantage over them. The
+inferiority of the crossed plants of this first generation cannot be
+attributed to the immaturity of the seeds, for I carefully examined
+them; nor to the seeds being diseased or in any way injured in some one
+capsule, for the contents of the ten crossed capsules were mingled
+together and a few taken by chance for sowing. In the second generation
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants were nearly equal in height. In
+the third generation, crossed and self-fertilised seeds were obtained
+from two plants of the previous generation, and the seedlings raised
+from them differed remarkably in constitution; the crossed in the one
+case exceeded the self-fertilised in height in the ratio of 100 to 83,
+and in the other case were almost equal. This difference between the two
+lots, raised at the same time from two plants growing in the same pot,
+and treated in every respect alike, as well as the extraordinary
+superiority of the self-fertilised over the crossed plants in the first
+generation, considered together, make me believe that some individuals
+of the present species differ to a certain extent from others in their
+sexual affinities (to use the term employed by Gartner), like closely
+allied species of the same genus. Consequently if two plants which thus
+differ are crossed, the seedlings suffer and are beaten by those from
+the self-fertilised flowers, in which the sexual elements are of the
+same nature. It is known that with our domestic animals certain
+individuals are sexually incompatible, and will not produce offspring,
+although fertile with other individuals. (6/3. I have given evidence on
+this head in my 'Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication'
+chapter 18 2nd edition volume 2 page 146.) But Kolreuter has recorded a
+case which bears more closely on our present one, as it shows that in
+the genus Nicotiana the varieties differ in their sexual affinities.
+(6/4. 'Das Geschlecht der Pflanzen, Zweite Fortsetzung' 1764 pages
+55-60.) He experimented on five varieties of the common tobacco, and
+proved that they were varieties by showing that they were perfectly
+fertile when reciprocally crossed; but one of these varieties, if used
+either as the father or the mother, was more fertile than any of the
+others when crossed with a widely distinct species, N. glutinosa. As the
+different varieties thus differ in their sexual affinities, there is
+nothing surprising in the individuals of the same variety differing in a
+like manner to a slight degree.
+
+Taking the plants of the three generations altogether, the crossed show
+no superiority over the self-fertilised, and I can account for this fact
+only by supposing that with this species, which is perfectly
+self-fertile without insect aid, most of the individuals are in the same
+condition, as those of the same variety of the common pea and of a few
+other exotic plants, which have been self-fertilised for many
+generations. In such cases a cross between two individuals does no good;
+nor does it in any case, unless the individuals differ in general
+constitution, either from so-called spontaneous variation, or from their
+progenitors having been subjected to different conditions. I believe
+that this is the true explanation in the present instance, because, as
+we shall immediately see, the offspring of plants, which did not profit
+at all by being crossed with a plant of the same stock, profited to an
+extraordinary degree by a cross with a slightly different sub-variety.
+
+THE EFFECTS OF A CROSS WITH A FRESH STOCK.
+
+I procured some seed of N. tabacum from Kew and raised some plants,
+which formed a slightly different sub-variety from my former plants; as
+the flowers were a shade pinker, the leaves a little more pointed, and
+the plants not quite so tall. Therefore the advantage in height which
+the seedlings gained by this cross cannot be attributed to direct
+inheritance. Two of the plants of the third self-fertilised generation,
+growing in Pots 2 and 5 in Table 6/87, which exceeded in height their
+crossed opponents (as did their parents in a still higher degree) were
+fertilised with pollen from the Kew plants, that is, by a fresh stock.
+The seedlings thus raised may be called the Kew-crossed. Some other
+flowers on the same two plants were fertilised with their own pollen,
+and the seedlings thus raised from the fourth self-fertilised
+generation. The crossed capsules produced by the plant in Pot 2, Table
+6/87, were plainly less fine than the self-fertilised capsules on the
+same plant. In Pot 5 the one finest capsule was also a self-fertilised
+one; but the seeds produced by the two crossed capsules together
+exceeded in number those produced by the two self-fertilised capsules on
+the same plant. Therefore as far as the flowers on the parent-plants are
+concerned, a cross with pollen from a fresh stock did little or no good;
+and I did not expect that the offspring would have received any benefit,
+but in this I was completely mistaken.
+
+The crossed and self-fertilised seeds from the two plants were placed on
+bare sand, and very many of the crossed seeds of both sets germinated
+before the self-fertilised seeds, and protruded their radicles at a
+quicker rate. Hence many of the crossed seeds had to be rejected, before
+pairs in an equal state of germination were obtained for planting on the
+opposite sides of sixteen large pots. The two series of seedlings raised
+from the parent-plants in the two Pots 2 and 5 were kept separate, and
+when fully grown were measured to the tips of their highest leaves, as
+shown in Table 6/88. But as there was no uniform difference in height
+between the crossed and self-fertilised seedlings raised from the two
+plants, their heights have been added together in calculating the
+averages. I should state that by the accidental fall of a large bush in
+the greenhouse, several plants in both the series were much injured.
+These were at once measured together with their opponents and afterwards
+thrown away. The others were left to grow to their full height, and were
+measured when in flower. This accident accounts for the small height of
+some of the pairs; but as all the pairs, whether only partly or fully
+grown, were measured at the same time, the measurements are fair.
+
+The average height of the twenty-six crossed plants in the sixteen pots
+of the two series is 63.29, and that of the twenty-six self-fertilised
+plants is 41.67 inches; or as 100 to 66. The superiority of the crossed
+plants was shown in another way, for in every one of the sixteen pots a
+crossed plant flowered before a self-fertilised one, with the exception
+of Pot 6 of the second series, in which the plants on the two sides
+flowered simultaneously.
+
+TABLE 6/88. Nicotiana tabacum. Plants raised from two plants of the
+third self-fertilised generation in Pots 2 and 5, in Table 6/87.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Kew-crossed Plants, pot 2, Table 6/87.
+
+Column 3: Plants of the fourth Self-fertilised generation, pot 2, Table
+6/87.
+
+Column 4: Kew-crossed Plants, pot 5, Table 6/87.
+
+Column 5: Plants of the fourth Self-fertilised generation, pot 5, Table
+6/87.
+
+Pot 1 : 84 6/8 : 68 4/8 : 77 6/8 : 56.
+Pot 1 : 31 : 5 : 7 2/8 : 5 3/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 78 4/8 : 51 4/8 : 55 4/8 : 27 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 48 : 70 : 18 : 7.
+
+Pot 3 : 77 3/8 : 12 6/8 : 76 2/8 : 60 6/8.
+Pot 3 : 77 1/8 : 6 6/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 49 2/8 : 29 4/8 : 90 4/8 : 11 6/8.
+Pot 4 : 15 6/8 : 32 : 22 2/8 : 4 1/8.
+
+Pot 5 : 89 : 85 : 94 2/8 : 28 4/8.
+Pot 5 : 17 : 5 3/8.
+
+Pot 6 : 90 : 80 : 78 : 78 6/8.
+
+Pot 7 : 84 4/8 : 48 6/8 : 85 4/8 : 61 4/8.
+Pot 7 : 76 4/8 : 56 4/8.
+
+Pot 8 : 83 4/8 : 84 4/8 : 65 5/8 : 78 3/8.
+Pot 8 : : : 72 2/8 : 27 4/8.
+
+Total : 902.63 : 636.13 : 743.13 : 447.38.
+
+Some of the remaining seeds of both series, whether or not in a state of
+germination, were thickly sown on the opposite sides of two very large
+pots; and the six highest plants on each side of each pot were measured
+after they had grown to nearly their full height. But their heights were
+much less than in the former trials, owing to their extremely crowded
+condition. Even whilst quite young, the crossed seedlings manifestly had
+much broader and finer leaves than the self-fertilised seedlings.
+
+TABLE 6/89. Nicotiana tabacum. Plants of the same parentage as those in
+Table 6/88, but grown extremely crowded in two large pots.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Kew-crossed Plants, from pot 2, Table 6/87.
+
+Column 2: Plants of the fourth Self-fertilised generation, from pot 2,
+Table 6/87.
+
+Column 3: Kew-crossed Plants, from pot 5, Table 6/87.
+
+Column 4: Plants of the fourth Self-fertilised generation, from pot 5,
+Table 6/87.
+
+ 42 4/8 : 22 4/8 : 44 6/8 : 22 4/8.
+ 34 : 19 2/8 : 42 4/8 : 21.
+ 30 4/8 : 14 2/8 : 27 4/8 : 18.
+ 23 4/8 : 16 : 31 2/8 : 15 2/8.
+ 26 6/8 : 13 4/8 : 32 : 13 5/8.
+ 18 3/8 : 16 : 24 6/8 : 14 6/8.
+
+175.63 : 101.50 : 202.75 : 105.13.
+
+The twelve tallest crossed plants in the two pots belonging to the two
+series average here 31.53, and the twelve tallest self-fertilised plants
+17.21 inches in height; or as 100 to 54. The plants on both sides, when
+fully grown, some time after they had been measured, were cut down close
+to the ground and weighed. The twelve crossed plants weighed 21.25
+ounces; and the twelve self-fertilised plants only 7.83 ounces; or in
+weight as 100 to 37.
+
+The rest of the crossed and self-fertilised seeds from the two
+parent-plants (the same as in the last experiment) was sown on the 1st
+of July in four long parallel and separate rows in good soil in the open
+ground; so that the seedlings were not subjected to any mutual
+competition. The summer was wet and unfavourable for their growth.
+Whilst the seedlings were very small the two crossed rows had a clear
+advantage over the two self-fertilised rows. When fully grown the twenty
+tallest crossed plants and the twenty tallest self-fertilised plants
+were selected and measured on the 11th of November to the extremities of
+their leaves, as shown in Table 6/90. Of the twenty crossed plants,
+twelve had flowered; whilst of the twenty self-fertilised plants one
+alone had flowered.
+
+TABLE 6/90. Nicotiana tabacum. Plants raised from the same seeds as in
+the last two experiments, but sown separately in the open ground, so as
+not to compete together.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Kew-crossed Plants, from pot 2, Table 6/87.
+
+Column 2: Plants of the fourth Self-fertilised generation, from pot 2,
+Table 6/87.
+
+Column 3: Kew-crossed Plants, from pot 5, Table 6/87.
+
+Column 4: Plants of the fourth Self-fertilised generation, from pot 5,
+Table 6/87.
+
+ 42 2/8 : 22 6/8 : 54 4/8 : 34 4/8.
+ 54 5/8 : 37 4/8 : 51 4/8 : 38 5/8.
+ 39 3/8 : 34 4/8 : 45 : 40 6/8.
+ 53 2/8 : 30 : 43 : 43 2/8.
+ 49 3/8 : 28 6/8 : 43 : 40.
+ 50 3/8 : 31 2/8 : 48 6/8 : 38 2/8.
+ 47 1/8 : 25 4/8 : 44 : 35 6/8.
+ 57 3/8 : 26 2/8 : 48 2/8 : 39 6/8.
+ 37 : 22 3/8 : 55 1/8 : 47 6/8.
+ 48 : 28 : 63 : 58 5/8.
+
+478.75 : 286.86 : 496.13 : 417.25
+
+The twenty tallest crossed plants here average 48.74, and the twenty
+tallest self-fertilised 35.2 inches in height; or as 100 to 72. These
+plants after being measured were cut down close to the ground, and the
+twenty crossed plants weighed 195.75 ounces, and the twenty
+self-fertilised plants 123.25 ounces; or as 100 to 63.
+
+In Tables 6/88, 6/89 and 6/90, we have the measurements of fifty-six
+plants derived from two plants of the third self-fertilised generation
+crossed with pollen from a fresh stock, and of fifty-six plants of the
+fourth self-fertilised generation derived from the same two plants.
+These crossed and self-fertilised plants were treated in three different
+ways, having been put, firstly, into moderately close competition with
+one another in pots; secondly, having been subjected to unfavourable
+conditions and to very severe competition from being greatly crowded in
+two large pots; and thirdly, having been sown separately in open and
+good ground, so as not to suffer from any mutual competition. In all
+these cases the crossed plants in each lot were greatly superior to the
+self-fertilised. This was shown in several ways,--by the earlier
+germination of the crossed seeds, by the more rapid growth of the
+seedlings whilst quite young, by the earlier flowering of the mature
+plants, as well as by the greater height which they ultimately attained.
+The superiority of the crossed plants was shown still more plainly when
+the two lots were weighed; the weight of the crossed plants to that of
+the self-fertilised in the two crowded pots being as 100 to 37. Better
+evidence could hardly be desired of the immense advantage derived from a
+cross with a fresh stock.
+
+26. PRIMULACEAE.--Cyclamen persicum. (6/5. Cyclamen repandum according
+to Lecoq 'Geographie Botanique de l'Europe' tome 8 1858 page 150, is
+proterandrous, and this I believe to be the case with Cyclamen
+persicum.)
+
+Ten flowers crossed with pollen from plants known to be distinct
+seedlings, yielded nine capsules, containing on an average 34.2 seeds,
+with a maximum of seventy-seven in one. Ten flowers self-fertilised
+yielded eight capsules, containing on an average only 13.1 seeds, with a
+maximum of twenty-five in one. This gives a ratio of 100 to 38 for the
+average number of seeds per capsule for the crossed and self-fertilised
+flowers. The flowers hang downwards, and as the stigmas stand close
+beneath the anthers, it might have been expected that pollen would have
+fallen on them, and that they would have been spontaneously
+self-fertilised; but these covered-up plants did not produce a single
+capsule. On some other occasions uncovered plants in the same greenhouse
+produced plenty of capsules, and I suppose that the flowers had been
+visited by bees, which could hardly fail to carry pollen from plant to
+plant.
+
+The seeds obtained in the manner just described were placed on sand, and
+after germinating were planted in pairs,--three crossed and three
+self-fertilised plants on the opposite sides of four pots. When the
+leaves were 2 or 3 inches in length, including the foot-stalks, the
+seedlings on both sides were equal. In the course of a month or two the
+crossed plants began to show a slight superiority over the
+self-fertilised, which steadily increased; and the crossed flowered in
+all four pots some weeks before, and much more profusely than the
+self-fertilised. The two tallest flower-stems on the crossed plants in
+each pot were now measured, and the average height of the eight stems
+was 9.49 inches. After a considerable interval of time the
+self-fertilised plants flowered, and several of their flower-stems (but
+I forgot to record how many) were roughly measured, and their average
+height was a little under 7.5 inches; so that the flower-stems on the
+crossed plants to those on the self-fertilised were at least as 100 to
+79. The reason why I did not make more careful measurements of the
+self-fertilised plants was, that they looked such poor specimens that I
+determined to there them re-potted in larger pots and in the following
+year to measure them carefully; but we shall see that this was partly
+frustrated by so few flower-stems being then produced.
+
+These plants were left uncovered in the greenhouse; and the twelve
+crossed plants produced forty capsules, whilst the twelve
+self-fertilised plants produced only five; or as 100 to 12. But this
+difference does not give a just idea of the relative fertility of the
+two lots. I counted the seeds in one of the finest capsules on the
+crossed plants, and it contained seventy-three; whilst the finest of the
+five capsules produced by the self-fertilised plants contained only
+thirty-five good seeds. In the other four capsules most of the seeds
+were barely half as large as those in the crossed capsules.
+
+TABLE 6/91. Cyclamen persicum: 0 implies that no flower-stem was
+produced.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 10 : 0.
+Pot 1 : 9 2/8 : 0.
+Pot 1 : 10 2/8 : 0.
+
+Pot 2 : 9 2/8 : 0.
+Pot 2 : 10 : 0.
+Pot 2 : 10 2/8 : 0.
+
+Pot 3 : 9 1/8 : 8.
+Pot 3 : 9 5/8 : 6 7/8.
+Pot 3 : 9 5/8 : 6 6/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 11 1/8 : 0.
+Pot 4 : 10 5/8 : 7 7/8.
+Pot 4 : 10 6/8 : 0.
+
+Total : 119.88 : 29.50.
+
+In the following year the crossed plants again bore many flowers before
+the self-fertilised bore a single one. The three tallest flower-stems on
+the crossed plants in each of the pots were measured, as shown in Table
+6/91. In Pots 1 and 2 the self-fertilised plants did not produce a
+single flower-stem; in Pot 4 only one; and in Pot 3 six, of which the
+three tallest were measured.
+
+The average height of the twelve flower-stems on the crossed plants is
+9.99, and that of the four flower-stems on the self-fertilised plants
+7.37 inches; or as 100 to 74. The self-fertilised plants were miserable
+specimens, whilst the crossed ones looked very vigorous.
+
+ANAGALLIS.
+
+Anagallis collina, var. grandiflora (pale red and blue-flowered
+sub-varieties).
+
+Firstly, twenty-five flowers on some plants of the red variety were
+crossed with pollen from a distinct plant of the same variety, and
+produced ten capsules; thirty-one flowers were fertilised with their own
+pollen, and produced eighteen capsules. These plants, which were grown
+in pots in the greenhouse, were evidently in a very sterile condition,
+and the seeds in both sets of capsules, especially in the
+self-fertilised, although numerous, were of so poor a quality that it
+was very difficult to determine which were good and which bad. But as
+far as I could judge, the crossed capsules contained on an average 6.3
+good seeds, with a maximum in one of thirteen; whilst the
+self-fertilised contained 6.05 such seeds, with a maximum in one of
+fourteen.
+
+Secondly, eleven flowers on the red variety were castrated whilst young
+and fertilised with pollen from the blue variety, and this cross
+evidently much increased their fertility; for the eleven flowers yielded
+seven capsules, which contained on an average twice as many good seeds
+as before, namely, 12.7; with a maximum in two of the capsules of
+seventeen seeds. Therefore these crossed capsules yielded seeds compared
+with those in the foregoing self-fertilised capsules, as 100 to 48.
+These seeds were also conspicuously larger than those from the cross
+between two individuals of the same red variety, and germinated much
+more freely. The flowers on most of the plants produced by the cross
+between the two-coloured varieties (of which several were raised), took
+after their mother, and were red-coloured. But on two of the plants the
+flowers were plainly stained with blue, and to such a degree in one case
+as to be almost intermediate in tint.
+
+The crossed seeds of the two foregoing kinds and the self-fertilised
+were sown on the opposite sides of two large pots, and the seedlings
+were measured when fully grown, as shown in Tables 6/92a and 6/92b.
+
+TABLE 6/92a. Anagallis collina: Red variety crossed by a distinct plant
+of the red variety, and red variety self-fertilised.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 23 4/8 : 15 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 21 : 15 4/8.
+Pot 1 : 17 2/8 : 14.
+
+Total : 61.75 : 45.00.
+
+TABLE 6/92b. Anagallis collina: Red variety crossed by blue variety, and
+red variety self-fertilised.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 2 : 30 4/8 : 24 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 27 3/8 : 18 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 25 : 11 6/8.
+
+Total : 82.88 : 54.75.
+
+Total of both lots:
+ : 144.63 : 99.75.
+
+As the plants of the two lots are few in number, they may be run
+together for the general average; but I may first state that the height
+of the seedlings from the cross between two individuals of the red
+variety is to that of the self-fertilised plants of the red variety as
+100 to 73; whereas the height of the crossed offspring from the two
+varieties to the self-fertilised plants of the red variety is as 100 to
+66. So that the cross between the two varieties is here seen to be the
+most advantageous. The average height of all six crossed plants in the
+two lots taken together is 48.20, and that of the six self-fertilised
+plants 33.25; or as 100 to 69.
+
+These six crossed plants produced spontaneously twenty-six capsules,
+whilst the six self-fertilised plants produced only two, or as 100 to 8.
+There is therefore the same extraordinary difference in fertility
+between the crossed and self-fertilised plants as in the last genus,
+Cyclamen, which belongs to the same family of the Primulaceae.
+
+Primula veris. British flora. (var. officinalis, Linn.).
+
+THE COWSLIP.
+
+Most of the species in this genus are heterostyled or dimorphic; that
+is, they present two forms,--one long-styled with short stamens, and the
+other short-styled with long stamens. (6/6. See my paper 'On the Two
+Forms or Dimorphic Condition in the Species of Primula' in 'Journal of
+the Proceedings of the Linnean Society' volume 6 1862 page 77. A second
+paper, to which I presently refer 'On the Hybrid-like Nature of the
+Offspring from the Illegitimate Unions of Dimorphic and Trimorphic
+Plants' was published in volume 10 1867 page 393 of the same journal.)
+For complete fertilisation it is necessary that pollen from the one form
+should be applied to the stigma of the other form; and this is effected
+under nature by insects. Such unions, and the seedlings raised from
+them, I have called legitimate. If one form is fertilised with pollen
+from the same form, the full complement of seed is not produced; and in
+the case of some heterostyled genera no seed at all is produced. Such
+unions, and the seedlings raised from them, I have called illegitimate.
+These seedlings are often dwarfed and more or less sterile, like
+hybrids. I possessed some long-styled plants of Primula veris, which
+during four successive generations had been produced from illegitimate
+unions between long-styled plants; they were, moreover, in some degree
+inter-related, and had been subjected all the time to similar conditions
+in pots in the greenhouse. As long as they were cultivated in this
+manner, they grew well and were healthy and fertile. Their fertility
+even increased in the later generations, as if they were becoming
+habituated to illegitimate fertilisation. Plants of the first
+illegitimate generation when taken from the greenhouse and planted in
+moderately good soil out of doors grew well and were healthy; but when
+those of the two last illegitimate generations were thus treated they
+became excessively sterile and dwarfed, and remained so during the
+following year, by which time they ought to have become accustomed to
+growing out of doors, so that they must have possessed a weak
+constitution.
+
+Under these circumstances, it seemed advisable to ascertain what would
+be the effect of legitimately crossing long-styled plants of the fourth
+illegitimate generation with pollen taken from non-related short-styled
+plants, growing under different conditions. Accordingly several flowers
+on plants of the fourth illegitimate generation (i.e.,
+great-great-grandchildren of plants which had been legitimately
+fertilised), growing vigorously in pots in the greenhouse, were
+legitimately fertilised with pollen from an almost wild short-styled
+cowslip, and these flowers yielded some fine capsules. Thirty other
+flowers on the same illegitimate plants were fertilised with their own
+pollen, and these yielded seventeen capsules, containing on an average
+thirty-two seeds. This is a high degree of fertility; higher, I believe,
+than that which generally obtains with illegitimately fertilised
+long-styled plants growing out of doors, and higher than that of the
+previous illegitimate generations, although their flowers were
+fertilised with pollen taken from a distinct plant of the same form.
+
+These two lots of seeds were sown (for they will not germinate well when
+placed on bare sand) on the opposite sides of four pots, and the
+seedlings were thinned, so that an equal number were left on the two
+sides. For some time there was no marked difference in height between
+the two lots; and in Pot 3, Table 6/93, the self-fertilised plants were
+rather the tallest. But by the time that they had thrown up young
+flower-stems, the legitimately crossed plants revealed much the finest,
+and had greener and larger leaves. The breadth of the largest leaf on
+each plant was measured, and those on the crossed plants were on an
+average a quarter of an inch (exactly .28 of an inch) broader than those
+on the self-fertilised plants. The plants, from being too much crowded,
+produced poor and short flower-stems. The two finest on each side were
+measured; the eight on the legitimately crossed plants averaged 4.08,
+and the eight on the illegitimately self-fertilised plants averaged 2.93
+inches in height; or as 100 to 72.
+
+These plants after they had flowered were turned out of their pots, and
+planted in fairly good soil in the open ground. In the following year
+(1870), when in full flower, the two tallest flower-stems on each side
+were again measured, as shown in Table 6/93, which likewise gives the
+number of flower-stems produced on both sides of all the pots.
+
+TABLE 6/93. Primula veris.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Height: Legitimately crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Number of Flower-stems produced: Legitimately crossed Plants.
+
+Column 4: Height: Illegitimately crossed Plants.
+
+Column 5: Number of Flower-stems produced: Illegitimately crossed
+Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 9 : 16 : 2 1/8 : 3.
+Pot 1 : 8 : : 3 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 7 : 16 : 6 : 3.
+Pot 2 : 6 4/8 : : 5 4/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 6 : 16 : 3 : 4.
+Pot 3 : 6 2/8 : : 0 4/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 7 3/8 : 14 : 2 5/8 : 5.
+Pot 4 : 6 1/8 : : 2 4/8.
+
+Total : 56.26 : 62 : 25.75 : 15.
+
+The average height of the eight tallest flower-stems on the crossed
+plants is here 7.03 inches, and that of the eight tallest flower-stems
+on the self-fertilised plants 3.21 inches; or as 100 to 46. We see,
+also, that the crossed plants bore sixty-two flower-stems; that is,
+above four times as many as those (namely fifteen) borne by the
+self-fertilised plants. The flowers were left exposed to the visits of
+insects, and as many plants of both forms grew close by, they must have
+been legitimately and naturally fertilised. Under these circumstances
+the crossed plants produced 324 capsules, whilst the self-fertilised
+produced only 16; and these were all produced by a single plant in Pot
+2, which was much finer than any other self-fertilised plant. Judging by
+the number of capsules produced, the fertility of an equal number of
+crossed and self-fertilised plants was as 100 to 5.
+
+In the succeeding year (1871) I did not count all the flower-stems on
+these plants, but only those which produced capsules containing good
+seeds. The season was unfavourable, and the crossed plants produced only
+forty such flower-stems, bearing 168 good capsules, whilst the
+self-fertilised plants produced only two such flower-stems, bearing only
+6 capsules, half of which were very poor ones. So that the fertility of
+the two lots, judging by the number of capsules, was as 100 to 3.5.
+
+In considering the great difference in height and the wonderful
+difference in fertility between the two sets of plants, we should bear
+in mind that this is the result of two distinct agencies. The
+self-fertilised plants were the product of illegitimate fertilisation
+during five successive generations, in all of which, excepting the last,
+the plants had been fertilised with pollen taken from a distinct
+individual belonging to the same form, but which was more or less
+closely related. The plants had also been subjected in each generation
+to closely similar conditions. This treatment alone, as I know from
+other observations, would have greatly reduced the size and fertility of
+the offspring. On the other hand, the crossed plants were the offspring
+of long-styled plants of the fourth illegitimate generation legitimately
+crossed with pollen from a short-styled plant, which, as well as its
+progenitors, had been exposed to very different conditions; and this
+latter circumstance alone would have given great vigour to the
+offspring, as we may infer from the several analogous cases already
+given. How much proportional weight ought to be attributed to these two
+agencies,--the one tending to injure the self-fertilised offspring, and
+the other to benefit the crossed offspring,--cannot be determined. But
+we shall immediately see that the greater part of the benefit, as far as
+increased fertility is concerned, must be attributed to the cross having
+been made with a fresh stock.
+
+Primula veris.
+
+EQUAL-STYLED AND RED-FLOWERED VAR.
+
+I have described in my paper 'On the Illegitimate Unions of Dimorphic
+and Trimorphic Plants' this remarkable variety, which was sent to me
+from Edinburgh by Mr. J. Scott. It possessed a pistil proper to the
+long-styled form, and stamens proper to the short-styled form; so that
+it had lost the heterostyled or dimorphic character common to most of
+the species of the genus, and may be compared with an hermaphrodite form
+of a bisexual animal. Consequently the pollen and stigma of the same
+flower are adapted for complete mutual fertilisation, instead of its
+being necessary that pollen should be brought from one form to another,
+as in the common cowslip. From the stigma and anthers standing nearly on
+the same level, the flowers are perfectly self-fertile when insects are
+excluded. Owing to the fortunate existence of this variety, it is
+possible to fertilise its flowers in a legitimate manner with their own
+pollen, and to cross other flowers in a legitimate manner with pollen
+from another variety or fresh stock. Thus the offspring from both unions
+can be compared quite fairly, free from any doubt from the injurious
+effects of an illegitimate union.
+
+The plants on which I experimented had been raised during two successive
+generations from spontaneously self-fertilised seeds produced by plants
+under a net; and as the variety is highly self-fertile, its progenitors
+in Edinburgh may have been self-fertilised during some previous
+generations. Several flowers on two of my plants were legitimately
+crossed with pollen from a short-styled common cowslip growing almost
+wild in my orchard; so that the cross was between plants which had been
+subjected to considerably different conditions. Several other flowers on
+the same two plants were allowed to fertilise themselves under a net;
+and this union, as already explained, is a legitimate one.
+
+The crossed and self-fertilised seeds thus obtained were sown thickly on
+the opposite sides of three pots, and the seedlings thinned, so that an
+equal number were left on the two sides. The seedlings during the first
+year were nearly equal in height, excepting in Pot 3, Table 6/94, in
+which the self-fertilised plants had a decided advantage. In the autumn
+the plants were bedded out, in their pots; owing to this circumstance,
+and to many plants growing in each pot, they did not flourish, and none
+were very productive in seeds. But the conditions were perfectly equal
+and fair for both sides. In the following spring I record in my notes
+that in two of the pots the crossed plants are "incomparably the finest
+in general appearance," and in all three pots they flowered before the
+self-fertilised. When in full flower the tallest flower-stem on each
+side of each pot was measured, and the number of the flower-stems on
+both sides counted, as shown in Table 6/94. The plants were left
+uncovered, and as other plants were growing close by, the flowers no
+doubt were crossed by insects. When the capsules were ripe they were
+gathered and counted, and the result is likewise shown in Table 6/94.
+
+TABLE 6/94. Primula veris (equal-styled, red-flowered variety).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Height of tallest flower-stem: crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Number of Flower-stems: crossed Plants.
+
+Column 4: Number of good capsules: crossed Plants.
+
+Column 5: Height of tallest flower-stem: self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Column 6: Number of Flower-stems: self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Column 7: Number of good capsules: self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 10 : 14 : 163 : 6 4/8 : 6 : 6.
+
+Pot 2 : 8 4/8 : 12 : * : 5 : 2 : 0.
+ *Several, not counted.
+
+Pot 3 : 7 4/8 : 7 : 43 : 10 4/8 : 5 : 26.
+
+Totals : 26.0 : 33 : 206 : 22.0 : 13 : 32.
+
+The average height of the three tallest flower-stems on the crossed
+plants is 8.66 inches, and that of the three on the self-fertilised
+plants 7.33 inches; or as 100 to 85.
+
+All the crossed plants together produced thirty-three flower-stems,
+whilst the self-fertilised bore only thirteen. The number of the
+capsules were counted only on the plants in Pots 1 and 3, for the
+self-fertilised plants in Pot 2 produced none; therefore those on the
+crossed plants on the opposite side were not counted. Capsules not
+containing any good seeds were rejected. The crossed plants in the above
+two pots produced 206, and the self-fertilised in the same pots only 32
+capsules; or as 100 to 15. Judging from the previous generations, the
+extreme unproductiveness of the self-fertilised plants in this
+experiment was wholly due to their having been subjected to unfavourable
+conditions, and to severe competition with the crossed plants; for had
+they grown separately in good soil, it is almost certain that they would
+have produced a large number of capsules. The seeds were counted in
+twenty capsules from the crossed plants, and they averaged 24.75; whilst
+in twenty capsules from the self-fertilised plants the average was
+17.65; or as 100 to 71. Moreover, the seeds from the self-fertilised
+plants were not nearly so fine as those from the crossed plants. If we
+consider together the number of capsules produced and the average number
+of contained seeds, the fertility of the crossed plants to the
+self-fertilised plants was as 100 to 11. We thus see what a great
+effect, as far as fertility is concerned, was produced by a cross
+between the two varieties, which had been long exposed to different
+conditions, in comparison with self-fertilisation; the fertilisation
+having been in both cases of the legitimate order.
+
+Primula sinensis.
+
+As the Chinese primrose is a heterostyled or dimorphic plant, like the
+common cowslip, it might have been expected that the flowers of both
+forms when illegitimately fertilised with their own pollen or with that
+from flowers on another plant of the same form, would have yielded less
+seed than the legitimately crossed flowers; and that the seedlings
+raised from illegitimately self-fertilised seeds would have been
+somewhat dwarfed and less fertile, in comparison with the seedlings from
+legitimately crossed seeds. This holds good in relation to the fertility
+of the flowers; but to my surprise there was no difference in growth
+between the offspring from a legitimate union between two distinct
+plants, and from an illegitimate union whether between the flowers on
+the same plant, or between distinct plants of the same form. But I have
+shown, in the paper before referred to, that in England this plant is in
+an abnormal condition, such as, judging from analogous cases, would tend
+to render a cross between two individuals of no benefit to the
+offspring. Our plants have been commonly raised from self-fertilised
+seeds; and the seedlings have generally been subjected to nearly uniform
+conditions in pots in greenhouses. Moreover, many of the plants are now
+varying and changing their character, so as to become in a greater or
+less degree equal-styled, and in consequence highly self-fertile. From
+the analogy of Primula veris there can hardly be a doubt that if a plant
+of Primula sinensis could have been procured direct from China, and if
+it had been crossed with one of our English varieties, the offspring
+would have shown wonderful superiority in height and fertility (though
+probably not in the beauty of their flowers) over our ordinary plants.
+
+My first experiment consisted in fertilising many flowers on long-styled
+and short-styled plants with their own pollen, and other flowers on the
+same plants with pollen taken from distinct plants belonging to the same
+form; so that all the unions were illegitimate. There was no uniform and
+marked difference in the number of seeds obtained from these two modes
+of self-fertilisation, both of which were illegitimate. The two lots of
+seeds from both forms were sown thickly on opposite sides of four pots,
+and numerous plants thus raised. But there was no difference in their
+growth, excepting in one pot, in which the offspring from the
+illegitimate union of two long-styled plants exceeded in a decided
+manner in height the offspring of flowers on the same plants fertilised
+with their own pollen. But in all four pots the plants raised from the
+union of distinct plants belonging to the same form, flowered before the
+offspring from the self-fertilised flowers.
+
+Some long-styled and short-styled plants were now raised from purchased
+seeds, and flowers on both forms were legitimately crossed with pollen
+from a distinct plant; and other flowers on both forms were
+illegitimately fertilised with pollen from the flowers on the same
+plant. The seeds were sown on opposite sides of Pots 1 to 4 in Table
+6/95; a single plant being left on each side. Several flowers on the
+illegitimate long-styled and short-styled plants described in the last
+paragraph, were also legitimately and illegitimately fertilised in the
+manner just described, and their seeds were sown in Pots 5 to 8 in the
+same table. As the two sets of seedlings did not differ in any essential
+manner, their measurements are given in a single table. I should add
+that the legitimate unions in both cases yielded, as might have been
+expected, many more seeds than the illegitimate unions. The seedlings
+whilst half-grown presented no difference in height on the two sides of
+the several pots. When fully grown they were measured to the tips of
+their longest leaves, and the result is given in Table 6/95.
+
+TABLE 6/95. Primula sinensis.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Plants from legitimately Crossed seeds.
+
+Column 3: Plants from illegitimately Self-fertilised seeds.
+
+Pot 1 : 8 2/8 : 8.
+From short-styled mother.
+
+Pot 2 : 7 4/8 : 8 5/8.
+From short-styled mother.
+
+Pot 3 : 9 5/8 : 9 3/8.
+From long-styled mother.
+
+Pot 4 : 8 4/8 : 8 2/8.
+From long-styled mother.
+
+Pot 5 : 9 3/8 : 9.
+From illegitimate short-styled mother.
+
+Pot 6 : 9 7/8 : 9 4/8.
+From illegitimate short-styled mother.
+
+Pot 7 : 8 4/8 : 9 4/8.
+From illegitimate long-styled mother.
+
+Pot 8 : 10 4/8 : 10.
+From illegitimate long-styled mother.
+
+Total : 72.13 : 72.25.
+
+In six out of the eight pots the legitimately crossed plants exceeded in
+height by a trifle the illegitimately self-fertilised plants; but the
+latter exceeded the former in two of the pots in a more strongly marked
+manner. The average height of the eight legitimately crossed plants is
+9.01, and that of the eight illegitimately self-fertilised 9.03 inches,
+or as 100 to 100.2. The plants on the opposite sides produced, as far as
+could be judged by the eye, an equal number of flowers. I did not count
+the capsules or the seeds produced by them; but undoubtedly, judging
+from many previous observations, the plants derived from the
+legitimately crossed seeds would have been considerably more fertile
+than those from the illegitimately self-fertilised seeds. The crossed
+plants, as in the previous case, flowered before the self-fertilised
+plants in all the pots except in Pot 2, in which the two sides flowered
+simultaneously; and this early flowering may, perhaps, be considered as
+an advantage.
+
+27. POLYGONEAE.--Fagopyrum esculentum.
+
+This plant was discovered by Hildebrand to be heterostyled, that is, to
+present, like the species of Primula, a long-styled and a short-styled
+form, which are adapted for reciprocal fertilisation. Therefore the
+following comparison of the growth of the crossed and self-fertilised
+seedlings is not fair, for we do not know whether the difference in
+their heights may not be wholly due to the illegitimate fertilisation of
+the self-fertilised flowers.
+
+I obtained seeds by legitimately crossing flowers on long-styled and
+short-styled plants, and by fertilising other flowers on both forms with
+pollen from the same plant. Rather more seeds were obtained by the
+former than by the latter process; and the legitimately crossed seeds
+were heavier than an equal number of the illegitimately self-fertilised
+seeds, in the ratio of 100 to 82. Crossed and self-fertilised seeds from
+the short-styled parents, after germinating on sand, were planted in
+pairs on the opposite sides of a large pot; and two similar lots of
+seeds from long-styled parents were planted in a like manner on the
+opposite sides of two other pots. In all three pots the legitimately
+crossed seedlings, when a few inches in height, were taller than the
+self-fertilised; and in all three pots they flowered before them by one
+or two days. When fully grown they were all cut down close to the
+ground, and as I was pressed for time, they were placed in a long row,
+the cut end of one plant touching the tip of another, and the total
+length of the legitimately crossed plants was 47 feet 7 inches, and of
+the illegitimately self-fertilised plants 32 feet 8 inches. Therefore
+the average height of the fifteen crossed plants in all three pots was
+38.06 inches, and that of the fifteen self-fertilised plants 26.13
+inches; or as 100 to 69.
+
+28. CHENOPODIACEAE.--Beta vulgaris.
+
+A single plant, no others growing in the same garden, was left to
+fertilise itself, and the self-fertilised seeds were collected. Seeds
+were also collected from a plant growing in the midst of a large bed in
+another garden; and as the incoherent pollen is abundant, the seeds of
+this plant will almost certainly have been the product of a crossed
+between distinct plants by means of the wind. Some of the two lots of
+seeds were sown on the opposite sides of two very large pots; and the
+young seedlings were thinned, so that an equal but considerable number
+was left on the two sides. These plants were thus subjected to very
+severe competition, as well as to poor conditions. The remaining seeds
+were sown out of doors in good soil in two long and not closely
+adjoining rows, so that these seedlings were placed under favourable
+conditions, and were not subjected to any mutual competition. The
+self-fertilised seeds in the open ground came up very badly; and on
+removing the soil in two or three places, it was found that many had
+sprouted under ground and had then died. No such case had been observed
+before. Owing to the large number of seedlings which thus perished, the
+surviving self-fertilised plants grew thinly in the row, and thus had an
+advantage over the crossed plants, which grew very thickly in the other
+row. The young plants in the two rows were protected by a little straw
+during the winter, and those in the two large pots were placed in the
+greenhouse.
+
+There was no difference between the two lots in the pots until the
+ensuing spring, when they had grown a little, and then some of the
+crossed plants were finer and taller than any of the self-fertilised.
+When in full flower their stems were measured, and the measurements are
+given in Table 6/96.
+
+TABLE 6/96. Beta vulgaris.
+
+Heights of flower stems measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 34 6/8 : 36.
+Pot 1 : 30 : 20 1/8.
+Pot 1 : 33 6/8 : 32 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 34 4/8 : 32.
+
+Pot 2 : 42 3/8 : 42 1/8.
+Pot 2 : 33 1/8 : 26 4/8.
+Pot 2 : 31 2/8 : 29 2/8.
+Pot 2 : 33 : 20 2/8.
+
+Total : 272.75 : 238.50.
+
+The average height of the eight crossed plants is here 34.09, and that
+of the eight self-fertilised plants 29.81; or as 100 to 87.
+
+With respect to the plants in the open ground, each long row was divided
+into half, so as to diminish the chance of any accidental advantage in
+one part of either row; and the four tallest plants in the two halves of
+the two rows were carefully selected and measured. The eight tallest
+crossed plants averaged 30.92, and the eight tallest self-fertilised
+30.7 inches in height, or as 100 to 99; so that they were practically
+equal. But we should bear in mind that the trial was not quite fair, as
+the self-fertilised plants had a great advantage over the crossed in
+being much less crowded in their own row, owing to the large number of
+seeds which had perished under ground after sprouting. Nor were the lots
+in the two rows subjected to any mutual competition.
+
+29. CANNACEAE.--Canna warscewiczi.
+
+In most or all the species belonging to this genus, the pollen is shed
+before the flower expands, and adheres in a mass to the foliaceous
+pistil close beneath the stigmatic surface. As the edge of this mass
+generally touches the edge of the stigma, and as it was ascertained by
+trials purposely made that a very few pollen-grains suffice for
+fertilisation, the present species and probably all the others of the
+genus are highly self-fertile. Exceptions occasionally occur in which,
+from the stamen being slightly shorter than usual, the pollen is
+deposited a little beneath the stigmatic surface, and such flowers drop
+off unimpregnated unless they are artificially fertilised. Sometimes,
+though rarely, the stamen is a little longer than usual, and then the
+whole stigmatic surface gets thickly covered with pollen. As some pollen
+is generally deposited in contact with the edge of the stigma, certain
+authors have concluded that the flowers are invariably self-fertilised.
+This is an extraordinary conclusion, for it implies that a great amount
+of pollen is produced for no purpose. On this view, also, the large size
+of the stigmatic surface is an unintelligible feature in the structure
+of the flower, as well as the relative position of all the parts, which
+is such that when insects visit the flowers to suck the copious nectar,
+they cannot fail to carry pollen from one flower to another. (6/7.
+Delpino has described 'Bot. Zeitung' 1867 page 277 and 'Scientific
+Opinion' 1870 page 135, the structure of the flowers in this genus, but
+he was mistaken in thinking that self-fertilisation is impossible, at
+least in the case of the present species. Dr. Dickie and Professor
+Faivre state that the flowers are fertilised in the bud, and that
+self-fertilisation is inevitable. I presume that they were misled by the
+pollen being deposited at a very early period on the pistil: see
+'Journal of Linnean Society Botany' volume 10 page 55 and 'Variabilit
+des Espces' 1868 page 158.)
+
+According to Delpino, bees eagerly visit the flowers in North Italy, but
+I have never seen any insect visiting the flowers of the present species
+in my hothouse, although many plants grew there during several years.
+Nevertheless these plants produced plenty of seed, as they likewise did
+when covered by a net; they are therefore fully capable of
+self-fertilisation, and have probably been self-fertilised in this
+country for many generations. As they are cultivated in pots, and are
+not exposed to competition with surrounding plants, they have also been
+subjected for a considerable time to somewhat uniform conditions. This,
+therefore, is a case exactly parallel with that of the common pea, in
+which we have no right to expect much or any good from intercrossing
+plants thus descended and thus treated; and no good did follow,
+excepting that the cross-fertilised flowers yielded rather more seeds
+than the self-fertilised. This species was one of the earlier ones on
+which I experimented, and as I had not then raised any self-fertilised
+plants for several successive generations under uniform conditions, I
+did not know or even suspect that such treatment would interfere with
+the advantages to be gained from a cross. I was therefore much surprised
+at the crossed plants not growing more vigorously than the
+self-fertilised, and a large number of plants were raised,
+notwithstanding that the present species is an extremely troublesome one
+to experiment on. The seeds, even those which have been long soaked in
+water, will not germinate well on bare sand; and those that were sown in
+pots (which plan I was forced to follow) germinated at very unequal
+intervals of time; so that it was difficult to get pairs of the same
+exact age, and many seedlings had to be pulled up and thrown away. My
+experiments were continued during three successive generations; and in
+each generation the self-fertilised plants were again self-fertilised,
+their early progenitors in this country having probably been
+self-fertilised for many previous generations. In each generation, also,
+the crossed plants were fertilised with pollen from another crossed
+plant.
+
+Of the flowers which were crossed in the three generations, taken
+together, a rather larger proportion yielded capsules than did those
+which were self-fertilised. The seeds were counted in forty-seven
+capsules from the crossed flowers, and they contained on an average 9.95
+seeds; whereas forty-eight capsules from the self-fertilised flowers
+contained on an average 8.45 seeds; or as 100 to 85. The seeds from the
+crossed flowers were not heavier, on the contrary a little lighter, than
+those from the self-fertilised flowers, as was thrice ascertained. On
+one occasion I weighed 200 of the crossed and 106 of the self-fertilised
+seeds, and the relative weight of an equal number was as 100 for the
+crossed to 101.5 for the self-fertilised. With other plants, when the
+seeds from the self-fertilised flowers were heavier than those from the
+crossed flowers, this appeared to be due generally to fewer having been
+produced by the self-fertilised flowers, and to their having been in
+consequence better nourished. But in the present instance the seeds from
+the crossed capsules were separated into two lots,--namely, those from
+the capsules containing over fourteen seeds, and those from the capsules
+containing under fourteen seeds, and the seeds from the more productive
+capsules were the heavier of the two; so that the above explanation here
+fails.
+
+As pollen is deposited at a very early age on the pistil, generally in
+contact with the stigma, some flowers whilst still in bud were castrated
+for my first experiment, and were afterwards fertilised with pollen from
+a distinct plant. Other flowers were fertilised with their own pollen.
+From the seeds thus obtained, I succeeded in rearing only three pairs of
+plants of equal age. The three crossed plants averaged 32.79 inches, and
+the three self-fertilised 32.08 inches in height; so that they were
+nearly equal, the crossed having a slight advantage. As the same result
+followed in all three generations, it would be superfluous to give the
+heights of all the plants, and I will give only the averages.
+
+In order to raise crossed and self-fertilised plants of the second
+generation, some flowers on the above crossed plants were crossed within
+twenty-four hours after they had expanded with pollen from a distinct
+plant; and this interval would probably not be too great to allow of
+cross-fertilisation being effectual. Some flowers on the self-fertilised
+plants of the last generation were also self-fertilised. From these two
+lots of seeds, ten crossed and twelve self-fertilised plants of equal
+ages were raised; and these were measured when fully grown. The crossed
+averaged 36.98, and the self-fertilised averaged 37.42 inches in height;
+so that here again the two lots were nearly equal; but the
+self-fertilised had a slight advantage.
+
+In order to raise plants of the third generation, a better plan was
+followed, and flowers on the crossed plants of the second generation
+were selected in which the stamens were too short to reach the stigmas,
+so that they could not possibly have been self-fertilised. These flowers
+were crossed with pollen from a distinct plant. Flowers on the
+self-fertilised plants of the second generation were again
+self-fertilised. From the two lots of seeds thus obtained, twenty-one
+crossed and nineteen self-fertilised plants of equal age, and forming
+the third generation, were raised in fourteen large pots. They were
+measured when fully grown, and by an odd chance the average height of
+the two lots was exactly the same, namely, 35.96 inches; so that neither
+side had the least advantage over the other. To test this result, all
+the plants on both sides in ten out of the above fourteen pots were cut
+down after they had flowered, and in the ensuing year the stems were
+again measured; and now the crossed plants exceeded by a little (namely,
+1.7 inches) the self-fertilised. They were again cut down, and on their
+flowering for the third time, the self-fertilised plants had a slight
+advantage (namely, 1.54 inches) over the crossed. Hence the result
+arrived at with these plants during the previous trials was confirmed,
+namely, that neither lot had any decided advantage over the other. It
+may, however, be worth mentioning that the self-fertilised plants showed
+some tendency to flower before the crossed plants: this occurred with
+all three pairs of the first generation; and with the cut down plants of
+the third generation, a self-fertilised plant flowered first in nine out
+of the twelve pots, whilst in the remaining three pots a crossed plant
+flowered first.
+
+If we consider all the plants of the three generations taken together,
+the thirty-four crossed plants average 35.98, and the thirty-four
+self-fertilised plants 36.39 inches in height; or as 100 to 101. We may
+therefore conclude that the two lots possessed equal powers of growth;
+and this I believe to be the result of long-continued
+self-fertilisation, together with exposure to similar conditions in each
+generation, so that all the individuals had acquired a closely similar
+constitution.
+
+30. GRAMINACEAE.--Zea mays.
+
+This plant is monoecious, and was selected for trial on this account, no
+other such plant having been experimented on. (6/8. Hildebrand remarks
+that this species seems at first sight adapted to be fertilised by
+pollen from the same plant, owing to the male flowers standing above the
+female flowers; but practically it must generally be fertilised by
+pollen from another plant, as the male flowers usually shed their pollen
+before the female flowers are mature: 'Monatsbericht der K. Akad.'
+Berlin October 1872 page 743.) It is also anemophilous, or is fertilised
+by the wind; and of such plants only the common beet had been tried.
+Some plants were raised in the greenhouse, and were crossed with pollen
+taken from a distinct plant; and a single plant, growing quite
+separately in a different part of the house, was allowed to fertilise
+itself spontaneously. The seeds thus obtained were placed on damp sand,
+and as they germinated in pairs of equal age were planted on the
+opposite sides of four very large pots; nevertheless they were
+considerably crowded. The pots were kept in the hothouse. The plants
+were first measured to the tips of their leaves when only between 1 and
+2 feet in height, as shown in Table 6/97.
+
+TABLE 6/97. Zea mays.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 23 4/8 : 17 3/8.
+Pot 1 : 12 : 20 3/8.
+Pot 1 : 21 : 20.
+
+Pot 2 : 22 : 20.
+Pot 2 : 19 1/8 : 18 3/8.
+Pot 2 : 21 4/8 : 18 5/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 22 1/8 : 18 5/8.
+Pot 3 : 20 3/8 : 15 2/8.
+Pot 3 : 18 2/8 : 16 4/8.
+Pot 3 : 21 5/8 : 18.
+Pot 3 : 23 2/8 : 16 2/8.
+
+Pot 4 : 21 : 18.
+Pot 4 : 22 1/8 : 12 6/8.
+Pot 4 : 23 : 15 4/8.
+Pot 4 : 12 : 18.
+
+Total : 302.88 : 263.63.
+
+The fifteen crossed plants here average 20.19, and the fifteen
+self-fertilised plants 17.57 inches in height; or as 100 to 87. Mr.
+Galton made a graphical representation, in accordance with the method
+described in the introductory chapter, of the above measurements, and
+adds the words "very good" to the curves thus formed.
+
+Shortly afterwards one of the crossed plants in Pot 1 died; another
+became much diseased and stunted; and the third never grew to its full
+height. They seemed to have been all injured, probably by some larva
+gnawing their roots. Therefore all the plants on both sides of this pot
+were rejected in the subsequent measurements. When the plants were fully
+grown they were again measured to the tips of the highest leaves, and
+the eleven crossed plants now averaged 68.1, and the eleven
+self-fertilised plants 62.34 inches in height; or as 100 to 91. In all
+four pots a crossed plant flowered before any one of the
+self-fertilised; but three of the plants did not flower at all. Those
+that flowered were also measured to the summits of the male flowers: the
+ten crossed plants averaged 66.51, and the nine self-fertilised plants
+61.59 inches in height; or as 100 to 93.
+
+A large number of the same crossed and self-fertilised seeds were sown
+in the middle of the summer in the open ground in two long rows. Very
+much fewer of the self-fertilised than of the crossed plants produced
+flowers; but those that did flower, flowered almost simultaneously. When
+fully grown the ten tallest plants in each row were selected and
+measured to the tips of their highest leaves, as well as to the summits
+of their male flowers. The crossed averaged to the tips of their leaves
+54 inches in height, and the self-fertilised 44.65, or as 100 to 83; and
+to the summits of their male flowers, 53.96 and 43.45 inches; or as 100
+to 80.
+
+Phalaris canariensis.
+
+Hildebrand has shown in the paper referred to under the last species,
+that this hermaphrodite grass is better adapted for cross-fertilisation
+than for self-fertilisation. Several plants were raised in the
+greenhouse close together, and their flowers were mutually intercrossed.
+Pollen from a single plant growing quite separately was collected and
+placed on the stigmas of the same plant. The seeds thus produced were
+self-fertilised, for they were fertilised with pollen from the same
+plant, but it will have been a mere chance whether with pollen from the
+same flowers. Both lots of seeds, after germinating on sand, were
+planted in pairs on the opposite sides of four pots, which were kept in
+the greenhouse. When the plants were a little over a foot in height they
+were measured, and the crossed plants averaged 13.38, and the
+self-fertilised 12.29 inches in height; or as 100 to 92.
+
+When in full flower they were again measured to the extremities of their
+culms, as shown in Table 6/98.
+
+TABLE 6/98. Phalaris canariensis.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Number (Name) of Pot.
+
+Column 2: Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 3: Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Pot 1 : 42 2/8 : 41 2/8.
+Pot 1 : 39 6/8 : 45 4/8.
+
+Pot 2 : 37 : 31 6/8.
+Pot 2 : 49 4/8 : 37 2/8.
+Pot 4 : 29 : 42 3/8.
+Pot 2 : 37 : 34 7/8.
+
+Pot 3 : 37 6/8 : 28.
+Pot 3 : 35 4/8 : 28.
+Pot 3 : 43 : 34.
+
+Pot 4 : 40 2/8 : 35 1/8.
+Pot 4 : 37 : 34 4/8.
+
+Total : 428.00 : 392.63.
+
+The eleven crossed plants now averaged 38.9, and the eleven
+self-fertilised plants 35.69 inches in height; or as 100 to 92, which is
+the same ratio as before. Differently to what occurred with the maize,
+the crossed plants did not flower before the self-fertilised; and though
+both lots flowered very poorly from having been kept in pots in the
+greenhouse, yet the self-fertilised plants produced twenty-eight
+flower-heads, whilst the crossed produced only twenty!
+
+Two long rows of the same seeds were sown out of doors, and care was
+taken that they were sown in nearly equal number; but a far greater
+number of the crossed than of the self-fertilised seeds yielded plants.
+The self-fertilised plants were in consequence not so much crowded as
+the crossed, and thus had an advantage over them. When in full flower,
+the twelve tallest plants were carefully selected from both rows and
+measured, as shown in Table 6/99.
+
+TABLE 6/99. Phalaris canariensis (growing in the open ground).
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Crossed Plants, twelve tallest.
+
+Column 2: Self-fertilised Plants, twelve tallest.
+
+ 34 1/8 : 35 2/8.
+ 35 7/8 : 31 1/8.
+ 36 : 33.
+ 35 5/8 : 32.
+ 35 5/8 : 31 5/8.
+ 36 1/8 : 36.
+ 36 6/8 : 33.
+ 38 6/8 : 32.
+ 36 2/8 : 35 1/8.
+ 35 5/8 : 33 5/8.
+ 34 1/8 : 34 2/8.
+ 34 5/8 : 35.
+
+Total : 429.5 : 402.0.
+
+The twelve crossed plants here average 35.78, and the twelve
+self-fertilised 33.5 inches in height; or as 100 to 93. In this case the
+crossed plants flowered rather before the self-fertilised, and thus
+differed from those growing in the pots.]
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+SUMMARY OF THE HEIGHTS AND WEIGHTS OF THE CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED
+PLANTS.
+
+Number of species and plants measured.
+Tables given.
+Preliminary remarks on the offspring of plants crossed by a fresh stock.
+Thirteen cases specially considered.
+The effects of crossing a self-fertilised plant either by another
+self-fertilised plant or by an intercrossed plant of the old stock.
+Summary of the results.
+Preliminary remarks on the crossed and self-fertilised plants of the
+same stock.
+The twenty-six exceptional cases considered, in which the crossed plants
+did not exceed greatly in height the self-fertilised.
+Most of these cases shown not to be real exceptions to the rule that
+cross-fertilisation is beneficial.
+Summary of results.
+Relative weights of the crossed and self-fertilised plants.
+
+The details which have been given under the head of each species are so
+numerous and so intricate, that it is necessary to tabulate the results.
+In Table 7/A, the number of plants of each kind which were raised from a
+cross between two individuals of the same stock and from self-fertilised
+seeds, together with their mean or average heights, are given. In the
+right hand column, the mean height of the crossed to that of the
+self-fertilised plants, the former being taken as 100, is shown. To make
+this clear, it may be advisable to give an example. In the first
+generation of Ipomoea, six plants derived from a cross between two
+plants were measured, and their mean height is 86.00 inches; six plants
+derived from flowers on the same parent-plant fertilised with their own
+pollen were measured, and their mean height is 65.66 inches. From this
+it follows, as shown in the right hand column, that if the mean height
+of the crossed plants be taken as 100, that of the self-fertilised
+plants is 76. The same plan is followed with all the other species.
+
+The crossed and self-fertilised plants were generally grown in pots in
+competition with one another, and always under as closely similar
+conditions as could be attained. They were, however, sometimes grown in
+separate rows in the open ground. With several of the species, the
+crossed plants were again crossed, and the self-fertilised plants again
+self-fertilised, and thus successive generations were raised and
+measured, as may be seen in Table 7/A. Owing to this manner of
+proceeding, the crossed plants became in the later generations more or
+less closely inter-related.
+
+In Table 7/B the relative weights of the crossed and self-fertilised
+plants, after they had flowered and had been cut down, are given in the
+few cases in which they were ascertained. The results are, I think, more
+striking and of greater value as evidence of constitutional vigour than
+those deduced from the relative heights of the plants.
+
+The most important table is Table 7/C, as it includes the relative
+heights, weights, and fertility of plants raised from parents crossed by
+a fresh stock (that is, by non-related plants grown under different
+conditions), or by a distinct sub-variety, in comparison with
+self-fertilised plants, or in a few cases with plants of the same old
+stock intercrossed during several generations. The relative fertility of
+the plants in this and the other tables will be more fully considered in
+a future chapter.
+
+TABLE 7/A. Relative heights of plants from parents crossed with pollen
+from other plants of the same stock, and self-fertilised.
+
+Heights of plants measured in inches.
+
+Column 1: Name of Plant.
+
+Column 2: Number of Crossed Plants measured.
+
+Column 3: Average Height of Crossed Plants.
+
+Column 4: Number of Self-fertilised Plants measured.
+
+Column 5: Average Height of Self-fertilised Plants.
+
+Column 6: x, where the ratio of the Average Height of the Crossed to the
+Self-fertilised Plants is expressed as 100 to x.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--first generation:
+ 6 : 86.00 : 6 : 65.66 : 76.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--second generation:
+ 6 : 84.16 : 6 : 66.33 : 79.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--third generation:
+ 6 : 77.41 : 6 : 52.83 : 68.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--fourth generation:
+ 7 : 69.78 : 7 : 60.14 : 86.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--fifth generation:
+ 6 : 82.54 : 6 : 62.33 : 75.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--sixth generation:
+ 6 : 87.50 : 6 : 63.16 : 72.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--seventh generation:
+ 9 : 83.94 : 9 : 68.25 : 81.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--eighth generation:
+ 8 : 113.25 : 8 : 96.65 : 85.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--ninth generation:
+ 14 : 81.39 : 14 : 64.07 : 79.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--tenth generation:
+ 5 : 93.70 : 5 : 50.40 : 54.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--Number and average height of all the plants of the ten
+generations:
+ 73 : 85.84 : 73 : 66.02 : 77.
+
+Mimulus luteus--three first generations, before the new and taller
+self-fertilised variety appeared:
+ 10 : 8.19 : 10 : 5.29 : 65.
+
+Digitalis purpurea:
+ 16 : 51.33 : 8 : 35.87 : 70.
+
+Calceolaria--(common greenhouse variety):
+ 1 : 19.50 : 1 : 15.00 : 77.
+
+Linaria vulgaris:
+ 3 : 7.08 : 3 : 5.75 : 81.
+
+Verbascum thapsus:
+ 6 : 65.34 : 6 : 56.50 : 86.
+
+Vandellia nummularifolia--crossed and self-fertilised plants, raised
+from perfect flowers:
+ 20 : 4.30 : 20 : 4.27 : 99.
+
+Vandellia nummularifolia--crossed and self-fertilised plants, raised
+from perfect flowers: second trial, plants crowded:
+ 24 : 3.60 : 24 : 3.38 : 94.
+
+Vandellia nummularifolia--crossed plants raised from perfect flowers,
+and self-fertilised plants from cleistogene flowers:
+ 20 : 4.30 : 20 : 4.06 : 94.
+
+Gesneria pendulina:
+ 8 : 32.06 : 8 : 29.14 : 90.
+
+Salvia coccinea:
+ 6 : 27.85 : 6 : 21.16 : 76.
+
+Origanum vulgare:
+ 4 : 20.00 : 4 : 17.12 : 86.
+
+Thunbergia alata:
+ 6 : 60.00 : 6 : 65.00 : 108.
+
+Brassica oleracea:
+ 9 : 41.08 : 9 : 39.00 : 95.
+
+Iberis umbellata--the self-fertilised plants of the third generation:
+ 7 : 19.12 : 7 : 16.39 : 86.
+
+Papaver vagum:
+ 15 : 21.91 : 15 : 19.54 : 89.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--English stock, first generation:
+ 4 : 29.68 : 4 : 25.56 : 86.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--English stock, second generation:
+ 11 : 32.47 : 11 : 32.81 : 101.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--Brazilian stock, first generation:
+ 14 : 44.64 : 14 : 45.12 : 101.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--Brazilian stock, second generation:
+ 18 : 43.38 : 19 : 50.30 : 116.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--average height and number of all the plants
+of Eschscholtzia:
+ 47 : 40.03 : 48 : 42.72 : 107.
+
+Reseda lutea--grown in pots:
+ 24 : 17.17 : 24 : 14.61 : 85.
+
+Reseda lutea--grown in open ground :
+ 8 : 28.09 : 8 : 23.14 : 82.
+
+Reseda odorata--self-fertilised seeds from a highly self-fertile plant,
+grown in pots:
+ 19 : 27.48 : 19 : 22.55 : 82.
+
+Reseda odorata--self-fertilised seeds from a highly self-fertile plant,
+grown in open ground:
+ 8 : 25.76 : 8 : 27.09 : 105.
+
+Reseda odorata--self-fertilised seeds from a semi-self-fertile plant,
+grown in pots:
+ 20 : 29.98 : 20 : 27.71 : 92.
+
+Reseda odorata--self-fertilised seeds from a semi-self-fertile plant,
+grown in open ground:
+ 8 : 25.92 : 8 : 23.54 : 90.
+
+Viola tricolor:
+ 14 : 5.58 : 14 : 2.37 : 42.
+
+Adonis aestivalis:
+ 4 : 14.25 : 4 : 14.31 : 100.
+
+Delphinium consolida:
+ 6 : 14.95 : 6 : 12.50 : 84.
+
+Viscaria oculata:
+ 15 : 34.50 : 15 : 33.55 : 97.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--open ground, about :
+ 6?: 28? : 6?: 24? : 86.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--second generation, in pots, crowded:
+ 2 : 16.75 : 2 : 9.75 : 58.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--third generation, in pots:
+ 8 : 28.39 : 8 : 28.21 : 99.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--offspring from plants of the third
+self-fertilised generation crossed by intercrossed plants of the third
+generation, compared with plants of fourth self-fertilised generation:
+ 15 : 28.00 : 10 : 26.55 : 95.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--number and average height of all the plants of
+Dianthus:
+ 31 : 27.37 : 26 : 25.18 : 92.
+
+Hibiscus africanus:
+ 4 : 13.25 : 4 : 14.43 : 109.
+
+Pelargonium zonale:
+ 7 : 22.35 : 7 : 16.62 : 74.
+
+Tropaeolum minus:
+ 8 : 58.43 : 8 : 46.00 : 79.
+
+Limnanthes douglasii:
+ 16 : 17.46 : 16 : 13.85 : 79.
+
+Lupinus luteus--second generation:
+ 8 : 30.78 : 8 : 25.21 : 82.
+
+Lupinus pilosus--plants of two generations:
+ 2 : 35.50 : 3 : 30.50 : 86.
+
+Phaseolus multiflorus:
+ 5 : 86.00 : 5 : 82.35 : 96.
+
+Pisum sativum:
+ 4 : 34.62 : 4 : 39.68 : 115.
+
+Sarothamnus scoparius--small seedlings:
+ 6 : 2.91 : 6 : 1.33 : 46.
+
+Sarothamnus scoparius--the three survivors on each side after three
+years' growth:
+ : 18.91 : : 11.83 : 63.
+
+Ononis minutissima:
+ 2 : 19.81 : 2 : 17.37 : 88.
+
+Clarkia elegans:
+ 4 : 33.50 : 4 : 27.62 : 82.
+
+Bartonia aurea:
+ 8 : 24.62 : 8 : 26.31 : 107.
+
+Passiflora gracilis:
+ 2 : 49.00 : 2 : 51.00 : 104.
+
+Apium petroselinum:
+ * : : * : : 100.
+*not measured.
+
+Scabiosa atro-purpurea:
+ 4 : 17.12 : 4 : 15.37 : 90.
+
+Lactuca sativa--plants of two generations:
+ 7 : 19.43 : 6 : 16.00 : 82.
+
+Specularia speculum:
+ 4 : 19.28 : 4 : 18.93 : 98.
+
+Lobelia ramosa--first generation:
+ 4 : 22.25 : 4 : 18.37 : 82.
+
+Lobelia ramosa--second generation:
+ 3 : 23.33 : 3 : 19.00 : 81.
+
+Lobelia fulgens--first generation:
+ 2 : 34.75 : 2 : 44.25 : 127.
+
+Lobelia fulgens--second generation:
+ 23 : 29.82 : 23 : 27.10 : 91.
+
+Nemophila insignis--half-grown:
+ 12 : 11.10 : 12 : 5.45 : 49.
+
+Nemophila insignis--the same fully-grown:
+ : 33.28 : : 19.90 : 60.
+
+Borago officinalis:
+ 4 : 20.68 : 4 : 21.18 : 102.
+
+Nolana prostrata:
+ 5 : 12.75 : 5 : 13.40 : 105.
+
+Petunia violacea--first generation:
+ 5 : 30.80 : 5 : 26.00 : 84.
+
+Petunia violacea--second generation:
+ 4 : 40.50 : 6 : 26.25 : 65.
+
+Petunia violacea--third generation:
+ 8 : 40.96 : 8 : 53.87 : 131.
+
+Petunia violacea--fourth generation:
+ 15 : 46.79 : 14 : 32.39 : 69.
+
+Petunia violacea--fourth generation, from a distinct parent:
+ 13 : 44.74 : 13 : 26.87 : 60.
+
+Petunia violacea--fifth generation:
+ 22 : 54.11 : 21 : 33.23 : 61.
+
+Petunia violacea--fifth generation, in open ground:
+ 10 : 38.27 : 10 : 23.31 : 61.
+
+Petunia violacea--Number and average height of all the plants in pots of
+Petunia:
+ 67 : 46.53 : 67 : 33.12 : 71.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--first generation:
+ 4 : 18.50 : 4 : 32.75 : 178.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--second generation:
+ 9 : 53.84 : 7 : 51.78 : 96.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--third generation:
+ 7 : 95.25 : 7 : 79.60 : 83.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--third generation but raised from a distinct plant:
+ 7 : 70.78 : 9 : 71.30 : 101.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--Number and average height of all the plants of
+Nicotiana:
+ 27 : 63.73 : 27 : 61.31 : 96.
+
+Cyclamen persicum:
+ 8 : 9.49 : 8?: 7.50 : 79.
+
+Anagallis collina:
+ 6 : 42.20 : 6 : 33.35 : 69.
+
+Primula sinensis--a dimorphic species:
+ 8 : 9.01 : 8 : 9.03 : 100.
+
+Fagopyrum esculentum--a dimorphic species:
+ 15 : 38.06 : 15 : 26.13 : 69.
+
+Beta vulgaris--in pots:
+ 8 : 34.09 : 8 : 29.81 : 87.
+
+Beta vulgaris--in open ground:
+ 8 : 30.92 : 8 : 30.70 : 99.
+
+Canna warscewiczi--plants of three generations:
+ 34 : 35.98 : 34 : 36.39 : 101.
+
+Zea mays--in pots, whilst young, measured to tips of leaves:
+ 15 : 20.19 : 15 : 17.57 : 87.
+
+Zea mays--when full-grown, after the death of some, measured to tips of
+leaves:
+ : 68.10 : : 62.34 : 91.
+
+Zea mays--when full-grown, after the death of some, measured to tips of
+flowers:
+ : 66.51 : : 61.59 : 93.
+
+Zea mays--grown in open ground, measured to tips of leaves:
+ 10 : 54.00 : 10 : 44.55 : 83.
+
+Zea mays--grown in open ground, measured to tips of flowers:
+ : 53.96 : : 43.45 : 80.
+
+Phalaris canariensis--in pots.
+ 11 : 38.90 : 11 : 35.69 : 92.
+
+Phalaris canariensis--in open ground:
+ 12 : 35.78 : 12 : 33.50 : 93.
+
+TABLE 7/B.--Relative weights of plants from parents crossed with pollen
+from distinct plants of the same stock, and self-fertilised.
+
+Column 1: Names of plants.
+
+Column 2: Number of crossed plants.
+
+Column 3: Number of self-fertilised plants.
+
+Column 4: x, where the ratio of the Weight of the Crossed to the
+Self-fertilised Plants is expressed as 100 to x.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--plants of the tenth generation:
+ 6 : 6 : 44.
+
+Vandellia nummularifolia--first generation:
+ 41 : 41 : 97.
+
+Brassica oleracea--first generation:
+ 9 : 9 : 37.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--plants of the second generation:
+ 19 : 19 : 118.
+
+Reseda lutea--first generation, grown in pots:
+ 24 : 24 : 21.
+
+Reseda lutea--first generation, grown in open ground:
+ 8 : 8 : 40.
+
+Reseda odorata--first generation, descended from a highly self-fertile
+plant, grown in pots:
+ 19 : 19 : 67.
+
+Reseda odorata--first generation, descended from a semi-self-fertile
+plant, grown in pots:
+ 20 : 20 : 99.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--plants of the third generation:
+ 8 : 8 : 49.
+
+Petunia violacea--plants of the fifth generation, in pots:
+ 22 : 21 : 22.
+
+Petunia violacea--plants of the fifth generation, in open ground:
+ 10 : 10 : 36.
+
+TABLE 7/C.--Relative heights, weights, and fertility of plants from
+parents crossed by a fresh stock, and from parents either
+self-fertilised or intercrossed with plants of the same stock.
+
+Column 1: Names of the plants and nature of the experiments.
+
+Column 2: Number of plants from a cross with a fresh stock.
+
+Column 3: Average height in inches and weight.
+
+Column 4: Number of the plants from self-fertilised or intercrossed
+parents of the same stock.
+
+Column 5: Average height in inches and weight.
+
+Column 4: x, where the ratio of the Height, Weight and Fertility of the
+plants from the Cross with a fresh stock is expressed as 100 to x.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--offspring of plants intercrossed for nine generations
+and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of the tenth
+intercrossed generation:
+ 19 : 84.03 : 19 : 65.78 : 78.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--offspring of plants intercrossed for nine generations
+and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of the tenth
+intercrossed generation, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 51.
+
+Mimulus luteus--offspring of plants self-fertilised for eight
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the ninth self-fertilised generation:
+ 28 : 21.62 : 19 : 10.44 : 52.
+
+Mimulus luteus--offspring of plants self-fertilised for eight
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the ninth self-fertilised generation, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 3.
+
+Mimulus luteus--offspring of plants self-fertilised for eight
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with the
+offspring of a plant self-fertilised for eight generations, and then
+intercrossed with another self-fertilised plant of the same generation:
+ 28 : 21.62 : 27 : 12.20 : 56.
+
+Mimulus luteus--offspring of plants self-fertilised for eight
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with the
+offspring of a plant self-fertilised for eight generations, and then
+intercrossed with another self-fertilised plant of the same generation,
+in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 4.
+
+Brassica oleracea--offspring of plants self-fertilised for two
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the third self-fertilised generation, by weight:
+ 6 : : 6 : : 22.
+
+Iberis umbellata--offspring from English variety crossed by slightly
+different Algerine variety, compared with the self-fertilised offspring
+of the English variety:
+ 30 : 17.34 : 29 : 15.51 : 89.
+
+Iberis umbellata--offspring from English variety crossed by slightly
+different Algerine variety, compared with the self-fertilised offspring
+of the English variety, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 75.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--offspring of a Brazilian stock crossed by an
+English stock, compared with plants of the Brazilian stock of the second
+self-fertilised generation:
+ 19 : 45.92 : 19 : 50.30 : 109.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--offspring of a Brazilian stock crossed by an
+English stock, compared with plants of the Brazilian stock of the second
+self-fertilised generation, in weight:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 118.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--offspring of a Brazilian stock crossed by an
+English stock, compared with plants of the Brazilian stock of the second
+self-fertilised generation, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 40.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--offspring of a Brazilian stock crossed by an
+English stock, compared with plants of the Brazilian stock of the second
+intercrossed generation, in height:
+ 19 : 45.92 : 18 : 43.38 : 94.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--offspring of a Brazilian stock crossed by an
+English stock, compared with plants of the Brazilian stock of the second
+intercrossed generation, in weight:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 100.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--offspring of a Brazilian stock crossed by an
+English stock, compared with plants of the Brazilian stock of the second
+intercrossed generation, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 45.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fourth self-fertilised generation:
+ 16 : 32.82 : 10 : 26.55 : 81.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fourth self-fertilised generation, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 33.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with the
+offspring of plants self-fertilised for three generations and then
+crossed by plants of the third intercrossed generation:
+ 16 : 32.82 : 15 : 28.00 : 85.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with the
+offspring of plants self-fertilised for three generations and then
+crossed by plants of the third intercrossed generation, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 45.
+
+Pisum sativum--offspring from a cross between two closely allied
+varieties, compared with the self-fertilised offspring of one of the
+varieties, or with intercrossed plants of the same stock:
+ ? : : ? : : 60 to 75.
+
+Lathyrus odoratus--offspring from two varieties, differing only in
+colour of their flowers, compared with the self-fertilised offspring of
+one of the varieties: in first generation:
+ 2 : 79.25 : 2 : 63.75 : 80.
+
+Lathyrus odoratus--offspring from two varieties, differing only in
+colour of their flowers, compared with the self-fertilised offspring of
+one of the varieties: in second generation:
+ 6 : 62.91 : 6 : 55.31 : 88.
+
+Petunia violacea--offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth self-fertilised generation, in height:
+ 21 : 50.05 : 21 : 33.23 : 66.
+
+Petunia violacea--offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth self-fertilised generation, in weight:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 23.
+
+Petunia violacea--offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth self-fertilised generation, grown in open ground, in height:
+ 10 : 36.67 : 10 : 23.31 : 63.
+
+Petunia violacea--offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth self-fertilised generation, grown in open ground, in weight:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 53.
+
+Petunia violacea--offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth self-fertilised generation, grown in open ground, in
+fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 46.
+
+Petunia violacea--offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth intercrossed generation, in height:
+ 21 : 50.05 : 22 : 54.11 : 108.
+
+Petunia violacea--offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth intercrossed generation, in weight:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 101.
+
+Petunia violacea--offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth intercrossed generation, grown in open ground, in height:
+ 10 : 36.67 : 10 : 38.27 : 104.
+
+Petunia violacea--offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth intercrossed generation, grown in open ground, in weight:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 146.
+
+Petunia violacea--offspring of plants self-fertilised for four
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of
+the fifth intercrossed generation, grown in open ground, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 54.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a slightly different variety, compared
+with plants of the fourth self-fertilised generation, grown not much
+crowded in pots, in height:
+ 26 : 63.29 : 26 : 41.67 : 66.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a slightly different variety, compared
+with plants of the fourth self-fertilised generation, grown much crowded
+in pots, in height:
+ 12 : 31.53 : 12 : 17.21 : 54.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a slightly different variety, compared
+with plants of the fourth self-fertilised generation, grown much crowded
+in pots, in weight:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 37.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a slightly different variety, compared
+with plants of the fourth self-fertilised generation, grown in open
+ground, in height:
+ 20 : 48.74 : 20 : 35.20 : 72.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--offspring of plants self-fertilised for three
+generations and then crossed by a slightly different variety, compared
+with plants of the fourth self-fertilised generation, grown in open
+ground, in weight:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 63.
+
+Anagallis collina--offspring from a red variety crossed by a blue
+variety, compared with the self-fertilised offspring of the red variety:
+ 3 : 27.62 : 3 : 18.21 : 66.
+
+Anagallis collina--offspring from a red variety crossed by a blue
+variety, compared with the self-fertilised offspring of the red variety,
+in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 6.
+
+Primula veris--offspring from long-styled plants of the third
+illegitimate generation, crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants
+of the fourth illegitimate and self-fertilised generation:
+ 8 : 7.03 : 8 : 3.21 : 46.
+
+Primula veris--offspring from long-styled plants of the third
+illegitimate generation, crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants
+of the fourth illegitimate and self-fertilised generation, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 5.
+
+Primula veris--offspring from long-styled plants of the third
+illegitimate generation, crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants
+of the fourth illegitimate and self-fertilised generation, in fertility
+in following year:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 3.5.
+
+Primula veris--(equal-styled, red-flowered variety)--offspring from
+plants self-fertilised for two generations and then crossed by a
+different variety, compared with plants of the third self-fertilised
+generation:
+ 3 : 8.66 : 3 : 7.33 : 85.
+
+Primula veris--(equal-styled, red-flowered variety)--offspring from
+plants self-fertilised for two generations and then crossed by a
+different variety, compared with plants of the third self-fertilised
+generation, in fertility:
+ .. : .. : .. : .. : 11.
+
+In these three tables the measurements of fifty-seven species, belonging
+to fifty-two genera and to thirty great natural families, are given. The
+species are natives of various parts of the world. The number of crossed
+plants, including those derived from a cross between plants of the same
+stock and of two different stocks, amounts to 1,101; and the number of
+self-fertilised plants (including a few in Table 7/C derived from a
+cross between plants of the same old stock) is 1,076. Their growth was
+observed from the germination of the seeds to maturity; and most of them
+were measured twice and some thrice. The various precautions taken to
+prevent either lot being unduly favoured, have been described in the
+introductory chapter. Bearing all these circumstances in mind, it may be
+admitted that we have a fair basis for judging of the comparative
+effects of cross-fertilisation and of self-fertilisation on the growth
+of the offspring.
+
+It will be the most convenient plan first to consider the results given
+in Table 7/C, as an opportunity will thus be afforded of incidentally
+discussing some important points. If the reader will look down the right
+hand column of this table, he will see at a glance what an extraordinary
+advantage in height, weight, and fertility the plants derived from a
+cross with a fresh stock or with another sub-variety have over the
+self-fertilised plants, as well as over the intercrossed plants of the
+same old stock. There are only two exceptions to this rule, and these
+are hardly real ones. In the case of Eschscholtzia, the advantage is
+confined to fertility. In that of Petunia, though the plants derived
+from a cross with a fresh stock had an immense superiority in height,
+weight, and fertility over the self-fertilised plants, they were
+conquered by the intercrossed plants of the same old stock in height and
+weight, but not in fertility. It has, however, been shown that the
+superiority of these intercrossed plants in height and weight was in all
+probability not real; for if the two sets had been allowed to grow for
+another month, it is almost certain that those from a cross with the
+fresh stock would have been victorious in every way over the
+intercrossed plants.
+
+Before we consider in detail the several cases given in Table 7/C, some
+preliminary remarks must be made. There is the clearest evidence, as we
+shall presently see, that the advantage of a cross depends wholly on the
+plants differing somewhat in constitution; and that the disadvantages of
+self-fertilisation depend on the two parents, which are combined in the
+same hermaphrodite flower, having a closely similar constitution. A
+certain amount of differentiation in the sexual elements seems
+indispensable for the full fertility of the parents, and for the full
+vigour of the offspring. All the individuals of the same species, even
+those produced in a state of nature, differ somewhat, though often very
+slightly, from one another in external characters and probably in
+constitution. This obviously holds good between the varieties of the
+same species, as far as external characters are concerned; and much
+evidence could be advanced with respect to their generally differing
+somewhat in constitution. There can hardly be a doubt that the
+differences of all kinds between the individuals and varieties of the
+same species depend largely, and as I believe exclusively, on their
+progenitors having been subjected to different conditions; though the
+conditions to which the individuals of the same species are exposed in a
+state of nature often falsely appear to us the same. For instance, the
+individuals growing together are necessarily exposed to the same
+climate, and they seem to us at first sight to be subjected to
+identically the same conditions; but this can hardly be the case, except
+under the unusual contingency of each individual being surrounded by
+other kinds of plants in exactly the same proportional numbers. For the
+surrounding plants absorb different amounts of various substances from
+the soil, and thus greatly affect the nourishment and even the life of
+the individuals of any particular species. These will also be shaded and
+otherwise affected by the nature of the surrounding plants. Moreover,
+seeds often lie dormant in the ground, and those which germinate during
+any one year will often have been matured during very different seasons.
+Seeds are widely dispersed by various means, and some will occasionally
+be brought from distant stations, where their parents have grown under
+somewhat different conditions, and the plants produced from such seeds
+will intercross with the old residents, thus mingling their
+constitutional peculiarities in all sorts of proportions.
+
+Plants when first subjected to culture, even in their native country,
+cannot fail to be exposed to greatly changed conditions of life, more
+especially from growing in cleared ground, and from not having to
+compete with many or any surrounding plants. They are thus enabled to
+absorb whatever they require which the soil may contain. Fresh seeds are
+often brought from distant gardens, where the parent-plants have been
+subjected to different conditions. Cultivated plants like those in a
+state of nature frequently intercross, and will thus mingle their
+constitutional peculiarities. On the other hand, as long as the
+individuals of any species are cultivated in the same garden, they will
+apparently be subjected to more uniform conditions than plants in a
+state of nature, as the individuals have not to compete with various
+surrounding species. The seeds sown at the same time in a garden have
+generally been matured during the same season and in the same place; and
+in this respect they differ much from the seeds sown by the hand of
+nature. Some exotic plants are not frequented by the native insects in
+their new home, and therefore are not intercrossed; and this appears to
+be a highly important factor in the individuals acquiring uniformity of
+constitution.
+
+In my experiments the greatest care was taken that in each generation
+all the crossed and self-fertilised plants should be subjected to the
+same conditions. Not that the conditions were absolutely the same, for
+the more vigorous individuals will have robbed the weaker ones of
+nutriment, and likewise of water when the soil in the pots was becoming
+dry; and both lots at one end of the pot will have received a little
+more light than those at the other end. In the successive generations,
+the plants were subjected to somewhat different conditions, for the
+seasons necessarily varied, and they were sometimes raised at different
+periods of the year. But as they were all kept under glass, they were
+exposed to far less abrupt and great changes of temperature and moisture
+than are plants growing out of doors. With respect to the intercrossed
+plants, their first parents, which were not related, would almost
+certainly have differed somewhat in constitution; and such
+constitutional peculiarities would be variously mingled in each
+succeeding intercrossed generation, being sometimes augmented, but more
+commonly neutralised in a greater or less degree, and sometimes revived
+through reversion; just as we know to be the case with the external
+characters of crossed species and varieties. With the plants which were
+self-fertilised during the successive generations, this latter important
+source of some diversity of constitution will have been wholly
+eliminated; and the sexual elements produced by the same flower must
+have been developed under as nearly the same conditions as it is
+possible to conceive.
+
+In Table 7/C the crossed plants are the offspring of a cross with a
+fresh stock, or with a distinct variety; and they were put into
+competition either with self-fertilised plants, or with intercrossed
+plants of the same old stock. By the term fresh stock I mean a
+non-related plant, the progenitors of which have been raised during some
+generations in another garden, and have consequently been exposed to
+somewhat different conditions. In the case of Nicotiana, Iberis, the red
+variety of Primula, the common Pea, and perhaps Anagallis, the plants
+which were crossed may be ranked as distinct varieties or sub-varieties
+of the same species; but with Ipomoea, Mimulus, Dianthus, and Petunia,
+the plants which were crossed differed exclusively in the tint of their
+flowers; and as a large proportion of the plants raised from the same
+lot of purchased seeds thus varied, the differences may be estimated as
+merely individual. Having made these preliminary remarks, we will now
+consider in detail the several cases given in Table 7/C, and they are
+well worthy of full consideration.
+
+1. Ipomoea purpurea.
+
+Plants growing in the same pots, and subjected in each generation to the
+same conditions, were intercrossed for nine consecutive generations.
+These intercrossed plants thus became in the later generations more or
+less closely inter-related. Flowers on the plants of the ninth
+intercrossed generation were fertilised with pollen taken from a fresh
+stock, and seedlings thus raised. Other flowers on the same intercrossed
+plants were fertilised with pollen from another intercrossed plant,
+producing seedlings of the tenth intercrossed generation. These two sets
+of seedlings were grown in competition with one another, and differed
+greatly in height and fertility. For the offspring from the cross with a
+fresh stock exceeded in height the intercrossed plants in the ratio of
+100 to 78; and this is nearly the same excess which the intercrossed had
+over the self-fertilised plants in all ten generations taken together,
+namely, as 100 to 77. The plants raised from the cross with a fresh
+stock were also greatly superior in fertility to the intercrossed,
+namely, in the ratio of 100 to 51, as judged by the relative weight of
+the seed-capsules produced by an equal number of plants of the two sets,
+both having been left to be naturally fertilised. It should be
+especially observed that none of the plants of either lot were the
+product of self-fertilisation. On the contrary, the intercrossed plants
+had certainly been crossed for the last ten generations, and probably,
+during all previous generations, as we may infer from the structure of
+the flowers and from the frequency of the visits of humble-bees. And so
+it will have been with the parent-plants of the fresh stock. The whole
+great difference in height and fertility between the two lots must be
+attributed to the one being the product of a cross with pollen from a
+fresh stock, and the other of a cross between plants of the same old
+stock.
+
+This species offers another interesting case. In the five first
+generations in which intercrossed and self-fertilised plants were put
+into competition with one another, every single intercrossed plant beat
+its self-fertilised antagonist, except in one instance, in which they
+were equal in height. But in the sixth generation a plant appeared,
+named by me the Hero, remarkable for its tallness and increased
+self-fertility, and which transmitted its characters to the next three
+generations. The children of Hero were again self-fertilised, forming
+the eighth self-fertilised generation, and were likewise intercrossed
+one with another; but this cross between plants which had been subjected
+to the same conditions and had been self-fertilised during the seven
+previous generations, did not effect the least good; for the
+intercrossed grandchildren were actually shorter than the
+self-fertilised grandchildren, in the ratio of 100 to 107. We here see
+that the mere act of crossing two distinct plants does not by itself
+benefit the offspring. This case is almost the converse of that in the
+last paragraph, on which the offspring profited so greatly by a cross
+with a fresh stock. A similar trial was made with the descendants of
+Hero in the following generation, and with the same result. But the
+trial cannot be fully trusted, owing to the extremely unhealthy
+condition of the plants. Subject to this same serious cause of doubt,
+even a cross with a fresh stock did not benefit the great-grandchildren
+of Hero; and if this were really the case, it is the greatest anomaly
+observed by me in all my experiments.
+
+2. Mimulus luteus.
+
+During the three first generations the intercrossed plants taken
+together exceeded in height the self-fertilised taken together, in the
+ratio of 100 to 65, and in fertility in a still higher degree. In the
+fourth generation a new variety, which grew taller and had whiter and
+larger flowers than the old varieties, began to prevail, especially
+amongst the self-fertilised plants. This variety transmitted its
+characters with remarkable fidelity, so that all the plants in the later
+self-fertilised generations belonged to it. These consequently exceeded
+the intercrossed plants considerably in height. Thus in the seventh
+generation the intercrossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height
+as 100 to 137. It is a more remarkable fact that the self-fertilised
+plants of the sixth generation had become much more fertile than the
+intercrossed plants, judging by the number of capsules spontaneously
+produced, in the ratio of 147 to 100. This variety, which as we have
+seen appeared amongst the plants of the fourth self-fertilised
+generation, resembles in almost all its constitutional peculiarities the
+variety called Hero which appeared in the sixth self-fertilised
+generation of Ipomoea. No other such case, with the partial exception of
+that of Nicotiana, occurred in my experiments, carried on during eleven
+years.
+
+Two plants of this variety of Mimulus, belonging to the sixth
+self-fertilised generation, and growing in separate pots, were
+intercrossed; and some flowers on the same plants were again
+self-fertilised. From the seeds thus obtained, plants derived from a
+cross between the self-fertilised plants, and others of the seventh
+self-fertilised generation, were raised. But this cross did not do the
+least good, the intercrossed plants being inferior in height to the
+self-fertilised, in the ratio of 100 to 110. This case is exactly
+parallel with that given under Ipomoea, of the grandchildren of Hero,
+and apparently of its great-grandchildren; for the seedlings raised by
+intercrossing these plants were not in any way superior to those of the
+corresponding generation raised from the self-fertilised flowers.
+Therefore in these several cases the crossing of plants, which had been
+self-fertilised for several generations and which had been cultivated
+all the time under as nearly as possible the same conditions, was not in
+the least beneficial.
+
+Another experiment was now tried. Firstly, plants of the eighth
+self-fertilised generation were again self-fertilised, producing plants
+of the ninth self-fertilised generation. Secondly, two of the plants of
+the eighth self-fertilised generation were intercrossed one with
+another, as in the experiment above referred to; but this was now
+effected on plants which had been subjected to two additional
+generations of self-fertilisation. Thirdly, the same plants of the
+eighth self-fertilised generation were crossed with pollen from plants
+of a fresh stock brought from a distant garden. Numerous plants were
+raised from these three sets of seeds, and grown in competition with one
+another. The plants derived from a cross between the self-fertilised
+plants exceeded in height by a little the self-fertilised, namely, as
+100 to 92; and in fertility in a greater degree, namely, as 100 to 73. I
+do not know whether this difference in the result, compared with that in
+the previous case, can be accounted for by the increased deterioration
+of the self-fertilised plants from two additional generations of
+self-fertilisation, and the consequent advantage of any cross whatever,
+along merely between the self-fertilised plants. But however this may
+be, the effects of crossing the self-fertilised plants of the eighth
+generation with a fresh stock were extremely striking; for the seedlings
+thus raised were to the self-fertilised of the ninth generation as 100
+to 52 in height, and as 100 to 3 in fertility! They were also to the
+intercrossed plants (derived from crossing two of the self-fertilised
+plants of the eighth generation) in height as 100 to 56, and in
+fertility as 100 to 4. Better evidence could hardly be desired of the
+potent influence of a cross with a fresh stock on plants which had been
+self-fertilised for eight generations, and had been cultivated all the
+time under nearly uniform conditions, in comparison with plants
+self-fertilised for nine generations continuously, or then once
+intercrossed, namely in the last generation.
+
+3. Brassica oleracea.
+
+Some flowers on cabbage plants of the second self-fertilised generation
+were crossed with pollen from a plant of the same variety brought from a
+distant garden, and other flowers were again self-fertilised. Plants
+derived from a cross with a fresh stock and plants of the third
+self-fertilised generation were thus raised. The former were to the
+self-fertilised in weight as 100 to 22; and this enormous difference
+must be attributed in part to the beneficial effects of a cross with a
+fresh stock, and in part to the deteriorating effects of
+self-fertilisation continued during three generations.
+
+4. Iberis umbellata.
+
+Seedlings from a crimson English variety crossed by a pale-coloured
+variety which had been grown for some generations in Algiers, were to
+the self-fertilised seedlings from the crimson variety in height as 100
+to 89, and as 100 to 75 in fertility. I am surprised that this cross
+with another variety did not produce a still more strongly marked
+beneficial effect; for some intercrossed plants of the crimson English
+variety, put into competition with plants of the same variety
+self-fertilised during three generations, were in height as 100 to 86,
+and in fertility as 100 to 75. The slightly greater difference in height
+in this latter case, may possibly be attributed to the deteriorating
+effects of self-fertilisation carried on for two additional generations.
+
+5. Eschscholtzia californica.
+
+This plant offers an almost unique case, inasmuch as the good effects of
+a cross are confined to the reproductive system. Intercrossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the English stock did not differ in height
+(nor in weight, as far as was ascertained) in any constant manner; the
+self-fertilised plants usually having the advantage. So it was with the
+offspring of plants of the Brazilian stock, tried in the same manner.
+The parent-plants, however, of the English stock produced many more
+seeds when fertilised with pollen from another plant than when
+self-fertilised; and in Brazil the parent-plants were absolutely sterile
+unless they were fertilised with pollen from another plant. Intercrossed
+seedlings, raised in England from the Brazilian stock, compared with
+self-fertilised seedlings of the corresponding second generation,
+yielded seeds in number as 100 to 89; both lots of plants being left
+freely exposed to the visits of insects. If we now turn to the effects
+of crossing plants of the Brazilian stock with pollen from the English
+stock,--so that plants which had been long exposed to very different
+conditions were intercrossed,--we find that the offspring were, as
+before, inferior in height and weight to the plants of the Brazilian
+stock after two generations of self-fertilisation, but were superior to
+them in the most marked manner in the number of seeds produced, namely,
+as 100 to 40; both lots of plants being left freely exposed to the
+visits of insects.
+
+In the case of Ipomoea, we have seen that the plants derived from a
+cross with a fresh stock were superior in height as 100 to 78, and in
+fertility as 100 to 51, to the plants of the old stock, although these
+had been intercrossed during the last ten generations. With
+Eschscholtzia we have a nearly parallel case, but only as far as
+fertility is concerned, for the plants derived from a cross with a fresh
+stock were superior in fertility in the ratio of 100 to 45 to the
+Brazilian plants, which had been artificially intercrossed in England
+for the two last generations, and which must have been naturally
+intercrossed by insects during all previous generations in Brazil, where
+otherwise they are quite sterile.
+
+6. Dianthus caryophyllus.
+
+Plants self-fertilised for three generations were crossed with pollen
+from a fresh stock, and their offspring were grown in competition with
+plants of the fourth self-fertilised generation. The crossed plants thus
+obtained were to the self-fertilised in height as 100 to 81, and in
+fertility (both lots being left to be naturally fertilised by insects)
+as 100 to 33.
+
+These same crossed plants were also to the offspring from the plants of
+the third generation crossed by the intercrossed plants of the
+corresponding generation, in height as 100 to 85, and in fertility as
+100 to 45.
+
+We thus see what a great advantage the offspring from a cross with a
+fresh stock had, not only over the self-fertilised plants of the fourth
+generation, but over the offspring from the self-fertilised plants of
+the third generation, when crossed by the intercrossed plants of the old
+stock.
+
+7. Pisum sativum.
+
+It has been shown under the head of this species, that the several
+varieties in this country almost invariably fertilise themselves, owing
+to insects rarely visiting the flowers; and as the plants have been long
+cultivated under nearly similar conditions, we can understand why a
+cross between two individuals of the same variety does not do the least
+good to the offspring either in height or fertility. This case is almost
+exactly parallel with that of Mimulus, or that of the Ipomoea named
+Hero; for in these two instances, crossing plants which had been
+self-fertilised for seven generations did not at all benefit the
+offspring. On the other hand, a cross between two varieties of the pea
+causes a marked superiority in the growth and vigour of the offspring,
+over the self-fertilised plants of the same varieties, as shown by two
+excellent observers. From my own observations (not made with great care)
+the offspring from crossed varieties were to self-fertilised plants in
+height, in one case as 100 to about 75, and in a second case as 100 to
+60.
+
+8. Lathyrus odoratus.
+
+The sweet-pea is in the same state in regard to self-fertilisation as
+the common pea; and we have seen that seedlings from a cross between two
+varieties, which differed in no respect except in the colour of their
+flowers, were to the self-fertilised seedlings from the same
+mother-plant in height as 100 to 80; and in the second generation as 100
+to 88. Unfortunately I did not ascertain whether crossing two plants of
+the same variety failed to produce any beneficial effect, but I venture
+to predict such would be the result.
+
+9. Petunia violacea.
+
+The intercrossed plants of the same stock in four out of the five
+successive generations plainly exceeded in height the self-fertilised
+plants. The latter in the fourth generation were crossed by a fresh
+stock, and the seedlings thus obtained were put into competition with
+the self-fertilised plants of the fifth generation. The crossed plants
+exceeded the self-fertilised in height in the ratio of 100 to 66, and in
+weight as 100 to 23; but this difference, though so great, is not much
+greater than that between the intercrossed plants of the same stock in
+comparison with the self-fertilised plants of the corresponding
+generation. This case, therefore, seems at first sight opposed to the
+rule that a cross with a fresh stock is much more beneficial than a
+cross between individuals of the same stock. But as with Eschscholtzia,
+the reproductive system was here chiefly benefited; for the plants
+raised from the cross with the fresh stock were to the self-fertilised
+plants in fertility, both lots being naturally fertilised, as 100 to 46,
+whereas the intercrossed plants of the same stock were to the
+self-fertilised plants of the corresponding fifth generation in
+fertility only as 100 to 86.
+
+Although at the time of measurement the plants raised from the cross
+with the fresh stock did not exceed in height or weight the intercrossed
+plants of the old stock (owing to the growth of the former not having
+been completed, as explained under the head of this species), yet they
+exceeded the intercrossed plants in fertility in the ratio of 100 to 54.
+This fact is interesting, as it shows that plants self-fertilised for
+four generations and then crossed by a fresh stock, yielded seedlings
+which were nearly twice as fertile as those from plants of the same
+stock which had been intercrossed for the five previous generations. We
+here see, as with Eschscholtzia and Dianthus, that the mere act of
+crossing, independently of the state of the crossed plants, has little
+efficacy in giving increased fertility to the offspring. The same
+conclusion holds good, as we have already seen, in the analogous cases
+of Ipomoea, Mimulus, and Dianthus, with respect to height.
+
+10. Nicotiana tabacum.
+
+My plants were remarkably self-fertile, and the capsules from the
+self-fertilised flowers apparently yielded more seeds than those which
+were cross-fertilised. No insects were seen to visit the flowers in the
+hothouse, and I suspect that the stock on which I experimented had been
+raised under glass, and had been self-fertilised during several previous
+generations; if so, we can understand why, in the course of three
+generations, the crossed seedlings of the same stock did not uniformly
+exceed in height the self-fertilised seedlings. But the case is
+complicated by individual plants having different constitutions, so that
+some of the crossed and self-fertilised seedlings raised at the same
+time from the same parents behaved differently. However this may be,
+plants raised from self-fertilised plants of the third generation
+crossed by a slightly different sub-variety, exceeded greatly in height
+and weight the self-fertilised plants of the fourth generation; and the
+trial was made on a large scale. They exceeded them in height when grown
+in pots, and not much crowded, in the ratio of 100 to 66; and when much
+crowded, as 100 to 54. These crossed plants, when thus subjected to
+severe competition, also exceeded the self-fertilised in weight in the
+ratio of 100 to 37. So it was, but in a less degree (as may be seen in
+Table 7/C), when the two lots were grown out of doors and not subjected
+to any mutual competition. Nevertheless, strange as is the fact, the
+flowers on the mother-plants of the third self-fertilised generation did
+not yield more seed when they were crossed with pollen from plants of
+the fresh stock than when they were self-fertilised.
+
+11. Anagallis collina.
+
+Plants raised from a red variety crossed by another plant of the same
+variety were in height to the self-fertilised plants from the red
+variety as 100 to 73. When the flowers on the red variety were
+fertilised with pollen from a closely similar blue-flowered variety,
+they yielded double the number of seeds to what they did when crossed by
+pollen from another individual of the same red variety, and the seeds
+were much finer. The plants raised from this cross between the two
+varieties were to the self-fertilised seedlings from the red variety, in
+height as 100 to 66, and in fertility as 100 to 6.
+
+12. Primula veris.
+
+Some flowers on long-styled plants of the third illegitimate generation
+were legitimately crossed with pollen from a fresh stock, and others
+were fertilised with their own pollen. From the seeds thus produced
+crossed plants, and self-fertilised plants of the fourth illegitimate
+generation, were raised. The former were to the latter in height as 100
+to 46, and in fertility during one year as 100 to 5, and as 100 to 3.5
+during the next year. In this case, however, we have no means of
+distinguishing between the evil effects of illegitimate fertilisation
+continued during four generations (that is, by pollen of the same form,
+but taken from a distinct plant) and strict self-fertilisation. But it
+is probable that these two processes do not differ so essentially as at
+first appears to be the case. In the following experiment any doubt
+arising from illegitimate fertilisation was completely eliminated.
+
+13. Primula veris. (Equal-styled, red-flowered variety.)
+
+Flowers on plants of the second self-fertilised generation were crossed
+with pollen from a distinct variety or fresh stock, and others were
+again self-fertilised. Crossed plants and plants of the third
+self-fertilised generation, all of legitimate origin, were thus raised;
+and the former was to the latter in height as 100 to 85, and in
+fertility (as judged by the number of capsules produced, together with
+the average number of seeds) as 100 to 11.
+
+SUMMARY OF THE MEASUREMENTS IN TABLE 7/C.
+
+This table includes the heights and often the weights of 292 plants
+derived from a cross with a fresh stock, and of 305 plants, either of
+self-fertilised origin, or derived from an intercross between plants of
+the same stock. These 597 plants belong to thirteen species and twelve
+genera. The various precautions which were taken to ensure a fair
+comparison have already been stated. If we now look down the right hand
+column, in which the mean height, weight, and fertility of the plants
+derived from a cross with a fresh stock are represented by 100, we shall
+see by the other figures how wonderfully superior they are both to the
+self-fertilised and to the intercrossed plants of the same stock. With
+respect to height and weight, there are only two exceptions to the rule,
+namely, with Eschscholtzia and Petunia, and the latter is probably no
+real exception. Nor do these two species offer an exception in regard to
+fertility, for the plants derived from the cross with a fresh stock were
+much more fertile than the self-fertilised plants. The difference
+between the two sets of plants in the table is generally much greater in
+fertility than in height or weight. On the other hand, with some of the
+species, as with Nicotiana, there was no difference in fertility between
+the two sets, although a great difference in height and weight.
+Considering all the cases in this table, there can be no doubt that
+plants profit immensely, though in different ways, by a cross with a
+fresh stock or with a distinct sub-variety. It cannot be maintained that
+the benefit thus derived is due merely to the plants of the fresh stock
+being perfectly healthy, whilst those which had been long intercrossed
+or self-fertilised had become unhealthy; for in most cases there was no
+appearance of such unhealthiness, and we shall see under Table 7/A that
+the intercrossed plants of the same stock are generally superior to a
+certain extent to the self-fertilised,--both lots having been subjected
+to exactly the same conditions and being equally healthy or unhealthy.
+
+We further learn from Table 7/C, that a cross between plants that have
+been self-fertilised during several successive generations and kept all
+the time under nearly uniform conditions, does not benefit the offspring
+in the least or only in a very slight degree. Mimulus and the
+descendants of Ipomoea named Hero offer instances of this rule. Again,
+plants self-fertilised during several generations profit only to a small
+extent by a cross with intercrossed plants of the same stock (as in the
+case of Dianthus), in comparison with the effects of a cross by a fresh
+stock. Plants of the same stock intercrossed during several generations
+(as with Petunia) were inferior in a marked manner in fertility to those
+derived from the corresponding self-fertilised plants crossed by a fresh
+stock. Lastly, certain plants which are regularly intercrossed by
+insects in a state of nature, and which were artificially crossed in
+each succeeding generation in the course of my experiments, so that they
+can never or most rarely have suffered any evil from self-fertilisation
+(as with Eschscholtzia and Ipomoea), nevertheless profited greatly by a
+cross with a fresh stock. These several cases taken together show us in
+the clearest manner that it is not the mere crossing of any two
+individuals which is beneficial to the offspring. The benefit thus
+derived depends on the plants which are united differing in some manner,
+and there can hardly be a doubt that it is in the constitution or nature
+of the sexual elements. Anyhow, it is certain that the differences are
+not of an external nature, for two plants which resemble each other as
+closely as the individuals of the same species ever do, profit in the
+plainest manner when intercrossed, if their progenitors have been
+exposed during several generations to different conditions. But to this
+latter subject I shall have to recur in a future chapter.
+
+TABLE 7/A.
+
+We will now turn to our first table, which relates to crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the same stock. These consist of fifty-four
+species belonging to thirty natural orders. The total number of crossed
+plants of which measurements are given is 796, and of self-fertilised
+809; that is altogether 1,605 plants. Some of the species were
+experimented on during several successive generations; and it should be
+borne in mind that in such cases the crossed plants in each generation
+were crossed with pollen from another crossed plant, and the flowers on
+the self-fertilised plants were almost always fertilised with their own
+pollen, though sometimes with pollen from other flowers on the same
+plant. The crossed plants thus became more or less closely inter-related
+in the later generations; and both lots were subjected in each
+generation to almost absolutely the same conditions, and to nearly the
+same conditions in the successive generations. It would have been a
+better plan in some respects if I had always crossed some flowers either
+on the self-fertilised or intercrossed plants of each generation with
+pollen from a non-related plant, grown under different conditions, as
+was done with the plants in Table 7/C; for by this procedure I should
+have learnt how much the offspring became deteriorated through continued
+self-fertilisation in the successive generations. As the case stands,
+the self-fertilised plants of the successive generations in Table 7/A
+were put into competition with and compared with intercrossed plants,
+which were probably deteriorated in some degree by being more or less
+inter-related and grown under similar conditions. Nevertheless, had I
+always followed the plan in Table 7/C, I should not have discovered the
+important fact that, although a cross between plants which are rather
+closely related and which had been subjected to closely similar
+conditions, gives during several generations some advantage to the
+offspring, yet that after a time they may be intercrossed with no
+advantage whatever to the offspring. Nor should I have learnt that the
+self-fertilised plants of the later generations might be crossed with
+intercrossed plants of the same stock with little or no advantage,
+although they profited to an extraordinary degree by a cross with a
+fresh stock.
+
+With respect to the greater number of the plants in Table 7/A, nothing
+special need here be said; full particulars may be found under the head
+of each species by the aid of the Index. The figures in the right-hand
+column show the mean height of the self-fertilised plants, that of the
+crossed plants with which they competed being represented by 100. No
+notice is here taken of the few cases in which crossed and
+self-fertilised plants were grown in the open ground, so as not to
+compete together. The table includes, as we have seen, plants belonging
+to fifty-four species, but as some of these were measured during several
+successive generations, there are eighty-three cases in which crossed
+and self-fertilised plants were compared. As in each generation the
+number of plants which were measured (given in the table) was never very
+large and sometimes small, whenever in the right hand column the mean
+height of the crossed and self-fertilised plants is the same within five
+per cent, their heights may be considered as practically equal. Of such
+cases, that is, of self-fertilised plants of which the mean height is
+expressed by figures between 95 and 105, there are eighteen, either in
+some one or all the generations. There are eight cases in which the
+self-fertilised plants exceed the crossed by above five per cent, as
+shown by the figures in the right hand column being above 105. Lastly,
+there are fifty-seven cases in which the crossed plants exceed the
+self-fertilised in a ratio of at least 100 to 95, and generally in a
+much higher degree.
+
+If the relative heights of the crossed and self-fertilised plants had
+been due to mere chance, there would have been about as many cases of
+self-fertilised plants exceeding the crossed in height by above five per
+cent as of the crossed thus exceeding the self-fertilised; but we see
+that of the latter there are fifty-seven cases, and of the former only
+eight cases; so that the cases in which the crossed plants exceed in
+height the self-fertilised in the above proportion are more than seven
+times as numerous as those in which the self-fertilised exceed the
+crossed in the same proportion. For our special purpose of comparing the
+powers of growth of crossed and self-fertilised plants, it may be said
+that in fifty-seven cases the crossed plants exceeded the
+self-fertilised by more than five per cent, and that in twenty-six cases
+(18 + 8) they did not thus exceed them. But we shall now show that in
+several of these twenty-six cases the crossed plants had a decided
+advantage over the self-fertilised in other respects, though not in
+height; that in other cases the mean heights are not trustworthy, owing
+to too few plants having been measured, or to their having grown
+unequally from being unhealthy, or to both causes combined.
+Nevertheless, as these cases are opposed to my general conclusion I have
+felt bound to give them. Lastly, the cause of the crossed plants having
+no advantage over the self-fertilised can be explained in some other
+cases. Thus a very small residue is left in which the self-fertilised
+plants appear, as far as my experiments serve, to be really equal or
+superior to the crossed plants.
+
+We will now consider in some little detail the eighteen cases in which
+the self-fertilised plants equalled in average height the crossed plants
+within five per cent; and the eight cases in which the self-fertilised
+plants exceeded in average height the crossed plants by above five per
+cent; making altogether twenty-six cases in which the crossed plants
+were not taller than the self-fertilised plants in any marked degree.
+
+[1. Dianthus caryophyllus (third generation).
+
+This plant was experimented on during four generations, in three of
+which the crossed plants exceeded in height the self-fertilised
+generally by much more than five per cent; and we have seen under Table
+7/C that the offspring from the plants of the third self-fertilised
+generation crossed by a fresh stock profited in height and fertility to
+an extraordinary degree. But in this third generation the crossed plants
+of the same stock were in height to the self-fertilised only as 100 to
+99, that is, they were practically equal. Nevertheless, when the eight
+crossed and eight self-fertilised plants were cut down and weighed, the
+former were to the latter in weight as 100 to 49! There can therefore be
+not the least doubt that the crossed plants of this species are greatly
+superior in vigour and luxuriance to the self-fertilised; and what was
+the cause of the self-fertilised plants of the third generation, though
+so light and thin, growing up so as almost to equal the crossed in
+height, I cannot explain.
+
+2. Lobelia fulgens (first generation).
+
+The crossed plants of this generation were much inferior in height to
+the self-fertilised, in the proportion of 100 to 127. Although only two
+pairs were measured, which is obviously much too few to be trusted, yet
+from other evidence given under the head of this species, it is certain
+that the self-fertilised plants were very much more vigorous than the
+crossed. As I used pollen of unequal maturity for crossing and
+self-fertilising the parent-plants, it is possible that the great
+difference in the growth of their offspring may have been due to this
+cause. In the next generation this source of error was avoided, and many
+more plants were raised, and now the average height of the twenty-three
+crossed plants was to that of the twenty-three self-fertilised plants as
+100 to 91. We can therefore hardly doubt that a cross is beneficial to
+this species.
+
+3. Petunia violacea (third generation).
+
+Eight crossed plants were to eight self-fertilised of the third
+generation in average height as 100 to 131; and at an early age the
+crossed were inferior even in a still higher degree. But it is a
+remarkable fact that in one pot in which plants of both lots grew
+extremely crowded, the crossed were thrice as tall as the
+self-fertilised. As in the two preceding and two succeeding generations,
+as well as with plants raised by a crossed with a fresh stock, the
+crossed greatly exceeded the self-fertilised in height, weight, and
+fertility (when these two latter points were attended to), the present
+case must be looked at as an anomaly not affecting the general rule. The
+most probable explanation is that the seeds from which the crossed
+plants of the third generation were raised were not well ripened; for I
+have observed an analogous case with Iberis. Self-fertilised seedlings
+of this latter plant, which were known to have been produced from seeds
+not well matured, grew from the first much more quickly than the crossed
+plants, which were raised from better matured seeds; so that having thus
+once got a great start they were enabled ever afterwards to retain their
+advantage. Some of these same seeds of the Iberis were sown on the
+opposite sides of pots filled with burnt earth and pure sand, not
+containing any organic matter; and now the young crossed seedlings grew
+during their short life to double the height of the self-fertilised, in
+the same manner as occurred with the above two sets of seedlings of
+Petunia which were much crowded and thus exposed to very unfavourable
+conditions. We have seen also in the eighth generation of Ipomoea that
+the self-fertilised seedlings raised from unhealthy parents grew at
+first very much more quickly than the crossed seedlings, so that they
+were for a long time much taller, though ultimately beaten by them.
+
+4, 5, 6. Eschscholtzia californica.
+
+Four sets of measurements are given in Table 7/A. In one of these the
+crossed plants exceed the self-fertilised in average height, so that
+this is not one of the exceptions here to be considered. In two other
+cases the crossed equalled the self-fertilised in height within five per
+cent; and in the fourth case the self-fertilised exceeded the crossed by
+above this limit. We have seen in Table 7/C that the whole advantage of
+a cross by a fresh stock is confined to fertility, and so it was with
+the intercrossed plants of the same stock compared with the
+self-fertilised, for the former were in fertility to the latter as 100
+to 89. The intercrossed plants thus have at least one important
+advantage over the self-fertilised. Moreover, the flowers on the
+parent-plants when fertilised with pollen from another individual of the
+same stock yield far more seeds than when self-fertilised; the flowers
+in this latter case being often quite sterile. We may therefore conclude
+that a cross does some good, though it does not give to the crossed
+seedlings increased powers of growth.
+
+7. Viscaria oculata.
+
+The average height of the fifteen intercrossed plants to that of the
+fifteen self-fertilised plants was only as 100 to 97; but the former
+produced many more capsules than the latter, in the ratio of 100 to 77.
+Moreover, the flowers on the parent-plants which were crossed and
+self-fertilised, yielded seeds on one occasion in the proportion of 100
+to 38, and on a second occasion in the proportion of 100 to 58. So that
+there can be no doubt about the beneficial effects of a cross, although
+the mean height of the crossed plants was only three per cent above that
+of the self-fertilised plants.
+
+8. Specularia speculum.
+
+Only the four tallest of the crossed and the four tallest of the
+self-fertilised plants, growing in four pots, were measured; and the
+former were to the latter in height as 100 to 98. In all four pots a
+crossed plant flowered before any one of the self-fertilised plants, and
+this is usually a safe indication of some real superiority in the
+crossed plants. The flowers on the parent-plants which were crossed with
+pollen from another plant yielded seeds compared with the
+self-fertilised flowers in the ratio of 100 to 72. We may therefore draw
+the same conclusion as in the last case with respect to a cross being
+decidedly beneficial.
+
+9. Borago officinalis.
+
+Only four crossed and four self-fertilised plants were raised and
+measured, and the former were to the latter in height as 100 to 102. So
+small a number of measurements ought never to be trusted; and in the
+present instance the advantage of the self-fertilised over the crossed
+plants depended almost entirely on one of the self-fertilised plants
+having grown to an unusual height. All four crossed plants flowered
+before their self-fertilised opponents. The cross-fertilised flowers on
+the parent-plants in comparison with the self-fertilised flowers yielded
+seeds in the proportion of 100 to 60. So that here again we may draw the
+same conclusion as in the two last cases.
+
+10. Passiflora gracilis.
+
+Only two crossed and two self-fertilised plants were raised; and the
+former were to the latter in height as 100 to 104. On the other hand,
+fruits from the cross-fertilised flowers on the parent-plants contained
+seeds in number, compared with those from the self-fertilised flowers,
+in the proportion of 100 to 85.
+
+11. Phaseolus multiflorus.
+
+The five crossed plants were to the five self-fertilised in height as
+100 to 96. Although the crossed plants were thus only four per cent
+taller than the self-fertilised, they flowered in both pots before them.
+It is therefore probable that they had some real advantage over the
+self-fertilised plants.
+
+12. Adonis aestivalis.
+
+The four crossed plants were almost exactly equal in height to the four
+self-fertilised plants, but as so few plants were measured, and as these
+were all "miserably unhealthy," nothing can be inferred with safety with
+respect to their relative heights.
+
+13. Bartonia aurea.
+
+The eight crossed plants were to the eight self-fertilised in height as
+100 to 107. This number of plants, considering the care with which they
+were raised and compared, ought to have given a trustworthy result. But
+from some unknown cause they grew very unequally, and they became so
+unhealthy that only three of the crossed and three of the
+self-fertilised plants set any seeds, and these few in number. Under
+these circumstances the mean height of neither lot can be trusted, and
+the experiment is valueless. The cross-fertilised flowers on the
+parent-plants yielded rather more seeds than the self-fertilised
+flowers.
+
+14. Thunbergia alata.
+
+The six crossed plants were to the six self-fertilised in height as 100
+to 108. Here the self-fertilised plants seem to have a decided
+advantage; but both lots grew unequally, some of the plants in both
+being more than twice as tall as others. The parent-plants also were in
+an odd semi-sterile condition. Under these circumstances the superiority
+of the self-fertilised plants cannot be fully trusted.
+
+15. Nolana prostrata.
+
+The five crossed plants were to the five self-fertilised in height as
+100 to 105; so that the latter seem here to have a small but decided
+advantage. On the other hand, the flowers on the parent-plants which
+were cross-fertilised produced very many more capsules than the
+self-fertilised flowers, in the ratio of 100 to 21; and the seeds which
+the former contained were heavier than an equal number from the
+self-fertilised capsules in the ratio of 100 to 82.
+
+16. Hibiscus africanus.
+
+Only four pairs were raised, and the crossed were to the self-fertilised
+in height as 100 to 109. Excepting that too few plants were measured, I
+know of nothing else to cause distrust in the result. The
+cross-fertilised flowers on the parent-plants were, on the other hand,
+rather more productive than the self-fertilised flowers.
+
+17. Apium petroselinum.
+
+A few plants (number not recorded) derived from flowers believed to have
+been crossed by insects and a few self-fertilised plants were grown on
+the opposite sides of four pots. They attained to a nearly equal height,
+the crossed having a very slight advantage.
+
+18. Vandellia nummularifolia.
+
+Twenty crossed plants raised from the seeds of perfect flowers were to
+twenty self-fertilised plants, likewise raised from the seeds of perfect
+flowers, in height as 100 to 99. The experiment was repeated, with the
+sole difference that the plants were allowed to grow more crowded; and
+now the twenty-four tallest of the crossed plants were to the
+twenty-four tallest self-fertilised plants in height as 100 to 94, and
+in weight as 100 to 97. Moreover, a larger number of the crossed than of
+the self-fertilised plants grew to a moderate height. The
+above-mentioned twenty crossed plants were also grown in competition
+with twenty self-fertilised plants raised from the closed or cleistogene
+flowers, and their heights were as 100 to 94. Therefore had it not been
+for the first trial, in which the crossed plants were to the
+self-fertilised in height only as 100 to 99, this species might have
+been classed with those in which the crossed plants exceed the
+self-fertilised by above five per cent. On the other hand, the crossed
+plants in the second trial bore fewer capsules; and these contained
+fewer seeds, than did the self-fertilised plants, all the capsules
+having been produced by cleistogene flowers. The whole case therefore
+must be left doubtful.
+
+19. Pisum sativum (common pea).
+
+Four-plants derived from a cross between individuals of the same variety
+were in height to four self-fertilised plants belonging to the same
+variety as 100 to 115. Although this cross did no good, we have seen
+under Table 7/C that a cross between distinct varieties adds greatly to
+the height and vigour of the offspring; and it was there explained that
+the fact of a cross between the individuals of the same variety not
+being beneficial, is almost certainly due to their having been
+self-fertilised for many generations, and in each generation grown under
+nearly similar conditions.
+
+20, 21, 22. Canna warscewiczi.
+
+Plants belonging to three generations were observed, and in all of three
+the crossed were approximately equal to the self-fertilised; the average
+height of the thirty-four crossed plants being to that of the same
+number of self-fertilised plants as 100 to 101. Therefore the crossed
+plants had no advantage over the self-fertilised; and it is probable
+that the same explanation here holds good as in the case of Pisum
+sativum; for the flowers of this Canna are perfectly self-fertile, and
+were never seen to be visited by insects in the hothouse, so as to be
+crossed by them. This plant, moreover, has been cultivated under glass
+for several generations in pots, and therefore under nearly uniform
+conditions. The capsules produced by the cross-fertilised flowers on the
+above thirty-four crossed plants contained more seeds than did the
+capsules produced by the self-fertilised flowers on the self-fertilised
+plants, in the proportion of 100 to 85; so that in this respect crossing
+was beneficial.
+
+23. Primula sinensis.
+
+The offspring of plants, some of which were legitimately and others
+illegitimately fertilised with pollen from a distinct plant, were almost
+exactly of the same height as the offspring of self-fertilised plants;
+but the former with rare exceptions flowered before the latter. I have
+shown in my paper on dimorphic plants that this species is commonly
+raised in England from self-fertilised seed, and the plants from having
+been cultivated in pots have been subjected to nearly uniform
+conditions. Moreover, many of them are now varying and changing their
+character, so as to become in a greater or less degree equal-styled, and
+in consequence highly self-fertile. Therefore I believe that the cause
+of the crossed plants not exceeding in height the self-fertilised is the
+same as in the two previous cases of Pisum sativum and Canna.
+
+24, 25, 26. Nicotiana tabacum.
+
+Four sets of measurements were made; in one, the self-fertilised plants
+greatly exceeded in height the crossed, in two others they were
+approximately equal to the crossed, and in the fourth were beaten by
+them; but this latter case does not here concern us. The individual
+plants differ in constitution, so that the descendants of some profit by
+their parents having been intercrossed, whilst others do not. Taking all
+three generations together, the twenty-seven crossed plants were in
+height to the twenty-seven self-fertilised plants as 100 to 96. This
+excess of height in the crossed plants, is so small compared with that
+displayed by the offspring from the same mother-plants when crossed by a
+slightly different variety, that we may suspect (as explained under
+Table 7/C) that most of the individuals belonging to the variety which
+served as the mother-plants in my experiments, had acquired a nearly
+similar constitution, so as not to profit by being mutually
+intercrossed.]
+
+Reviewing these twenty-six cases, in which the crossed plants either do
+not exceed the self-fertilised by above five per cent in height, or are
+inferior to them, we may conclude that much the greater number of the
+cases do not form real exceptions to the rule,--that a cross between two
+plants, unless these have been self-fertilised and exposed to nearly the
+same conditions for many generations, gives a great advantage of some
+kind to the offspring. Of the twenty-six cases, at least two, namely,
+those of Adonis and Bartonia, may be wholly excluded, as the trials were
+worthless from the extreme unhealthiness of the plants. Inn twelve other
+cases (three trials with Eschscholtzia here included) the crossed plants
+either were superior in height to the self-fertilised in all the other
+generations excepting the one in question, or they showed their
+superiority in some different manner, as in weight, fertility, or in
+flowering first; or again, the cross-fertilised flowers on the
+mother-plant were much more productive of seed than the self-fertilised.
+
+Deducting these fourteen cases, there remain twelve in which the crossed
+plants show no well-marked advantage over the self-fertilised. On the
+other hand, we have seen that there are fifty-seven cases in which the
+crossed plants exceed the self-fertilised in height by at least five per
+cent, and generally in a much higher degree. But even in the twelve
+cases just referred to, the want of any advantage on the crossed side is
+far from certain: with Thunbergia the parent-plants were in an odd
+semi-sterile condition, and the offspring grew very unequally; with
+Hibiscus and Apium much too few plants were raised for the measurements
+to be trusted, and the cross-fertilised flowers of Hibiscus produced
+rather more seed than did the self-fertilised; with Vandellia the
+crossed plants were a little taller and heavier than the
+self-fertilised, but as they were less fertile the case must be left
+doubtful. Lastly, with Pisum, Primula, the three generations of Canna,
+and the three of Nicotiana (which together complete the twelve cases), a
+cross between two plants certainly did no good or very little good to
+the offspring; but we have reason to believe that this is the result of
+these plants having been self-fertilised and cultivated under nearly
+uniform conditions for several generations. The same result followed
+with the experimental plants of Ipomoea and Mimulus, and to a certain
+extent with some other species, which had been intentionally treated by
+me in this manner; yet we know that these species in their normal
+condition profit greatly by being intercrossed. There is, therefore, not
+a single case in Table 7/A which affords decisive evidence against the
+rule that a cross between plants, the progenitors of which have been
+subjected to somewhat diversified conditions, is beneficial to the
+offspring. This is a surprising conclusion, for from the analogy of
+domesticated animals it could not have been anticipated, that the good
+effects of crossing or the evil effects of self-fertilisation would have
+been perceptible until the plants had been thus treated for several
+generations.
+
+The results given in Table 7/A may be looked at under another point of
+view. Hitherto each generation has been considered as a separate case,
+of which there are eighty-three; and this no doubt is the more correct
+method of comparing the crossed and self-fertilised plants.
+
+But in those cases in which plants of the same species were observed
+during several generations, a general average of their heights in all
+the generations together may be made; and such averages are given in
+Table 7/A; for instance, under Ipomoea the general average for the
+plants of all ten generations is as 100 for the crossed, to 77 for the
+self-fertilised plants. This having been done in each case in which more
+than one generation was raised, it is easy to calculate the average of
+the average heights of the crossed and self-fertilised plants of all the
+species included in Table 7/A. It should however be observed that as
+only a few plants of some species, whilst a considerable number of
+others, were measured, the value of the mean or average heights of the
+several species is very different. Subject to this source of error, it
+may be worth while to give the mean of the mean heights of the
+fifty-four species in Table 7/A; and the result is, calling the mean of
+the mean heights of the crossed plants 100, that of the self-fertilised
+plants is 87. But it is a better plan to divide the fifty-four species
+into three groups, as was done with the previously given eighty-three
+cases. The first group consists of species of which the mean heights of
+the self-fertilised plants are within five per cent of 100; so that the
+crossed and self-fertilised plants are approximately equal; and of such
+species there are twelve about which nothing need be said, the mean of
+the mean heights of the self-fertilised being of course very nearly 100,
+or exactly 99.58. The second group consists of the species, thirty-seven
+in number, of which the mean heights of the crossed plants exceed that
+of the self-fertilised plants by more than five per cent; and the mean
+of their mean heights is to that of the self-fertilised plants as 100 to
+78. The third group consists of the species, only five in number, of
+which the mean heights of the self-fertilised plants exceed that of the
+crossed by more than five per cent; and here the mean of the mean
+heights of the crossed plants is to that of the self-fertilised as 100
+to 109. Therefore if we exclude the species which are approximately
+equal, there are thirty-seven species in which the mean of the mean
+heights of the crossed plants exceeds that of the self-fertilised by
+twenty-two per cent; whereas there are only five species in which the
+mean of the mean heights of the self-fertilised plants exceeds that of
+the crossed, and this only by nine per cent.
+
+The truth of the conclusion--that the good effects of a cross depend on
+the plants having been subjected to different conditions or to their
+belonging to different varieties, in both of which cases they would
+almost certainly differ somewhat in constitution--is supported by a
+comparison of the Tables 7/A and 7/C. The latter table gives the results
+of crossing plants with a fresh stock or with a distinct variety; and
+the superiority of the crossed offspring over the self-fertilised is
+here much more general and much more strongly marked than in Table 7/A,
+in which plants of the same stock were crossed. We have just seen that
+the mean of the mean heights of the crossed plants of the whole
+fifty-four species in Table 7/A is to that of the self-fertilised plants
+as 100 to 87; whereas the mean of the mean heights of the plants crossed
+by a fresh stock is to that of the self-fertilised in Table 7/C as 100
+to 74. So that the crossed plants beat the self-fertilised plants by
+thirteen per cent in Table 7/A, and by twenty-six per cent, or double as
+much, in Table 7/C, which includes the results of the cross by a fresh
+stock.
+
+TABLE 7/B.
+
+A few words must be added on the weights of the crossed plants of the
+same stock, in comparison with the self-fertilised. Eleven cases are
+given in Table 7/B, relating to eight species. The number of plants
+which were weighed is shown in the two left columns, and their relative
+weights in the right column, that of the crossed plants being taken as
+100. A few other cases have already been recorded in Table 7/C in
+reference to plants crossed by a fresh stock. I regret that more trials
+of this kind were not made, as the evidence of the superiority of the
+crossed over the self-fertilised plants is thus shown in a more
+conclusive manner than by their relative heights. But this plan was not
+thought of until a rather late period, and there were difficulties
+either way, as the seeds had to be collected when ripe, by which time
+the plants had often begun to wither. In only one out of the eleven
+cases in Table 7/B, that of Eschscholtzia, do the self-fertilised plants
+exceed the crossed in weight; and we have already seen they are likewise
+superior to them in height, though inferior in fertility, the whole
+advantage of a cross being here confined to the reproductive system.
+With Vandellia the crossed plants were a little heavier, as they were
+also a little taller than the self-fertilised; but as a greater number
+of more productive capsules were produced by the cleistogene flowers on
+the self-fertilised plants than by those on the crossed plants, the case
+must be left, as remarked under Table 7/A, altogether doubtful. The
+crossed and self-fertilised offspring from a partially self-sterile
+plant of Reseda odorata were almost equal in weight, though not in
+height. In the remaining eight cases, the crossed plants show a
+wonderful superiority over the self-fertilised, being more than double
+their weight, except in one case, and here the ratio is as high as 100
+to 67. The results thus deduced from the weights of the plants confirm
+in a striking manner the former evidence of the beneficial effects of a
+cross between two plants of the same stock; and in the few cases in
+which plants derived from a cross with a fresh stock were weighed, the
+results are similar or even more striking.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+DIFFERENCE BETWEEN CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS IN CONSTITUTIONAL
+VIGOUR AND IN OTHER RESPECTS.
+
+Greater constitutional vigour of crossed plants.
+The effects of great crowding.
+Competition with other kinds of plants.
+Self-fertilised plants more liable to premature death.
+Crossed plants generally flower before the self-fertilised.
+Negative effects of intercrossing flowers on the same plant.
+Cases described.
+Transmission of the good effects of a cross to later generations.
+Effects of crossing plants of closely related parentage.
+Uniform colour of the flowers on plants self-fertilised during several
+generations and cultivated under similar conditions.
+
+GREATER CONSTITUTIONAL VIGOUR OF CROSSED PLANTS.
+
+As in almost all my experiments an equal number of crossed and
+self-fertilised seeds, or more commonly seedlings just beginning to
+sprout, were planted on the opposite sides of the same pots, they had to
+compete with one another; and the greater height, weight, and fertility
+of the crossed plants may be attributed to their possessing greater
+innate constitutional vigour. Generally the plants of the two lots
+whilst very young were of equal height; but afterwards the crossed
+gained insensibly on their opponents, and this shows that they possessed
+some inherent superiority, though not displayed at a very early period
+in life. There were, however, some conspicuous exceptions to the rule of
+the two lots being at first equal in height; thus the crossed seedlings
+of the broom (Sarothamnus scoparius) when under three inches in height
+were more than twice as tall as the self-fertilised plants.
+
+After the crossed or the self-fertilised plants had once grown decidedly
+taller than their opponents, a still increasing advantage would tend to
+follow from the stronger plants robbing the weaker ones of nourishment
+and overshadowing them. This was evidently the case with the crossed
+plants of Viola tricolor, which ultimately quite overwhelmed the
+self-fertilised. But that the crossed plants have an inherent
+superiority, independently of competition, was sometimes well shown when
+both lots were planted separately, not far distant from one another, in
+good soil in the open ground. This was likewise shown in several cases,
+even with plants growing in close competition with one another, by one
+of the self-fertilised plants exceeding for a time its crossed opponent,
+which had been injured by some accident or was at first sickly, but
+being ultimately conquered by it. The plants of the eighth generation of
+Ipomoea were raised from small seeds produced by unhealthy parents, and
+the self-fertilised plants grew at first very rapidly, so that when the
+plants of both lots were about three feet in height, the mean height of
+the crossed to that of the self-fertilised was as 100 to 122; when they
+were about six feet high the two lots were very nearly equal, but
+ultimately when between eight and nine feet in height, the crossed
+plants asserted their usually superiority, and were to the
+self-fertilised in height as 100 to 85.
+
+The constitutional superiority of the crossed over the self-fertilised
+plants was proved in another way in the third generation of Mimulus, by
+self-fertilised seeds being sown on one side of a pot, and after a
+certain interval of time crossed seeds on the opposite side. The
+self-fertilised seedlings thus had (for I ascertained that the seeds
+germinated simultaneously) a clear advantage over the crossed in the
+start for the race. Nevertheless they were easily beaten (as may be seen
+under the head of Mimulus) when the crossed seeds were sown two whole
+days after the self-fertilised. But when the interval was four days, the
+two lots were nearly equal throughout life. Even in this latter case the
+crossed plants still possessed an inherent advantage, for after both
+lots had grown to their full height they were cut down, and without
+being disturbed were transferred to a larger pot, and when in the
+ensuing year they had again grown to their full height they were
+measured; and now the tallest crossed plants were to the tallest
+self-fertilised plants in height as 100 to 75, and in fertility (i.e.,
+by weight of seeds produced by an equal number of capsules from both
+lots) as 100 to 34.
+
+My usual method of proceeding, namely, to plant several pairs of crossed
+and self-fertilised seeds in an equal state of germination on the
+opposite sides of the same pots, so that the plants were subjected to
+moderately severe mutual competition, was I think the best that could
+have been followed, and was a fair test of what occurs in a state of
+nature. For plants sown by nature generally come up crowded, and are
+almost always exposed to very severe competition with one another and
+with other kinds of plants. This latter consideration led me to make
+some trials, chiefly but not exclusively with Ipomoea and Mimulus, by
+sowing crossed and self-fertilised seeds on the opposite sides of large
+pots in which other plants had long been growing, or in the midst of
+other plants out of doors. The seedlings were thus subjected to very
+severe competition with plants of other kinds; and in all such cases,
+the crossed seedlings exhibited a great superiority in their power of
+growth over the self-fertilised.
+
+After the germinating seedlings had been planted in pairs on the
+opposite sides of several pots, the remaining seeds, whether or not in a
+state of germination, were in most cases sown very thickly on the two
+sides of an additional large pot; so that the seedlings came up
+extremely crowded, and were subjected to extremely severe competition
+and unfavourable conditions. In such cases the crossed plants almost
+invariably showed a greater superiority over the self-fertilised, than
+did the plants which grew in pairs in the pots.
+
+Sometimes crossed and self-fertilised seeds were sown in separate rows
+in the open ground, which was kept clear of weeds; so that the seedlings
+were not subjected to any competition with other kinds of plants. Those
+however in each row had to struggle with the adjoining ones in the same
+row. When fully grown, several of the tallest plants in each row were
+selected, measured, and compared. The result was in several cases (but
+not so invariably as might have been expected) that the crossed plants
+did not exceed in height the self-fertilised in nearly so great a degree
+as when grown in pairs in the pots. Thus with the plants of Digitalis,
+which competed together in pots, the crossed were to the self-fertilised
+in height as 100 to 70; whilst those which were grown separately were
+only as 100 to 85. Nearly the same result was observed with Brassica.
+With Nicotiana the crossed were to the self-fertilised plants in height,
+when grown extremely crowded together in pots, as 100 to 54; when grown
+much less crowded in pots as 100 to 66, and when grow in the open
+ground, so as to be subjected to but little competition, as 100 to 72.
+On the other hand with Zea, there was a greater difference in height
+between the crossed and self-fertilised plants growing out of doors,
+than between the pairs which grew in pots in the hothouse; but this may
+be attributed to the self-fertilised plants being more tender, so that
+they suffered more than the crossed, when both lots were exposed to a
+cold and wet summer. Lastly, with one out of two series of Reseda
+odorata, grown out of doors in rows, as well as with Beta vulgaris, the
+crossed plants did not at all exceed the self-fertilised in height, or
+exceeded them by a mere trifle.
+
+The innate power of the crossed plants to resist unfavourable conditions
+far better than did the self-fertilised plants, was shown on two
+occasions in a curious manner, namely, with Iberis and in the third
+generation of Petunia, by the great superiority in height of the crossed
+over the self-fertilised seedlings, when both sets were grown under
+extremely unfavourable conditions; whereas owing to special
+circumstances exactly the reverse occurred with the plants raised from
+the same seeds and grown in pairs in pots. A nearly analogous case was
+observed on two other occasions with plants of the first generation of
+Nicotiana.
+
+The crossed plants always withstood the injurious effects of being
+suddenly removed into the open air after having been kept in the
+greenhouse better than did the self-fertilised. On several occasions
+they also resisted much better cold and intemperate weather. This was
+manifestly the case with some crossed and self-fertilised plants of
+Ipomoea, which were suddenly moved from the hothouse to the coldest part
+of a cool greenhouse. The offspring of plants of the eighth
+self-fertilised generation of Mimulus crossed by a fresh stock, survived
+a frost which killed every single self-fertilised and intercrossed plant
+of the same old stock. Nearly the same result followed with some crossed
+and self-fertilised plants of Viola tricolor. Even the tips of the
+shoots of the crossed plants of Sarothamnus scoparius were not touched
+by a very severe winter; whereas all the self-fertilised plants were
+killed halfway down to the ground, so that they were not able to flower
+during the next summer. Young crossed seedlings of Nicotiana withstood a
+cold and wet summer much better than the self-fertilised seedlings. I
+have met with only one exception to the rule of crossed plants being
+hardier than the self-fertilised: three long rows of Eschscholtzia
+plants, consisting of crossed seedlings from a fresh stock, of
+intercrossed seedlings of the same stock, and of self-fertilised ones,
+were left unprotected during a severe winter, and all perished except
+two of the self-fertilised. But this case is not so anomalous as it at
+first appears, for it should be remembered that the self-fertilised
+plants of Eschscholtzia always grow taller and are heavier than the
+crossed; the whole benefit of a cross with this species being confined
+to increased fertility.
+
+Independently of any external cause which could be detected, the
+self-fertilised plants were more liable to premature death than were the
+crossed; and this seems to me a curious fact. Whilst the seedlings were
+very young, if one died its antagonist was pulled up and thrown away,
+and I believe that many more of the self-fertilised died at this early
+age than of the crossed; but I neglected to keep any record. With Beta
+vulgaris, however, it is certain that a large number of the
+self-fertilised seeds perished after germinating beneath the ground,
+whereas the crossed seeds sown at the same time did not thus suffer.
+When a plant died at a somewhat more advanced age the fact was recorded;
+and I find in my notes that out of several hundred plants, only seven of
+the crossed died, whilst of the self-fertilised at least twenty-nine
+were thus lost, that is more than four times as many. Mr. Galton, after
+examining some of my tables, remarks: "It is very evident that the
+columns with the self-fertilised plants include the larger number of
+exceptionally small plants;" and the frequent presence of such puny
+plants no doubt stands in close relation with their liability to
+premature death. The self-fertilised plants of Petunia completed their
+growth and began to wither sooner than did the intercrossed plants; and
+these latter considerably before the offspring from a cross with a fresh
+stock.
+
+PERIOD OF FLOWERING.
+
+In some cases, as with Digitalis, Dianthus, and Reseda, a larger number
+of the crossed than of the self-fertilised plants threw up flower-stems;
+but this probably was merely the result of their greater power of
+growth; for in the first generation of Lobelia fulgens, in which the
+self-fertilised plants greatly exceeded in height the crossed plants,
+some of the latter failed to throw up flower-stems. With a large number
+of species, the crossed plants exhibited a well-marked tendency to
+flower before the self-fertilised ones growing in the same pots. It
+should however be remarked that no record was kept of the flowering of
+many of the species; and when a record was kept, the flowering of the
+first plant in each pot was alone observed, although two or more pairs
+grew in the same pot. I will now give three lists,--one of the species
+in which the first plant that flowered was a crossed one,--a second in
+which the first that flowered was a self-fertilised plant,--and a third
+of those which flowered at the same time.
+
+[SPECIES, OF WHICH THE FIRST PLANTS THAT FLOWERED WERE OF CROSSED
+PARENTAGE.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea.
+
+I record in my notes that in all ten generations many of the crossed
+plants flowered before the self-fertilised; but no details were kept.
+
+Mimulus luteus (First Generation).
+
+Ten flowers on the crossed plants were fully expanded before one on the
+self-fertilised.
+
+Mimulus luteus (Second and Third Generation).
+
+In both these generations a crossed plant flowered before one of the
+self-fertilised in all three pots.
+
+Mimulus luteus (Fifth Generation).
+
+In all three pots a crossed plant flowered first; yet the
+self-fertilised plants, which belonged to the new tall variety, were in
+height to the crossed as 126 to 100.
+
+Mimulus luteus.
+
+Plants derived from a cross with a fresh stock as well as the
+intercrossed plants of the old stock, flowered before the
+self-fertilised plants in nine out of the ten pots.
+
+Salvia coccinea.
+
+A crossed plant flowered before any one of the self-fertilised in all
+three pots.
+
+Origanum vulgare.
+
+During two successive seasons several crossed plants flowered before the
+self-fertilised.
+
+Brassica oleracea (First Generation).
+
+All the crossed plants growing in pots and in the open ground flowered
+first.
+
+Brassica oleracea (Second Generation).
+
+A crossed plant in three out of the four pots flowered before any one of
+the self-fertilised.
+
+Iberis umbellata.
+
+In both pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica.
+
+Plants derived from the Brazilian stock crossed by the English stock
+flowered in five out of the nine pots first; in four of them a
+self-fertilised plant flowered first; and not in one pot did an
+intercrossed plant of the old stock flower first.
+
+Viola tricolor.
+
+A crossed plant in five out of the six pots flowered before any one of
+the self-fertilised.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus (First Generation).
+
+In two large beds of plants, four of the crossed plants flowered before
+any one of the self-fertilised.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus (Second Generation).
+
+In both pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus (Third Generation).
+
+In three out of the four pots a crossed plant flowered first; yet the
+crossed were to the self-fertilised in height only as 100 to 99, but in
+weight as 100 to 49.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus.
+
+Plants derived from a cross with a fresh stock, and the intercrossed
+plants of the old stock, both flowered before the self-fertilised in
+nine out of the ten pots.
+
+Hibiscus africanus.
+
+In three out of the four pots a crossed plant flowered before any one of
+the self-fertilised; yet the latter were to the crossed in height as 109
+to 100.
+
+Tropaeolum minus.
+
+A crossed plant flowered before any one of the self-fertilised in three
+out of the four pots, and simultaneously in the fourth pot.
+
+Limnanthes douglasii.
+
+A crossed plant flowered before any one of the self-fertilised in four
+out of the five pots.
+
+Phaseolus multiflorus.
+
+In both pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+
+Specularia speculum.
+
+In all four pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+
+Lobelia ramosa (First Generation).
+
+In all four pots a crossed plant flowered before any one of the
+self-fertilised.
+
+Lobelia ramosa (Second Generation).
+
+In all four pots a crossed plant flowered some days before any one of
+the self-fertilised.
+
+Nemophila insignis.
+
+In four out of the five pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+
+Borago officinalis.
+
+In both pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+
+Petunia violacea (Second Generation).
+
+In all three pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum.
+
+A plant derived from a cross with a fresh stock flowered before any one
+of the self-fertilised plants of the fourth generation, in fifteen out
+of the sixteen pots.
+
+Cyclamen persicum.
+
+During two successive seasons a crossed plant flowered some weeks before
+any one of the self-fertilised in all four pots.
+
+Primula veris (equal-styled var.)
+
+In all three pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+
+Primula sinensis.
+
+In all four pots plants derived from an illegitimate cross between
+distinct plants flowered before any one of the self-fertilised plants.
+
+Primula sinensis.
+
+A legitimately crossed plant flowered before any one of the
+self-fertilised plants in seven out of the eight pots.
+
+Fagopyrum esculentum.
+
+A legitimately crossed plant flowered from one to two days before any
+one of the self-fertilised plants in all three pots.
+
+Zea mays.
+
+In all four pots a crossed plant flowered first.
+
+Phalaris canariensis.
+
+The crossed plants flowered before the self-fertilised in the open
+ground, but simultaneously in the pots.
+
+SPECIES OF WHICH THE FIRST PLANTS THAT FLOWERED WERE OF SELF-FERTILISED
+PARENTAGE.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica (First Generation).
+
+The crossed plants were at first taller than the self-fertilised, but on
+their second growth during the following year the self-fertilised
+exceeded the crossed in height, and now they flowered first in three out
+of the four pots.
+
+Lupinus luteus.
+
+Although the crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height as 100
+to 82; yet in all three pots the self-fertilised plants flowered first.
+
+Clarkia elegans.
+
+Although the crossed plants were, as in the last case, to the
+self-fertilised in height as 100 to 82, yet in the two pots the
+self-fertilised flowered first.
+
+Lobelia fulgens (First Generation).
+
+The crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height only as 100 to
+127, and the latter flowered much before the crossed.
+
+Petunia violacea (Third Generation).
+
+The crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height as 100 to 131,
+and in three out of the four pots a self-fertilised plant flowered
+first; in the fourth pot simultaneously.
+
+Petunia violacea (Fourth generation).
+
+Although the crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height as 100
+to 69, yet in three out of the five pots a self-fertilised plant
+flowered first; in the fourth pot simultaneously, and only in the fifth
+did a crossed plant flower first.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum (First Generation).
+
+The crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height only as 100 to
+178, and a self-fertilised plant flowered first in all four pots.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum (Third Generation).
+
+The crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height as 100 to 101,
+and in four out of the five pots a self-fertilised plant flowered first.
+
+Canna warscewiczi.
+
+In the three generations taken together the crossed were to the
+self-fertilised in height as 100 to 101; in the first generation the
+self-fertilised plants showed some tendency to flower first, and in the
+third generation they flowered first in nine out of the twelve pots.
+
+SPECIES IN WHICH THE CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS FLOWERED ALMOST
+SIMULTANEOUSLY.
+
+Mimulus luteus (Sixth Generation).
+
+The crossed plants were inferior in height and vigour to the
+self-fertilised plants, which all belonged to the new white-flowered
+tall variety, yet in only half the pots did the self-fertilised plants
+flower first, and in the other half the crossed plants.
+
+Viscaria oculata.
+
+The crossed plants were only a little taller than the self-fertilised
+(namely, as 100 to 97), but considerably more fertile, yet both lots
+flowered almost simultaneously.
+
+Lathyrus odoratus (Second Generation).
+
+Although the crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height as 100
+to 88, yet there was no marked difference in their period of flowering.
+
+Lobelia fulgens (Second Generation).
+
+Although the crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height as 100
+to 91, yet they flowered simultaneously.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum (Third Generation).
+
+Although the crossed plants were to the self-fertilised in height as 100
+to 83, yet in half the pots a self-fertilised plant flowered first, and
+in the other half a crossed plant.]
+
+These three lists include fifty-eight cases, in which the period of
+flowering of the crossed and self-fertilised plants was recorded. In
+forty-four of them a crossed plant flowered first either in a majority
+of the pots or in all; in nine instances a self-fertilised plant
+flowered first, and in five the two lots flowered simultaneously. One of
+the most striking cases is that of Cyclamen, in which the crossed plants
+flowered some weeks before the self-fertilised in all four pots during
+two seasons. In the second generation of Lobelia ramosa, a crossed plant
+flowered in all four pots some days before any one of the
+self-fertilised. Plants derived from a cross with a fresh stock
+generally showed a very strongly marked tendency to flower before the
+self-fertilised and the intercrossed plants of the old stock; all three
+lots growing in the same pots. Thus with Mimulus and Dianthus, in only
+one pot out of ten, and in Nicotiana in only one pot out of sixteen, did
+a self-fertilised plant flower before the plants of the two crossed
+kinds,--these latter flowering almost simultaneously.
+
+A consideration of the two first lists, especially of the second one,
+shows that a tendency to flower first is generally connected with
+greater power of growth, that is, with greater height. But there are
+some remarkable exceptions to this rule, proving that some other cause
+comes into play. Thus the crossed plants both of Lupinus luteus and
+Clarkia elegans were to the self-fertilised plants in height as 100 to
+82, and yet the latter flowered first. In the third generation of
+Nicotiana, and in all three generations of Canna, the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants were of nearly equal height, yet the
+self-fertilised tended to flower first. On the other hand, with Primula
+sinensis, plants raised from a cross between two distinct individuals,
+whether these were legitimately or illegitimately crossed, flowered
+before the illegitimately self-fertilised plants, although all the
+plants were of nearly equal height in both cases. So it was with respect
+to height and flowering with Phaseolus, Specularia, and Borago. The
+crossed plants of Hibiscus were inferior in height to the
+self-fertilised, in the ratio of 100 to 109, and yet they flowered
+before the self-fertilised in three out of the four pots. On the whole,
+there can be no doubt that the crossed plants exhibit a tendency to
+flower before the self-fertilised, almost though not quite so strongly
+marked as to grow to a greater height, to weigh more, and to be more
+fertile.
+
+A few other cases not included in the above three lists deserve notice.
+In all three pots of Viola tricolor, naturally crossed plants the
+offspring of crossed plants flowered before naturally crossed plants the
+offspring of self-fertilised plants. Flowers on two plants, both of
+self-fertilised parentage, of the sixth generation of Mimulus luteus
+were intercrossed, and other flowers on the same plants were fertilised
+with their own pollen; intercrossed seedlings and seedlings of the
+seventh self-fertilised generation were thus raised, and the latter
+flowered before the intercrossed in three out of the five pots. Flowers
+on a plant both of Mimulus luteus and of Ipomoea purpurea were crossed
+with pollen from other flowers on the same plant, and other flowers were
+fertilised with their own pollen; intercrossed seedlings of this
+peculiar kind, and others strictly self-fertilised being thus raised. In
+the case of the Mimulus the self-fertilised plants flowered first in
+seven out of the eight pots, and in the case of the Ipomoea in eight out
+of the ten pots; so that an intercross between the flowers on the same
+plant was very far from giving to the offspring thus raised, any
+advantage over the strictly self-fertilised plants in their period of
+flowering.
+
+EFFECTS OF CROSSING FLOWERS ON THE SAME PLANT.
+
+In the discussion on the results of a cross with a fresh stock, given
+under Table 7/C in the last chapter, it was shown that the mere act of
+crossing by itself does no good; but that the advantages thus derived
+depend on the plants which are crossed, either consisting of distinct
+varieties which will almost certainly differ somewhat in constitution,
+or on the progenitors of the plants which are crossed, though identical
+in every external character, having been subjected to somewhat different
+conditions and having thus acquired some slight difference in
+constitution. All the flowers produced by the same plant have been
+developed from the same seed; those which expand at the same time have
+been exposed to exactly the same climatic influences; and the stems have
+all been nourished by the same roots. Therefore in accordance with the
+conclusion just referred to, no good ought to result from crossing
+flowers on the same plant. (8/1. It is, however, possible that the
+stamens which differ in length or construction in the same flower may
+produce pollen differing in nature, and in this manner a cross might be
+made effective between the several flowers on the same plant. Mr. Macnab
+states in a communication to M. Verlot 'La Production des Varietes' 1865
+page 42, that seedlings raised from the shorter and longer stamens of
+rhododendron differ in character; but the shorter stamens apparently are
+becoming rudimentary, and the seedlings are dwarfs, so that the result
+may be simply due to a want of fertilising power in the pollen, as in
+the case of the dwarfed plants of Mirabilis raised by Naudin by the use
+of too few pollen-grains. Analogous statements have been made with
+respect to the stamens of Pelargonium. With some of the Melastomaceae,
+seedlings raised by me from flowers fertilised by pollen from the
+shorter stamens, certainly differed in appearance from those raised from
+the longer stamens, with differently coloured anthers; but here, again,
+there is some reason for believing that the shorter stamens are tending
+towards abortion. In the very different case of trimorphic heterostyled
+plants, the two sets of stamens in the same flower have widely different
+fertilising powers.) In opposition to this conclusion is the fact that a
+bud is in one sense a distinct individual, and is capable of
+occasionally or even not rarely assuming new external characters, as
+well as new constitutional peculiarities. Plants raised from buds which
+have thus varied may be propagated for a great length of time by grafts,
+cuttings, etc., and sometimes even by seminal generation. (8/2. I have
+given numerous cases of such bud-variations in my 'Variation of Animals
+and Plants under Domestication' chapter 11 2nd edition volume 1 page
+448.) There exist also numerous species in which the flowers on the same
+plant differ from one another,--as in the sexual organs of monoecious
+and polygamous plants,--in the structure of the circumferential flowers
+in many Compositae, Umbelliferae, etc.,--in the structure of the central
+flower in some plants,--in the two kinds of flowers produced by
+cleistogene species,--and in several other such cases. These instances
+clearly prove that the flowers on the same plant have often varied
+independently of one another in many important respects, such variations
+having been fixed, like those on distinct plants during the development
+of species.
+
+It was therefore necessary to ascertain by experiment what would be the
+effect of intercrossing flowers on the same plant, in comparison with
+fertilising them with their own pollen or crossing them with pollen from
+a distinct plant. Trials were carefully made on five genera belonging to
+four families; and in only one case, namely, Digitalis, did the
+offspring from a cross between the flowers on the same plant receive any
+benefit, and the benefit here was small compared with that derived from
+a cross between distinct plants. In the chapter on Fertility, when we
+consider the effects of cross-fertilisation and self-fertilisation on
+the productiveness of the parent-plants we shall arrive at nearly the
+same result, namely, that a cross between the flowers on the same plant
+does not at all increase the number of the seeds, or only occasionally
+and to a slight degree. I will now give an abstract of the results of
+the five trials which were made.
+
+1. Digitalis purpurea.
+
+Seedlings raised from intercrossed flowers on the same plant, and others
+from flowers fertilised with their own pollen, were grown in the usual
+manner in competition with one another on the opposite sides of ten
+pots. In this and the four following cases, the details may be found
+under the head of each species. In eight pots, in which the plants did
+not grow much crowded, the flower-stems on sixteen intercrossed plants
+were in height to those on sixteen self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 94.
+In the two other pots on which the plants grew much crowded, the
+flower-stems on nine intercrossed plants were in height to those on nine
+self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 90. That the intercrossed plants in
+these two latter pots had a real advantage over their self-fertilised
+opponents, was well shown by their relative weights when cut down, which
+was as 100 to 78. The mean height of the flower-stems on the twenty-five
+intercrossed plants in the ten pots taken together, was to that of the
+flower-stems on the twenty-five self-fertilised plants, as 100 to 92.
+Thus the intercrossed plants were certainly superior to the
+self-fertilised in some degree; but their superiority was small compared
+with that of the offspring from a cross between distinct plants over the
+self-fertilised, this being in the ratio of 100 to 70 in height. Nor
+does this latter ratio show at all fairly the great superiority of the
+plants derived from a cross between distinct individuals over the
+self-fertilised, as the former produced more than twice as many
+flower-stems as the latter, and were much less liable to premature
+death.
+
+2. Ipomoea purpurea.
+
+Thirty-one intercrossed plants raised from a cross between flowers on
+the same plants were grown in ten pots in competition with the same
+number of self-fertilised plants, and the former were to the latter in
+height as 100 to 105. So that the self-fertilised plants were a little
+taller than the intercrossed; and in eight out of the ten pots a
+self-fertilised plant flowered before any one of the crossed plants in
+the same pots. The plants which were not greatly crowded in nine of the
+pots (and these offer the fairest standard of comparison) were cut down
+and weighed; and the weight of the twenty-seven intercrossed plants was
+to that of the twenty-seven self-fertilised as 100 to 124; so that by
+this test the superiority of the self-fertilised was strongly marked. To
+this subject of the superiority of the self-fertilised plants in certain
+cases, I shall have to recur in a future chapter. If we now turn to the
+offspring from a cross between distinct plants when put into competition
+with self-fertilised plants, we find that the mean height of
+seventy-three such crossed plants, in the course of ten generations, was
+to that of the same number of self-fertilised plants as 100 to 77; and
+in the case of the plants of the tenth generation in weight as 100 to
+44. Thus the contrast between the effects of crossing flowers on the
+same plant, and of crossing flowers on distinct plants, is wonderfully
+great.
+
+3. Mimulus luteus.
+
+Twenty-two plants raised by crossing flowers on the same plant were
+grown in competition with the same number of self-fertilised plants; and
+the former were to the latter in height as 100 to 105, and in weight as
+100 to 103. Moreover, in seven out of the eight pots a self-fertilised
+plant flowered before any of the intercrossed plants. So that here again
+the self-fertilised exhibit a slight superiority over the intercrossed
+plants. For the sake of comparison, I may add that seedlings raised
+during three generations from a cross between distinct plants were to
+the self-fertilised plants in height as 100 to 65.
+
+4. Pelargonium zonale.
+
+Two plants growing in separate pots, which had been propagated by
+cuttings from the same plant, and therefore formed in fact parts of the
+same individual, were intercrossed, and other flowers on one of these
+plants were self-fertilised; but the seedlings obtained by the two
+processes did not differ in height. When, on the other hand, flowers on
+one of the above plants were crossed with pollen taken from a distinct
+seedling, and other flowers were self-fertilised, the crossed offspring
+thus obtained were to the self-fertilised in height as 100 to 74.
+
+5. Origanum vulgare.
+
+A plant which had been long cultivated in my kitchen garden, had spread
+by stolons so as to form a large bed or clump. Seedlings raised by
+intercrossing flowers on these plants, which strictly consisted of the
+same plant, and other seedlings raised from self-fertilised flowers,
+were carefully compared from their earliest youth to maturity; and they
+did not differ at all in height or in constitutional vigour. Some
+flowers on these seedlings were then crossed with pollen taken from a
+distinct seedling, and other flowers were self-fertilised; two fresh
+lots of seedlings being thus raised, which were the grandchildren of the
+plant that had spread by stolons and formed a large clump in my garden.
+These differed much in height, the crossed plants being to the
+self-fertilised as 100 to 86. They differed, also, to a wonderful degree
+in constitutional vigour. The crossed plants flowered first, and
+produced exactly twice as many flower-stems; and they afterwards
+increased by stolons to such an extent as almost to overwhelm the
+self-fertilised plants.
+
+Reviewing these five cases, we see that in four of them, the effect of a
+cross between flowers on the same plant (even on offsets of the same
+plant growing on separate roots, as with the Pelargonium and Origanum)
+does not differ from that of the strictest self-fertilisation. Indeed,
+in two of the cases the self-fertilised plants were superior to such
+intercrossed plants. With Digitalis a cross between the flowers on the
+same plant certainly did do some good, yet very slight compared with
+that from a cross between distinct plants. On the whole the results here
+arrived at, if we bear in mind that the flower-buds are to a certain
+extent distinct individuals and occasionally vary independently of one
+another, agree well with our general conclusion, that the advantages of
+a cross depend on the progenitors of the crossed plants possessing
+somewhat different constitutions, either from having been exposed to
+different conditions, or to their having varied from unknown causes in a
+manner which we in our ignorance are forced to speak of as spontaneous.
+Hereafter I shall have to recur to this subject of the inefficiency of a
+cross between the flowers on the same plant, when we consider the part
+which insects play in the cross-fertilisation of flowers.
+
+ON THE TRANSMISSION OF THE GOOD EFFECTS FROM A CROSS AND OF THE EVIL
+EFFECTS FROM SELF-FERTILISATION.
+
+We have seen that seedlings from a cross between distinct plants almost
+always exceed their self-fertilised opponents in height, weight, and
+constitutional vigour, and, as will hereafter be shown, often in
+fertility. To ascertain whether this superiority would be transmitted
+beyond the first generation, seedlings were raised on three occasions
+from crossed and self-fertilised plants, both sets being fertilised in
+the same manner, and therefore not as in the many cases given in Tables
+7/A, 7/B, 7/C, in which the crossed plants were again crossed and the
+self-fertilised again self-fertilised.
+
+Firstly, seedlings were raised from self-fertilised seeds produced under
+a net by crossed and self-fertilised plants of Nemophila insignis; and
+the latter were to the former in height as 133 to 100. But these
+seedlings became very unhealthy early in life, and grew so unequally
+that some of them in both lots were five times as tall as the others.
+Therefore this experiment was quite worthless; but I have felt bound to
+give it, as opposed to my general conclusion. I should state that in
+this and the two following trials, both sets of plants were grown on the
+opposite sides of the same pots, and treated in all respects alike. The
+details of the experiments may be found under the head of each species.
+
+Secondly, a crossed and a self-fertilised plant of Heartsease (Viola
+tricolor) grew near together in the open ground and near to other plants
+of heartsease; and as both produced an abundance of very fine capsules,
+the flowers on both were certainly cross-fertilised by insects. Seeds
+were collected from both plants, and seedlings raised from them. Those
+from the crossed plants flowered in all three pots before those from the
+self-fertilised plants; and when fully grown the former were to the
+latter in height as 100 to 82. As both sets of plants were the product
+of cross-fertilisation, the difference in their growth and period of
+flowering was clearly due to their parents having been of crossed and
+self-fertilised parentage; and it is equally clear that they transmitted
+different constitutional powers to their offspring, the grandchildren of
+the plants which were originally crossed and self-fertilised.
+
+Thirdly, the Sweet Pea (Lathyrus odoratus) habitually fertilises itself
+in this country. As I possessed plants, the parents and grandparents of
+which had been artificially crossed and other plants descended from the
+same parents which had been self-fertilised for many previous
+generations, these two lots of plants were allowed to fertilise
+themselves under a net, and their self-fertilised seeds saved. The
+seedlings thus raised were grown in competition with each other in the
+usual manner, and differed in their powers of growth. Those from the
+self-fertilised plants which had been crossed during the two previous
+generations were to those from the plants self-fertilised during many
+previous generations in height as 100 to 90. These two lots of seeds
+were likewise tried by being sown under very unfavourable conditions in
+poor exhausted soil, and the plants whose grandparents and
+great-grandparents had been crossed showed in an unmistakable manner
+their superior constitutional vigour. In this case, as in that of the
+heartsease, there could be no doubt that the advantage derived from a
+cross between two plants was not confined to the offspring of the first
+generation. That constitutional vigour due to cross-parentage is
+transmitted for many generations may also be inferred as highly
+probable, from some of Andrew Knight's varieties of the common pea,
+which were raised by crossing distinct varieties, after which time they
+no doubt fertilised themselves in each succeeding generation. These
+varieties lasted for upwards of sixty years, "but their glory is now
+departed." (8/3. See the evidence on this head in my 'Variation under
+Domestication' chapter 9 volume 1 2nd edition page 397.) On the other
+hand, most of the varieties of the common pea, which there is no reason
+to suppose owe their origin to a cross, have had a much shorter
+existence. Some also of Mr. Laxton's varieties produced by artificial
+crosses have retained their astonishing vigour and luxuriance for a
+considerable number of generations; but as Mr. Laxton informs me, his
+experience does not extend beyond twelve generations, within which
+period he has never perceived any diminution of vigour in his plants.
+
+An allied point may be here noticed. As the force of inheritance is
+strong with plants (of which abundant evidence could be given), it is
+almost certain that seedlings from the same capsule or from the same
+plant would tend to inherit nearly the same constitution; and as the
+advantage from a cross depends on the plants which are crossed differing
+somewhat in constitution, it may be inferred as probable that under
+similar conditions a cross between the nearest relations would not
+benefit the offspring so much as one between non-related plants. In
+support of this conclusion we have some evidence, as Fritz Muller has
+shown by his valuable experiments on hybrid Abutilons, that the union of
+brothers and sisters, parents and children, and of other near relations
+is highly injurious to the fertility of the offspring. In one case,
+moreover, seedlings from such near relations possessed very weak
+constitutions. (8/4. 'Jenaische Zeitschrift fur Naturw.' B. 7 pages 22
+and 45 1872 and 1873 pages 441-450.) This same observer also found three
+plants of a Bignonia growing near together. (8/5. 'Botanische Zeitung'
+1868 page 626.) He fertilised twenty-nine flowers on one of them with
+their own pollen, and they did not set a single capsule. Thirty flowers
+were then fertilised with pollen from a distinct plant, one of the three
+growing together, and they yielded only two capsules. Lastly, five
+flowers were fertilised with pollen from a fourth plant growing at a
+distance, and all five produced capsules. It seems therefore probable,
+as Fritz Muller suggests, that the three plants growing near together
+were seedlings from the same parent, and that from being closely related
+they had little power of fertilising one another. (8/6. Some remarkable
+cases are given in my 'Variation under Domestication' chapter 17 2nd
+edition volume 2 page 121, of hybrids of Gladiolus and Cistus, any one
+of which could be fertilised by pollen from any other, but not by its
+own pollen.)
+
+Lastly, the fact of the intercrossed plants in Table 7/A not exceeding
+in height the self-fertilised plants in a greater and greater degree in
+the later generations, is probably the result of their having become
+more and more closely inter-related.
+
+UNIFORM COLOUR OF THE FLOWERS ON PLANTS, SELF-FERTILISED AND GROWN UNDER
+SIMILAR CONDITIONS FOR SEVERAL GENERATIONS.
+
+At the commencement of my experiments, the parent-plants of Mimulus
+luteus, Ipomoea purpurea, Dianthus caryophyllus, and Petunia violacea,
+raised from purchased seeds, varied greatly in the colour of their
+flowers. This occurs with many plants which have been long cultivated as
+an ornament for the flower-garden, and which have been propagated by
+seeds. The colour of the flowers was a point to which I did not at first
+in the least attend, and no selection whatever was practised.
+Nevertheless, the flowers produced by the self-fertilised plants of the
+above four species became absolutely uniform in tint, or very nearly so,
+after they had been grown for some generations under closely similar
+conditions. The intercrossed plants, which were more or less closely
+inter-related in the later generations, and which had been likewise
+cultivated all the time under similar conditions, became more uniform in
+the colour of their flowers than were the original parent-plants, but
+much less so than the self-fertilised plants. When self-fertilised
+plants of one of the later generations were crossed with a fresh stock,
+and seedlings thus raised, these presented a wonderful contrast in the
+diversified tints of their flowers compared with those of the
+self-fertilised seedlings. As such cases of flowers becoming uniformly
+coloured without any aid from selection seem to me curious, I will give
+a full abstract of my observations.
+
+Mimulus luteus.
+
+A tall variety, bearing large, almost white flowers blotched with
+crimson, appeared amongst the intercrossed and self-fertilised plants of
+the third and fourth generations. This variety increased so rapidly,
+that in the sixth generation of self-fertilised plants every single one
+consisted of it. So it was with all the many plants which were raised,
+up to the last or ninth self-fertilised generation. Although this
+variety first appeared amongst the intercrossed plants, yet from their
+offspring being intercrossed in each succeeding generation, it never
+prevailed amongst them; and the flowers on the several intercrossed
+plants of the ninth generation differed considerably in colour. On the
+other hand, the uniformity in colour of the flowers on the plants of all
+the later self-fertilised generations was quite surprising; on a casual
+inspection they might have been said to be quite alike, but the crimson
+blotches were not of exactly the same shape, or in exactly the same
+position. Both my gardener and myself believe that this variety did not
+appear amongst the parent-plants, raised from purchased seeds, but from
+its appearance amongst both the crossed and self-fertilised plants of
+the third and fourth generations; and from what I have seen of the
+variation of this species on other occasions, it is probable that it
+would occasionally appear under any circumstances. We learn, however,
+from the present case that under the peculiar conditions to which my
+plants were subjected, this particular variety, remarkable for its
+colouring, largeness of the corolla, and increased height of the whole
+plant, prevailed in the sixth and all the succeeding self-fertilised
+generations to the complete exclusion of every other variety.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea.
+
+My attention was first drawn to the present subject by observing that
+the flowers on all the plants of the seventh self-fertilised generation
+were of a uniform, remarkably rich, dark purple tint. The many plants
+which were raised during the three succeeding generations, up to the
+last or tenth, all produced flowers coloured in the same manner. They
+were absolutely uniform in tint, like those of a constant species living
+in a state of nature; and the self-fertilised plants might have been
+distinguished with certainty, as my gardener remarked, without the aid
+of labels, from the intercrossed plants of the later generations. These,
+however, had more uniformly coloured flowers than those which were first
+raised from the purchased seeds. This dark purple variety did not
+appear, as far as my gardener and myself could recollect, before the
+fifth or sixth self-fertilised generation. However this may have been,
+it became, through continued self-fertilisation and the cultivation of
+the plants under uniform conditions, perfectly constant, to the
+exclusion of every other variety.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus.
+
+The self-fertilised plants of the third generation all bore flowers of
+exactly the same pale rose-colour; and in this respect they differed
+quite remarkably from the plants growing in a large bed close by and
+raised from seeds purchased from the same nursery garden. In this case
+it is not improbable that some of the parent-plants which were first
+self-fertilised may have borne flowers thus coloured; but as several
+plants were self-fertilised in the first generation, it is extremely
+improbable that all bore flowers of exactly the same tint as those of
+the self-fertilised plants of the third generation. The intercrossed
+plants of the third generation likewise produced flowers almost, though
+not quite so uniform in tint as those of the self-fertilised plants.
+
+Petunia violacea.
+
+In this case I happened to record in my notes that the flowers on the
+parent-plant which was first self-fertilised were of a "dingy purple
+colour." In the fifth self-fertilised generation, every one of the
+twenty-one self-fertilised plants growing in pots, and all the many
+plants in a long row out of doors, produced flowers of absolutely the
+same tint, namely, of a dull, rather peculiar and ugly flesh colour;
+therefore, considerably unlike those on the parent-plant. I believe that
+this change of colour supervened quite gradually; but I kept no record,
+as the point did not interest me until I was struck with the uniform
+tint of the flowers on the self-fertilised plants of the fifth
+generation. The flowers on the intercrossed plants of the corresponding
+generation were mostly of the same dull flesh colour, but not nearly so
+uniform as those on the self-fertilised plants, some few being very
+pale, almost white. The self-fertilised plants which grew in a long row
+in the open ground were also remarkable for their uniformity in height,
+as were the intercrossed plants in a less degree, both lots being
+compared with a large number of plants raised at the same time under
+similar conditions from the self-fertilised plants of the fourth
+generation crossed by a fresh stock. I regret that I did not attend to
+the uniformity in height of the self-fertilised seedlings in the later
+generations of the other species.
+
+These few cases seem to me to possess much interest. We learn from them
+that new and slight shades of colour may be quickly and firmly fixed,
+independently of any selection, if the conditions are kept as nearly
+uniform as is possible, and no intercrossing be permitted. With Mimulus,
+not only a grotesque style of colouring, but a larger corolla and
+increased height of the whole plant were thus fixed; whereas with most
+plants which have been long cultivated for the flower-garden, no
+character is more variable than that of colour, excepting perhaps that
+of height. From the consideration of these cases we may infer that the
+variability of cultivated plants in the above respects is due, firstly,
+to their being subjected to somewhat diversified conditions, and,
+secondly, to their being often intercrossed, as would follow from the
+free access of insects. I do not see how this inference can be avoided,
+as when the above plants were cultivated for several generations under
+closely similar conditions, and were intercrossed in each generation,
+the colour of their flowers tended in some degree to change and to
+become uniform. When no intercrossing with other plants of the same
+stock was allowed,--that is, when the flowers were fertilised with their
+own pollen in each generation--their colour in the later generations
+became as uniform as that of plants growing in a state of nature,
+accompanied at least in one instance by much uniformity in the height of
+the plants. But in saying that the diversified tints of the flowers on
+cultivated plants treated in the ordinary manner are due to differences
+in the soil, climate, etc., to which they are exposed, I do not wish to
+imply that such variations are caused by these agencies in any more
+direct manner than that in which the most diversified illnesses, as
+colds, inflammation of the lungs or pleura, rheumatism, etc., may be
+said to be caused by exposure to cold. In both cases the constitution of
+the being which is acted on is of preponderant importance.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE EFFECTS OF CROSS-FERTILISATION AND SELF-FERTILISATION ON THE
+PRODUCTION OF SEEDS.
+
+Fertility of plants of crossed and self-fertilised parentage, both lots
+being fertilised in the same manner.
+Fertility of the parent-plants when first crossed and self-fertilised,
+and of their crossed and self-fertilised offspring when again crossed
+and self-fertilised.
+Comparison of the fertility of flowers fertilised with their own pollen
+and with that from other flowers on the same plant.
+Self-sterile plants.
+Causes of self-sterility.
+The appearance of highly self-fertile varieties.
+Self-fertilisation apparently in some respects beneficial, independently
+of the assured production of seeds.
+Relative weights and rates of germination of seeds from crossed and
+self-fertilised flowers.
+
+The present chapter is devoted to the Fertility of plants, as influenced
+by cross-fertilisation and self-fertilisation. The subject consists of
+two distinct branches; firstly, the relative productiveness or fertility
+of flowers crossed with pollen from a distinct plant and with their own
+pollen, as shown by the proportional number of capsules which they
+produce, together with the number of the contained seeds. Secondly, the
+degree of innate fertility or sterility of the seedlings raised from
+crossed and self-fertilised seeds; such seedlings being of the same age,
+grown under the same conditions, and fertilised in the same manner.
+These two branches of the subject correspond with the two which have to
+be considered by any one treating of hybrid plants; namely, in the first
+place the comparative productiveness of a species when fertilised with
+pollen from a distinct species and with its own pollen; and in the
+second place, the fertility of its hybrid offspring. These two classes
+of cases do not always run parallel; thus some plants, as Gartner has
+shown, can be crossed with great ease, but yield excessively sterile
+hybrids; while others are crossed with extreme difficulty, but yield
+fairly fertile hybrids.
+
+The natural order to follow in this chapter would have been first to
+consider the effects on the fertility of the parent-plants of crossing
+them, and of fertilising them with their own pollen; but as we have
+discussed in the two last chapters the relative height, weight, and
+constitutional vigour of crossed and self-fertilised plants--that is, of
+plants raised from crossed and self-fertilised seeds--it will be
+convenient here first to consider their relative fertility. The cases
+observed by me are given in Table 9/D, in which plants of crossed and
+self-fertilised parentage were left to fertilise themselves, being
+either crossed by insects or spontaneously self-fertilised. It should be
+observed that the results cannot be considered as fully trustworthy, for
+the fertility of a plant is a most variable element, depending on its
+age, health, nature of the soil, amount of water given, and temperature
+to which it is exposed. The number of the capsules produced and the
+number of the contained seeds, ought to have been ascertained on a large
+number of crossed and self-fertilised plants of the same age and treated
+in every respect alike. In these two latter respects my observations may
+be trusted, but a sufficient number of capsules were counted only in a
+few instances. The fertility, or as it may perhaps better be called the
+productiveness, of a plant depends on the number of capsules produced,
+and on the number of seeds which these contain. But from various causes,
+chiefly from the want of time, I was often compelled to rely on the
+number of the capsules alone. Nevertheless, in the more interesting
+cases, the seeds were also counted or weighed. The average number of
+seeds per capsule is a more valuable criterion of fertility than the
+number of capsules produced. This latter circumstance depends partly on
+the size of the plant; and we know that crossed plants are generally
+taller and heavier than the self-fertilised; but the difference in this
+respect is rarely sufficient to account for the difference in the number
+of the capsules produced. It need hardly be added that in Table 9/D the
+same number of crossed and self-fertilised plants are always compared.
+Subject to the foregoing sources of doubt I will now give the table, in
+which the parentage of the plants experimented on, and the manner of
+determining their fertility are explained. Fuller details may be found
+in the previous part of this work, under the head of each species.
+
+TABLE 9/D.--RELATIVE FERTILITY OF PLANTS OF CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED
+PARENTAGE, BOTH SETS BEING FERTILISED IN THE SAME MANNER. FERTILITY
+JUDGED OF BY VARIOUS STANDARDS. THAT OF THE CROSSED PLANTS TAKEN AS 100.
+
+Column 1: Name of plant and feature observed.
+
+Column 2: x, in the expression, as 100 to x.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--first generation: seeds per capsule on crossed and
+self-fertilised plants, not growing much crowded, spontaneously
+self-fertilised under a net, in number: 99.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--seeds per capsule on crossed and self-fertilised
+plants from the same parents as in the last case, but growing much
+crowded, spontaneously self-fertilised under a net, in number: 93.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--productiveness of the same plants, as judged by the
+number of capsules produced, and average number of seeds per capsule:
+45.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--third generation: seeds per capsule on crossed and
+self-fertilised plants, spontaneously self-fertilised under a net, in
+number: 94.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--productiveness of the same plants, as judged by the
+number of capsules produced, and the average number of seeds per
+capsule: 35.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--fifth generation: seeds per capsule on crossed and
+self-fertilised plants, left uncovered in the hothouse, and
+spontaneously fertilised: 89.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--ninth generation: number of capsules on crossed plants
+to those on self-fertilised plants, spontaneously self-fertilised under
+a net: 26.
+
+Mimulus luteus--an equal number of capsules on plants descended from
+self-fertilised plants of the 8th generation crossed by a fresh stock,
+and on plants of the 9th self-fertilised generation, both sets having
+been left uncovered and spontaneously fertilised, contained seeds, by
+weight: 30.
+
+Mimulus luteus--productiveness of the same plants, as judged by the
+number of capsules produced, and the average weight of seeds per
+capsule: 3.
+
+Vandellia nummularifolia--seeds per capsule from cleistogene flowers on
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants, in number: 106.
+
+Salvia coccinea--crossed plants, compared with self-fertilised plants,
+produced flowers, in number: 57.
+
+Iberis umbellata--plants left uncovered in greenhouse; intercrossed
+plants of the 3rd generation, compared with self-fertilised plants of
+the 3rd generation, yielded seeds, in number: 75.
+
+Iberis umbellata--plants from a cross between two varieties, compared
+with self-fertilised plants of the 3rd generation, yielded seeds, by
+weight : 75.
+
+Papaver vagum--crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered,
+produced capsules, in number: 99.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--Brazilian stock; plants left uncovered and
+cross-fertilised by bees; capsules on intercrossed plants of the 2nd
+generation, compared with capsules on self-fertilised plants of 2nd
+generation, contained seeds, in number: 78.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--productiveness of the same plants, as judged
+by the number of capsules produced, and the average number of seeds per
+capsule: 89.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--plants left uncovered and cross-fertilised by
+bees; capsules on plants derived from intercrossed plants of the 2nd
+generation of the Brazilian stock crossed by English stock, compared
+with capsules on self-fertilised plants of 2nd generation, contained
+seeds, in number: 63.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--productiveness of the same plants, as judged
+by the number of capsules produced, and the average number of seeds per
+capsule: 40.
+
+Reseda odorata--crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered and
+cross-fertilised by bees; produced capsules in number (about): 100.
+
+Viola tricolor--crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered and
+cross-fertilised by bees, produced capsules in number: 10.
+
+Delphinium consolida--crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered
+in the greenhouse, produced capsules in number: 56.
+
+Viscaria oculata--crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered in
+the greenhouse, produced capsules in number: 77.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--plants spontaneously self-fertilised under a net;
+capsules on intercrossed and self-fertilised plants of the 3rd
+generation contained seeds in number: 125.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--plants left uncovered and cross-fertilised by
+insects: offspring from plants self-fertilised for three generations and
+then crossed by an intercrossed plant of the same stock, compared with
+plants of the 4th self-fertilised generation, produced seeds by weight:
+73.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--plants left uncovered and cross-fertilised by
+insects: offspring from plants self-fertilised for three generations and
+then crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of the 4th
+self-fertilised generation, produced seeds by weight: 33.
+
+Tropaeolum minus--crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered in
+the greenhouse, produced seeds in number: 64.
+
+Limnanthes douglasii--crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered
+in the greenhouse, produced capsules in number (about): 100.
+
+Lupinus luteus--crossed and self-fertilised plants of the 2nd
+generation, left uncovered in the greenhouse, produced seeds in number
+(judged from only a few pods): 88.
+
+Phaseolus multiflorus--crossed and self-fertilised plants, left
+uncovered in the greenhouse, produced seeds in number (about): 100.
+
+Lathyrus odoratus--crossed and self-fertilised plants of the 2nd
+generation, left uncovered in the greenhouse, but certainly
+self-fertilised, produced pods in number: 91.
+
+Clarkia elegans--crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered in
+the greenhouse, produced capsules in number: 60.
+
+Nemophila insignis--crossed and self-fertilised plants, covered by a net
+and spontaneously self-fertilised in the greenhouse, produced capsules
+in number: 29.
+
+Petunia violacea--left uncovered and cross-fertilised by insects: plants
+of the 5th intercrossed and self-fertilised generations produced seeds,
+as judged by the weight of an equal number of capsules: 86.
+
+Petunia violacea--left uncovered as above: offspring of plants
+self-fertilised for four generations and then crossed by a fresh stock,
+compared with plants of the 5th self-fertilised generation, produced
+seeds, as judged by the weight of an equal number of capsules: 46.
+
+Cyclamen persicum--crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered in
+the greenhouse, produced capsules in number: 12.
+
+Anagallis collina--crossed and self-fertilised plants, left uncovered in
+the greenhouse, produced capsules in number: 8.
+
+Primula veris--left uncovered in open ground and cross-fertilised by
+insects: offspring from plants of the 3rd illegitimate generation
+crossed by a fresh stock, compared with plants of the 4th illegitimate
+and self-fertilised generation, produced capsules in number: 5.
+
+Same plants in the following year: 3.5.
+
+Primula veris--(equal-styled variety): left uncovered in open ground and
+cross-fertilised by insects: offspring from plants self-fertilised for
+two generations and then crossed by another variety, compared with
+plants of the 3rd self-fertilised generation, produced capsules in
+number: 15.
+
+Primula veris--(equal-styled variety) same plants; average number of
+seeds per capsule: 71.
+
+Primula veris--(equal-styled variety) productiveness of the same plants,
+as judged by the number of capsules produced and the average number of
+seeds per capsule: 11.
+
+This table includes thirty-three cases relating to twenty-three species,
+and shows the degree of innate fertility of plants of crossed parentage
+in comparison with those of self-fertilised parentage; both lots being
+fertilised in the same manner. With several of the species, as with
+Eschscholtzia, Reseda, Viola, Dianthus, Petunia, and Primula, both lots
+were certainly cross-fertilised by insects, and so it probably was with
+several of the others; but in some of the species, as with Nemophila,
+and in some of the trials with Ipomoea and Dianthus, the plants were
+covered up, and both lots were spontaneously self-fertilised. This also
+was necessarily the case with the capsules produced by the cleistogene
+flowers of Vandellia.
+
+The fertility of the crossed plants is represented in Table 9/D by 100,
+and that of the self-fertilised by the other figures. There are five
+cases in which the fertility of the self-fertilised plants is
+approximately equal to that of the crossed; nevertheless, in four of
+these cases the crossed plants were plainly taller, and in the fifth
+somewhat taller than the self-fertilised. But I should state that in
+some of these five cases the fertility of the two lots was not strictly
+ascertained, as the capsules were not actually counted, from appearing
+equal in number and from all apparently containing a full complement of
+seeds. In only two instances in the table, namely, with Vandellia and in
+the third generation of Dianthus, the capsules on the self-fertilised
+plants contained more seed than those on the crossed plants. With
+Dianthus the ratio between the number of seeds contained in the
+self-fertilised and crossed capsules was as 125 to 100; both sets of
+plants were left to fertilise themselves under a net; and it is almost
+certain that the greater fertility of the self-fertilised plants was
+here due merely to their having varied and become less strictly
+dichogamous, so as to mature their anthers and stigmas more nearly at
+the same time than is proper to the species. Excluding the seven cases
+now referred to, there remain twenty-six in which the crossed plants
+were manifestly much more fertile, sometimes to an extraordinary degree,
+than the self-fertilised with which they grew in competition. The most
+striking instances are those in which plants derived from a cross with a
+fresh stock are compared with plants of one of the later self-fertilised
+generations; yet there are some striking cases, as that of Viola,
+between the intercrossed plants of the same stock and the
+self-fertilised, even in the first generation. The results most to be
+trusted are those in which the productiveness of the plants was
+ascertained by the number of capsules produced by an equal number of
+plants, together with the actual or average number of seeds in each
+capsule. Of such cases there are twelve in the table, and the mean of
+their mean fertility is as 100 for the crossed plants, to 59 for the
+self-fertilised plants. The Primulaceae seem eminently liable to suffer
+in fertility from self-fertilisation.
+
+The following short table, Table 9/E, includes four cases which have
+already been partly given in the last table.
+
+TABLE 9/E.--INNATE FERTILITY OF PLANTS FROM A CROSS WITH A FRESH STOCK,
+COMPARED WITH THAT OF INTERCROSSED PLANTS OF THE SAME STOCK, AND WITH
+THAT OF SELF-FERTILISED PLANTS, ALL OF THE CORRESPONDING GENERATION.
+FERTILITY JUDGED OF BY THE NUMBER OR WEIGHT OF SEEDS PRODUCED BY AN
+EQUAL NUMBER OF PLANTS.
+
+Column 1: Name of plant and feature observed.
+
+Column 2: Plants from a cross with a fresh stock.
+
+Column 3: Intercrossed plants of the same stock.
+
+Column 4: Self-fertilised plants.
+
+Mimulus luteus--the intercrossed plants are derived from a cross between
+two plants of the 8th self-fertilised generation. The self-fertilised
+plants belong to the 9th generation: 100 : 4 : 3.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--the intercrossed and self-fertilised plants
+belong to the 2nd generation: 100 : 45 : 40.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--the intercrossed plants are derived from
+self-fertilised of the 3rd generation, crossed by intercrossed plants of
+the 3rd generation. The self-fertilised plants belong to the 4th
+generation: 100 : 45 : 33.
+
+Petunia violacea--the intercrossed and self-fertilised plants belong to
+the 5th generation: 100 : 54 : 46.
+
+NB.--In the above cases, excepting in that of Eschscholtzia, the plants
+derived from a cross with a fresh stock belong on the mother-side to the
+same stock with the intercrossed and self-fertilised plants, and to the
+corresponding generation.
+
+These cases show us how greatly superior in innate fertility the
+seedlings from plants self-fertilised or intercrossed for several
+generations and then crossed by a fresh stock are, in comparison with
+the seedlings from plants of the old stock, either intercrossed or
+self-fertilised for the same number of generations. The three lots of
+plants in each case were left freely exposed to the visits of insects,
+and their flowers without doubt were cross-fertilised by them.
+
+Table 9/E further shows us that in all four cases the intercrossed
+plants of the same stock still have a decided though small advantage in
+fertility over the self-fertilised plants.
+
+With respect to the state of the reproductive organs in the
+self-fertilised plants of Tables 9/D and 9/E, only a few observations
+were made. In the seventh and eighth generation of Ipomoea, the anthers
+in the flowers of the self-fertilised plants were plainly smaller than
+those in the flowers of the intercrossed plants. The tendency to
+sterility in these same plants was also shown by the first-formed
+flowers, after they had been carefully fertilised, often dropping off,
+in the same manner as frequently occurs with hybrids. The flowers
+likewise tended to be monstrous. In the fourth generation of Petunia,
+the pollen produced by the self-fertilised and intercrossed plants was
+compared, and they were far more empty and shrivelled grains in the
+former.
+
+RELATIVE FERTILITY OF FLOWERS CROSSED WITH POLLEN FROM A DISTINCT PLANT
+AND WITH THEIR OWN POLLEN. THIS HEADING INCLUDES FLOWERS ON THE
+PARENT-PLANTS, AND ON THE CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED SEEDLINGS OF THE
+FIRST OR A SUCCEEDING GENERATION.
+
+I will first treat of the parent-plants, which were raised from seeds
+purchased from nursery-gardens, or taken from plants growing in my
+garden, or growing wild, and surrounded in every case by many
+individuals of the same species. Plants thus circumstanced will commonly
+have been intercrossed by insects; so that the seedlings which were
+first experimented on will generally have been the product of a cross.
+Consequently any difference in the fertility of their flowers, when
+crossed and self-fertilised, will have been caused by the nature of the
+pollen employed; that is, whether it was taken from a distinct plant or
+from the same flower. The degrees of fertility shown in Table 9/F, were
+determined in each case by the average number of seeds per capsule,
+ascertained either by counting or weighing.
+
+Another element ought properly to have been taken into account, namely,
+the proportion of flowers which yielded capsules when they were crossed
+and self-fertilised; and as crossed flowers generally produce a larger
+proportion of capsules, their superiority in fertility, if this element
+had been taken into account, would have been much more strongly marked
+than appears in Table 9/F. But had I thus acted, there would have been
+greater liability to error, as pollen applied to the stigma at the wrong
+time fails to produce any effect, independently of its greater or less
+potency. A good illustration of the great difference in the results
+which sometimes follows, if the number of capsules produced relatively
+to the number of flowers fertilised be included in the calculation, was
+afforded by Nolana prostrata. Thirty flowers on some plants of this
+species were crossed and produced twenty-seven capsules, each containing
+five seeds; thirty-two flowers on the same plants were self-fertilised
+and produced only six capsules, each containing five seeds. As the
+number of seeds per capsule is here the same, the fertility of the
+crossed and self-fertilised flowers is given in Table 9/F as equal, or
+as 100 to 100. But if the flowers which failed to produce capsules be
+included, the crossed flowers yielded on an average 4.50 seeds, whilst
+the self-fertilised flowers yielded only 0.94 seeds, so that their
+relative fertility would have been as 100 to 21. I should here state
+that it has been found convenient to reserve for separate discussion the
+cases of flowers which are usually quite sterile with their own pollen.
+
+TABLE 9/f.--relative fertility of the flowers on the parent-plants used
+in my experiments, when fertilised with pollen from a distinct plant and
+with their own pollen. Fertility judged of by the average number of
+seeds per capsule. Fertility of crossed flowers taken as 100.
+
+Column 1: Name of plant and feature observed.
+
+Column 2: x, in the expression 100 to x.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as
+(about): 100.
+
+Mimulus luteus--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as (by
+weight): 79.
+
+Linaria vulgaris--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as:
+14.
+
+Vandellia nummularifolia--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded
+seeds as: 67?
+
+Gesneria pendulina--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as
+(by weight): 100.
+
+Salvia coccinea--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as
+(about): 100.
+
+Brassica oleracea--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as:
+25.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--(English stock) crossed and self-fertilised
+flowers yielded seeds as (by weight): 71.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica--(Brazilian stock grown in England) crossed
+and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds (by weight) as (about): 15.
+
+Delphinium consolida--crossed and self-fertilised flowers
+(self-fertilised capsules spontaneously produced, but result supported
+by other evidence) yielded seeds as: 59.
+
+Viscaria oculata--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as
+(by weight): 38.
+
+Viscaria oculata--crossed and self-fertilised flowers (crossed capsules
+compared on following year with spontaneously self-fertilised capsules)
+yielded seeds as : 58.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+as: 92.
+
+Tropaeolum minus--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as:
+92.
+
+Tropaeolum tricolorum--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+as: 115. (9/1. Tropaeolum tricolorum and Cuphea purpurea have been
+introduced into this table, although seedlings were not raised from
+them; but of the Cuphea only six crossed and six self-fertilised
+capsules, and of the Tropaeolum only six crossed and eleven
+self-fertilised capsules, were compared. A larger proportion of the
+self-fertilised than of the crossed flowers of the Tropaeolum produced
+fruit.)
+
+Limnanthes douglasii--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+as (about): 100.
+
+Sarothamnus scoparius--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+as: 41.
+
+Ononis minutissima--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+as: 65.
+
+Cuphea purpurea--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as:
+113.
+
+Passiflora gracilis--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+as: 85.
+
+Specularia speculum--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+as: 72.
+
+Lobelia fulgens--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as
+(about): 100.
+
+Nemophila insignis--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as
+(by weight): 69.
+
+Borago officinalis--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds
+as: 60.
+
+Nolana prostrata--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as:
+100.
+
+Petunia violacea--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as
+(by weight): 67.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as
+(by weight): 150.
+
+Cyclamen persicum--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as:
+38.
+
+Anagallis collina--crossed and self-fertilised flowers yielded seeds as:
+96.
+
+Canna warscewiczi--crossed and self-fertilised flowers (on three
+generations of crossed and self-fertilised plants taken all together)
+yielded seeds as: 85.
+
+Table 9/G gives the relative fertility of flowers on crossed plants
+again cross-fertilised, and of flowers on self-fertilised plants again
+self-fertilised, either in the first or in a later generation. Here two
+causes combine to diminish the fertility of the self-fertilised flowers;
+namely, the lesser efficacy of pollen from the same flower, and the
+innate lessened fertility of plants derived from self-fertilised seeds,
+which as we have seen in the previous Table 9/D is strongly marked. The
+fertility was determined in the same manner as in Table 9/F, that is, by
+the average number of seeds per capsule; and the same remarks as before,
+with respect to the different proportion of flowers which set capsules
+when they are cross-fertilised and self-fertilised, are here likewise
+applicable.
+
+TABLE 9/G.--RELATIVE FERTILITY OF FLOWERS ON CROSSED AND SELF-FERTILISED
+PLANTS OF THE FIRST OR SOME SUCCEEDING GENERATION; THE FORMER BEING
+AGAIN FERTILISED WITH POLLEN FROM A DISTINCT PLANT, AND THE LATTER AGAIN
+WITH THEIR OWN POLLEN. FERTILITY JUDGED OF BY THE AVERAGE NUMBER OF
+SEEDS PER CAPSULE. FERTILITY OF CROSSED FLOWERS TAKEN AS 100.
+
+Column 1: Name of plant and feature observed.
+
+Column 2: x, in the expression, 100 to x.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the first generation yielded seeds as: 93.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the 3rd generation yielded seeds as: 94.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the 4th generation yielded seeds as: 94.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the 5th generation yielded seeds as: 107.
+
+Mimulus luteus--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the 3rd generation yielded seeds as (by
+weight): 65.
+
+Mimulus luteus--same plants of the 3rd generation treated in the same
+manner on the following year yielded seeds as (by weight): 34.
+
+Mimulus luteus--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the 4th generation yielded seeds as (by
+weight): 40.
+
+Viola tricolor--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the 1st generation yielded seeds as: 69.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the
+crossed and self-fertilised plants of the 1st generation yielded seeds
+as: 65.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--flowers on self-fertilised plants of the 3rd
+generation crossed by intercrossed plants, and other flowers again
+self-fertilised yielded seeds as: 97.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus--flowers on self-fertilised plants of the 3rd
+generation crossed by a fresh stock, and other flowers again
+self-fertilised yielded seeds as: 127.
+
+Lathytus odoratus--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed
+and self-fertilised plants of the 1st generation yielded seeds as: 65.
+
+Lobelia ramosa--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the 1st generation yielded seeds as (by
+weight): 60.
+
+Petunia violacea--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the 1st generation yielded seeds as (by
+weight): 68.
+
+Petunia violacea--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of the 4th generation yielded seeds as (by
+weight): 72.
+
+Petunia violacea--flowers on self-fertilised plants of the 4th
+generation crossed by a fresh stock, and other flowers again
+self-fertilised yielded seeds as (by weight): 48.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed
+and self-fertilised plants of the 1st generation yielded seeds as (by
+weight): 97.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--flowers on self-fertilised plants of the 2nd
+generation crossed by intercrossed plants, and other flowers again
+self-fertilised yielded seeds as (by estimation): 110.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum--flowers on self-fertilised plants of the 3rd
+generation crossed by a fresh stock, and other flowers again
+self-fertilised yielded seeds as (by estimation): 110.
+
+Anagallis collina--flowers on red variety crossed by a blue variety, and
+other flowers on the red variety self-fertilised yielded seeds as: 48.
+
+Canna warscewiczi--crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the crossed
+and self-fertilised plants of three generations taken together yielded
+seeds as: 85.
+
+As both these tables relate to the fertility of flowers fertilised by
+pollen from another plant and by their own pollen, they may be
+considered together. The difference between them consists in the
+self-fertilised flowers in Table 9/G, being produced by self-fertilised
+parents, and the crossed flowers by crossed parents, which in the later
+generations had become somewhat closely inter-related, and had been
+subjected all the time to nearly the same conditions. These two tables
+include fifty cases relating to thirty-two species. The flowers on many
+other species were crossed and self-fertilised, but as only a few were
+thus treated, the results cannot be trusted, as far as fertility is
+concerned, and are not here given. Some other cases have been rejected,
+as the plants were in an unhealthy condition. If we look to the figures
+in the two tables expressing the ratios between the mean relative
+fertility of the crossed and self-fertilised flowers, we see that in a
+majority of cases (i.e., in thirty-five out of fifty) flowers fertilised
+by pollen from a distinct plant yield more, sometimes many more, seeds
+than flowers fertilised with their own pollen; and they commonly set a
+larger proportion of capsules. The degree of infertility of the
+self-fertilised flowers differs extremely in the different species, and
+even, as we shall see in the section on self-sterile plants, in the
+individuals of the same species, as well as under slightly changed
+conditions of life. Their fertility ranges from zero to fertility
+equalling that of the crossed flowers; and of this fact no explanation
+can be offered. There are fifteen cases in the two tables in which the
+number of seeds per capsule produced by the self-fertilised flowers
+equals or even exceeds that yielded by the crossed flowers. Some few of
+these cases are, I believe, accidental; that is, would not recur on a
+second trial. This was apparently the case with the plants of the fifth
+generation of Ipomoea, and in one of the experiments with Dianthus.
+Nicotiana offers the most anomalous case of any, as the self-fertilised
+flowers on the parent-plants, and on their descendants of the second and
+third generations, produced more seeds than did the crossed flowers; but
+we shall recur to this case when we treat of highly self-fertile
+varieties.
+
+It might have been expected that the difference in fertility between the
+crossed and self-fertilised flowers would have been more strongly marked
+in Table 9/G, in which the plants of one set were derived from
+self-fertilised parents, than in Table 9/F, in which flowers on the
+parent-plants were self-fertilised for the first time. But this is not
+the case, as far as my scanty materials allow of any judgment. There is
+therefore no evidence at present, that the fertility of plants goes on
+diminishing in successive self-fertilised generations, although there is
+some rather weak evidence that this does occur with respect to their
+height or growth. But we should bear in mind that in the later
+generations the crossed plants had become more or less closely
+inter-related, and had been subjected all the time to nearly uniform
+conditions.
+
+It is remarkable that there is no close correspondence, either in the
+parent-plants or in the successive generations, between the relative
+number of seeds produced by the crossed and self-fertilised flowers, and
+the relative powers of growth of the seedlings raised from such seeds.
+Thus, the crossed and self-fertilised flowers on the parent-plants of
+Ipomoea, Gesneria, Salvia, Limnanthes, Lobelia fulgens, and Nolana
+produced a nearly equal number of seeds, yet the plants raised from the
+crossed seeds exceeded considerably in height those raised from the
+self-fertilised seeds. The crossed flowers of Linaria and Viscaria
+yielded far more seeds than the self-fertilised flowers; and although
+the plants raised from the former were taller than those from the
+latter, they were not so in any corresponding degree. With Nicotiana the
+flowers fertilised with their own pollen were more productive than those
+crossed with pollen from a slightly different variety; yet the plants
+raised from the latter seeds were much taller, heavier, and more hardy
+than those raised from the self-fertilised seeds. On the other hand, the
+crossed seedlings of Eschscholtzia were neither taller nor heavier than
+the self-fertilised, although the crossed flowers were far more
+productive than the self-fertilised. But the best evidence of a want of
+correspondence between the number of seeds produced by crossed and
+self-fertilised flowers, and the vigour of the offspring raised from
+them, is afforded by the plants of the Brazilian and European stocks of
+Eschscholtzia, and likewise by certain individual plants of Reseda
+odorata; for it might have been expected that the seedlings from plants,
+the flowers of which were excessively self-sterile, would have profited
+in a greater degree by a cross, than the seedlings from plants which
+were moderately or fully self-fertile, and therefore apparently had no
+need to be crossed. But no such result followed in either case: for
+instance, the crossed and self-fertilised offspring from a highly
+self-fertile plant of Reseda odorata were in average height to each
+other as 100 to 82; whereas the similar offspring from an excessively
+self-sterile plant were as 100 to 92 in average height.
+
+With respect to the innate fertility of the plants of crossed and
+self-fertilised parentage, given in the previous Table 9/D--that is, the
+number of seeds produced by both lots when their flowers were fertilised
+in the same manner,--nearly the same remarks are applicable, in
+reference to the absence of any close correspondence between their
+fertility and powers of growth, as in the case of the plants in the
+Tables 9/F and 9/G, just considered. Thus the crossed and
+self-fertilised plants of Ipomoea, Papaver, Reseda odorata, and
+Limnanthes were almost equally fertile, yet the former exceeded
+considerably in height the self-fertilised plants. On the other hand,
+the crossed and self-fertilised plants of Mimulus and Primula differed
+to an extreme degree in innate fertility, but by no means to a
+corresponding degree in height or vigour.
+
+In all the cases of self-fertilised flowers included in Tables 9/E, 9/F,
+and 9/G, these were fertilised with their own pollen; but there is
+another form of self-fertilisation, namely, by pollen from other flowers
+on the same plant; but this latter method made no difference in
+comparison with the former in the number of seeds produced, or only a
+slight difference. Neither with Digitalis nor Dianthus were more seeds
+produced by the one method than by the other, to any trustworthy degree.
+With Ipomoea rather more seeds, in the proportion of 100 to 91, were
+produced from a crossed between flowers on the same plant than from
+strictly self-fertilised flowers; but I have reason to suspect that the
+result was accidental. With Origanum vulgare, however, a cross between
+flowers on plants propagated by stolons from the same stock certainly
+increased slightly their fertility. This likewise occurred, as we shall
+see in the next section, with Eschscholtzia, perhaps with Corydalis cava
+and Oncidium; but not so with Bignonia, Abutilon, Tabernaemontana,
+Senecio, and apparently Reseda odorata.
+
+SELF-STERILE PLANTS.
+
+The cases here to be described might have been introduced in Table 9/F,
+which gives the relative fertility of flowers fertilised with their own
+pollen, and with that from a distinct plant, but it has been found more
+convenient to keep them for separate discussion. The present cases must
+not be confounded with those to be given in the next chapter relatively
+to flowers which are sterile when insects are excluded; for such
+sterility depends not merely on the flowers being incapable of
+fertilisation with their own pollen, but on mechanical causes, by which
+their pollen is prevented from reaching the stigma, or on the pollen and
+stigma of the same flower being matured at different periods.
+
+In the seventeenth chapter of my 'Variation of Animals and Plants under
+Domestication' I had occasion to enter fully on the present subject; and
+I will therefore here give only a brief abstract of the cases there
+described, but others must be added, as they have an important bearing
+on the present work. Kolreuter long ago described plants of Verbascum
+phoeniceum which during two years were sterile with their own pollen,
+but were easily fertilised by that of four other species; these plants
+however afterwards became more or less self-fertile in a strangely
+fluctuating manner. Mr. Scott also found that this species, as well as
+two of its varieties, were self-sterile, as did Gartner in the case of
+Verbascum nigrum. So it was, according to this latter author, with two
+plants of Lobelia fulgens, though the pollen and ovules of both were in
+an efficient state in relation to other species. Five species of
+Passiflora and certain individuals of a sixth species have been found
+sterile with their own pollen; but slight changes in their conditions,
+such as being grafted on another stock or a change of temperature,
+rendered them self-fertile. Flowers on a completely self-impotent plant
+of Passiflora alata fertilised with pollen from its own self-impotent
+seedlings were quite fertile. Mr. Scott, and afterwards Mr. Munro, found
+that some species of Oncidium and of Maxillaria cultivated in a hothouse
+in Edinburgh were quite sterile with their own pollen; and Fritz Muller
+found this to be the case with a large number of Orchidaceous genera
+growing in their native home of South Brazil. (9/2. 'Botanische Zeitung'
+1868 page 114.) He also discovered that the pollen-masses of some
+orchids acted on their own stigmas like a poison; and it appears that
+Gartner formerly observed indications of this extraordinary fact in the
+case of some other plants.
+
+Fritz Muller also states that a species of Bignonia and Tabernaemontana
+echinata are both sterile with their own pollen in their native country
+of Brazil. (9/3. Ibid 1868 page 626 and 1870 page 274.) Several
+Amaryllidaceous and Liliaceous plants are in the same predicament.
+Hildebrand observed with care Corydalis cava, and found it completely
+self-sterile (9/4. 'Report of the International Horticultural Congress'
+1866.); but according to Caspary a few self-fertilised seeds are
+occasionally produced: Corydalis halleri is only slightly self-sterile,
+and C. intermedia not at all so. (9/5. 'Botanische Zeitung' June 27,
+1873.) In another Fumariaceous genus, Hypecoum, Hildebrand observed that
+H. grandiflorum was highly self-sterile, whilst H. procumbens was fairly
+self-fertile. (9/6. 'Jahrb. fur wiss. Botanik' B. 7 page 464.)
+Thunbergia alata kept by me in a warm greenhouse was self-sterile early
+in the season, but at a later period produced many spontaneously
+self-fertilised fruits. So it was with Papaver vagum: another species,
+P. alpinum, was found by Professor H. Hoffmann to be quite self-sterile
+excepting on one occasion (9/7. 'Zur Speciesfrage' 1875 page 47.);
+whilst P. somniferum has been with me always completely self-sterile.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica.
+
+This species deserves a fuller consideration. A plant cultivated by
+Fritz Muller in South Brazil happened to flower a month before any of
+the others, and it did not produce a single capsule. This led him to
+make further observations during the next six generations, and he found
+that all his plants were completely sterile, unless they were crossed by
+insects or were artificially fertilised with pollen from a distinct
+plant, in which case they were completely fertile. (9/8. 'Botanische
+Zeitung' 1868 page 115 and 1869 page 223.) I was much surprised at this
+fact, as I had found that English plants, when covered by a net, set a
+considerable number of capsules; and that these contained seeds by
+weight, compared with those on plants intercrossed by the bees, as 71 to
+100. Professor Hildebrand, however, found this species much more
+self-sterile in Germany than it was with me in England, for the capsules
+produced by self-fertilised flowers, compared with those from
+intercrossed flowers, contained seeds in the ratio of only 11 to 100. At
+my request Fritz Muller sent me from Brazil seeds of his self-sterile
+plants, from which I raised seedlings. Two of these were covered with a
+net, and one produced spontaneously only a single capsule containing no
+good seeds, but yet, when artificially fertilised with its own pollen,
+produced a few capsules. The other plant produced spontaneously under
+the net eight capsules, one of which contained no less than thirty
+seeds, and on an average about ten seeds per capsule. Eight flowers on
+these two plants were artificially self-fertilised, and produced seven
+capsules, containing on an average twelve seeds; eight other flowers
+were fertilised with pollen from a distinct plant of the Brazilian
+stock, and produced eight capsules, containing on an average about
+eighty seeds: this gives a ratio of 15 seeds for the self-fertilised
+capsules to 100 for the crossed capsules. Later in the season twelve
+other flowers on these two plants were artificially self-fertilised; but
+they yielded only two capsules, containing three and six seeds. It
+appears therefore that a lower temperature than that of Brazil favours
+the self-fertility of this plant, whilst a still lower temperature
+lessens it. As soon as the two plants which had been covered by the net
+were uncovered, they were visited by many bees,and it was interesting to
+observe how quickly they became, even the more sterile plant of the two,
+covered with young capsules. On the following year eight flowers on
+plants of the Brazilian stock of self-fertilised parentage (i.e.,
+grandchildren of the plants which grew in Brazil) were again
+self-fertilised, and produced five capsules, containing on an average
+27.4 seeds, with a maximum in one of forty-two seeds; so that their
+self-fertility had evidently increased greatly by being reared for two
+generations in England. On the whole we may conclude that plants of the
+Brazilian stock are much more self-fertile in this country than in
+Brazil, and less so than plants of the English stock in England; so that
+the plants of Brazilian parentage retained by inheritance some of their
+former sexual constitution. Conversely, seeds from English plants sent
+by me to Fritz Muller and grown in Brazil, were much more self-fertile
+than his plants which had been cultivated there for several generations;
+but he informs me that one of the plants of English parentage which did
+not flower the first year, and was thus exposed for two seasons to the
+climate of Brazil, proved quite self-sterile, like a Brazilian plant,
+showing how quickly the climate had acted on its sexual constitution.
+
+Abutilon darwinii.
+
+Seeds of this plant were sent me by Fritz Muller, who found it, as well
+as some other species of the same genus, quite sterile in its native
+home of South Brazil, unless fertilised with pollen from a distinct
+plant, either artificially or naturally by humming-birds. (9/9.
+'Jenaische Zeitschr. fur Naturwiss' B. 7 1872 page 22 and 1873 page
+441.) Several plants were raised from these seeds and kept in the
+hothouse. They produced flowers very early in the spring, and twenty of
+them were fertilised, some with pollen from the same flower, and some
+with pollen from other flowers on the same plants; but not a single
+capsule was thus produced, yet the stigmas twenty-seven hours after the
+application of the pollen were penetrated by the pollen-tubes. At the
+same time nineteen flowers were crossed with pollen from a distinct
+plant, and these produced thirteen capsules, all abounding with fine
+seeds. A greater number of capsules would have been produced by the
+cross, had not some of the nineteen flowers been on a plant which was
+afterwards proved to be from some unknown cause completely sterile with
+pollen of any kind. Thus far these plants behaved exactly like those in
+Brazil; but later in the season, in the latter part of May and in June,
+they began to produce under a net a few spontaneously self-fertilised
+capsules. As soon as this occurred, sixteen flowers were fertilised with
+their own pollen, and these produced five capsules, containing on an
+average 3.4 seeds. At the same time I selected by chance four capsules
+from the uncovered plants growing close by, the flowers of which I had
+seen visited by humble-bees, and these contained on an average 21.5
+seeds; so that the seeds in the naturally intercrossed capsules to those
+in the self-fertilised capsules were as 100 to 16. The interesting point
+in this case is that these plants, which were unnaturally treated by
+being grown in pots in a hothouse, under another hemisphere, with a
+complete reversal of the seasons, were thus rendered slightly
+self-fertile, whereas they seem always to be completely self-sterile in
+their native home.
+
+Senecio cruentus (greenhouse varieties, commonly called Cinerarias,
+probably derived from several fruticose or herbaceous species much
+intercrossed (9/10. I am much obliged to Mr. Moore and to Mr. Thiselton
+Dyer for giving me information with respect to the varieties on which I
+experimented. Mr. Moore believes that Senecio cruentas, tussilaginis,
+and perhaps heritieri, maderensis and populifolius have all been more or
+less blended together in our Cinerarias.))
+
+Two purple-flowered varieties were placed under a net in the greenhouse,
+and four corymbs on each were repeatedly brushed with flowers from the
+other plant, so that their stigmas were well covered with each other's
+pollen. Two of the eight corymbs thus treated produced very few seeds,
+but the other six produced on an average 41.3 seeds per corymb, and
+these germinated well. The stigmas on four other corymbs on both plants
+were well smeared with pollen from the flowers on their own corymbs;
+these eight corymbs produced altogether ten extremely poor seeds, which
+proved incapable of germinating. I examined many flowers on both plants,
+and found the stigmas spontaneously covered with pollen; but they
+produced not a single seed. These plants were afterwards left uncovered
+in the same house where many other Cinerarias were in flower; and the
+flowers were frequently visited by bees. They then produced plenty of
+seed, but one of the two plants less than the other, as this species
+shows some tendency to be dioecious.
+
+The trial was repeated on another variety with white petals tipped with
+red. Many stigmas on two corymbs were covered with pollen from the
+foregoing purple variety, and these produced eleven and twenty-two
+seeds, which germinated well. A large number of the stigmas on several
+of the other corymbs were repeatedly smeared with pollen from their own
+corymb; but they yielded only five very poor seeds, which were incapable
+of germination. Therefore the above three plants belonging to two
+varieties, though growing vigorously and fertile with pollen from either
+of the other two plants, were utterly sterile with pollen from other
+flowers on the same plant.
+
+Reseda odorata.
+
+Having observed that certain individuals were self-sterile, I covered
+during the summer of 1868 seven plants under separate nets, and will
+call these plants A, B, C, D, E, F, G. They all appeared to be quite
+sterile with their own pollen, but fertile with that of any other plant.
+
+Fourteen flowers on A were crossed with pollen from B or C, and produced
+thirteen fine capsules. Sixteen flowers were fertilised with pollen from
+other flowers on the same plant, but yielded not a single capsule.
+
+Fourteen flowers on B were crossed with pollen from A, C or D, and all
+produced capsules; some of these were not very fine, yet they contained
+plenty of seeds. Eighteen flowers were fertilised with pollen from other
+flowers on the same plant, and produced not one capsule.
+
+Ten flowers on C were crossed with pollen from A, B, D or E, and
+produced nine fine capsules. Nineteen flowers were fertilised with
+pollen from other flowers on the same plant, and produced no capsules.
+
+Ten flowers on D were crossed with pollen from A, B, C or E, and
+produced nine fine capsules. Eighteen flowers were fertilised with
+pollen from other flowers on the same plant, and produced no capsules.
+
+Seven flowers on E were crossed with pollen from A, C, or D, and all
+produced fine capsules. Eight flowers were fertilised with pollen from
+other flowers on the same plant, and produced no capsules.
+
+On the plants F and G no flowers were crossed, but very many (number not
+recorded) were fertilised with pollen from other flowers on the same
+plants, and these did not produce a single capsule.
+
+We thus see that fifty-five flowers on five of the above plants were
+reciprocally crossed in various ways; several flowers on each of these
+plants being fertilised with pollen from several of the other plants.
+These fifty-five flowers produced fifty-two capsules, almost all of
+which were of full size and contained an abundance of seeds. On the
+other hand, seventy-nine flowers (besides many others not recorded) were
+fertilised with pollen from other flowers on the same plants, and these
+did not produce a single capsule. In one case in which I examined the
+stigmas of the flowers fertilised with their own pollen, these were
+penetrated by the pollen-tubes, although such penetration produced no
+effect. Pollen falls generally, and I believe always, from the anthers
+on the stigmas of the same flower; yet only three out of the above seven
+protected plants produced spontaneously any capsules, and these it might
+have been thought must have been self-fertilised. There were altogether
+seven such capsules; but as they were all seated close to the
+artificially crossed flowers, I can hardly doubt that a few grains of
+foreign pollen had accidentally fallen on their stigmas. Besides the
+above seven plants, four others were kept covered under the SAME large
+net; and some of these produced here and there in the most capricious
+manner little groups of capsules; and this makes me believe that a bee,
+many of which settled on the outside of the net, being attracted by the
+odour, had on some one occasion found an entrance, and had intercrossed
+a few of the flowers.
+
+In the spring of 1869 four plants raised from fresh seeds were carefully
+protected under separate nets; and now the result was widely different
+to what it was before. Three of these protected plants became actually
+loaded with capsules, especially during the early part of the summer;
+and this fact indicates that temperature produces some effect, but the
+experiment given in the following paragraph shows that the innate
+constitution of the plant is a far more important element. The fourth
+plant produced only a few capsules, many of them of small size; yet it
+was far more self-fertile than any of the seven plants tried during the
+previous year. The flowers on four small branches of this
+semi-self-sterile plant were smeared with pollen from one of the other
+plants, and they all produced fine capsules.
+
+As I was much surprised at the difference in the results of the trials
+made during the two previous years, six fresh plants were protected by
+separate nets in the year 1870. Two of these proved almost completely
+self-sterile, for on carefully searching them I found only three small
+capsules, each containing either one or two seeds of small size, which,
+however, germinated. A few flowers on both these plants were
+reciprocally fertilised with each other's pollen, and a few with pollen
+from one of the following self-fertile plants, and all these flowers
+produced fine capsules. The four other plants whilst still remaining
+protected beneath the nets presented a wonderful contrast (though one of
+them in a somewhat less degree than the others), for they became
+actually covered with spontaneously self-fertilised capsules, as
+numerous as, or very nearly so, and as fine as those on the unprotected
+plants growing near.
+
+The above three spontaneously self-fertilised capsules produced by the
+two almost completely self-sterile plants, contained altogether five
+seeds; and from these I raised in the following year (1871) five plants,
+which were kept under separate nets. They grew to an extraordinarily
+large size, and on August 29th were examined. At first sight they
+appeared entirely destitute of capsules; but on carefully searching
+their many branches, two or three capsules were found on three of the
+plants, half-a-dozen on the fourth, and about eighteen on the fifth
+plant. But all these capsules were small, some being empty; the greater
+number contained only a single seed, and very rarely more than one.
+After this examination the nets were taken off, and the bees immediately
+carried pollen from one of these almost self-sterile plants to the
+other, for no other plants grew near. After a few weeks the ends of the
+branches on all five plants became covered with capsules, presenting a
+curious contrast with the lower and naked parts of the same long
+branches. These five plants therefore inherited almost exactly the same
+sexual constitution as their parents; and without doubt a self-sterile
+race of Mignonette could have been easily established.
+
+Reseda lutea.
+
+Plants of this species were raised from seeds gathered from a group of
+wild plants growing at no great distance from my garden. After casually
+observing that some of these plants were self-sterile, two plants taken
+by hazard were protected under separate nets. One of these soon became
+covered with spontaneously self-fertilised capsules, as numerous as
+those on the surrounding unprotected plants; so that it was evidently
+quite self-fertile. The other plant was partially self-sterile,
+producing very few capsules, many of which were of small size. When,
+however, this plant had grown tall, the uppermost branches became
+pressed against the net and grew crooked, and in this position the bees
+were able to suck the flowers through the meshes, and brought pollen to
+them from the neighbouring plants. These branches then became loaded
+with capsules; the other and lower branches remaining almost bare. The
+sexual constitution of this species is therefore similar to that of
+Reseda odorata.
+
+CONCLUDING REMARKS ON SELF-STERILE PLANTS.
+
+In order to favour as far as possible the self-fertilisation of some of
+the foregoing plants, all the flowers on Reseda odorata and some of
+those on the Abutilon were fertilised with pollen from other flowers on
+the same plant, instead of with their own pollen, and in the case of the
+Senecio with pollen from other flowers on the same corymb; but this made
+no difference in the result. Fritz Muller tried both kinds of
+self-fertilisation in the case of Bignonia, Tabernaemontana and
+Abutilon, likewise with no difference in the result. With Eschscholtzia,
+however, he found that pollen from other flowers on the same plant was a
+little more effective than pollen from the same flower. So did
+Hildebrand in Germany; as thirteen out of fourteen flowers of
+Eschscholtzia thus fertilised set capsules, these containing on an
+average 9.5 seeds; whereas only fourteen flowers out of twenty-one
+fertilised with their own pollen set capsules, these containing on an
+average 9.0 seeds. (9/11. 'Pringsheim's Jahrbuch fur wiss. Botanik' 7
+page 467.) Hildebrand found a trace of a similar difference with
+Corydalis cava, as did Fritz Muller with an Oncidium. (9/12. 'Variation
+under Domestication' chapter 17 2nd edition volume 2 pages 113-115.)
+
+In considering the several cases above given of complete or almost
+complete self-sterility, we are first struck with their wide
+distribution throughout the vegetable kingdom. Their number is not at
+present large, for they can be discovered only by protecting plants from
+insects and then fertilising them with pollen from another plant of the
+same species and with their own pollen; and the latter must be proved to
+be in an efficient state by other trials. Unless all this be done, it is
+impossible to know whether their self-sterility may not be due to the
+male or female reproductive organs, or to both, having been affected by
+changed conditions of life. As in the course of my experiments I have
+found three new cases, and as Fritz Muller has observed indications of
+several others, it is probable that they will hereafter be proved to be
+far from rare. (9/13. Mr. Wilder, the editor of a horticultural journal
+in the United States quoted in 'Gardeners' Chronicle' 1868 page 1286,
+states that Lilium auratum, Impatiens pallida and fulva, and Forsythia
+viridissima, cannot be fertilised with their own pollen.)
+
+As with plants of the same species and parentage, some individuals are
+self-sterile and others self-fertile, of which fact Reseda odorata
+offers the most striking instances, it is not at all surprising that
+species of the same genus differ in this same manner. Thus Verbascum
+phoeniceum and nigrum are self-sterile, whilst V. thapsus and lychnitis
+are quite self-fertile, as I know by trial. There is the same difference
+between some of the species of Papaver, Corydalis, and of other genera.
+Nevertheless, the tendency to self-sterility certainly runs to a certain
+extent in groups, as we see in the genus Passiflora, and with the
+Vandeae amongst Orchids.
+
+Self-sterility differs much in degree in different plants. In those
+extraordinary cases in which pollen from the same flower acts on the
+stigma like a poison, it is almost certain that the plants would never
+yield a single self-fertilised seed. Other plants, like Corydalis cava,
+occasionally, though very rarely, produce a few self-fertilised seeds. A
+large number of species, as may be seen in Table 9/F, are less fertile
+with their own pollen than with that from another plant; and lastly,
+some species are perfectly self-fertile. Even with the individuals of
+the same species, as just remarked, some are utterly self-sterile,
+others moderately so, and some perfectly self-fertile. The cause,
+whatever it may be, which renders many plants more or less sterile with
+their own pollen, that is, when they are self-fertilised, must be
+different, at least to a certain extent, from that which determines the
+difference in height, vigour, and fertility of the seedlings raised from
+self-fertilised and crossed seeds; for we have already seen that the two
+classes of cases do not by any means run parallel. This want of
+parallelism would be intelligible, if it could be shown that
+self-sterility depended solely on the incapacity of the pollen-tubes to
+penetrate the stigma of the same flower deeply enough to reach the
+ovules; whilst the greater or less vigorous growth of the seedlings no
+doubt depends on the nature of the contents of the pollen-grains and
+ovules. Now it is certain that with some plants the stigmatic secretion
+does not properly excite the pollen-grains, so that the tubes are not
+properly developed, if the pollen is taken from the same flower. This is
+the case according to Fritz Muller with Eschscholtzia, for he found that
+the pollen-tubes did not penetrate the stigma deeply; and with the
+Orchidaceous genus Notylia they failed altogether to penetrate it.
+(9/14. 'Botanische Zeitung' 1868 pages 114, 115.)
+
+With dimorphic and trimorphic species, an illegitimate union between
+plants of the same form presents the closest analogy with
+self-fertilisation, whilst a legitimate union closely resembles
+cross-fertilisation; and here again the lessened fertility or complete
+sterility of an illegitimate union depends, at least in part, on the
+incapacity for interaction between the pollen-grains and stigma. Thus
+with Linum grandiflorum, as I have elsewhere shown, not more than two or
+three out of hundreds of pollen-grains, either of the long-styled or
+short-styled form, when placed on the stigma of their own form, emit
+their tubes, and these do not penetrate deeply; nor does the stigma
+itself change colour, as occurs when it is legitimately fertilised.
+(9/15. 'Journal of the Linnean Society Botany' volume 7 1863 pages
+73-75.)
+
+On the other hand the difference in innate fertility, as well as in
+growth between plants raised from crossed and self-fertilised seeds, and
+the difference in fertility and growth between the legitimate and
+illegitimate offspring of dimorphic and trimorphic plants, must depend
+on some incompatibility between the sexual elements contained within the
+pollen-grains and ovules, as it is through their union that new
+organisms are developed.
+
+If we now turn to the more immediate cause of self-sterility, we clearly
+see that in most cases it is determined by the conditions to which the
+plants have been subjected. Thus Eschscholtzia is completely
+self-sterile in the hot climate of Brazil, but is perfectly fertile
+there with the pollen of any other individual. The offspring of
+Brazilian plants became in England in a single generation partially
+self-fertile, and still more so in the second generation. Conversely,
+the offspring of English plants, after growing for two seasons in
+Brazil, became in the first generation quite self-sterile. Again,
+Abutilon darwinii, which is self-sterile in its native home of Brazil,
+became moderately self-fertile in a single generation in an English
+hothouse. Some other plants are self-sterile during the early part of
+the year, and later in the season become self-fertile. Passiflora alata
+lost its self-sterility when grafted on another species. With Reseda,
+however, in which some individuals of the same parentage are
+self-sterile and others are self-fertile, we are forced in our ignorance
+to speak of the cause as due to spontaneous variability; but we should
+remember that the progenitors of these plants, either on the male or
+female side, may have been exposed to somewhat different conditions. The
+power of the environment thus to affect so readily and in so peculiar a
+manner the reproductive organs, is a fact which has many important
+bearings; and I have therefore thought the foregoing details worth
+giving. For instance, the sterility of many animals and plants under
+changed conditions of life, such as confinement, evidently comes within
+the same general principle of the sexual system being easily affected by
+the environment. It has already been proved, that a cross between plants
+which have been self-fertilised or intercrossed during several
+generations, having been kept all the time under closely similar
+conditions, does not benefit the offspring; and on the other hand, that
+a cross between plants that have been subjected to different conditions
+benefits the offspring to an extraordinary degree. We may therefore
+conclude that some degree of differentiation in the sexual system is
+necessary for the full fertility of the parent-plants and for the full
+vigour of their offspring. It seems also probable that with those plants
+which are capable of complete self-fertilisation, the male and female
+elements and organs already differ to an extent sufficient to excite
+their mutual interaction; but that when such plants are taken to another
+country, and become in consequence self-sterile, their sexual elements
+and organs are so acted on as to be rendered too uniform for such
+interaction, like those of a self-fertilised plant long cultivated under
+the same conditions. Conversely, we may further infer that plants which
+are self-sterile in their native country, but become self-fertile under
+changed conditions, have their sexual elements so acted on, that they
+become sufficiently differentiated for mutual interaction.
+
+We know that self-fertilised seedlings are inferior in many respects to
+those from a cross; and as with plants in a state of nature pollen from
+the same flower can hardly fail to be often left by insects or by the
+wind on the stigma, it seems at first sight highly probable that
+self-sterility has been gradually acquired through natural selection in
+order to prevent self-fertilisation. It is no valid objection to this
+belief that the structure of some flowers, and the dichogamous condition
+of many others, suffice to prevent the pollen reaching the stigma of the
+same flower; for we should remember that with most species many flowers
+expand at the same time, and that pollen from the same plant is equally
+injurious or nearly so as that from the same flower. Nevertheless, the
+belief that self-sterility is a quality which has been gradually
+acquired for the special purpose of preventing self-fertilisation must,
+I believe, be rejected. In the first place, there is no close
+correspondence in degree between the sterility of the parent-plants when
+self-fertilised, and the extent to which their offspring suffer in
+vigour by this process; and some such correspondence might have been
+expected if self-sterility had been acquired on account of the injury
+caused by self-fertilisation. The fact of individuals of the same
+parentage differing greatly in their degree of self-sterility is
+likewise opposed to such a belief; unless, indeed, we suppose that
+certain individuals have been rendered self-sterile to favour
+intercrossing, whilst other individuals have been rendered self-fertile
+to ensure the propagation of the species. The fact of self-sterile
+individuals appearing only occasionally, as in the case of Lobelia, does
+not countenance this latter view. But the strongest argument against the
+belief that self-sterility has been acquired to prevent
+self-fertilisation, is the immediate and powerful effect of changed
+conditions in either causing or in removing self-sterility. We are not
+therefore justified in admitting that this peculiar state of the
+reproductive system has been gradually acquired through natural
+selection; but we must look at it as an incidental result, dependent on
+the conditions to which the plants have been subjected, like the
+ordinary sterility caused in the case of animals by confinement, and in
+the case of plants by too much manure, heat, etc. I do not, however,
+wish to maintain that self-sterility may not sometimes be of service to
+a plant in preventing self-fertilisation; but there are so many other
+means by which this result might be prevented or rendered difficult,
+including as we shall see in the next chapter the prepotency of pollen
+from a distinct individual over a plant's own pollen, that
+self-sterility seems an almost superfluous acquirement for this purpose.
+
+Finally, the most interesting point in regard to self-sterile plants is
+the evidence which they afford of the advantage, or rather of the
+necessity, of some degree or kind of differentiation in the sexual
+elements, in order that they should unite and give birth to a new being.
+It was ascertained that the five plants of Reseda odorata which were
+selected by chance, could be perfectly fertilised by pollen taken from
+any one of them, but not by their own pollen; and a few additional
+trials were made with some other individuals, which I have not thought
+worth recording. So again, Hildebrand and Fritz Muller frequently speak
+of self-sterile plants being fertile with the pollen of any other
+individual; and if there had been any exceptions to the rule, these
+could hardly have escaped their observation and my own. We may therefore
+confidently assert that a self-sterile plant can be fertilised by the
+pollen of any one out of a thousand or ten thousand individuals of the
+same species, but not by its own. Now it is obviously impossible that
+the sexual organs and elements of every individual can have been
+specialised with respect to every other individual. But there is no
+difficulty in believing that the sexual elements of each differ slightly
+in the same diversified manner as do their external characters; and it
+has often been remarked that no two individuals are absolutely alike.
+Therefore we can hardly avoid the conclusion, that differences of an
+analogous and indefinite nature in the reproductive system are
+sufficient to excite the mutual action of the sexual elements, and that
+unless there be such differentiation fertility fails.
+
+THE APPEARANCE OF HIGHLY SELF-FERTILE VARIETIES.
+
+We have just seen that the degree to which flowers are capable of being
+fertilised with their own pollen differs much, both with the species of
+the same genus, and sometimes with the individuals of the same species.
+Some allied cases of the appearance of varieties which, when
+self-fertilised, yield more seed and produce offspring growing taller
+than their self-fertilised parents, or than the intercrossed plants of
+the corresponding generation, will now be considered.
+
+Firstly, in the third and fourth generations of Mimulus luteus, a tall
+variety, often alluded to, having large white flowers blotched with
+crimson, appeared amongst both the intercrossed and self-fertilised
+plants. It prevailed in all the later self-fertilised generations to the
+exclusion of every other variety, and transmitted its characters
+faithfully, but disappeared from the intercrossed plants, owing no doubt
+to their characters being repeatedly blended by crossing. The
+self-fertilised plants belonging to this variety were not only taller,
+but more fertile than the intercrossed plants; though these latter in
+the earlier generations were much taller and more fertile than the
+self-fertilised plants. Thus in the fifth generation the self-fertilised
+plants were to the intercrossed in height as 126 to 100. In the sixth
+generation they were likewise much taller and finer plants, but were not
+actually measured; they produced capsules compared with those on the
+intercrossed plants, in number, as 147 to 100; and the self-fertilised
+capsules contained a greater number of seeds. In the seventh generation
+the self-fertilised plants were to the crossed in height as 137 to 100;
+and twenty flowers on these self-fertilised plants fertilised with their
+own pollen yielded nineteen very fine capsules,--a degree of
+self-sterility which I have not seen equalled in any other case. This
+variety seems to have become specially adapted to profit in every way by
+self-fertilisation, although this process was so injurious to the
+parent-plants during the first four generations. It should however be
+remembered that seedlings raised from this variety, when crossed by a
+fresh stock, were wonderfully superior in height and fertility to the
+self-fertilised plants of the corresponding generation.
+
+Secondly, in the sixth self-fertilised generation of Ipomoea a single
+plant named the Hero appeared, which exceeded by a little in height its
+intercrossed opponent,--a case which had not occurred in any previous
+generation. Hero transmitted the peculiar colour of its flowers, as well
+as its increased tallness and a high degree of self-fertility, to its
+children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren. The self-fertilised
+children of Hero were in height to other self-fertilised plants of the
+same stock as 100 to 85. Ten self-fertilised capsules produced by the
+grandchildren contained on an average 5.2 seeds; and this is a higher
+average than was yielded in any other generation by the capsules of
+self-fertilised flowers. The great-grandchildren of Hero derived from a
+cross with a fresh stock were so unhealthy, from having been grown at an
+unfavourable season, that their average height in comparison with that
+of the self-fertilised plants cannot be judged of with any safety; but
+it did not appear that they had profited even by a cross of this kind.
+
+Thirdly, the plants of Nicotiana on which I experimented appear to come
+under the present class of cases; for they varied in their sexual
+constitution and were more or less highly self-fertile. They were
+probably the offspring of plants which had been spontaneously
+self-fertilised under glass for several generations in this country. The
+flowers on the parent-plants which were first fertilised by me with
+their own pollen yielded half again as many seeds as did those which
+were crossed; and the seedlings raised from these self-fertilised seeds
+exceeded in height those raised from the crossed seeds to an
+extraordinary degree. In the second and third generations, although the
+self-fertilised plants did not exceed the crossed in height, yet their
+self-fertilised flowers yielded on two occasions considerably more seeds
+than the crossed flowers, even than those which were crossed with pollen
+from a distinct stock or variety.
+
+Lastly, as certain individual plants of Reseda odorata and lutea are
+incomparably more self-fertile than other individuals, the former might
+be included under the present heading of the appearance of new and
+highly self-fertile varieties. But in this case we should have to look
+at these two species as normally self-sterile; and this, judging by my
+experience, appears to be the correct view.
+
+We may therefore conclude from the facts now given, that varieties
+sometimes arise which when self-fertilised possess an increased power of
+producing seeds and of growing to a greater height, than the
+intercrossed or self-fertilised plants of the corresponding
+generation--all the plants being of course subjected to the same
+conditions. The appearance of such varieties is interesting, as it bears
+on the existence under nature of plants which regularly fertilise
+themselves, such as Ophrys apifera and a few other orchids, or as
+Leersia oryzoides, which produces an abundance of cleistogene flowers,
+but most rarely flowers capable of cross-fertilisation.
+
+Some observations made on other plants lead me to suspect that
+self-fertilisation is in some respects beneficial; although the benefit
+thus derived is as a rule very small compared with that from a cross
+with a distinct plant. Thus we have seen in the last chapter that
+seedlings of Ipomoea and Mimulus raised from flowers fertilised with
+their own pollen, which is the strictest possible form of
+self-fertilisation, were superior in height, weight, and in early
+flowering to the seedlings raised from flowers crossed with pollen from
+other flowers on the same plant; and this superiority apparently was too
+strongly marked to be accidental. Again, the cultivated varieties of the
+common pea are highly self-fertile, although they have been
+self-fertilised for many generations; and they exceeded in height
+seedlings from a cross between two plants belonging to the same variety
+in the ratio of 115 to 100; but then only four pairs of plants were
+measured and compared. The self-fertility of Primula veris increased
+after several generations of illegitimate fertilisation, which is a
+process closely analogous to self-fertilisation, but only as long as the
+plants were cultivated under the same favourable conditions. I have also
+elsewhere shown that with Primula veris and sinensis, equal-styled
+varieties occasionally appear which possess the sexual organs of the two
+forms combined in the same flower. (9/16. 'Journal of the Linnean
+Society Botany' volume 10 1867 pages 417, 419.) Consequently they
+fertilise themselves in a legitimate manner and are highly self-fertile;
+but the remarkable fact is that they are rather more fertile than
+ordinary plants of the same species legitimately fertilised by pollen
+from a distinct individual. Formerly it appeared to me probable, that
+the increased fertility of these dimorphic plants might be accounted for
+by the stigma lying so close to the anthers that it was impregnated at
+the most favourable age and time of the day; but this explanation is not
+applicable to the above given cases, in which the flowers were
+artificially fertilised with their own pollen.
+
+Considering the facts now adduced, including the appearance of those
+varieties which are more fertile and taller than their parents and than
+the intercrossed plants of the corresponding generation, it is difficult
+to avoid the suspicion that self-fertilisation is in some respects
+advantageous; though if this be really the case, any such advantage is
+as a rule quite insignificant compared with that from a cross with a
+distinct plant, and especially with one of a fresh stock. Should this
+suspicion be hereafter verified, it would throw light, as we shall see
+in the next chapter, on the existence of plants bearing small and
+inconspicuous flowers which are rarely visited by insects, and therefore
+are rarely intercrossed.
+
+RELATIVE WEIGHT AND PERIOD OF GERMINATION OF SEEDS FROM CROSSED AND
+SELF-FERTILISED FLOWERS.
+
+An equal number of seeds from flowers fertilised with pollen from
+another plant, and from flowers fertilised with their own pollen, were
+weighed, but only in sixteen cases. Their relative weights are given in
+the following list; that of the seeds from the crossed flowers being
+taken as 100.
+
+Column 1: Name of Plant.
+
+Column 2: x, in the expression, 100 to x.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea (parent plants): 127.
+Ipomoea purpurea (third generation): 87.
+Salvia coccinea: 100.
+Brassica oleracea: 103.
+Iberis umbellata (second generation): 136.
+Delphinium consolida: 45.
+Hibiscus africanus: 105.
+Tropaeolum minus: 115.
+Lathyrus odoratus (about): 100.
+Sarothamnus scoparius: 88.
+Specularia speculum: 86.
+Nemophila insignis: 105.
+Borago officinalis: 111.
+Cyclamen persicum (about): 50.
+Fagopyrum esculentum: 82.
+Canna warscewiczi (3 generations): 102.
+
+It is remarkable that in ten out of these sixteen cases the
+self-fertilised seeds were either superior or equal to the crossed in
+weight; nevertheless, in six out of the ten cases (namely, with Ipomoea,
+Salvia, Brassica, Tropaeolum, Lathyrus, and Nemophila) the plants raised
+from these self-fertilised seeds were very inferior in height and in
+other respects to those raised from the crossed seeds. The superiority
+in weight of the self-fertilised seeds in at least six out of the ten
+cases, namely, with Brassica, Hibiscus, Tropaeolum, Nemophila, Borago,
+and Canna, may be accounted for in part by the self-fertilised capsules
+containing fewer seeds; for when a capsule contains only a few seeds,
+these will be apt to be better nourished, so as to be heavier, than when
+many are contained in the same capsule. It should, however, be observed
+that in some of the above cases, in which the crossed seeds were the
+heaviest, as with Sarothamnus and Cyclamen, the crossed capsules
+contained a larger number of seeds. Whatever may be the explanation of
+the self-fertilised seeds being often the heaviest, it is remarkable in
+the case of Brassica, Tropaeolum, Nemophila, and of the first generation
+of Ipomoea, that the seedlings raised from them were inferior in height
+and in other respects to the seedlings raised from the crossed seeds.
+This fact shows how superior in constitutional vigour the crossed
+seedlings must have been, for it cannot be doubted that heavy and fine
+seeds tend to yield the finest plants. Mr. Galton has shown that this
+holds good with Lathyrus odoratus; as has Mr. A.J. Wilson with the
+Swedish turnip, Brassica campestris ruta baga. Mr. Wilson separated the
+largest and smallest seeds of this latter plant, the ratio between the
+weights of the two lots being as 100 to 59, and he found that the
+seedlings "from the larger seeds took the lead and maintained their
+superiority to the last, both in height and thickness of stem." (9/17.
+'Gardeners' Chronicle' 1867 page 107. Loiseleur-Deslongchamp 'Les
+Cereales' 1842 pages 208-219, was led by his observations to the
+extraordinary conclusion that the smaller grains of cereals produce as
+fine plants as the large. This conclusion is, however, contradicted by
+Major Hallet's great success in improving wheat by the selection of the
+finest grains. It is possible, however, that man, by long-continued
+selection, may have given to the grains of the cereals a greater amount
+of starch or other matter, than the seedlings can utilise for their
+growth. There can be little doubt, as Humboldt long ago remarked, that
+the grains of cereals have been rendered attractive to birds in a degree
+which is highly injurious to the species.) Nor can this difference in
+the growth of the seedling turnips be attributed to the heavier seeds
+having been of crossed, and the lighter of self-fertilised origin, for
+it is known that plants belonging to this genus are habitually
+intercrossed by insects.
+
+With respect to the relative period of germination of crossed and
+self-fertilised seeds, a record was kept in only twenty-one cases; and
+the results are very perplexing. Neglecting one case in which the two
+lots germinated simultaneously, in ten cases or exactly one-half many of
+the self-fertilised seeds germinated before the crossed, and in the
+other half many of the crossed before the self-fertilised. In four out
+of these twenty cases, seeds derived from a cross with a fresh stock
+were compared with self-fertilised seeds from one of the later
+self-fertilised generations; and here again in half the cases the
+crossed seeds, and in the other half the self-fertilised seeds,
+germinated first. Yet the seedlings of Mimulus raised from such
+self-fertilised seeds were inferior in all respects to the crossed
+seedlings, and in the case of Eschscholtzia they were inferior in
+fertility. Unfortunately the relative weight of the two lots of seeds
+was ascertained in only a few instances in which their germination was
+observed; but with Ipomoea and I believe with some of the other species,
+the relative lightness of the self-fertilised seeds apparently
+determined their early germination, probably owing to the smaller mass
+being favourable to the more rapid completion of the chemical and
+morphological changes necessary for germination. On the other hand, Mr.
+Galton gave me seeds (no doubt all self-fertilised) of Lathyrus
+odoratus, which were divided into two lots of heavier and lighter seeds;
+and several of the former germinated first. It is evident that many more
+observations are necessary before anything can be decided with respect
+to the relative period of germination of crossed and self-fertilised
+seeds.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+MEANS OF FERTILISATION.
+
+Sterility and fertility of plants when insects are excluded.
+The means by which flowers are cross-fertilised.
+Structures favourable to self-fertilisation.
+Relation between the structure and conspicuousness of flowers, the
+visits of insects, and the advantages of cross-fertilisation.
+The means by which flowers are fertilised with pollen from a distinct
+plant.
+Greater fertilising power of such pollen.
+Anemophilous species.
+Conversion of anemophilous species into entomophilous.
+Origin of nectar.
+Anemophilous plants generally have their sexes separated.
+Conversion of diclinous into hermaphrodite flowers.
+Trees often have their sexes separated.
+
+In the introductory chapter I briefly specified the various means by
+which cross-fertilisation is favoured or ensured, namely, the separation
+of the sexes,--the maturity of the male and female sexual elements at
+different periods,--the heterostyled or dimorphic and trimorphic
+condition of certain plants,--many mechanical contrivances,--the more or
+less complete inefficiency of a flower's own pollen on the stigma,--and
+the prepotency of pollen from any other individual over that from the
+same plant. Some of these points require further consideration; but for
+full details I must refer the reader to the several excellent works
+mentioned in the introduction. I will in the first place give two lists:
+the first, of plants which are either quite sterile or produce less than
+about half the full complement of seeds, when insects are excluded; and
+a second list of plants which, when thus treated, are fully fertile or
+produce at least half the full complement of seeds. These lists have
+been compiled from the several previous tables, with some additional
+cases from my own observations and those of others. The species are
+arranged nearly in the order followed by Lindley in his 'Vegetable
+Kingdom.' The reader should observe that the sterility or fertility of
+the plants in these two lists depends on two wholly distinct causes;
+namely, the absence or presence of the proper means by which pollen is
+applied to the stigma, and its less or greater efficiency when thus
+applied. As it is obvious that with plants in which the sexes are
+separate, pollen must be carried by some means from flower to flower,
+such species are excluded from the lists; as are likewise dimorphic and
+trimorphic plants, in which the same necessity occurs to a limited
+extent. Experience has proved to me that, independently of the exclusion
+of insects, the seed-bearing power of a plant is not lessened by
+covering it while in flower under a thin net supported on a frame; and
+this might indeed have been inferred from the consideration of the two
+following lists, as they include a considerable number of species
+belonging to the same genera, some of which are quite sterile and others
+quite fertile when protected by a net from the access of insects.
+
+[LIST OF PLANTS WHICH, WHEN INSECTS ARE EXCLUDED, ARE EITHER QUITE
+STERILE, OR PRODUCE, AS FAR AS I COULD JUDGE, LESS THAN HALF THE NUMBER
+OF SEEDS PRODUCED BY UNPROTECTED PLANTS.
+
+Passiflora alata, racemosa, coerulea, edulis, laurifolia, and some
+individuals of P. quadrangularis (Passifloraceae), are quite sterile
+under these conditions: see 'Variation of Animals and Plants under
+Domestication' chapter 17 2nd edition volume 2 page 118.
+
+Viola canina (Violaceae).--Perfect flowers quite sterile unless
+fertilised by bees, or artificially fertilised.
+
+Viola tricolor.--Sets very few and poor capsules.
+
+Reseda odorata (Resedaceae).--Some individuals quite sterile.
+
+Reseda lutea.--Some individuals produce very few and poor capsules.
+
+Abutilon darwinii (Malvaceae).--Quite sterile in Brazil: see previous
+discussion on self-sterile plants.
+
+Nymphaea (Nymphaeaceae).--Professor Caspary informs me that some of the
+species are quite sterile if insects are excluded.
+
+Euryale amazonica (Nymphaeaceae).--Mr. J. Smith, of Kew, informs me that
+capsules from flowers left to themselves, and probably not visited by
+insects, contained from eight to fifteen seeds; those from flowers
+artificially fertilised with pollen from other flowers on the same plant
+contained from fifteen to thirty seeds; and that two flowers fertilised
+with pollen brought from another plant at Chatsworth contained
+respectively sixty and seventy-five seeds. I have given these statements
+because Professor Caspary advances this plant as a case opposed to the
+doctrine of the necessity or advantage of cross-fertilisation: see
+Sitzungsberichte der Phys.-okon. Gesell.zu Konigsberg, B.6 page 20.)
+
+Delphinium consolida (Ranunculaceae).--Produces many capsules, but these
+contain only about half the number of seeds compared with capsules from
+flowers naturally fertilised by bees.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica (Papaveraceae).--Brazilian plants quite
+sterile: English plants produce a few capsules.
+
+Papaver vagum (Papaveraceae).--In the early part of the summer produced
+very few capsules, and these contained very few seeds.
+
+Papaver alpinum.--H. Hoffmann ('Speciesfrage' 1875 page 47) states that
+this species produced seeds capable of germination only on one occasion.
+
+Corydalis cava (Fumariaceae).--Sterile: see the previous discussion on
+self-sterile plants.
+
+Corydalis solida.--I had a single plant in my garden (1863), and saw
+many hive-bees sucking the flowers, but not a single seed was produced.
+I was much surprised at this fact, as Professor Hildebrand's discovery
+that C. cava is sterile with its own pollen had not then been made. He
+likewise concludes from the few experiments which he made on the present
+species that it is self-sterile. The two foregoing cases are
+interesting, because botanists formerly thought (see, for instance,
+Lecoq, 'De la Fecondation et de l'Hybridation' 1845 page 61 and Lindley
+'Vegetable Kingdom' 1853 page 436) that all the species of the
+Fumariaceae were specially adapted for self-fertilisation.
+
+Corydalis lutea.--A covered-up plant produced (1861) exactly half as
+many capsules as an exposed plant of the same size growing close
+alongside. When humble-bees visit the flowers (and I repeatedly saw them
+thus acting) the lower petals suddenly spring downwards and the pistil
+upwards; this is due to the elasticity of the parts, which takes effect,
+as soon as the coherent edges of the hood are separated by the entrance
+of an insect. Unless insects visit the flowers the parts do not move.
+Nevertheless, many of the flowers on the plants which I had protected
+produced capsules, notwithstanding that their petals and pistils still
+retained their original position; and I found to my surprise that these
+capsules contained more seeds than those from flowers, the petals of
+which had been artificially separated and allowed to spring apart. Thus,
+nine capsules produced by undisturbed flowers contained fifty-three
+seeds; whilst nine capsules from flowers, the petals of which had been
+artificially separated, contained only thirty-two seeds. But we should
+remember that if bees had been permitted to visit these flowers, they
+would have visited them at the best time for fertilisation. The flowers,
+the petals of which had been artificially separated, set their capsules
+before those which were left undisturbed under the net. To show with
+what certainty the flowers are visited by bees, I may add that on one
+occasion all the flowers on some unprotected plants were examined, and
+every single one had its petals separated; and, on a second occasion,
+forty-one out of forty-three flowers were in this state. Hildebrand
+states (Pring. Jahr. f. wiss. Botanik, B. 7 page 450) that the mechanism
+of the parts in this species is nearly the same as in C. ochroleuca,
+which he has fully described.
+
+Hypecoum grandiflorum (Fumariaceae).--Highly self-sterile (Hildebrand,
+ibid.).
+
+Kalmia latifolia (Ericaceae).--Mr. W.J. Beal says ('American Naturalist'
+1867) that flowers protected from insects wither and drop off, with
+"most of the anthers still remaining in the pockets."
+
+Pelargonium zonale (Geraniaceae).--Almost sterile; one plant produced
+two fruits. It is probable that different varieties would differ in this
+respect, as some are only feebly dichogamous.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus (Caryophyllaceae).--Produces very few capsules
+which contain any good seeds.
+
+Phaseolus multiflorus (Leguminosae).--Plants protected from insects
+produced on two occasions about one-third and one-eighth of the full
+number of seeds: see my article in 'Gardeners' Chronicle' 1857 page 225
+and 1858 page 828; also 'Annals and Magazine of Natural History' 3rd
+series volume 2 1858 page 462. Dr. Ogle ('Popular Science Review' 1870
+page 168) found that a plant was quite sterile when covered up. The
+flowers are not visited by insects in Nicaragua, and, according to Mr.
+Belt, the species is there quite sterile: 'The Naturalist in Nicaragua'
+page 70.
+
+Vicia faba (Leguminosae).--Seventeen covered-up plants yielded 40 beans,
+whilst seventeen plants left unprotected and growing close alongside
+produced 135 beans; these latter plants were, therefore, between three
+and four times more fertile than the protected plants: see 'Gardeners'
+Chronicle' for fuller details, 1858 page 828.
+
+Erythrina (sp.?) (Leguminosae).--Sir W. MacArthur informed me that in
+New South Wales the flowers do not set, unless the petals are moved in
+the same manner as is done by insects.
+
+Lathyrus grandiflorus (Leguminosae).--Is in this country more or less
+sterile. It never sets pods unless the flowers are visited by
+humble-bees (and this happens only rarely), or unless they are
+artificially fertilised: see my article in 'Gardeners' Chronicle' 1858
+page 828.
+
+Sarothamnus scoparius (Leguminosae).--Extremely sterile when the flowers
+are neither visited by bees, nor disturbed by being beaten by the wind
+against the surrounding net.
+
+Melilotus officinalis (Leguminosae).--An unprotected plant visited by
+bees produced at least thirty times more seeds than a protected one. On
+this latter plant many scores of racemes did not produce a single pod;
+several racemes produced each one or two pods; five produced three; six
+produced four; and one produced six pods. On the unprotected plant each
+of several racemes produced fifteen pods; nine produced between sixteen
+and twenty-two pods, and one produced thirty pods.
+
+Lotus corniculatus (Leguminosae).--Several covered-up plants produced
+only two empty pods, and not a single good seed.
+
+Trifolium repens (Leguminosae).--Several plants were protected from
+insects, and the seeds from ten flowers-heads on these plants, and from
+ten heads on other plants growing outside the net (which I saw visited
+by bees), were counted; and the seeds from the latter plants were very
+nearly ten times as numerous as those from the protected plants. The
+experiment was repeated on the following year; and twenty protected
+heads now yielded only a single aborted seed, whilst twenty heads on the
+plants outside the net (which I saw visited by bees) yielded 2290 seeds,
+as calculated by weighing all the seed, and counting the number in a
+weight of two grains.
+
+Trifolium pratense.--One hundred flower-heads on plants protected by a
+net did not produce a single seed, whilst 100 heads on plants growing
+outside, which were visited by bees, yielded 68 grains weight of seeds;
+and as eighty seeds weighed two grains, the 100 heads must have yielded
+2720 seeds. I have often watched this plant, and have never seen
+hive-bees sucking the flowers, except from the outside through holes
+bitten by humble-bees, or deep down between the flowers, as if in search
+of some secretion from the calyx, almost in the same manner as described
+by Mr. Farrer, in the case of Coronilla ('Nature' 1874 July 2 page 169).
+I must, however, except one occasion, when an adjoining field of
+sainfoin (Hedysarum onobrychis) had just been cut down, and when the
+bees seemed driven to desperation. On this occasion most of the flowers
+of the clover were somewhat withered, and contained an extraordinary
+quantity of nectar, which the bees were able to suck. An experienced
+apiarian, Mr. Miner, says that in the United States hive-bees never suck
+the red clover; and Mr. R. Colgate informs me that he has observed the
+same fact in New Zealand after the introduction of the hive-bee into
+that island. On the other hand, H. Muller ('Befruchtung' page 224) has
+often seen hive-bees visiting this plant in Germany, for the sake both
+of pollen and nectar, which latter they obtained by breaking apart the
+petals. It is at least certain that humble-bees are the chief
+fertilisers of the common red clover.
+
+Trifolium incarnatum.--The flower-heads containing ripe seeds, on some
+covered and uncovered plants, appeared equally fine, but this was a
+false appearance; 60 heads on the latter yielded 349 grains weight of
+seeds, whereas 60 on the covered-up plants yielded only 63 grains, and
+many of the seeds in the latter lot were poor and aborted. Therefore the
+flowers which were visited by bees produced between five and six times
+as many seeds as those which were protected. The covered-up plants not
+having been much exhausted by seed-bearing, bore a second considerable
+crop of flower-stems, whilst the exposed plants did not do so.
+
+Cytisus laburnum (Leguminosae).--Seven flower-racemes ready to expand
+were enclosed in a large bag made of net, and they did not seem in the
+least injured by this treatment. Only three of them produced any pods,
+each a single one; and these three pods contained one, four, and five
+seeds. So that only a single pod from the seven racemes included a fair
+complement of seeds.
+
+Cuphea purpurea (Lythraceae).--Produced no seeds. Other flowers on the
+same plant artificially fertilised under the net yielded seeds.
+
+Vinca major (Apocynaceae).--Is generally quite sterile, but sometimes
+sets seeds when artificially cross-fertilised: see my notice 'Gardeners'
+Chronicle' 1861 page 552.
+
+Vinca rosea.--Behaves in the same manner as the last species:
+'Gardeners' Chronicle' 1861 page 699, 736, 831.
+
+Tabernaemontana echinata (Apocynaceae).--Quite sterile.
+
+Petunia violacea (Solanaceae).--Quite sterile, as far as I have
+observed.
+
+Solanum tuberosum (Solanaceae).--Tinzmann says ('Gardeners' Chronicle'
+1846 page 183) that some varieties are quite sterile unless fertilised
+by pollen from another variety.
+
+Primula scotica (Primulaceae).--A non-dimorphic species, which is
+fertile with its own pollen, but is extremely sterile if insects are
+excluded. J. Scott in 'Journal of the Linnean Society Botany' volume 8
+1864 page 119.
+
+Cortusa matthioli (Primulaceae).--Protected plants completely sterile;
+artificially self-fertilised flowers perfectly fertile. J. Scott ibid.
+page 84.
+
+Cyclamen persicum (Primulaceae).--During one season several covered-up
+plants did not produce a single seed.
+
+Borago officinalis (Boraginaceae).--Protected plants produced about half
+as many seeds as the unprotected.
+
+Salvia tenori (Labiatae).--Quite sterile; but two or three flowers on
+the summits of three of the spikes, which touched the net when the wind
+blew, produced a few seeds. This sterility was not due to the injurious
+effects of the net, for I fertilised five flowers with pollen from an
+adjoining plant, and these all yielded fine seeds. I removed the net,
+whilst one little branch still bore a few not completely faded flowers,
+and these were visited by bees and yielded seeds.
+
+Salvia coccinea.--Some covered-up plants produced a good many fruits,
+but not, I think, half as many as did the uncovered plants; twenty-eight
+of the fruits spontaneously produced by the protected plant contained on
+an average only 1.45 seeds, whilst some artificially self-fertilised
+fruits on the same plant contained more than twice as many, namely 3.3
+seeds.
+
+Bignonia (unnamed species) (Bignoniaceae).--Quite sterile: see my
+account of self-sterile plants.
+
+Digitalis purpurea (Scrophulariaceae).--Extremely sterile, only a few
+poor capsules being produced.
+
+Linaria vulgaris (Scrophulariaceae).--Extremely sterile.
+
+Antirrhinum majus, red var. (Scrophulariaceae).--Fifty pods gathered
+from a large plant under a net contained 9.8 grains weight of seeds; but
+many (unfortunately not counted) of the fifty pods contained no seeds.
+Fifty pods on a plant fully exposed to the visits of humble-bees
+contained 23.1 grains weight of seed, that is, more than twice the
+weight; but in this case again, several of the fifty pods contained no
+seeds.
+
+Antirrhinum majus (white var., with a pink mouth to the corolla).--Fifty
+pods, of which only a very few were empty, on a covered-up plant
+contained 20 grains weight of seed; so that this variety seems to be
+much more self-fertile than the previous one. With Dr. W. Ogle ('Popular
+Science Review' January 1870 page 52) a plant of this species was much
+more sterile when protected from insects than with me, for it produced
+only two small capsules. As showing the efficiency of bees, I may add
+that Mr. Crocker castrated some young flowers and left them uncovered;
+and these produced as many seeds as the unmutilated flowers.
+
+Antirrhinum majus (peloric var.).--This variety is quite fertile when
+artificially fertilised with its own pollen, but is utterly sterile when
+left to itself and uncovered, as humble-bees cannot crawl into the
+narrow tubular flowers.
+
+Verbascum phoeniceum (Scrophulariaceae).--Quite sterile. See my account
+of self-sterile plants.
+
+Verbascum nigrum.--Quite sterile. See my account of self-sterile plants.
+
+Campanula carpathica (Lobeliaceae).--Quite sterile.
+
+Lobelia ramosa (Lobeliaceae).--Quite sterile.
+
+Lobelia fulgens.--This plant is never visited in my garden by bees, and
+is quite sterile; but in a nursery-garden at a few miles' distance I saw
+humble-bees visiting the flowers, and they produced some capsules.
+
+Isotoma (a white-flowered var.) (Lobeliaceae).--Five plants left
+unprotected in my greenhouse produced twenty-four fine capsules,
+containing altogether 12.2 grains weight of seed, and thirteen other
+very poor capsules, which were rejected. Five plants protected from
+insects, but otherwise exposed to the same conditions as the above
+plants, produced sixteen fine capsules, and twenty other very poor and
+rejected ones. The sixteen fine capsules contained seeds by weight in
+such proportion that twenty-four would have yielded 4.66 grains. So that
+the unprotected plants produced nearly thrice as many seeds by weight as
+the protected plants.
+
+Leschenaultia formosa (Goodeniaceae).--Quite sterile. My experiments on
+this plant, showing the necessity of insect aid, are given in the
+'Gardeners' Chronicle' 1871 page 1166.
+
+Senecio cruentus (Compositae).--Quite sterile: see my account of
+self-sterile plants.
+
+Heterocentron mexicanum (Malastomaceae).--Quite sterile; but this
+species and the following members of the group produce plenty of seed
+when artificially self-fertilised.
+
+Rhexia glandulosa (Melastomaceae).--Set spontaneously only two or three
+capsules.
+
+Centradenia floribunda (Melastomaceae).--During some years produced
+spontaneously two or three capsules, sometimes none.
+
+Pleroma (unnamed species from Kew) (Melastomaceae).--During some years
+produced spontaneously two or three capsules, sometimes none.
+
+Monochaetum ensiferum (Melastomaceae).--During some years produced
+spontaneously two or three capsules, sometimes none.
+
+Hedychium (unnamed species) (Marantaceae).--Almost self-sterile without
+aid.
+
+Orchideae.--An immense proportion of the species sterile, if insects are
+excluded.
+
+LIST OF PLANTS, WHICH WHEN PROTECTED FROM INSECTS ARE EITHER QUITE
+FERTILE, OR YIELD MORE THAN HALF THE NUMBER OF SEEDS PRODUCED BY
+UNPROTECTED PLANTS.
+
+Passiflora gracilis (Passifloraceae).--Produces many fruits, but these
+contain fewer seeds than fruits from intercrossed flowers.
+
+Brassica oleracea (Cruciferae).--Produces many capsules, but these
+generally not so rich in seed as those on uncovered plants.
+
+Raphanus sativus (Cruciferae).--Half of a large branching plant was
+covered by a net, and was as thickly covered with capsules as the other
+and unprotected half; but twenty of the capsules on the latter contained
+on an average 3.5 seeds, whilst twenty of the protected capsules
+contained only 1.85 seeds, that is, only a little more than half the
+number. This plant might perhaps have been more properly included in the
+former list.
+
+Iberis umbellata (Cruciferae).--Highly fertile.
+
+Iberis amara.--Highly fertile.
+
+Reseda odorata and lutea (Resedaceae).--Certain individuals completely
+self-fertile.
+
+Euryale ferox (Nymphaeaceae).--Professor Caspary informs me that this
+plant is highly self-fertile when insects are excluded. He remarks in
+the paper before referred to, that his plants (as well as those of the
+Victoria regia) produce only one flower at a time; and that as this
+species is an annual, and was introduced in 1809, it must have been
+self-fertilised for the last fifty-six generations; but Dr. Hooker
+assures me that to his knowledge it has been repeatedly introduced, and
+that at Kew the same plant both of the Euryale and of the Victoria
+produce several flowers at the same time.
+
+Nymphaea (Nymphaeaceae).--Some species, as I am informed by Professor
+Caspary, are quite self-fertile when insects are excluded.
+
+Adonis aestivalis (Ranunculaceae).--Produces, according to Professor H.
+Hoffmann ('Speciesfrage' page 11), plenty of seeds when protected from
+insects.
+
+Ranunculus acris (Ranunculaceae).--Produces plenty of seeds under a net.
+
+Papaver somniferum (Papaveraceae).--Thirty capsules from uncovered
+plants yielded 15.6 grains weight of seed, and thirty capsules from
+covered-up plants, growing in the same bed, yielded 16.5 grains weight;
+so that the latter plants were more productive than the uncovered.
+Professor H. Hoffmann ('Speciesfrage' 1875 page 53) also found this
+species self-fertile when protected from insects.
+
+Papaver vagum.--Produced late in the summer plenty of seeds, which
+germinated well.
+
+Papaver argemonoides.--According to Hildebrand ('Jahrbuch fur w. Bot.'
+B.7 page 466), spontaneously self-fertilised flowers are by no means
+sterile.
+
+Glaucium luteum (Papaveraceae).--According to Hildebrand ('Jahrbuch fur
+w. Bot.' B.7 page 466), spontaneously self-fertilised flowers are by no
+means sterile.
+
+Argemone ochroleuca (Papaveraceae).--According to Hildebrand ('Jahrbuch
+fur w. Bot.' B.7 page 466), spontaneously self-fertilised flowers are by
+no means sterile.
+
+Adlumia cirrhosa (Fumariaceae).--Sets an abundance of capsules.
+
+Hypecoum procumbens (Fumariaceae).--Hildebrand says (idem), with respect
+to protected flowers, that "eine gute Fruchtbildung eintrete."
+
+Fumaria officinalis (Fumariaceae).--Covered-up and unprotected plants
+apparently produced an equal number of capsules, and the seeds of the
+former seemed to the eye equally good. I have often watched this plant,
+and so has Hildebrand, and we have never seen an insect visit the
+flowers. Hermann Muller has likewise been struck with the rarity of the
+visits of insects to it, though he has sometimes seen hive-bees at work.
+The flowers may perhaps be visited by small moths, as is probably the
+case with the following species.
+
+Fumaria capreolata.--Several large beds of this plant growing wild were
+watched by me during many days, but the flowers were never visited by
+any insects, though a humble-bee was once seen closely to inspect them.
+Nevertheless, as the nectary contains much nectar, especially in the
+evening, I felt convinced that they were visited, probably by moths. The
+petals do not naturally separate or open in the least; but they had been
+opened by some means in a certain proportion of the flowers, in the same
+manner as follows when a thick bristle is pushed into the nectary; so
+that in this respect they resemble the flowers of Corydalis lutea.
+Thirty-four heads, each including many flowers, were examined, and
+twenty of them had from one to four flowers, whilst fourteen had not a
+single flower thus opened. It is therefore clear that some of the
+flowers had been visited by insects, while the majority had not; yet
+almost all produced capsules.
+
+Linum usitatissimum (Linaceae).--Appears to be quite fertile. H.
+Hoffmann 'Botanische Zeitung' 1876 page 566.
+
+Impatiens barbigerum (Balsaminaceae).--The flowers, though excellently
+adapted for cross-fertilisation by the bees which freely visit them, set
+abundantly under a net.
+
+Impatiens noli-me-tangere (Balsaminaceae).--This species produces
+cleistogene and perfect flowers. A plant was covered with a net, and
+some perfect flowers, marked with threads, produced eleven spontaneously
+self-fertilised capsules, which contained on an average 3.45 seeds. I
+neglected to ascertain the number of seeds produced by perfect flowers
+exposed to the visits of insects, but I believe it is not greatly in
+excess of the above average. Mr. A.W. Bennett has carefully described
+the structure of the flowers of I. fulva in 'Journal of the Linnean
+Society' volume 13 Bot. 1872 page 147. This latter species is said to be
+sterile with its own pollen ('Gardeners' Chronicle' 1868 page 1286), and
+if so, it presents a remarkable contrast with I. barbigerum and
+noli-me-tangere.
+
+Limnanthes douglasii (Geraniaceae).--Highly fertile.
+
+Viscaria oculata (Caryophyllaceae).--Produces plenty of capsules with
+good seeds.
+
+Stellaria media (Caryophyllaceae).--Covered-up and uncovered plants
+produced an equal number of capsules, and the seeds in both appeared
+equally numerous and good.
+
+Beta vulgaris (Chenopodiaceae).--Highly self-fertile.
+
+Vicia sativa (Leguminosae).--Protected and unprotected plants produced
+an equal number of pods and equally fine seeds. If there was any
+difference between the two lots, the covered-up plants were the most
+productive.
+
+Vicia hirsuta.--This species bears the smallest flowers of any British
+leguminous plant. The result of covering up plants was exactly the same
+as in the last species.
+
+Pisum sativum (Leguminosae).--Fully fertile.
+
+Lathyrus odoratus (Leguminosae).--Fully fertile.
+
+Lathyrus nissolia.--Fully fertile.
+
+Lupinus luteus (Leguminosae).--Fairly productive.
+
+Lupinus pilosus.--Produced plenty of pods.
+
+Ononis minutissima (Leguminosae).--Twelve perfect flowers on a plant
+under a net were marked by threads, and produced eight pods, containing
+on an average 2.38 seeds. Pods produced by flowers visited by insects
+would probably have contained on an average 3.66 seeds, judging from the
+effects of artificial cross-fertilisation.
+
+Phaseolus vulgaris (Leguminosae).--Quite fertile.
+
+Trifolium arvense (Leguminosae).--The excessively small flowers are
+incessantly visited by hive and humble-bees. When insects were excluded
+the flower-heads seemed to produce as many and as fine seeds as the
+exposed heads.
+
+Trifolium procumbens.--On one occasion covered-up plants seemed to yield
+as many seeds as the uncovered. On a second occasion sixty uncovered
+flower-heads yielded 9.1 grains weight of seeds, whilst sixty heads on
+protected plants yielded no less than 17.7 grains; so that these latter
+plants were much more productive; but this result I suppose was
+accidental. I have often watched this plant, and have never seen the
+flowers visited by insects; but I suspect that the flowers of this
+species, and more especially of Trifolium minus, are frequented by small
+nocturnal moths which, as I hear from Mr. Bond, haunt the smaller
+clovers.
+
+Medicago lupulina (Leguminosae).--On account of the danger of losing the
+seeds, I was forced to gather the pods before they were quite ripe; 150
+flower-heads on plants visited by bees yielded pods weighing 101 grains;
+whilst 150 heads on protected plants yielded pods weighing 77 grains.
+The inequality would probably have been greater if the mature seeds
+could have been all safely collected and compared. Ig. Urban (Keimung,
+Bluthen, etc., bei Medicago 1873) has described the means of
+fertilisation in this genus, as has the Reverend G. Henslow in the
+'Journal of the Linnean Society Botany' volume 9 1866 pages 327 and 355.
+
+Nicotiana tabacum (Solanaceae).--Fully self-fertile.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea (Convolvulaceae).--Highly self-fertile.
+
+Leptosiphon androsaceus (Polemoniacae).--Plants under a net produced a
+good many capsules.
+
+Primula mollis (Primulaceae).--A non-dimorphic species, self-fertile: J.
+Scott, in 'Journal of the Linnean Society Botany' volume 8 1864 page
+120.
+
+Nolana prostrata (Nolanaceae).--Plants covered up in the greenhouse,
+yielded seeds by weight compared with uncovered plants, the flowers of
+which were visited by many bees, in the ratio of 100 to 61.
+
+Ajuga reptans (Labiatae).--Set a good many seeds; but none of the stems
+under a net produced so many as several uncovered stems growing closely
+by.
+
+Euphrasia officinalis (Scrophulariaceae).--Covered-up plants produced
+plenty of seed; whether less than the exposed plants I cannot say. I saw
+two small Dipterous insects (Dolichopos nigripennis and Empis chioptera)
+repeatedly sucking the flowers; as they crawled into them, they rubbed
+against the bristles which project from the anthers, and became dusted
+with pollen.
+
+Veronica agrestis (Scrophulariaceae).--Covered-up plants produced an
+abundance of seeds. I do not know whether any insects visit the flowers;
+but I have observed Syrphidae repeatedly covered with pollen visiting
+the flowers of V. hederaefolia and chamoedrys.
+
+Mimulus luteus (Scrophulariaceae).--Highly self-fertile.
+
+Calceolaria (greenhouse variety) (Scrophulariaceae).--Highly
+self-fertile.
+
+Verbascum thapsus (Scrophulariaceae).--Highly self-fertile.
+
+Verbascum lychnitis.--Highly self-fertile.
+
+Vandellia nummularifolia (Scrophulariaceae).--Perfect flowers produce a
+good many capsules.
+
+Bartsia odontites (Scrophulariaceae).--Covered-up plants produced a good
+many seeds; but several of these were shrivelled, nor were they so
+numerous as those produced by unprotected plants, which were incessantly
+visited by hive and humble-bees.
+
+Specularia speculum (Lobeliaceae).--Covered plants produced almost as
+many capsules as the uncovered.
+
+Lactuca sativa (Compositae).--Covered plants produced some seeds, but
+the summer was wet and unfavourable.
+
+Galium aparine (Rubiaceae).--Covered plants produced quite as many seeds
+as the uncovered.
+
+Apium petroselinum (Umbelliferae).--Covered plants apparently were as
+productive as the uncovered.
+
+Zea mays (Gramineae).--A single plant in the greenhouse produced a good
+many grains.
+
+Canna warscewiczi (Marantaceae).--Highly self-fertile.
+
+Orchidaceae.--In Europe Ophrys apifera is as regularly self-fertilised
+as is any cleistogene flower. In the United States, South Africa, and
+Australia there are a few species which are perfectly self-fertile.
+These several cases are given in the second edition of my work on the
+Fertilisation of Orchids.
+
+Allium cepa (blood red var.) (Liliaceae).--Four flower-heads were
+covered with a net, and they produced somewhat fewer and smaller
+capsules than those on the uncovered heads. The capsules were counted on
+one uncovered head, and were 289 in number; whilst those on a fine head
+from under the net were only 199.]
+
+Each of these lists contains by a mere accident the same number of
+genera, namely, forty-nine. The genera in the first list include
+sixty-five species, and those in the second sixty species; the Orchideae
+in both being excluded. If the genera in this latter order, as well as
+in the Asclepiadae and Apocynaceae, had been included, the number of
+species which are sterile if insects are excluded would have been
+greatly increased; but the lists are confined to species which were
+actually experimented on. The results can be considered as only
+approximately accurate, for fertility is so variable a character, that
+each species ought to have been tried many times. The above number of
+species, namely, 125, is as nothing to the host of living plants; but
+the mere fact of more than half of them being sterile within the
+specified degree, when insects are excluded, is a striking one; for
+whenever pollen has to be carried from the anthers to the stigma in
+order to ensure full fertility, there is at least a good chance of
+cross-fertilisation. I do not, however, believe that if all known plants
+were tried in the same manner, half would be found to be sterile within
+the specified limits; for many flowers were selected for experiment
+which presented some remarkable structure; and such flowers often
+require insect-aid. Thus out of the forty-nine genera in the first list,
+about thirty-two have flowers which are asymmetrical or present some
+remarkable peculiarity; whilst in the second list, including species
+which are fully or moderately fertile when insects were excluded, only
+about twenty-one out of the forty-nine are asymmetrical or present any
+remarkable peculiarity.
+
+MEANS OF CROSS-FERTILISATION.
+
+The most important of all the means by which pollen is carried from the
+anthers to the stigma of the same flower, or from flower to flower, are
+insects, belonging to the orders of Hymenoptera, Lepidoptera, and
+Diptera; and in some parts of the world, birds. (10/1. I will here give
+all the cases known to me of birds fertilising flowers. In South Brazil,
+humming-birds certainly fertilise the various species of Abutilon, which
+are sterile without their aid (Fritz Muller 'Jenaische Zeitschrift f.
+Naturwiss.' B. 7 1872 page 24.) Long-beaked humming-birds visit the
+flowers of Brugmansia, whilst some of the short-beaked species often
+penetrate its large corolla in order to obtain the nectar in an
+illegitimate manner, in the same manner as do bees in all parts of the
+world. It appears, indeed, that the beaks of humming-birds are specially
+adapted to the various kinds of flowers which they visit: on the
+Cordillera they suck the Salviae, and lacerate the flowers of the
+Tacsoniae; in Nicaragua, Mr. Belt saw them sucking the flowers of
+Marcgravia and Erythina, and thus they carried pollen from flower to
+flower. In North America they are said to frequent the flowers of
+Impatiens: (Gould 'Introduction to the Trochilidae' 1861 pages 15, 120;
+'Gardeners' Chronicle' 1869 page 389; 'The Naturalist in Nicaragua' page
+129; 'Journal of the Linnean Society Botany' volume 13 1872 page 151.) I
+may add that I often saw in Chile a Mimus with its head yellow with
+pollen from, as I believe, a Cassia. I have been assured that at the
+Cape of Good Hope, Strelitzia is fertilised by the Nectarinidae. There
+can hardly be a doubt that many Australian flowers are fertilised by the
+many honey-sucking birds of that country. Mr. Wallace remarks (address
+to the Biological Section, British Association 1876) that he has "often
+observed the beaks and faces of the brush-tongued lories of the Moluccas
+covered with pollen." In New Zealand, many specimens of the Anthornis
+melanura had their heads coloured with pollen from the flowers of an
+endemic species of Fuchsia (Potts 'Transactions of the New Zealand
+Institute' volume 3 1870 page 72.) Next in importance, but in a quite
+subordinate degree, is the wind; and with some aquatic plants, according
+to Delpino, currents of water. The simple fact of the necessity in many
+cases of extraneous aid for the transport of the pollen, and the many
+contrivances for this purpose, render it highly probable that some great
+benefit is thus gained; and this conclusion has now been firmly
+established by the proved superiority in growth, vigour, and fertility
+of plants of crossed parentage over those of self-fertilised parentage.
+But we should always keep in mind that two somewhat opposed ends have to
+be gained; the first and more important one being the production of
+seeds by any means, and the second, cross-fertilisation.
+
+The advantages derived from cross-fertilisation throw a flood of light
+on most of the chief characters of flowers. We can thus understand their
+large size and bright colours, and in some cases the bright tints of the
+adjoining parts, such as the peduncles, bracteae, etc. By this means
+they are rendered conspicuous to insects, on the same principle that
+almost every fruit which is devoured by birds presents a strong contrast
+in colour with the green foliage, in order that it may be seen, and its
+seeds freely disseminated. With some flowers conspicuousness is gained
+at the expense even of the reproductive organs, as with the ray-florets
+of many Compositae, the exterior flowers of Hydrangea, and the terminal
+flowers of the Feather-hyacinth or Muscari. There is also reason to
+believe, and this was the opinion of Sprengel, that flowers differ in
+colour in accordance with the kinds of insects which frequent them.
+
+Not only do the bright colours of flowers serve to attract insects, but
+dark-coloured streaks and marks are often present, which Sprengel long
+ago maintained served as guides to the nectary. These marks follow the
+veins in the petals, or lie between them. They may occur on only one, or
+on all excepting one or more of the upper or lower petals; or they may
+form a dark ring round the tubular part of the corolla, or be confined
+to the lips of an irregular flower. In the white varieties of many
+flowers, such as of Digitalis purpurea, Antirrhinum majus, several
+species of Dianthus, Phlox, Myosotis, Rhododendron, Pelargonium, Primula
+and Petunia, the marks generally persist, whilst the rest of the corolla
+has become of a pure white; but this may be due merely to their colour
+being more intense and thus less readily obliterated. Sprengel's notion
+of the use of these marks as guides appeared to me for a long time
+fanciful; for insects, without such aid, readily discover and bite holes
+through the nectary from the outside. They also discover the minute
+nectar-secreting glands on the stipules and leaves of certain plants.
+Moreover, some few plants, such as certain poppies, which are not
+nectariferous, have guiding marks; but we might perhaps expect that some
+few plants would retain traces of a former nectariferous condition. On
+the other hand, these marks are much more common on asymmetrical
+flowers, the entrance into which would be apt to puzzle insects, than on
+regular flowers. Sir J. Lubbock has also proved that bees readily
+distinguish colours, and that they lose much time if the position of
+honey which they have once visited be in the least changed. (10/2.
+'British Wild Flowers in relation to Insects' 1875 page 44.) The
+following case affords, I think, the best evidence that these marks have
+really been developed in correlation with the nectary. The two upper
+petals of the common Pelargonium are thus marked near their bases; and I
+have repeatedly observed that when the flowers vary so as to become
+peloric or regular, they lose their nectaries and at the same time the
+dark marks. When the nectary is only partially aborted, only one of the
+upper petals loses its mark. Therefore the nectary and these marks
+clearly stand in some sort of close relation to one another; and the
+simplest view is that they were developed together for a special
+purpose; the only conceivable one being that the marks serve as a guide
+to the nectary. It is, however, evident from what has been already said,
+that insects could discover the nectar without the aid of guiding marks.
+They are of service to the plant, only by aiding insects to visit and
+suck a greater number of flowers within a given time than would
+otherwise be possible; and thus there will be a better chance of
+fertilisation by pollen brought from a distinct plant, and this we know
+is of paramount importance.
+
+The odours emitted by flowers attract insects, as I have observed in the
+case of plants covered by a muslin net. Nageli affixed artificial
+flowers to branches, scenting some with essential oils and leaving
+others unscented; and insects were attracted to the former in an
+unmistakable manner. (10/3. 'Enstehung etc. der Naturhist. Art.' 1865
+page 23.) Not a few flowers are both conspicuous and odoriferous. Of all
+colours, white is the prevailing one; and of white flowers a
+considerably larger proportion smell sweetly than of any other colour,
+namely, 14.6 per cent; of red, only 8.2 per cent are odoriferous. (10/4.
+The colours and odours of the flowers of 4200 species have been
+tabulated by Landgrabe and by Schubler and Kohler. I have not seen their
+original works, but a very full abstract is given in Loudon's
+'Gardeners' Magazine' volume 13 1837 page 367.) The fact of a larger
+proportion of white flowers smelling sweetly may depend in part on those
+which are fertilised by moths requiring the double aid of
+conspicuousness in the dusk and of odour. So great is the economy of
+nature, that most flowers which are fertilised by crepuscular or
+nocturnal insects emit their odour chiefly or exclusively in the
+evening. Some flowers, however, which are highly odoriferous depend
+solely on this quality for their fertilisation, such as the
+night-flowering stock (Hesperis) and some species of Daphne; and these
+present the rare case of flowers which are fertilised by insects being
+obscurely coloured.
+
+The storage of a supply of nectar in a protected place is manifestly
+connected with the visits of insects. So is the position which the
+stamens and pistils occupy, either permanently or at the proper period
+through their own movements; for when mature they invariably stand in
+the pathway leading to the nectary. The shape of the nectary and of the
+adjoining parts are likewise related to the particular kinds of insects
+which habitually visit the flowers; this has been well shown by Hermann
+Muller by his comparison of lowland species which are chiefly visited by
+bees, with alpine species belonging to the same genera which are visited
+by butterflies. (10/5. 'Nature' 1874 page 110, 1875 page 190, 1876 pages
+210, 289.) Flowers may also be adapted to certain kinds of insects, by
+secreting nectar particularly attractive to them, and unattractive to
+other kinds; of which fact Epipactis latifolia offers the most striking
+instance known to me, as it is visited exclusively by wasps. Structures
+also exist, such as the hairs within the corolla of the fox glove
+(Digitalis), which apparently serve to exclude insects that are not well
+fitted to bring pollen from one flower to another. (10/6. Belt 'The
+Naturalist in Nicaragua' 1874 page 132.) I need say nothing here of the
+endless contrivances, such as the viscid glands attached to the
+pollen-masses of the Orchideae and Asclepiadae, or the viscid or
+roughened state of the pollen-grains of many plants, or the irritability
+of their stamens which move when touched by insects etc.--as all these
+contrivances evidently favour or ensure cross-fertilisation.
+
+All ordinary flowers are so far open that insects can force an entrance
+into them, notwithstanding that some, like the Snapdragon (Antirrhinum),
+various Papilionaceous and Fumariaceous flowers, are in appearance
+closed. It cannot be maintained that their openness is necessary for
+fertility, as cleistogene flowers which are permanently closed yield a
+full complement of seeds. Pollen contains much nitrogen and
+phosphorus--the two most precious of all the elements for the growth of
+plants--but in the case of most open flowers, a large quantity of pollen
+is consumed by pollen-devouring insects, and a large quantity is
+destroyed during long-continued rain. With many plants this latter evil
+is guarded against, as far as is possible, by the anthers opening only
+during dry weather (10/7. Mr. Blackley observed that the ripe anthers of
+rye did not dehisce whilst kept under a bell-glass in a damp atmosphere,
+whilst other anthers exposed to the same temperature in the open air
+dehisced freely. He also found much more pollen adhering to the sticky
+slides, which were attached to kites and sent high up in the atmosphere,
+during the first fine and dry days after wet weather, than at other
+times: 'Experimental Researches on Hay Fever' 1873 page 127.)--by the
+position and form of some or all of the petals,--by the presence of
+hairs, etc., and as Kerner has shown in his interesting essay, by the
+movements of the petals or of the whole flower during cold and wet
+weather. (10/8. 'Die Schutzmittel des Pollens' 1873.) In order to
+compensate the loss of pollen in so many ways, the anthers produce a far
+larger amount than is necessary for the fertilisation of the same
+flower. I know this from my own experiments on Ipomoea, given in the
+Introduction; and it is still more plainly shown by the astonishingly
+small quantity produced by cleistogene flowers, which lose none of their
+pollen, in comparison with that produced by the open flowers borne by
+the same plants; and yet this small quantity suffices for the
+fertilisation of all their numerous seeds. Mr. Hassall took pains in
+estimating the number of pollen-grains produced by a flower of the
+Dandelion (Leontodon), and found the number to be 243,600, and in a
+Paeony 3,654,000 grains. (10/9. 'Annals and Magazine of Natural History'
+volume 8 1842 page 108.) The editor of the 'Botanical Register' counted
+the ovules in the flowers of Wistaria sinensis, and carefully estimated
+the number of pollen-grains, and he found that for each ovule there were
+7000 grains. (10/10. Quoted in 'Gardeners' Chronicle' 1846 page 771.)
+With Mirabilis, three or four of the very large pollen-grains are
+sufficient to fertilise an ovule; but I do not know how many grains a
+flower produces. With Hibiscus, Kolreuter found that sixty grains were
+necessary to fertilise all the ovules of a flower, and he calculated
+that 4863 grains were produced by a single flower, or eighty-one times
+too many. With Geum urbanum, however, according to Gartner, the pollen
+is only ten times too much. (10/11. Kolreuter 'Vorlaufige Nachricht'
+1761 page 9. Gartner 'Beitrage zur Kenntniss' etc. page 346.) As we thus
+see that the open state of all ordinary flowers, and the consequent loss
+of much pollen, necessitate the development of so prodigious an excess
+of this precious substance, why, it may be asked, are flowers always
+left open? As many plants exist throughout the vegetable kingdom which
+bear cleistogene flowers, there can hardly be a doubt that all open
+flowers might easily have been converted into closed ones. The graduated
+steps by which this process could have been effected may be seen at the
+present time in Lathyrus nissolia, Biophytum sensitivum, and several
+other plants. The answer to the above question obviously is, that with
+permanently closed flowers there could be no cross-fertilisation.
+
+The frequency, almost regularity, with which pollen is transported by
+insects from flower to flower, often from a considerable distance, well
+deserves attention. (10/12. An experiment made by Kolreuter 'Forsetsung'
+etc. 1763 page 69, affords good evidence on this head. Hibiscus
+vesicarius is strongly dichogamous, its pollen being shed before the
+stigmas are mature. Kolreuter marked 310 flowers, and put pollen from
+other flowers on their stigmas every day, so that they were thoroughly
+fertilised; and he left the same number of other flowers to the agency
+of insects. Afterwards he counted the seeds of both lots: the flowers
+which he had fertilised with such astonishing care produced 11,237
+seeds, whilst those left to the insects produced 10,886; that is, a less
+number by only 351; and this small inferiority is fully accounted for by
+the insects not having worked during some days, when the weather was
+cold with continued rain.) This is best shown by the impossibility in
+many cases of raising two varieties of the same species pure, if they
+grow at all near together; but to this subject I shall presently return;
+also by the many cases of hybrids which have appeared spontaneously both
+in gardens and a state of nature. With respect to the distance from
+which pollen is often brought, no one who has had any experience would
+expect to obtain pure cabbage-seed, for instance, if a plant of another
+variety grew within two or three hundred yards. An accurate observer,
+the late Mr. Masters of Canterbury, assured me that he once had his
+whole stock of seeds "seriously affected with purple bastards," by some
+plants of purple kale which flowered in a cottager's garden at the
+distance of half a mile; no other plant of this variety growing any
+nearer. (10/13. Mr. W.C. Marshall caught no less than seven specimens of
+a moth (Cucullia umbratica) with the pollinia of the butterfly-orchis
+(Habenaria chlorantha) sticking to their eyes, and, therefore, in the
+proper position for fertilising the flowers of this species, on an
+island in Derwentwater, at the distance of half a mile from any place
+where this plant grew: 'Nature' 1872 page 393.) But the most striking
+case which has been recorded is that by M. Godron, who shows by the
+nature of the hybrids produced that Primula grandiflora must have been
+crossed with pollen brought by bees from P. officinalis, growing at the
+distance of above two kilometres, or of about one English mile and a
+quarter. (10/14. 'Revue des Sc. Nat.' 1875 page 331.)
+
+All those who have long attended to hybridisation, insist in the
+strongest terms on the liability of castrated flowers to be fertilised
+by pollen brought from distant plants of the same species. (10/15. See,
+for instance, the remarks by Herbert 'Amaryllidaceae' 1837 page 349.
+Also Gartner's strong expressions on this subject in his
+'Bastarderzeugung' 1849 page 670 and 'Kenntniss der Befruchtung' 1844
+pages 510, 573. Also Lecoq 'De la Fecondation' etc. 1845 page 27. Some
+statements have been published during late years of the extraordinary
+tendency of hybrid plants to revert to their parent forms; but as it is
+not said how the flowers were protected from insects, it may be
+suspected that they were often fertilised with pollen brought from a
+distance from the parent-species.) The following case shows this in the
+clearest manner: Gartner, before he had gained much experience,
+castrated and fertilised 520 flowers on various species with pollen of
+other genera or other species, but left them unprotected; for, as he
+says, he thought it a laughable idea that pollen should be brought from
+flowers of the same species, none of which grew nearer than between 500
+and 600 yards. (10/16. 'Kenntniss der Befruchtung' pages 539, 550, 575,
+576.) The result was that 289 of these 520 flowers yielded no seed, or
+none that germinated; the seed of 29 flowers produced hybrids, such as
+might have been expected from the nature of the pollen employed; and
+lastly, the seed of the remaining 202 flowers produced perfectly pure
+plants, so that these flowers must have been fertilised by pollen
+brought by insects from a distance of between 500 and 600 yards. (10/17.
+Henschel's experiments quoted by Gartner 'Kenntniss' etc. page 574,
+which are worthless in all other respects, likewise show how largely
+flowers are intercrossed by insects. He castrated many flowers on
+thirty-seven species, belonging to twenty-two genera, and put on their
+stigmas either no pollen, or pollen from distinct genera, yet they all
+seeded, and all the seedlings raised from them were of course pure.) It
+is of course possible that some of these 202 flowers might have been
+fertilised by pollen left accidentally in them when they were castrated;
+but to show how improbable this is, I may add that Gartner, during the
+next eighteen years, castrated no less than 8042 flowers and hybridised
+them in a closed room; and the seeds from only seventy of these, that is
+considerably less than 1 per cent, produced pure or unhybridised
+offspring. (10/18. 'Kenntniss' etc. pages 555, 576.)
+
+From the various facts now given, it is evident that most flowers are
+adapted in an admirable manner for cross-fertilisation. Nevertheless,
+the greater number likewise present structures which are manifestly
+adapted, though not in so striking a manner, for self-fertilisation. The
+chief of these is their hermaphrodite condition; that is, their
+including within the same corolla both the male and female reproductive
+organs. These often stand close together and are mature at the same
+time; so that pollen from the same flower cannot fail to be deposited at
+the proper period on the stigma. There are also various details of
+structure adapted for self-fertilisation. (10/19. Hermann Muller 'Die
+Befruchtung' etc. page 448.) Such structures are best shown in those
+curious cases discovered by Hermann Muller, in which a species exists
+under two forms,--one bearing conspicuous flowers fitted for
+cross-fertilisation, and the other smaller flowers fitted for
+self-fertilisation, with many parts in the latter slightly modified for
+this special purpose. (10/20. 'Nature' 1873 pages 44, 433.)
+
+As two objects in most respects opposed, namely, cross-fertilisation and
+self-fertilisation, have in many cases to be gained, we can understand
+the co-existence in so many flowers of structures which appear at first
+sight unnecessarily complex and of an opposed nature. We can thus
+understand the great contrast in structure between cleistogene flowers,
+which are adapted exclusively for self-fertilisation, and ordinary
+flowers on the same plant, which are adapted so as to allow of at least
+occasional cross-fertilisation. (10/21. Fritz Muller has discovered in
+the animal kingdom 'Jenaische Zeitschr.' B. 4 page 451, a case curiously
+analogous to that of the plants which bear cleistogene and perfect
+flowers. He finds in the nests of termites in Brazil, males and females
+with imperfect wings, which do not leave the nests and propagate the
+species in a cleistogene manner, but only if a fully-developed queen
+after swarming does not enter the old nest. The fully-developed males
+and females are winged, and individuals from distinct nests can hardly
+fail often to intercross. In the act of swarming they are destroyed in
+almost infinite numbers by a host of enemies, so that a queen may often
+fail to enter an old nest; and then the imperfectly developed males and
+females propagate and keep up the stock.) The former are always minute,
+completely closed, with their petals more or less rudimentary and never
+brightly coloured; they never secrete nectar, never are odoriferous,
+have very small anthers which produce only a few grains of pollen, and
+their stigmas are but little developed. Bearing in mind that some
+flowers are cross-fertilised by the wind (called anemophilous by
+Delpino), and others by insects (called entomophilous), we can further
+understand, as was pointed out by me several years ago, the great
+contrast in appearance between these two classes of flowers. (10/22.
+'Journal of the Linnean Society' volume 7 Botany 1863 page 77.)
+Anemophilous flowers resemble in many respects cleistogene flowers, but
+differ widely in not being closed, in producing an extraordinary amount
+of pollen which is always incoherent, and in the stigma often being
+largely developed or plumose. We certainly owe the beauty and odour of
+our flowers and the storage of a large supply of honey to the existence
+of insects.
+
+ON THE RELATION BETWEEN THE STRUCTURE AND CONSPICUOUSNESS OF FLOWERS,
+THE VISITS OF INSECTS, AND THE ADVANTAGES OF CROSS-FERTILISATION.
+
+It has already been shown that there is no close relation between the
+number of seeds produced by flowers when crossed and self-fertilised,
+and the degree to which their offspring are aaffected by the two
+processes. I have also given reasons for believing that the inefficiency
+of a plant's own pollen is in most cases an incidental result, or has
+not been specially acquired for the sake of preventing
+self-fertilisation. On the other hand, there can hardly be a doubt that
+dichogamy, which prevails according to Hildebrand in the greater number
+of species (10/23. 'Die Geschlecter Vertheiling' etc. page 32.),--that
+the heterostyled condition of certain plants,--and that many mechanical
+structures--have all been acquired so as both to check
+self-fertilisation and to favour cross-fertilisation. The means for
+favouring cross-fertilisation must have been acquired before those which
+prevent self-fertilisation; as it would manifestly be injurious to a
+plant that its stigma should fail to receive its own pollen, unless it
+had already become well adapted for receiving pollen from another
+individual. It should be observed that many plants still possess a high
+power of self-fertilisation, although their flowers are excellently
+constructed for cross-fertilisation--for instance, those of many
+papilionaceous species.
+
+It may be admitted as almost certain that some structures, such as a
+narrow elongated nectary, or a long tubular corolla, have been developed
+in order that certain kinds of insects alone should obtain the nectar.
+These insects would thus find a store of nectar preserved from the
+attacks of other insects; and they would thus be led to visit frequently
+such flowers and to carry pollen from one to the other. (10/24. See the
+interesting discussion on this subject by Hermann Muller, 'Die
+Befruchtung' etc. page 431.) It might perhaps have been expected that
+plants having their flowers thus peculiarly constructed would profit in
+a greater degree by being crossed, than ordinary or simple flowers; but
+this does not seem to hold good. Thus Tropaeolum minus has a long
+nectary and an irregular corolla, whilst Limnanthes douglasii has a
+regular flower and no proper nectary, yet the crossed seedlings of both
+species are to the self-fertilised in height as 100 to 79. Salvia
+coccinea has an irregular corolla, with a curious apparatus by which
+insects depress the stamens, while the flowers of Ipomoea are regular;
+and the crossed seedlings of the former are in height to the
+self-fertilised as 100 to 76, whilst those of the Ipomoea are as 100 to
+77. Fagopyrum is dimorphic, and Anagallis collina is non-dimorphic, and
+the crossed seedlings of both are in height to the self-fertilised as
+100 to 69.
+
+With all European plants, excepting the comparatively rare anemophilous
+kinds, the possibility of distinct individuals intercrossing depends on
+the visits of insects; and Hermann Muller has proved by his valuable
+observations, that large conspicuous flowers are visited much more
+frequently and by many more kinds of insects, than are small
+inconspicuous flowers. He further remarks that the flowers which are
+rarely visited must be capable of self-fertilisation, otherwise they
+would quickly become extinct. (10/25. 'Die Befruchtung' etc. page 426.
+'Nature' 1873 page 433.) There is, however, some liability to error in
+forming a judgment on this head, from the extreme difficulty of
+ascertaining whether flowers which are rarely or never visited during
+the day (as in the above given case of Fumaria capreolata) are not
+visited by small nocturnal Lepidoptera, which are known to be strongly
+attracted by sugar. (10/26. In answer to a question by me, the editor of
+an entomological journal writes--"The Depressariae, as is notorious to
+every collector of Noctuae, come very freely to sugar, and no doubt
+naturally visit flowers:" the 'Entomologists' Weekly Intelligencer' 1860
+page 103.) The two lists given in the early part of this chapter support
+Muller's conclusion that small and inconspicuous flowers are completely
+self-fertile: for only eight or nine out of the 125 species in the two
+lists come under this head, and all of these were proved to be highly
+fertile when insects were excluded. The singularly inconspicuous flowers
+of the Fly Ophrys (O. muscifera), as I have elsewhere shown, are rarely
+visited by insects; and it is a strange instance of imperfection, in
+contradiction to the above rule, that these flowers are not
+self-fertile, so that a large proportion of them do not produce seeds.
+The converse of the rule that plants bearing small and inconspicuous
+flowers are self-fertile, namely, that plants with large and conspicuous
+flowers are self-sterile, is far from true, as may be seen in our second
+list of spontaneously self-fertile species; for this list includes such
+species as Ipomoea purpurea, Adonis aestivalis, Verbascum thapsus, Pisum
+sativum, Lathyrus odoratus, some species of Papaver and of Nymphaea, and
+others.
+
+The rarity of the visits of insects to small flowers, does not depend
+altogether on their inconspicuousness, but likewise on the absence of
+some sufficient attraction; for the flowers of Trifolium arvense are
+extremely small, yet are incessantly visited by hive and humble-bees, as
+are the small and dingy flowers of the asparagus. The flowers of Linaria
+cymbalaria are small and not very conspicuous, yet at the proper time
+they are freely visited by hive-bees. I may add that, according to Mr.
+Bennett, there is another and quite distinct class of plants which
+cannot be much frequented by insects, as they flower either exclusively
+or often during the winter, and these seem adapted for
+self-fertilisation, as they shed their pollen before the flowers expand.
+(10/27. 'Nature' 1869 page 11.)
+
+That many flowers have been rendered conspicuous for the sake of guiding
+insects to them is highly probable or almost certain; but it may be
+asked, have other flowers been rendered inconspicuous so that they may
+not be frequently visited, or have they merely retained a former and
+primitive condition? If a plant were much reduced in size, so probably
+would be the flowers through correlated growth, and this may possibly
+account for some cases; but the size and colour of the corolla are both
+extremely variable characters, and it can hardly be doubted that if
+large and brightly-coloured flowers were advantageous to any species,
+these could be acquired through natural selection within a moderate
+lapse of time, as indeed we see with most alpine plants. Papilionaceous
+flowers are manifestly constructed in relation to the visits of insects,
+and it seems improbable, from the usual character of the group, that the
+progenitors of the genera Vicia and Trifolium produced such minute and
+unattractive flowers as those of V. hirsuta and T. procumbens. We are
+thus led to infer that some plants either have not had their flowers
+increased in size, or have actually had them reduced and purposely
+rendered inconspicuous, so that they are now but little visited by
+insects. In either case they must also have acquired or retained a high
+degree of self-fertility.
+
+If it became from any cause advantageous to a species to have its
+capacity for self-fertilisation increased, there is little difficulty in
+believing that this could readily be effected; for three cases of plants
+varying in such a manner as to be more fertile with their own pollen
+than they originally were, occurred in the course of my few experiments,
+namely, with Mimulus, Ipomoea, and Nicotiana. Nor is there any reason to
+doubt that many kinds of plants are capable under favourable
+circumstances of propagating themselves for very many generations by
+self-fertilisation. This is the case with the varieties of Pisum sativum
+and of Lathyrus odoratus which are cultivated in England, and with
+Ophrys apifera and some other plants in a state of nature. Nevertheless,
+most or all of these plants retain structures in an efficient state
+which cannot be of the least use excepting for cross-fertilisation. We
+have also seen reason to suspect that self-fertilisation is in some
+peculiar manner beneficial to certain plants; but if this be really the
+case, the benefit thus derived is far more than counter-balanced by a
+cross with a fresh stock or with a slightly different variety.
+
+Notwithstanding the several considerations just advanced, it seems to me
+highly improbable that plants bearing small and inconspicuous flowers
+have been or should continue to be subjected to self-fertilisation for a
+long series of generations. I think so, not from the evil which
+manifestly follows from self-fertilisation, in many cases even in the
+first generation, as with Viola tricolor, Sarothamnus, Nemophila,
+Cyclamen, etc.; nor from the probability of the evil increasing after
+several generations, for on this latter head I have not sufficient
+evidence, owing to the manner in which my experiments were conducted.
+But if plants bearing small and inconspicuous flowers were not
+occasionally intercrossed, and did not profit by the process, all their
+flowers would probably have been rendered cleistogene, as they would
+thus have largely benefited by having to produce only a small quantity
+of safely-protected pollen. In coming to this conclusion, I have been
+guided by the frequency with which plants belonging to distinct orders
+have been rendered cleistogene. But I can hear of no instance of a
+species with all its flowers rendered permanently cleistogene. Leersia
+makes the nearest approach to this state; but as already stated, it has
+been known to produce perfect flowers in one part of Germany. Some other
+plants of the cleistogene class, for instance Aspicarpa, have failed to
+produce perfect flowers during several years in a hothouse; but it does
+not follow that they would fail to do so in their native country, any
+more than with Vandellia, which with me produced only cleistogene
+flowers during certain years. Plants belonging to this class commonly
+bear both kinds of flowers every season, and the perfect flowers of
+Viola canina yield fine capsules, but only when visited by bees. We have
+also seen that the seedlings of Ononis minutissima, raised from the
+perfect flowers fertilised with pollen from another plant, were finer
+than those from self-fertilised flowers; and this was likewise the case
+to a certain extent with Vandellia. As therefore no species which at one
+time bore small and inconspicuous flowers has had all its flowers
+rendered cleistogene, I must believe that plants now bearing small and
+inconspicuous flowers profit by their still remaining open, so as to be
+occasionally intercrossed by insects. It has been one of the greatest
+oversights in my work that I did not experimentise on such flowers,
+owing to the difficulty of fertilising them, and to my not having seen
+the importance of the subject. (10/28. Some of the species of Solanum
+would be good ones for such experiments, for they are said by Hermann
+Muller 'Befruchtung' page 434, to be unattractive to insects from not
+secreting nectar, not producing much pollen, and not being very
+conspicuous. Hence probably it is that, according to Verlot 'Production
+des Varieties' 1865 page 72, the varieties of "les aubergines et les
+tomates" (species of Solanum) do not intercross when they are cultivated
+near together; but it should be remembered that these are not endemic
+species. On the other hand, the flowers of the common potato (S.
+tuberosum), though they do not secrete nectar Kurr 'Bedeutung der
+Nektarien' 1833 page 40, yet cannot be considered as inconspicuous, and
+they are sometimes visited by diptera (Muller), and, as I have seen, by
+humble-bees. Tinzmann (as quoted in 'Gardeners' Chronicle' 1846 page
+183, found that some of the varieties did not bear seed when fertilised
+with pollen from the same variety, but were fertile with that from
+another variety.)
+
+It should be remembered that in two of the cases in which highly
+self-fertile varieties appeared amongst my experimental plants, namely,
+with Mimulus and Nicotiana, such varieties were greatly benefited by a
+cross with a fresh stock or with a slightly different variety; and this
+likewise was the case with the cultivated varieties of Pisum sativum and
+Lathyrus odoratus, which have been long propagated by
+self-fertilisation. Therefore until the contrary is distinctly proved, I
+must believe that as a general rule small and inconspicuous flowers are
+occasionally intercrossed by insects; and that after long-continued
+self-fertilisation, if they are crossed with pollen brought from a plant
+growing under somewhat different conditions, or descended from one thus
+growing, their offspring would profit greatly. It cannot be admitted,
+under our present state of knowledge, that self-fertilisation continued
+during many successive generations is ever the most beneficial method of
+reproduction.
+
+THE MEANS WHICH FAVOUR OR ENSURE FLOWERS BEING FERTILISED WITH POLLEN
+FROM A DISTINCT PLANT.
+
+We have seen in four cases that seedlings raised from a cross between
+flowers on the same plant, even on plants appearing distinct from having
+been propagated by stolons or cuttings, were not superior to seedlings
+from self-fertilised flowers; and in a fifth case (Digitalis) superior
+only in a slight degree. Therefore we might expect that with plants
+growing in a state of nature a cross between the flowers on distinct
+individuals, and not merely between the flowers on the same plant, would
+generally or often be effected by some means. The fact of bees and of
+some Diptera visiting the flowers of the same species as long as they
+can, instead of promiscuously visiting various species, favours the
+intercrossing of distinct plants. On the other hand, insects usually
+search a large number of flowers on the same plant before they fly to
+another, and this is opposed to cross-fertilisation. The extraordinary
+number of flowers which bees are able to search within a very short
+space of time, as will be shown in a future chapter, increases the
+chance of cross-fertilisation; as does the fact that they are not able
+to perceive without entering a flower whether other bees have exhausted
+the nectar. For instance, Hermann Muller found that four-fifths of the
+flowers of Lamium album which a humble-bee visited had been already
+exhausted of their nectar. (10/29. 'Die Befruchtung' etc. page 311.) In
+order that distinct plants should be intercrossed, it is of course
+indispensable that two or more individuals should grow near one another;
+and this is generally the case. Thus A. de Candolle remarks that in
+ascending a mountain the individuals of the same species do not commonly
+disappear near its upper limit quite gradually, but rather abruptly.
+This fact can hardly be explained by the nature of the conditions, as
+these graduate away in an insensible manner, and it probably depends in
+large part on vigorous seedlings being produced only as high up the
+mountain as many individuals can subsist together.
+
+With respect to dioecious plants, distinct individuals must always
+fertilise each other. With monoecious plants, as pollen has to be
+carried from flower to flower, there will always be a good chance of its
+being carried from plant to plant. Delpino has also observed the curious
+fact that certain individuals of the monoecious walnut (Juglans regia)
+are proterandrous, and others proterogynous, and these will reciprocally
+fertilise each other. (10/30. 'Ult. Osservazioni' etc. part 2 fasc 2
+page 337.) So it is with the common nut (Corylus avellana) (10/31.
+'Nature' 1875 page 26.), and, what is more surprising, with some few
+hermaphrodite plants, as observed by Hermann Muller. (10/32. 'Die
+Befruchtung' etc. pages 285, 339.) These latter plants cannot fail to
+act on each other like dimorphic or trimorphic species, in which the
+union of two individuals is necessary for full and normal fertility.
+With ordinary hermaphrodite species, the expansion of only a few flowers
+at the same time is one of the simplest means for favouring the
+intercrossing of distinct individuals; but this would render the plants
+less conspicuous to insects, unless the flowers were of large size, as
+in the case of several bulbous plants. Kerner thinks that it is for this
+object that the Australian Villarsia parnassifolia produces daily only a
+single flower. (10/33. 'Die Schutzmittel' etc page 23.) Mr. Cheeseman
+also remarks, that as certain Orchids in New Zealand which require
+insect-aid for their fertilisation bear only a single flower, distinct
+plants cannot fail to intercross. (10/34. 'Transactions of the New
+Zealand Institute' volume 5 1873 page 356.)
+
+Dichogamy, which prevails so extensively throughout the vegetable
+kingdom, much increases the chance of distinct individuals
+intercrossing. With proterandrous species, which are far more ccommon
+than proterogynous, the young flowers are exclusively male in function,
+and the older ones exclusively female; and as bees habitually alight low
+down on the spikes of flowers in order to crawl upwards, they get dusted
+with pollen from the uppermost flowers, which they carry to the stigmas
+of the lower and older flowers on the next spike which they visit. The
+degree to which distinct plants will thus be intercrossed depends on the
+number of spikes in full flower at the same time on the same plant. With
+proterogynous flowers and with depending racemes, the manner in which
+insects visit the flowers ought to be reversed in order that distinct
+plants should be intercrossed. But this whole subject requires further
+investigation, as the great importance of crosses between distinct
+individuals, instead of merely between distinct flowers, has hitherto
+been hardly recognised.
+
+In some few cases the special movements of certain organs almost ensure
+pollen being carried from plant to plant. Thus with many orchids, the
+pollen-masses after becoming attached to the head or proboscis of an
+insect do not move into the proper position for striking the stigma,
+until ample time has elapsed for the insect to fly to another plant.
+With Spiranthes autumnalis, the pollen-masses cannot be applied to the
+stigma until the labellum and rostellum have moved apart, and this
+movement is very slow. (10/35. 'The Various Contrivances by which
+British and Foreign Orchids are fertilised' first edition page 128.)
+With Posoqueria fragrans (one of the Rubiaceae) the same end is gained
+by the movement of a specially constructed stamen, as described by Fritz
+Muller.
+
+We now come to a far more general and therefore more important means by
+which the mutual fertilisation of distinct plants is effected, namely,
+the fertilising power of pollen from another variety or individual being
+greater than that of a plant's own pollen. The simplest and best known
+case of prepotent action in pollen, though it does not bear directly on
+our present subject, is that of a plant's own pollen over that from a
+distinct species. If pollen from a distinct species be placed on the
+stigma of a castrated flower, and then after the interval of several
+hours, pollen from the same species be placed on the stigma, the effects
+of the former are wholly obliterated, excepting in some rare cases. If
+two varieties are treated in the same manner, the result is analogous,
+though of directly opposite nature; for pollen from any other variety is
+often or generally prepotent over that from the same flower. I will give
+some instances: the pollen of Mimulus luteus regularly falls on the
+stigma of its own flower, for the plant is highly fertile when insects
+are excluded. Now several flowers on a remarkably constant whitish
+variety were fertilised without being castrated with pollen from a
+yellowish variety; and of the twenty-eight seedlings thus raised, every
+one bore yellowish flowers, so that the pollen of the yellow variety
+completely overwhelmed that of the mother-plant. Again, Iberis umbellata
+is spontaneously self-fertile, and I saw an abundance of pollen from
+their own flowers on the stigmas; nevertheless, of thirty seedlings
+raised from non-castrated fflowers of a crimson variety crossed with
+pollen from a pink variety, twenty-four bore pink flowers, like those of
+the male or pollen-bearing parent.
+
+In these two cases flowers were fertilised with pollen from a distinct
+variety, and this was shown to be prepotent by the character of the
+offspring. Nearly similar results often follow when two or more
+self-fertile varieties are allowed to grow near one another and are
+visited by insects. The common cabbage produces a large number of
+flowers on the same stalk, and when insects are excluded these set many
+capsules, moderately rich in seeds. I planted a white Kohl-rabi, a
+purple Kohl-rabi, a Portsmouth broccoli, a Brussels sprout, and a
+Sugar-loaf cabbage near together and left them uncovered. Seeds
+collected from each kind were sown in separate beds; and the majority of
+the seedlings in all five beds were mongrelised in the most complicated
+manner, some taking more after one variety, and some after another. The
+effects of the Kohl-rabi were particularly plain in the enlarged stems
+of many of the seedlings. Altogether 233 plants were raised, of which
+155 were mongrelised in the plainest manner, and of the remaining 78 not
+half were absolutely pure. I repeated the experiment by planting near
+together two varieties of cabbage with purple-green and white-green
+lacinated leaves; and of the 325 seedlings raised from the purple-green
+variety, 165 had white-green and 160 purple-green leaves. Of the 466
+seedlings raised from the white-green variety, 220 had purple-green and
+246 white-green leaves. These cases show how largely pollen from a
+neighbouring variety of the cabbage effaces the action of the plant's
+own pollen. We should bear in mind that pollen must be carried by the
+bees from flower to flower on the same large branching stem much more
+abundantly than from plant to plant; and in the case of plants the
+flowers of which are in some degree dichogamous, those on the same stem
+would be of different ages, and would thus be as ready for mutual
+fertilisation as the flowers on distinct plants, were it not for the
+prepotency of pollen from another variety. (10/36. A writer in the
+'Gardeners' Chronicle' 1855 page 730, says that he planted a bed of
+turnips (Brassica rapa) and of rape (B. napus) close together, and sowed
+the seeds of the former. The result was that scarcely one seedling was
+true to its kind, and several closely resembled rape.)
+
+Several varieties of the radish (Raphanus sativus), which is moderately
+self-fertile when insects are excluded, were in flower at the same time
+in my garden. Seed was collected from one of them, and out of twenty-two
+seedlings thus raised only twelve were true to their kind. (10/37.
+Duhamel as quoted by Godron 'De l'Espece' tome 2 page 50, makes an
+analogous statement with respect to this plant.)
+
+The onion produces a large number of flowers, all crowded together into
+a large globular head, each flower having six stamens; so that the
+stigmas receive plenty of pollen from their own and the adjoining
+anthers. Consequently the plant is fairly self-fertile when protected
+from insects. A blood-red, silver, globe and Spanish onion were planted
+near together; and seedlings were raised from each kind in four separate
+beds. In all the beds mongrels of various kinds were numerous, except
+amongst the ten seedlings from the blood-red onion, which included only
+two. Altogether forty-six seedlings were raised, of which thirty-one had
+been plainly crossed.
+
+A similar result is known to follow with the varieties of many other
+plants, if allowed to flower near together: I refer here only to species
+which are capable of fertilising themselves, for if this be not the
+case, they would of course be liable to be crossed by any other variety
+growing near. Horticulturists do not commonly distinguish between the
+effects of variability and intercrossing; but I have collected evidence
+on the natural crossing of varieties of the tulip, hyacinth, anemone,
+ranunculus, strawberry, Leptosiphon androsaceus, orange, rhododendron
+and rhubarb, all of which plants I believe to be self-fertile. (10/38.
+With respect to tulips and some other flowers, see Godron 'De l'Espece'
+tome 1 page 252. For anemones 'Gardeners' Chronicle' 1859 page 98. For
+strawberries see Herbert in 'Transactions of the Horticultural Society'
+volume 4 page 17. The same observer elsewhere speaks of the spontaneous
+crossing of rhododendrons. Gallesio makes the same statement with
+respect to oranges. I have myself known extensive crossing to occur with
+the common rhubarb. For Leptosiphon, Verlot 'Des Varieties' 1865 page
+20. I have not included in my list the Carnation, Nemophila, or
+Antirrhinum, the varieties of which are known to cross freely, because
+these plants are not always self-fertile. I know nothing about the
+self-fertility of Trollius Lecoq 'De la Fecondation' 1862 page 93,
+Mahonia, and Crinum, in which genera the species intercross largely.
+With respect to Mahonia it is now scarcely possible to procure in this
+country pure specimens of M. aquifolium or repens; and the various
+species of Crinum sent by Herbert 'Amaryllidaceae' page 32, to Calcutta,
+crossed there so freely that pure seed could not be saved.) Much other
+indirect evidence could be given with respect to the extent to which
+varieties of the same species spontaneously intercross.
+
+Gardeners who raise seed for sale are compelled by dearly bought
+experience to take extraordinary precautions against intercrossing. Thus
+Messrs. Sharp "have land engaged in the growth of seed in no less than
+eight parishes." The mere fact of a vast number of plants belonging to
+the same variety growing together is a considerable protection, as the
+chances are strong in favour of plants of the same variety
+intercrossing; and it is in chief part owing to this circumstance, that
+certain villages have become famous for pure seed of particular
+varieties. (10/39. With respect to Messrs. Sharp see 'Gardeners'
+Chronicle' 1856 page 823. Lindley's 'Theory of Horticulture' page 319.)
+Only two trials were made by me to ascertain after how long an interval
+of time, pollen from a distinct variety would obliterate more or less
+completely the action of a plant's own pollen. The stigmas in two lately
+expanded flowers on a variety of cabbage, called Ragged Jack, were well
+covered with pollen from the same plant. After an interval of
+twenty-three hours, pollen from the Early Barnes Cabbage growing at a
+distance was placed on both stigmas; and as the plant was left
+uncovered, pollen from other flowers on the Ragged Jack would certainly
+have been left by the bees during the next two or three days on the same
+two stigmas. Under these circumstances it seemed very unlikely that the
+pollen of the Barnes cabbage would produce any effect; but three out of
+the fifteen plants raised from the two capsules thus produced were
+plainly mongrelised: and I have no doubt that the twelve other plants
+were affected, for they grew much more vigorously than the
+self-fertilised seedlings from the Ragged Jack planted at the same time
+and under the same conditions. Secondly, I placed on several stigmas of
+a long-styled cowslip (Primula veris) plenty of pollen from the same
+plant, and after twenty-four hours added some from a short-styled
+dark-red Polyanthus, which is a variety of the cowslip. From the flowers
+thus treated thirty seedlings were raised, and all these without
+exception bore reddish flowers; so that the effect of the plant's own
+pollen, though placed on the stigmas twenty-four hours previously, was
+quite destroyed by that of the red variety. It should, however, be
+observed that these plants are dimorphic, and that the second union was
+a legitimate one, whilst the first was illegitimate; but flowers
+illegitimately fertilised with their own pollen yield a moderately fair
+supply of seeds.
+
+We have hitherto considered only the prepotent fertilising power of
+pollen from a distinct variety over a plants' own pollen,--both kinds of
+pollen being placed on the same stigma. It is a much more remarkable
+fact that pollen from another individual of the same variety is
+prepotent over a plant's own pollen, as shown by the superiority of the
+seedlings raised from a cross of this kind over seedlings from
+self-fertilised flowers. Thus in Tables 7/A, B, and C, there are at
+least fifteen species which are self-fertile when insects are excluded;
+and this implies that their stigmas must receive their own pollen;
+nevertheless, most of the seedlings which were raised by fertilising the
+non-castrated flowers of these fifteen species with pollen from another
+plant were greatly superior, in height, weight, and fertility, to the
+self-fertilised offspring. (10/40. These fifteen species consist of
+Brassica oleracea, Reseda odorata and lutea, Limnanthes douglasii,
+Papaver vagum, Viscaria oculata, Beta vulgaris, Lupinus luteus, Ipomoea
+purpurea, Mimulus luteus, Calceolaria, Verbascum thapsus, Vandellia
+nummularifolia, Lactuca sativa, and Zea mays.) For instance, with
+Ipomoea purpurea every single intercrossed plant exceeded in height its
+self-fertilised opponent until the sixth generation; and so it was with
+Mimulus luteus until the fourth generation. Out of six pairs of crossed
+and self-fertilised cabbages, every one of the former was much heavier
+than the latter. With Papaver vagum, out of fifteen pairs, all but two
+of the crossed plants were taller than their self-fertilised opponents.
+Of eight pairs of Lupinus luteus, all but two of the crossed were
+taller; of eight pairs of Beta vulgaris all but one; and of fifteen
+pairs of Zea mays all but two were taller. Of fifteen pairs of
+Limnanthes douglasii, and of seven pairs of Lactuca sativa, every single
+crossed plant was taller than its self-fertilised opponent. It should
+also be observed that in these experiments no particular care was taken
+to cross-fertilise the flowers immediately after their expansion; it is
+therefore almost certain that in many of these cases some pollen from
+the same flower will have already fallen on and acted on the stigma.
+
+There can hardly be a doubt that several other species of which the
+crossed seedlings are more vigorous than the self-fertilised, as shown
+in Tables 7/A, 7/B and 7/C, besides the above fifteen, must have
+received their own pollen and that from another plant at nearly the same
+time; and if so, the same remarks as those just given are applicable to
+them. Scarcely any result from my experiments has surprised me so much
+as this of the prepotency of pollen from a distinct individual over each
+plant's own pollen, as proved by the greater constitutional vigour of
+the crossed seedlings. The evidence of prepotency is here deduced from
+the comparative growth of the two lots of seedlings; but we have similar
+evidence in many cases from the much greater fertility of the
+non-castrated flowers on the mother-plant, when these received at the
+same time their own pollen and that from a distinct plant, in comparison
+with the flowers which received only their own pollen.
+
+From the various facts now given on the spontaneous intercrossing of
+varieties growing near together, and on the effects of cross-fertilising
+flowers which are self-fertile and have not been castrated, we may
+conclude that pollen brought by insects or by the wind from a distinct
+plant will generally prevent the action of pollen from the same flower,
+even though it may have been applied some time before; and thus the
+intercrossing of plants in a state of nature will be greatly favoured or
+ensured.
+
+The case of a great tree covered with innumerable hermaphrodite flowers
+seems at first sight strongly opposed to the belief in the frequency of
+intercrosses between distinct individuals. The flowers which grow on the
+opposite sides of such a tree will have been exposed to somewhat
+different conditions, and a cross between them may perhaps be in some
+degree beneficial; but it is not probable that it would be nearly so
+beneficial as a cross between flowers on distinct trees, as we may infer
+from the inefficiency of pollen taken from plants which have been
+propagated from the same stock, though growing on separate roots. The
+number of bees which frequent certain kinds of trees when in full flower
+is very great, and they may be seen flying from tree to tree more
+frequently than might have been expected. Nevertheless, if we consider
+how numerous are the flowers, for instance, on a horse-chestnut or
+lime-tree, an incomparably larger number of flowers must be fertilised
+by pollen brought from other flowers on the same tree, than from flowers
+on a distinct tree. But we should bear in mind that with the
+horse-chestnut, for instance, only one or two of the several flowers on
+the same peduncle produce a seed; and that this seed is the product of
+only one out of several ovules within the same ovarium. Now we know from
+the experiments of Herbert and others that if one flower is fertilised
+with pollen which is more efficient than that applied to the other
+flowers on the same peduncle, the latter often drop off (10/41.
+'Variation under Domestication' chapter 17 2nd edition volume 2 page
+120.); and it is probable that this would occur with many of the
+self-fertilised flowers on a large tree, if other and adjoining flowers
+were cross-fertilised. Of the flowers annually produced by a great tree,
+it is almost certain that a large number would be self-fertilised; and
+if we assume that the tree produced only 500 flowers, and that this
+number of seeds were requisite to keep up the stock, so that at least
+one seedling should hereafter struggle to maturity, then a large
+proportion of the seedlings would necessarily be derived from
+self-fertilised seeds. But if the tree annually produced 50,000 flowers,
+of which the self-fertilised dropped off without yielding seeds, then
+the cross-fertilised flowers might yield seeds in sufficient number to
+keep up the stock, and most of the seedlings would be vigorous from
+being the product of a cross between distinct individuals. In this
+manner the production of a vast number of flowers, besides serving to
+entice numerous insects and to compensate for the accidental destruction
+of many flowers by spring-frosts or otherwise, would be a very great
+advantage to the species; and when we behold our orchard-trees covered
+with a white sheet of bloom in the spring, we should not falsely accuse
+nature of wasteful expenditure, though comparatively little fruit is
+produced in the autumn.
+
+ANEMOPHILOUS PLANTS.
+
+The nature and relations of plants which are fertilised by the wind have
+been admirably discussed by Delpino and Hermann Muller; and I have
+already made some remarks on the structure of their flowers in contrast
+with those of entomophilous species. (10/42. Delpino 'Ult. Osservazioni
+sulla Dicogamia' part 2 fasc. 1 1870 and 'Studi sopra un Lignaggio
+anemofilo' etc. 1871. Hermann Muller 'Die Befruchtung' etc. pages 412,
+442. Both these authors remark that plants must have been anemophilous
+before they were entomophilous. Hermann Muller further discusses in a
+very interesting manner the steps by which entomophilous flowers became
+nectariferous and gradually acquired their present structure through
+successive beneficial changes.) There is good reason to believe that the
+first plants which appeared on this earth were cryptogamic; and judging
+from what now occurs, the male fertilising element must either have
+possessed the power of spontaneous movement through the water or over
+damp surfaces, or have been carried by currents of water to the female
+organs. That some of the most ancient plants, such as ferns, possessed
+true sexual organs there can hardly be a doubt; and this shows, as
+Hildebrand remarks, at how early a period the sexes were separated.
+(10/43. 'Die Geschlechter-Vertheilung' 1867 pages 84-90.) As soon as
+plants became phanerogamic and grew on the dry ground, if they were ever
+to intercross, it would be indispensable that the male fertilising
+element should be transported by some means through the air; and the
+wind is the simplest means of transport. There must also have been a
+period when winged insects did not exist, and plants would not then have
+been rendered entomophilous. Even at a somewhat later period the more
+specialised orders of the Hymenoptera, Lepidoptera, and Diptera, which
+are now chiefly concerned with the transport of pollen, did not exist.
+Therefore the earliest terrestrial plants known to us, namely, the
+Coniferae and Cycadiae, no doubt were anemophilous, like the existing
+species of these same groups. A vestige of this early state of things is
+likewise shown by some other groups of plants which are anemophilous, as
+these on the whole stand lower in the scale than entomophilous species.
+
+There is no great difficulty in understanding how an anemophilous plant
+might have been rendered entomophilous. Pollen is a nutritious
+substance, and would soon have been discovered and devoured by insects;
+and if any adhered to their bodies it would have been carried from the
+anthers to the stigma of the same flower, or from one flower to another.
+One of the chief characteristics of the pollen of anemophilous plants is
+its incoherence; but pollen in this state can adhere to the hairy bodies
+of insects, as we see with some Leguminosae, Ericaceae, and
+Melastomaceae. We have, however, better evidence of the possibility of a
+transition of the above kind in certain plants being now fertilised
+partly by the wind and partly by insects. The common rhubarb (Rheum
+rhaponticum) is so far in an intermediate condition, that I have seen
+many Diptera sucking the flowers, with much pollen adhering to their
+bodies; and yet the pollen is so incoherent, that clouds of it are
+emitted if the plant be gently shaken on a sunny day, some of which
+could hardly fail to fall on the large stigmas of the neighbouring
+flowers. According to Delpino and Hermann Muller, some species of
+Plantago are in a similar intermediate condition. (10/44. 'Die
+Befruchtung' etc. page 342.)
+
+Although it is probable that pollen was aboriginally the sole attraction
+to insects, and although many plants now exist whose flowers are
+frequented exclusively by pollen-devouring insects, yet the great
+majority secrete nectar as the chief attraction. Many years ago I
+suggested that primarily the saccharine matter in nectar was excreted as
+a waste product of chemical changes in the sap; and that when the
+excretion happened to occur within the envelopes of a flower, it was
+utilised for the important object of cross-fertilisation, being
+subsequently much increased in quantity and stored in various ways.
+(10/45. Nectar was regarded by De Candolle and Dunal as an excretion, as
+stated by Martinet in 'Annal des Sc. Nat.' 1872 tome 14 page 211.) This
+view is rendered probable by the leaves of some trees excreting, under
+certain climatic conditions, without the aid of special glands, a
+saccharine fluid, often called honey-dew. This is the case with the
+leaves of the lime; for although some authors have disputed the fact, a
+most capable judge, Dr. Maxwell Masters, informs me that, after having
+heard the discussions on this subject before the Horticultural Society,
+he feels no doubt on this head. The leaves, as well as the cut stems, of
+the manna ash (Fraxinus ornus) secrete in a like manner saccharine
+matter. (10/46. 'Gardeners' Chronicle' 1876 page 242.) According to
+Treviranus, so do the upper surfaces of the leaves of Carduus arctioides
+during hot weather. Many analogous facts could be given. (10/47. Kurr
+'Untersuchungen uber die Bedeutung der Nektarien' 1833 page 115.) There
+are, however, a considerable number of plants which bear small glands on
+their leaves, petioles, phyllodia, stipules, bracteae, or flower
+peduncles, or on the outside of their calyx, and these glands secrete
+minute drops of a sweet fluid, which is eagerly sought by sugar-loving
+insects, such as ants, hive-bees, and wasps. (10/48. A large number of
+cases are given by Delpino in the 'Bulletino Entomologico' Anno 6 1874.
+To these may be added those given in my text, as well as the excretion
+of saccharine matter from the calyx of two species of Iris, and from the
+bracteae of certain Orchideae: see Kurr 'Bedeutung der Nektarien' 1833
+pages 25, 28. Belt 'Nicaragua' page 224, also refers to a similar
+excretion by many epiphytal orchids and passion-flowers. Mr. Rodgers has
+seen much nectar secreted from the bases of the flower-peduncles of
+Vanilla. Link says that the only example of a hypopetalous nectary known
+to him is externally at the base of the flowers of Chironia decussata:
+see 'Reports on Botany, Ray Society' 1846 page 355. An important memoir
+bearing on this subject has lately appeared by Reinke 'Gottingen
+Nachrichten' 1873 page 825, who shows that in many plants the tips of
+the serrations on the leaves in the bud bear glands which secrete only
+at a very early age, and which have the same morphological structure as
+true nectar-secreting glands. He further shows that the nectar-secreting
+glands on the petioles of Prunus avium are not developed at a very early
+age, yet wither away on the old leaves. They are homologous with those
+on the serrations of the blades of the same leaves, as shown by their
+structure and by transition-forms; for the lowest serrations on the
+blades of most of the leaves secrete nectar instead of resin (harz).) In
+the case of the glands on the stipules of Vicia sativa, the excretion
+manifestly depends on changes in the sap, consequent on the sun shining
+brightly; for I repeatedly observed that as soon as the sun was hidden
+behind clouds the secretion ceased, and the hive-bees left the field;
+but as soon as the sun broke out again, they returned to their feast.
+(10/49. I published a brief notice of this case in the 'Gardeners'
+Chronicle' 1855 July 21 page 487, and afterwards made further
+observations. Besides the hive-bee, another species of bee, a moth,
+ants, and two kinds of flies sucked the drops of fluid on the stipules.
+The larger drops tasted sweet. The hive-bees never even looked at the
+flowers which were open at the same time; whilst two species of
+humble-bees neglected the stipules and visited only the flowers.) I have
+observed an analogous fact with the secretion of true nectar in the
+flowers of Lobelia erinus.
+
+Delpino, however, maintains that the power of secreting a sweet fluid by
+any extra-floral organ has been in every case specially gained, for the
+sake of attracting ants and wasps as defenders of the plant against
+their enemies; but I have never seen any reason to believe that this is
+so with the three species observed by me, namely, Prunus laurocerasus,
+Vicia sativa, and V. faba. No plant is so little attacked by enemies of
+any kind as the common bracken-fern (Pteris aquilina); and yet, as my
+son Francis has discovered, the large glands at the bases of the fronds,
+but only whilst young, excrete much sweetish fluid, which is eagerly
+sought by innumerable ants, chiefly belonging to Myrmica; and these ants
+certainly do not serve as a protection against any enemy. Delpino argues
+that such glands ought not to be considered as excretory, because if
+they were so, they would be present in every species; but I cannot see
+much force in this argument, as the leaves of some plants excrete sugar
+only during certain states of the weather. That in some cases the
+secretion serves to attract insects as defenders of the plant, and may
+have been developed to a high degree for this special purpose, I have
+not the least doubt, from the observations of Delpino, and more
+especially from those of Mr. Belt on Acacia sphaerocephala, and on
+passion-flowers. This acacia likewise produces, as an additional
+attraction to ants, small bodies containing much oil and protoplasm, and
+analogous bodies are developed by a Cecropia for the same purpose, as
+described by Fritz Muller. (10/50. Mr. Belt 'The Naturalist in
+Nicaragua' 1874 page 218, has given a most interesting account of the
+paramount importance of ants as defenders of the above Acacia. With
+respect to the Cecropia see 'Nature' 1876 page 304. My son Francis has
+described the microscopical structure and development of these wonderful
+food-bodies in a paper read before the Linnean Society.)
+
+The excretion of a sweet fluid by glands seated outside of a flower is
+rarely utilised as a means for cross-fertilisation by the aid of
+insects; but this occurs with the bracteae of the Marcgraviaceae, as the
+late Dr. Cruger informed me from actual observation in the West Indies,
+and as Delpino infers with much acuteness from the relative position of
+the several parts of their flowers. (10/51. 'Ult. Osservaz. Dicogamia'
+1868-69 page 188.) Mr. Farrer has also shown that the flowers of
+Coronilla are curiously modified, so that bees may fertilise them whilst
+sucking the fluid secreted from the outside of the calyx. (10/52.
+'Nature' 1874 page 169.) It further appears probable from the
+observations of the Reverend W.A. Leighton, that the fluid so abundantly
+secreted by glands on the phyllodia of the Australian Acacia magnifica,
+which stand near the flowers, is connected with their fertilisation.
+(10/53. 'Annals and Magazine of Natural History' volume 16 1865 page 14.
+In my work on the 'Fertilisation of Orchids' and in a paper subsequently
+published in the 'Annals and Magazine of Natural History' it has been
+shown that although certain kinds of orchids possess a nectary, no
+nectar is actually secreted by it; but that insects penetrate the inner
+walls and suck the fluid contained in the intercellular spaces. I
+further suggested, in the case of some other orchids which do not
+secrete nectar, that insects gnawed the labellum; and this suggestion
+has since been proved true. Hermann Muller and Delpino have now shown
+that some other plants have thickened petals which are sucked or gnawed
+by insects, their fertilisation being thus aided. All the known facts on
+this head have been collected by Delpino in his 'Ult. Osserv.' part 2
+fasc. 2 1875 pages 59-63.)
+
+The amount of pollen produced by anemophilous plants, and the distance
+to which it is often transported by the wind, are both surprisingly
+great. Mr. Hassall found that the weight of pollen produced by a single
+plant of the Bulrush (Typha) was 144 grains. Bucketfuls of pollen,
+chiefly of Coniferae and Gramineae, have been swept off the decks of
+vessels near the North American shore; and Mr. Riley has seen the ground
+near St. Louis, in Missouri, covered with pollen, as if sprinkled with
+sulphur; and there was good reason to believe that this had been
+transported from the pine-forests at least 400 miles to the south.
+Kerner has seen the snow-fields on the higher Alps similarly dusted; and
+Mr. Blackley found numerous pollen-grains, in one instance 1200,
+adhering to sticky slides, which were sent up to a height of from 500 to
+1000 feet by means of a kite, and then uncovered by a special mechanism.
+It is remarkable that in these experiments there were on an average
+nineteen times as many pollen-grains in the atmosphere at the higher
+than at the lower levels. (10/54. For Mr. Hassall's observations see
+'Annals and Magazine of Natural History' volume 8 1842 page 108. In the
+'North American Journal of Science' January 1842, there is an account of
+the pollen swept off the decks of a vessel. Riley 'Fifth Report on the
+Noxious Insects of Missouri' 1873 page 86. Kerner 'Die Schutzmittel des
+Pollens' 1873 page 6. This author has also seen a lake in the Tyrol so
+covered with pollen, that the water no longer appeared blue. Mr.
+Blackley 'Experimental Researches on Hay-fever' 1873 pages 132,
+141-152.) Considering these facts, it is not so surprising as it at
+first appears that all, or nearly all, the stigmas of anemophilous
+plants should receive pollen brought to them by mere chance by the wind.
+During the early part of summer every object is thus dusted with pollen;
+for instance, I examined for another purpose the labella of a large
+number of flowers of the Fly Ophrys (which is rarely visited by
+insects), and found on all very many pollen-grains of other plants,
+which had been caught by their velvety surfaces.
+
+The extraordinary quantity and lightness of the pollen of anemophilous
+plants are no doubt both necessary, as their pollen has generally to be
+carried to the stigmas of other and often distant flowers; for, as we
+shall soon see, most anemophilous plants have their sexes separated. The
+fertilisation of these plants is generally aided by the stigmas being of
+large size or plumose; and in the case of the Coniferae, by the naked
+ovules secreting a drop of fluid, as shown by Delpino. Although the
+number of anemophilous species is small, as the author just quoted
+remarks, the number of individuals is large in comparison with that of
+entomophilous species. This holds good especially in cold and temperate
+regions, where insects are not so numerous as under a warmer climate,
+and where consequently entomophilous plants are less favourably
+situated. We see this in our forests of Coniferae and other trees, such
+as oaks, beeches, birches, ashes, etc.; and in the Gramineae,
+Cyperaceae, and Juncaceae, which clothe our meadows and swamps; all
+these trees and plants being fertilised by the wind. As a large quantity
+of pollen is wasted by anemophilous plants, it is surprising that so
+many vigorous species of this kind abounding with individuals should
+still exist in any part of the world; for if they had been rendered
+entomophilous, their pollen would have been transported by the aid of
+the senses and appetites of insects with incomparably greater safety
+than by the wind. That such a conversion is possible can hardly be
+doubted, from the remarks lately made on the existence of intermediate
+forms; and apparently it has been effected in the group of willows, as
+we may infer from the nature of their nearest allies. (10/55. Hermann
+Muller 'Die Befruchtung' etc. page 149.)
+
+It seems at first sight a still more surprising fact that plants, after
+having been once rendered entomophilous, should ever again have become
+anemophilous; but this has occasionally though rarely occurred, for
+instance, with the common Poterium sanguisorba, as may be inferred from
+its belonging to the Rosaceae. Such cases are, however, intelligible, as
+almost all plants require to be occasionally intercrossed; and if any
+entomiphilous species ceased to be visited by insects, it would probably
+perish unless it were rendered anemophilous. A plant would be neglected
+by insects if nectar failed to be secreted, unless indeed a large supply
+of attractive pollen was present; and from what we have seen of the
+excretion of saccharine fluid from leaves and glands being largely
+governed in several cases by climatic influences, and from some few
+flowers which do not now secrete nectar still retaining coloured
+guiding-marks, the failure of the secretion cannot be considered as a
+very improbable event. The same result would follow to a certainty, if
+winged insects ceased to exist in any district, or became very rare. Now
+there is only a single plant in the great order of the Cruciferae,
+namely, Pringlea, which is anemophilous, and this plant is an inhabitant
+of Kerguelen Land, where there are hardly any winged insects, owing
+probably, as was suggested by me in the case of Madeira, to the risk
+which they run of being blown out to sea and destroyed. (10/56. The
+Reverend A.E. Eaton in 'Proceedings of the Royal Society' volume 23 1875
+page 351.)
+
+A remarkable fact with respect to anemophilous plants is that they are
+often diclinous, that is, they are either monoecious with their sexes
+separated on the same plant, or dioecious with their sexes on distinct
+plants. In the class Monoecia of Linnaeus, Delpino shows that the
+species of twenty-eight genera are anemophilous, and of seventeen genera
+entomophilous. (10/57. 'Studi sopra un Lignaggio anemofilo delle
+Compositae' 1871.) The larger proportion of entomophilous genera in this
+latter class is probably the indirect result of insects having the power
+of carrying pollen to another and sometimes distant plant much more
+securely than the wind. In the above two classes taken together there
+are thirty-eight anemophilous and thirty-six entomophilous genera;
+whereas in the great mass of hermaphrodite plants the proportion of
+anemophilous to entomophilous genera is extremely small. The cause of
+this remarkable difference may be attributed to anemophilous plants
+having retained in a greater degree than the entomophilous a primordial
+condition, in which the sexes were separated and their mutual
+fertilisation effected by means of the wind. That the earliest and
+lowest members of the vegetable kingdom had their sexes separated, as is
+still the case to a large extent, is the opinion of a high authority,
+Nageli. (10/58. 'Entstehung und Begriff der Naturhist. Art' 1865 page
+22.) It is indeed difficult to avoid this conclusion, if we admit the
+view, which seems highly probable, that the conjugation of the Algae and
+of some of the simplest animals is the first step towards sexual
+reproduction; and if we further bear in mind that a greater and greater
+degree of differentiation between the cells which conjugate can be
+traced, thus leading apparently to the development of the two sexual
+forms. (10/59. See the interesting discussion on this whole subject by
+O. Butschli in his 'Studien uber die ersten Entwickelungsvorgange der
+Eizelle; etc. 1876 pages 207-219. Also Engelmann "Ueber Entwickelung von
+Infusorien" 'Morphol. Jahrbuch' B. 1 page 573. Also Dr. A. Dodel "Die
+Kraushaar-Algae" 'Pringsheims Jahrbuch f. Wiss. Bot.' B. 10.) We have
+also seen that as plants became more highly developed and affixed to the
+ground, they would be compelled to be anemophilous in order to
+intercross. Therefore all plants which have not since been greatly
+modified, would tend still to be both diclinous and anemophilous; and we
+can thus understand the connection between these two states, although
+they appear at first sight quite disconnected. If this view is correct,
+plants must have been rendered hermaphrodites at a later though still
+very early period, and entomophilous at a yet later period, namely,
+after the development of winged insects. So that the relationship
+between hermaphroditism and fertilisation by means of insects is
+likewise to a certain extent intelligible.
+
+Why the descendants of plants which were originally dioecious, and which
+therefore profited by always intercrossing with another individual,
+should have been converted into hermaphrodites, may perhaps be explained
+by the risk which they ran, especially as long as they were
+anemophilous, of not being always fertilised, and consequently of not
+leaving offspring. This latter evil, the greatest of all to any
+organism, would have been much lessened by their becoming
+hermaphrodites, though with the contingent disadvantage of frequent
+self-fertilisation. By what graduated steps an hermaphrodite condition
+was acquired we do not know. But we can see that if a lowly organised
+form, in which the two sexes were represented by somewhat different
+individuals, were to increase by budding either before or after
+conjugation, the two incipient sexes would be capable of appearing by
+buds on the same stock, as occasionally occurs with various characters
+at the present day. The organism would then be in a monoecious
+condition, and this is probably the first step towards hermaphroditism;
+for if very simple male and female flowers on the same stock, each
+consisting of a single stamen or pistil, were brought close together and
+surrounded by a common envelope, in nearly the same manner as with the
+florets of the Compositae, we should have an hermaphrodite flower.
+
+There seems to be no limit to the changes which organisms undergo under
+changing conditions of life; and some hermaphrodite plants, descended as
+we must believe from aboriginally diclinous plants, have had their sexes
+again separated. That this has occurred, we may infer from the presence
+of rudimentary stamens in the flowers of some individuals, and of
+rudimentary pistils in the flowers of other individuals, for example in
+Lychnis dioica. But a conversion of this kind will not have occurred
+unless cross-fertilisation was already assured, generally by the agency
+of insects; but why the production of male and female flowers on
+distinct plants should have been advantageous to the species,
+cross-fertilisation having been previously assured, is far from obvious.
+A plant might indeed produce twice as many seeds as were necessary to
+keep up its numbers under new or changed conditions of life; and if it
+did not vary by bearing fewer flowers, and did vary in the state of its
+reproductive organs (as often occurs under cultivation), a wasteful
+expenditure of seeds and pollen would be saved by the flowers becoming
+diclinous.
+
+A related point is worth notice. I remarked in my Origin of Species that
+in Britain a much larger proportion of trees and bushes than of
+herbaceous plants have their sexes separated; and so it is, according to
+Asa Gray and Hooker, in North America and New Zealand. (10/60. I find in
+the 'London Catalogue of British Plants' that there are thirty-two
+indigenous trees and bushes in Great Britain, classed under nine
+families; but to err on the safe side, I have counted only six species
+of willows. Of the thirty-two trees and bushes, nineteen, or more than
+half, have their sexes separated; and this is an enormous proportion
+compared with other British plants. New Zealand abounds with diclinous
+plants and trees; and Dr. Hooker calculates that out of about 756
+phanerogamic plants inhabiting the islands, no less than 108 are trees,
+belonging to thirty-five families. Of these 108 trees, fifty-two, or
+very nearly half, have their sexes more or less separated. Of bushes
+there are 149, of which sixty-one have their sexes in the same state;
+whilst of the remaining 500 herbaceous plants only 121, or less than a
+fourth, have their sexes separated. Lastly, Professor Asa Gray informs
+me that in the United States there are 132 native trees (belonging to
+twenty-five families) of which ninety-five (belonging to seventeen
+families) "have their sexes more or less separated, for the greater part
+decidedly separated.") It is, however, doubtful how far this rule holds
+good generally, and it certainly does not do so in Australia. But I have
+been assured that the flowers of the prevailing Australian trees,
+namely, the Myrtaceae, swarm with insects, and if they are dichogamous
+they would be practically diclinous. (10/61. With respect to the
+Proteaceae of Australia, Mr. Bentham 'Journal of the Linnean Society
+Botany' volume 13 1871 pages 58, 64, remarks on the various contrivances
+by which the stigma in the several genera is screened from the action of
+the pollen from the same flower. For instance, in Synaphea "the stigma
+is held by the eunuch (i.e., one of the stamens which is barren) safe
+from all pollution from her brother anthers, and is preserved intact for
+any pollen that may be inserted by insects and other agencies.") As far
+as anemophilous plants are concerned, we know that they are apt to have
+their sexes separated, and we can see that it would be an unfavourable
+circumstance for them to bear their flowers very close to the ground, as
+their pollen is liable to be blown high up in the air (10/62. Kerner
+'Schutzmittel des Pollens' 1873 page 4.); but as the culms of grasses
+give sufficient elevation, we cannot thus account for so many trees and
+bushes being diclinous. We may infer from our previous discussion that a
+tree bearing numerous hermaphrodite flowers would rarely intercross with
+another tree, except by means of the pollen of a distinct individual
+being prepotent over the plants' own pollen. Now the separation of the
+sexes, whether the plant were anemophilous are entomophilous, would most
+effectually bar self-fertilisation, and this may be the cause of so many
+trees and bushes being diclinous. Or to put the case in another way, a
+plant would be better fitted for development into a tree, if the sexes
+were separated, than if it were hermaphrodite; for in the former case
+its numerous flowers would be less liable to continued
+self-fertilisation. But it should also be observed that the long life of
+a tree or bush permits of the separation of the sexes, with much less
+risk of evil from impregnation occasionally failing and seeds not being
+produced, than in the case of short-lived plants. Hence it probably is,
+as Lecoq has remarked, that annual plants are rarely dioecious.
+
+Finally, we have seen reason to believe that the higher plants are
+descended from extremely low forms which conjugated, and that the
+conjugating individuals differed somewhat from one another,--the one
+representing the male and the other the female--so that plants were
+aboriginally dioecious. At a very early period such lowly organised
+dioecious plants probably gave rise by budding to monoecious plants with
+the two sexes borne by the same individual; and by a still closer union
+of the sexes to hermaphrodite plants, which are now much the commonest
+form. (10/63. There is a considerable amount of evidence that all the
+higher animals are the descendants of hermaphrodites; and it is a
+curious problem whether such hermaphroditism may not have been the
+result of the conjugation of two slightly different individuals, which
+represented the two incipient sexes. On this view, the higher animals
+may now owe their bilateral structure, with all their organs double at
+an early embryonic period, to the fusion or conjugation of two
+primordial individuals.) As soon as plants became affixed to the ground,
+their pollen must have been carried by some means from flower to flower,
+at first almost certainly by the wind, then by pollen-devouring, and
+afterwards by nectar-seeking insects. During subsequent ages some few
+entomophilous plants have been again rendered anemophilous, and some
+hermaphrodite plants have had their sexes again separated; and we can
+vaguely see the advantages of such recurrent changes under certain
+conditions.
+
+Dioecious plants, however fertilised, have a great advantage over other
+plants in their cross-fertilisation being assured. But this advantage is
+gained in the case of anemophilous species at the expense of the
+production of an enormous superfluity of pollen, with some risk to them
+and to entomophilous species of their fertilisation occasionally
+failing. Half the individuals, moreover, namely, the males, produce no
+seed, and this might possibly be a disadvantage. Delpino remarks that
+dioecious plants cannot spread so easily as monoecious and hermaphrodite
+species, for a single individual which happened to reach some new site
+could not propagate its kind; but it may be doubted whether this is a
+serious evil. Monoecious plants can hardly fail to be to a large extent
+dioecious in function, owing to the lightness of their pollen and to the
+wind blowing laterally, with the great additional advantage of
+occasionally or often producing some self-fertilised seeds. When they
+are also dichogamous, they are necessarily dioecious in function.
+Lastly, hermaphrodite plants can generally produce at least some
+self-fertilised seeds, and they are at the same time capable, through
+the various means specified in this chapter, of cross-fertilisation.
+When their structure absolutely prevents self-fertilisation, they are in
+the same relative position to one another as monoecious and dioecious
+plants, with what may be an advantage, namely, that every flower is
+capable of yielding seeds.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE HABITS OF INSECTS IN RELATION TO THE FERTILISATION OF FLOWERS.
+
+Insects visit the flowers of the same species as long as they can.
+Cause of this habit.
+Means by which bees recognise the flowers of the same species.
+Sudden secretion of nectar.
+Nectar of certain flowers unattractive to certain insects.
+Industry of bees, and the number of flowers visited within a short time.
+Perforation of the corolla by bees.
+Skill shown in the operation.
+Hive-bees profit by the holes made by humble-bees.
+Effects of habit.
+The motive for perforating flowers to save time.
+Flowers growing in crowded masses chiefly perforated.
+
+Bees and various other insects must be directed by instinct to search
+flowers for nectar and pollen, as they act in this manner without
+instruction as soon as they emerge from the pupa state. Their instincts,
+however, are not of a specialised nature, for they visit many exotic
+flowers as readily as the endemic kinds, and they often search for
+nectar in flowers which do not secrete any; and they may be seen
+attempting to suck it out of nectaries of such length that it cannot be
+reached by them. (11/1. See, on this subject Hermann Muller
+'Befruchtung' etc. page 427; and Sir J. Lubbock's 'British Wild Flowers'
+etc. page 20. Muller 'Bienen Zeitung' June 1876 page 119, assigns good
+reasons for his belief that bees and many other Hymenoptera have
+inherited from some early nectar-sucking progenitor greater skill in
+robbing flowers than that which is displayed by insects belonging to the
+other Orders.) All kinds of bees and certain other insects usually visit
+the flowers of the same species as long as they can, before going to
+another species. This fact was observed by Aristotle with respect to the
+hive-bee more than 2000 years ago, and was noticed by Dobbs in a paper
+published in 1736 in the Philosophical Transactions. It may be observed
+by any one, both with hive and humble-bees, in every flower-garden; not
+that the habit is invariably followed. Mr. Bennett watched for several
+hours many plants of Lamium album, L. purpureum, and another Labiate
+plant, Nepeta glechoma, all growing mingled together on a bank near some
+hives; and he found that each bee confined its visits to the same
+species. (11/2. 'Nature' 1874 June 4 page 92.) The pollen of these three
+plants differs in colour, so that he was able to test his observations
+by examining that which adhered to the bodies of the captured bees, and
+he found one kind on each bee.
+
+Humble and hive-bees are good botanists, for they know that varieties
+may differ widely in the colour of their flowers and yet belong to the
+same species. I have repeatedly seen humble-bees flying straight from a
+plant of the ordinary red Dictamnus fraxinella to a white variety; from
+one to another very differently coloured variety of Delphinium consolida
+and of Primula veris; from a dark purple to a bright yellow variety of
+Viola tricolor; and with two species of Papaver, from one variety to
+another which differed much in colour; but in this latter case some of
+the bees flew indifferently to either species, although passing by other
+genera, and thus acted as if the two species were merely varieties.
+Hermann Muller also has seen hive-bees flying from flower to flower of
+Ranunculus bulbosus and arvensis, and of Trifolium fragiferum and
+repens; and even from blue hyacinths to blue violets. (11/3. 'Bienen
+Zeitung' July 1876 page 183.)
+
+Some species of Diptera or flies keep to the flowers of the same species
+with almost as much regularity as do bees; and when captured they are
+found covered with pollen. I have seen Rhingia rostrata acting in this
+manner with the flowers of Lychnis dioica, Ajuga reptans, and Vici
+sepium. Volucella plumosa and Empis cheiroptera flew straight from
+flower to flower of Myosotis sylvatica. Dolichopus nigripennis behaved
+in the same manner with Potentilla tormentilla; and other Diptera with
+Stellaria holostea, Helianthemum vulgare, Bellis perennis, Veronica
+hederaefolia and chamoedrys; but some flies visited indifferently the
+flowers of these two latter species. I have seen more than once a minute
+Thrips, with pollen adhering to its body, fly from one flower to another
+of the same kind; and one was observed by me crawling about within a
+convolvulus with four grains of pollen adhering to its head, which were
+deposited on the stigma.
+
+Fabricius and Sprengel state that when flies have once entered the
+flowers of Aristolochia they never escape,--a statement which I could
+not believe, as in this case the insects would not aid in the
+cross-fertilisation of the plant; and this statement has now been shown
+by Hildebrand to be erroneous. As the spathes of Arum maculatum are
+furnished with filaments apparently adapted to prevent the exit of
+insects, they resemble in this respect the flowers of Aristolochia; and
+on examining several spathes, from thirty to sixty minute Diptera
+belonging to three species were found in some of them; and many of these
+insects were lying dead at the bottom, as if they had been permanently
+entrapped. In order to discover whether the living ones could escape and
+carry pollen to another plant, I tied in the spring of 1842 a fine
+muslin bag tightly round a spathe; and on returning in an hour's time
+several little flies were crawling about on the inner surface of the
+bag. I then gathered a spathe and breathed hard into it; several flies
+soon crawled out, and all without exception were dusted with arum
+pollen. These flies quickly flew away, and I distinctly saw three of
+them fly to another plant about a yard off; they alighted on the inner
+or concave surface of the spathe, and suddenly flew down into the
+flower. I then opened this flower, and although not a single anther had
+burst, several grains of pollen were lying at the bottom, which must
+have been brought from another plant by one of these flies or by some
+other insect. In another flower little flies were crawling about, and I
+saw them leave pollen on the stigmas.
+
+I do not know whether Lepidoptera generally keep to the flowers of the
+same species; but I once observed many minute moths (I believe Lampronia
+(Tinea) calthella) apparently eating the pollen of Mercurialis annua,
+and they had the whole front of their bodies covered with pollen. I then
+went to a female plant some yards off, and saw in the course of fifteen
+minutes three of these moths alight on the stigmas. Lepidoptera are
+probably often induced to frequent the flowers of the same species,
+whenever these are provided with a long and narrow nectary, as in this
+case other insects cannot suck the nectar, which will thus be preserved
+for those having an elongated proboscis. No doubt the Yucca moth visits
+only the flowers whence its name is derived, for a most wonderful
+instinct guides this moth to place pollen on the stigma, so that the
+ovules may be developed on which the larvae feed. (11/4. Described by
+Mr. Riley in the 'American Naturalist' volume 7 October 1873.)With
+respect to Coleoptera, I have seen Meligethes covered with pollen flying
+from flower to flower of the same species; and this must often occur,
+as, according to M. Brisout, 'many of the species affect only one kind
+of plant." (11/5. As quoted in 'American Nat.' May 1873 page 270.)
+
+It must not be supposed from these several statements that insects
+strictly confine their visits to the same species. They often visit
+other species when only a few plants of the same kind grow near
+together. In a flower-garden containing some plants of Oenothera, the
+pollen of which can easily be recognised, I found not only single grains
+but masses of it within many flowers of Mimulus, Digitalis, Antirrhinum,
+and Linaria. Other kinds of pollen were likewise detected in these same
+flowers. A large number of the stigmas of a plant of Thyme, in which the
+anthers were completely aborted, were examined; and these stigmas,
+though scarcely larger than a split needle, were covered not only with
+pollen of Thyme brought from other plants by the bees, but with several
+other kinds of pollen.
+
+That insects should visit the flowers of the same species as long as
+they can, is of great importance to the plant, as it favours the
+cross-fertilisation of distinct individuals of the same species; but no
+one will suppose that insects act in this manner for the good of the
+plant. The cause probably lies in insects being thus enabled to work
+quicker; they have just learnt how to stand in the best position on the
+flower, and how far and in what direction to insert their proboscides.
+(11/6. Since these remarks were written, I find that Hermann Muller has
+come to almost exactly the same conclusion with respect to the cause of
+insects frequenting as long as they can the flowers of the same species:
+'Bienen Zeitung' July 1876 page 182.) They act on the same principle as
+does an artificer who has to make half-a-dozen engines, and who saves
+time by making consecutively each wheel and part for all of them.
+Insects, or at least bees, seem much influenced by habit in all their
+manifold operations; and we shall presently see that this holds good in
+their felonious practice of biting holes through the corolla.
+
+It is a curious question how bees recognise the flowers of the same
+species. That the coloured corolla is the chief guide cannot be doubted.
+On a fine day, when hive-bees were incessantly visiting the little blue
+flowers of Lobelia erinus, I cut off all the petals of some, and only
+the lower striped petals of others, and these flowers were not once
+again sucked by the bees, although some actually crawled over them. The
+removal of the two little upper petals alone made no difference in their
+visits. Mr. J. Anderson likewise states that when he removed the
+corollas of the Calceolaria, bees never visited the flowers. (11/7.
+'Gardeners' Chronicle' 1853 page 534. Kurr cut off the nectaries from a
+large number of flowers of several species, and found that the greater
+number yielded seeds; but insects probably would not perceive the loss
+of the nectary until they had inserted their proboscides into the holes
+thus formed, and in doing so would fertilise the flowers. He also
+removed the whole corolla from a considerable number of flowers, and
+these likewise yielded seeds. Flowers which are self-fertile would
+naturally produce seeds under these circumstances; but I am greatly
+surprised that Delphinium consolida, as well as another species of
+Delphinium, and Viola tricolor, should have produced a fair supply of
+seeds when thus treated; but it does not appear that he compared the
+number of the seeds thus produced with those yielded by unmutilated
+flowers left to the free access of insects: 'Bedeutung der Nektarien'
+1833 pages 123-135.) On the other hand, in some large masses of Geranium
+phaeum which had escaped out of a garden, I observed the unusual fact of
+the flowers continuing to secrete an abundance of nectar after all the
+petals had fallen off; and the flowers in this state were still visited
+by humble-bees. But the bees might have learnt that these flowers with
+all their petals lost were still worth visiting, by finding nectar in
+those with only one or two lost. The colour alone of the corolla serves
+as an approximate guide: thus I watched for some time humble-bees which
+were visiting exclusively plants of the white-flowered Spiranthes
+autumnalis, growing on short turf at a considerable distance apart; and
+these bees often flew within a few inches of several other plants with
+white flowers, and then without further examination passed onwards in
+search of the Spiranthes. Again, many hive-bees which confined their
+visits to the common ling (Calluna vulgaris), repeatedly flew towards
+Erica tetralix, evidently attracted by the nearly similar tint of their
+flowers, and then instantly passed on in search of the Calluna.
+
+That the colour of the flower is not the sole guide, is clearly shown by
+the six cases above given of bees which repeatedly passed in a direct
+line from one variety to another of the same species, although they bore
+very differently coloured flowers. I observed also bees flying in a
+straight line from one clump of a yellow-flowered Oenothera to every
+other clump of the same plant in the garden, without turning an inch
+from their course to plants of Eschscholtzia and others with yellow
+flowers which lay only a foot or two on either side. In these cases the
+bees knew the position of each plant in the garden perfectly well, as we
+may infer by the directness of their flight; so that they were guided by
+experience and memory. But how did they discover at first that the above
+varieties with differently coloured flowers belonged to the same
+species? Improbable as it may appear, they seem, at least sometimes, to
+recognise plants even from a distance by their general aspect, in the
+same manner as we should do. On three occasions I observed humble-bees
+flying in a perfectly straight line from a tall larkspur (Delphinium)
+which was in full flower to another plant of the same species at the
+distance of fifteen yards which had not as yet a single flower open, and
+on which the buds showed only a faint tinge of blue. Here neither odour
+nor the memory of former visits could have come into play, and the tinge
+of blue was so faint that it could hardly have served as a guide. (11/8.
+A fact mentioned by Hermann Muller 'Die Befruchtung' etc. page 347,
+shows that bees possess acute powers of vision and discrimination; for
+those engaged in collecting pollen from Primula elatior invariably
+passed by the flowers of the long-styled form, in which the anthers are
+seated low down in the tubular corolla. Yet the difference in aspect
+between the long-styled and short-styled forms is extremely slight.)
+
+The conspicuousness of the corolla does not suffice to induce repeated
+visits from insects, unless nectar is at the same time secreted,
+together perhaps with some odour emitted. I watched for a fortnight many
+times daily a wall covered with Linaria cymbalaria in full flower, and
+never saw a bee even looking at one. There was then a very hot day, and
+suddenly many bees were industriously at work on the flowers. It appears
+that a certain degree of heat is necessary for the secretion of nectar;
+for I observed with Lobelia erinus that if the sun ceased to shine for
+only half an hour, the visits of the bees slackened and soon ceased. An
+analogous fact with respect to the sweet excretion from the stipules of
+Vicia sativa has been already given. As in the case of the Linaria, so
+with Pedicularis sylvatica, Polygala vulgaris, Viola tricolor, and some
+species of Trifolium, I have watched the flowers day after day without
+seeing a bee at work, and then suddenly all the flowers were visited by
+many bees. Now how did so many bees discover at once that the flowers
+were secreting nectar? I presume that it must have been by their odour;
+and that as soon as a few bees began to suck the flowers, others of the
+same and of different kinds observed the fact and profited by it. We
+shall presently see, when we treat of the perforation of the corolla,
+that bees are fully capable of profiting by the labour of other species.
+Memory also comes into play, for, as already remarked, bees know the
+position of each clump of flowers in a garden. I have repeatedly seen
+them passing round a corner, but otherwise in as straight a line as
+possible, from one plant of Fraxinella and of Linaria to another and
+distant one of the same species; although, owing to the intervention of
+other plants, the two were not in sight of each other.
+
+It would appear that either the taste or the odour of the nectar of
+certain flowers is unattractive to hive or to humble-bees, or to both;
+for there seems no other reason why certain open flowers which secrete
+nectar are not visited by them. The small quantity of nectar secreted by
+some of these flowers can hardly be the cause of their neglect, as
+hive-bees search eagerly for the minute drops on the glands on the
+leaves of the Prunus laurocerasus. Even the bees from different hives
+sometimes visit different kinds of flowers, as is said to be the case by
+Mr. Grant with respect to the Polyanthus and Viola tricolor. (11/9.
+'Gardeners' Chronicle' 1844 page 374.) I have known humble-bees to visit
+the flowers of Lobelia fulgens in one garden and not in another at the
+distance of only a few miles. The cupful of nectar in the labellum of
+Epipactis latifolia is never touched by hive- or humble-bees, although I
+have seen them flying close by; and yet the nectar has a pleasant taste
+to us, and is habitually consumed by the common wasp. As far as I have
+seen, wasps seek for nectar in this country only from the flowers of
+this Epipactis, Scrophularia aquatica, Symphoricarpus racemosa (11/10.
+The same fact apparently holds good in Italy, for Delpino says that the
+flowers of these three plants are alone visited by wasps: 'Nettarii
+Estranuziali, Bulletino Entomologico' anno 6.), and Tritoma; the two
+former plants being endemic, and the two latter exotic. As wasps are so
+fond of sugar and of any sweet fluid, and as they do not disdain the
+minute drops on the glands of Prunus laurocerasus, it is a strange fact
+that they do not suck the nectar of many open flowers, which they could
+do without the aid of a proboscis. Hive-bees visit the flowers of the
+Symphoricarpus and Tritoma, and this makes it all the stranger that they
+do not visit the flowers of the Epipactis, or, as far as I have seen,
+those of the Scrophularia aquatica; although they do visit the flowers
+of Scrophularia nodosa, at least in North America. (11/11. 'Silliman's
+American Journal of Science' August 1871.)
+
+The extraordinary industry of bees and the number of flowers which they
+visit within a short time, so that each flower is visited repeatedly,
+must greatly increase the chance of each receiving pollen from a
+distinct plant. When the nectar is in any way hidden, bees cannot tell
+without inserting their proboscides whether it has lately been exhausted
+by other bees, and this, as remarked in a former chapter, forces them to
+visit many more flowers than they otherwise would. But they endeavour to
+lose as little time as they can; thus in flowers having several
+nectaries, if they find one dry they do not try the others, but as I
+have often observed, pass on to another flower. They work so
+industriously and effectually, that even in the case of social plants,
+of which hundreds of thousands grow together, as with the several kinds
+of heath, every single flower is visited, of which evidence will
+presently be given. They lose no time and fly very quickly from plant to
+plant, but I do not know the rate at which hive-bees fly. Humble-bees
+fly at the rate of ten miles an hour, as I was able to ascertain in the
+case of the males from their curious habit of calling at certain fixed
+points, which made it easy to measure the time taken in passing from one
+place to another.
+
+With respect to the number of flowers which bees visit in a given time,
+I observed that in exactly one minute a humble-bee visited twenty-four
+of the closed flowers of the Linaria cymbalaria; another bee visited in
+the same time twenty-two flowers of the Symphoricarpus racemosa; and
+another seventeen flowers on two plants of a Delphinium. In the course
+of fifteen minutes a single flower on the summit of a plant of Oenothera
+was visited eight times by several humble-bees, and I followed the last
+of these bees, whilst it visited in the course of a few additional
+minutes every plant of the same species in a large flower-garden. In
+nineteen minutes every flower on a small plant of Nemophila insignis was
+visited twice. In one minute six flowers of a Campanula were entered by
+a pollen-collecting hive-bee; and bees when thus employed work slower
+than when sucking nectar. Lastly, seven flower-stalks on a plant of
+Dictamnus fraxinella were observed on the 15th of June 1841 during ten
+minutes; they were visited by thirteen humble-bees each of which entered
+many flowers. On the 22nd the same flower-stalks were visited within the
+same time by eleven humble-bees. This plant bore altogether 280 flowers,
+and from the above data, taking into consideration how late in the
+evening humble-bees work, each flower must have been visited at least
+thirty times daily, and the same flower keeps open during several days.
+The frequency of the visits of bees is also sometimes shown by the
+manner in which the petals are scratched by their hooked tarsi; I have
+seen large beds of Mimulus, Stachys, and Lathyrus with the beauty of
+their flowers thus sadly defaced.
+
+PERFORATION OF THE COROLLA BY BEES.
+
+I have already alluded to bees biting holes in flowers for the sake of
+obtaining the nectar. They often act in this manner, both with endemic
+and exotic species, in many parts of Europe, in the United States, and
+in the Himalaya; and therefore probably in all parts of the world. The
+plants, the fertilisation of which actually depends on insects entering
+the flowers, will fail to produce seed when their nectar is stolen from
+the outside; and even with those species which are capable of
+fertilising themselves without any aid, there can be no
+cross-fertilisation, and this, as we know, is a serious evil in most
+cases. The extent to which humble-bees carry on the practice of biting
+holes is surprising: a remarkable case was observed by me near
+Bournemouth, where there were formerly extensive heaths. I took a long
+walk, and every now and then gathered a twig of Erica tetralix, and when
+I had got a handful all the flowers were examined through a lens. This
+process was repeated many times; but though many hundreds were examined,
+I did not succeed in finding a single flower which had not been
+perforated. Humble-bees were at the time sucking the flowers through
+these perforations. On the following day a large number of flowers were
+examined on another heath with the same result, but here hive-bees were
+sucking through the holes. This case is all the more remarkable, as the
+innumerable holes had been made within a fortnight, for before that time
+I saw the bees everywhere sucking in the proper manner at the mouths of
+the corolla. In an extensive flower-garden some large beds of Salvia
+grahami, Stachys coccinea, and Pentstemon argutus (?) had every flower
+perforated, and many scores were examined. I have seen whole fields of
+red clover (Trifolium pratense) in the same state. Dr. Ogle found that
+90 per cent of the flowers of Salvia glutinosa had been bitten. In the
+United States Mr. Bailey says it is difficult to find a blossom of the
+native Gerardia pedicularia without a hole in it; and Mr. Gentry, in
+speaking of the introduced Wistaria sinensis, says "that nearly every
+flower had been perforated." (11/12. Dr. Ogle 'Pop. Science Review' July
+1869 page 267. Bailey 'American Naturalist' November 1873 page 690.
+Gentry ibid May 1875 page 264.)
+
+As far as I have seen, it is always humble-bees which first bite the
+holes, and they are well fitted for the work by possessing powerful
+mandibles; but hive-bees afterwards profit by the holes thus made. Dr.
+Hermann Muller, however, writes to me that hive-bees sometimes bite
+holes through the flowers of Erica tetralix. No insects except bees,
+with the single exception of wasps in the case of Tritoma, have sense
+enough, as far as I have observed, to profit by the holes already made.
+Even humble-bees do not always discover that it would be advantageous to
+them to perforate certain flowers. There is an abundant supply of nectar
+in the nectary of Tropaeolum tricolor, yet I have found this plant
+untouched in more than one garden, while the flowers of other plants had
+been extensively perforated; but a few years ago Sir J. Lubbock's
+gardener assured me that he had seen humble-bees boring through the
+nectary of this Tropaeolum. Muller has observed humble-bees trying to
+suck at the mouths of the flowers of Primula elatior and of an
+Aquilegia, and, failing in their attempts, they made holes through the
+corolla; but they often bite holes, although they could with very little
+more trouble obtain the nectar in a legitimate manner by the mouth of
+the corolla.
+
+Dr. W. Ogle has communicated to me a curious case. He gathered in
+Switzerland 100 flower-stems of the common blue variety of the monkshood
+(Aconitum napellus), and not a single flower was perforated; he then
+gathered 100 stems of a white variety growing close by, and every one of
+the open flowers had been perforated. (11/13. Dr. Ogle 'Popular Science
+Review' July 1869 page 267. Bailey 'American Naturalist' November 1873
+page 690. Gentry ibid May 1875 page 264.) This surprising difference in
+the state of the flowers may be attributed with much probability to the
+blue variety being distasteful to bees, from the presence of the acrid
+matter which is so general in the Ranunculaceae, and to its absence in
+the white variety in correlation with the loss of the blue tint.
+According to Sprengel, this plant is strongly proterandrous (11/14. 'Das
+Entdeckte' etc. page 278.); it would therefore be more or less sterile
+unless bees carried pollen from the younger to the older flowers.
+Consequently the white variety, the flowers of which were always bitten
+instead of being properly entered by the bees, would fail to yield the
+full number of seeds and would be a comparatively rare plant, as Dr.
+Ogle informs me was the case.
+
+Bees show much skill in their manner of working, for they always make
+their holes from the outside close to the spot where the nectar lies
+hidden within the corolla. All the flowers in a large bed of Stachys
+coccinea had either one or two slits made on the upper side of the
+corolla near the base. The flowers of a Mirabilis and of Salvia coccinea
+were perforated in the same manner; whilst those of Salvia grahami, in
+which the calyx is much elongated, had both the calyx and the corolla
+invariably perforated. The flowers of Pentstemon argutus are broader
+than those of the plants just named, and two holes alongside each other
+had here always been made just above the calyx. In these several cases
+the perforations were on the upper side, but in Antirrhinum majus one or
+two holes had been made on the lower side, close to the little
+protuberance which represents the nectary, and therefore directly in
+front of and close to the spot where the nectar is secreted.
+
+But the most remarkable case of skill and judgment known to me, is that
+of the perforation of the flowers of Lathyrus sylvestris, as described
+by my son Francis. (11/15. 'Nature' January 8, 1874 page 189.) The
+nectar in this plant is enclosed within a tube, formed by the united
+stamens, which surround the pistil so closely that a bee is forced to
+insert its proboscis outside the tube; but two natural rounded passages
+or orifices are left in the tube near the base, in order that the nectar
+may be reached by the bees. Now my son found in sixteen out of
+twenty-four flowers on this plant, and in eleven out of sixteen of those
+on the cultivated everlasting pea, which is either a variety of the same
+species or a closely allied one, that the left passage was larger than
+the right one. And here comes the remarkable point,--the humble-bees
+bite holes through the standard-petal, and they always operated on the
+left side over the passage, which is generally the larger of the two. My
+son remarks: "It is difficult to say how the bees could have acquired
+this habit. Whether they discovered the inequality in the size of the
+nectar-holes in sucking the flowers in the proper way, and then utilised
+this knowledge in determining where to gnaw the hole; or whether they
+found out the best situation by biting through the standard at various
+points, and afterwards remembered its situation in visiting other
+flowers. But in either case they show a remarkable power of making use
+of what they have learnt by experience." It seems probable that bees owe
+their skill in biting holes through flowers of all kinds to their having
+long practised the instinct of moulding cells and pots of wax, or of
+enlarging their old cocoons with tubes of wax; for they are thus
+compelled to work on the inside and outside of the same object.
+
+In the early part of the summer of 1857 I was led to observe during some
+weeks several rows of the scarlet kidney-bean (Phaseolus multiflorus),
+whilst attending to the fertilisation of this plant, and daily saw
+humble- and hive-bees sucking at the mouths of the flowers. But one day
+I found several humble-bees employed in cutting holes in flower after
+flower; and on the next day every single hive-bee, without exception,
+instead of alighting on the left wing-petal and sucking the flower in
+the proper manner, flew straight without the least hesitation to the
+calyx, and sucked through the holes which had been made only the day
+before by the humble-bees; and they continued this habit for many
+following days. (11/16. 'Gardeners' Chronicle' 1857 page 725.) Mr. Belt
+has communicated to me (July 28th, 1874) a similar case, with the sole
+difference that less than half of the flowers had been perforated by the
+humble-bees; nevertheless, all the hive-bees gave up sucking at the
+mouths of the flowers and visited exclusively the bitten ones. Now how
+did the hive-bees find out so quickly that holes had been made? Instinct
+seems to be out of the question, as the plant is an exotic. The holes
+cannot be seen by bees whilst standing on the wing-petals, where they
+had always previously alighted. From the ease with which bees were
+deceived when the petals of Lobelia erinus were cut off, it was clear
+that in this case they were not guided to the nectar by its smell; and
+it may be doubted whether they were attracted to the holes in the
+flowers of the Phaseolus by the odour emitted from them. Did they
+perceive the holes by the sense of touch in their proboscides, whilst
+sucking the flowers in the proper manner, and then reason that it would
+save them time to alight on the outside of the flowers and use the
+holes? This seems almost too abstruse an act of reason for bees; and it
+is more probable that they saw the humble-bees at work, and
+understanding what they were about, imitated them and took advantage of
+the shorter path to the nectar. Even with animals high in the scale,
+such as monkeys, we should be surprised at hearing that all the
+individuals of one species within the space of twenty-four hours
+understood an act performed by a distinct species, and profited by it.
+
+I have repeatedly observed with various kinds of flowers that all the
+hive and humble-bees which were sucking through the perforations, flew
+to them, whether on the upper or under side of the corolla, without the
+least hesitation; and this shows how quickly all the individuals within
+the district had acquired the same knowledge. Yet habit comes into play
+to a certain extent, as in so many of the other operations of bees. Dr.
+Ogle, Messrs. Farrer and Belt have observed in the case of Phaseolus
+multiflorus that certain individuals went exclusively to the
+perforations, while others of the same species visited only the mouths
+of the flowers. (11/17. Dr. Ogle 'Pop. Science Review' April 1870 page
+167. Mr. Farrer 'Annals and Magazine of Natural History' 4th series
+volume 2 1868 page 258. Mr. Belt in a letter to me.) I noticed in 1861
+exactly the same fact with Trifolium pratense. So persistent is the
+force of habit, that when a bee which is visiting perforated flowers
+comes to one which has not been bitten, it does not go to the mouth, but
+instantly flies away in search of another bitten flower. Nevertheless, I
+once saw a humble-bee visiting the hybrid Rhododendron azaloides, and it
+entered the mouths of some flowers and cut holes into the others. Dr.
+Hermann Muller informs me that in the same district he has seen some
+individuals of Bombus mastrucatus boring through the calyx and corolla
+of Rhinanthus alecterolophus, and others through the corolla alone.
+Different species of bees may, however, sometimes be observed acting
+differently at the same time on the same plant. I have seen hive-bees
+sucking at the mouths of the flowers of the common bean; humble-bees of
+one kind sucking through holes bitten in the calyx, and humble-bees of
+another kind sucking the little drops of fluid excreted by the stipules.
+Mr. Beal of Michigan informs me that the flowers of the Missouri currant
+(Ribes aureum) abound with nectar, so that children often suck them; and
+he saw hive-bees sucking through holes made by a bird, the oriole, and
+at the same time humble-bees sucking in the proper manner at the mouths
+of the flowers. (11/18. The flowers of the Ribes are however sometimes
+perforated by humble-bees, and Mr. Bundy says that they were able to
+bite through and rob seven flowers of their honey in a minute: 'American
+Naturalist' 1876 page 238.) This statement about the oriole calls to
+mind what I have before said of certain species of humming-birds boring
+holes through the flowers of the Brugmansia, whilst other species
+entered by the mouth.
+
+The motive which impels bees to gnaw holes through the corolla seems to
+be the saving of time, for they lose much time in climbing into and out
+of large flowers, and in forcing their heads into closed ones. They were
+able to visit nearly twice as many flowers, as far as I could judge, of
+a Stachys and Pentstemon by alighting on the upper surface of the
+corolla and sucking through the cut holes, than by entering in the
+proper way. Nevertheless each bee before it has had much practice, must
+lose some time in making each new perforation, especially when the
+perforation has to be made through both calyx and corolla. This action
+therefore implies foresight, of which faculty we have abundant evidence
+in their building operations; and may we not further believe that some
+trace of their social instinct, that is, of working for the good of
+other members of the community, may here likewise play a part?
+
+Many years ago I was struck with the fact that humble-bees as a general
+rule perforate flowers only when these grow in large numbers near
+together. In a garden where there were some very large beds of Stachys
+coccinea and of Pentstemon argutus, every single flower was perforated,
+but I found two plants of the former species growing quite separate with
+their petals much scratched, showing that they had been frequently
+visited by bees, and yet not a single flower was perforated. I found
+also a separate plant of the Pentstemon, and saw bees entering the mouth
+of the corolla, and not a single flower had been perforated. In the
+following year (1842) I visited the same garden several times: on the
+19th of July humble-bees were sucking the flowers of Stachys coccinea
+and Salvia grahami in the proper manner, and none of the corollas were
+perforated. On the 7th of August all the flowers were perforated, even
+those on some few plants of the Salvia which grew at a little distance
+from the great bed. On the 21st of August only a few flowers on the
+summits of the spikes of both species remained fresh, and not one of
+these was now bored. Again, in my own garden every plant in several rows
+of the common bean had many flowers perforated; but I found three plants
+in separate parts of the garden which had sprung up accidentally, and
+these had not a single flower perforated. General Strachey formerly saw
+many perforated flowers in a garden in the Himalaya, and he wrote to the
+owner to inquire whether this relation between the plants growing
+crowded and their perforation by the bees there held good, and was
+answered in the affirmative. Hence it follows that the red clover
+(Trifolium pratense) and the common bean when cultivated in great masses
+in fields,--that Erica tetralix growing in large numbers on
+heaths,--rows of the scarlet kidney-bean in the kitchen-garden,--and
+masses of any species in the flower-garden,--are all eminently liable to
+be perforated.
+
+The explanation of this fact is not difficult. Flowers growing in large
+numbers afford a rich booty to the bees, and are conspicuous from a
+distance. They are consequently visited by crowds of these insects, and
+I once counted between twenty and thirty bees flying about a bed of
+Pentstemon. They are thus stimulated to work quickly by rivalry, and,
+what is much more important, they find a large proportion of the
+flowers, as suggested by my son, with their nectaries sucked dry.
+(11/19. 'Nature' January 8, 1874 page 189.) They thus waste much time in
+searching many empty flowers, and are led to bite the holes, so as to
+find out as quickly as possible whether there is any nectar present, and
+if so, to obtain it.
+
+Flowers which are partially or wholly sterile unless visited by insects
+in the proper manner, such as those of most species of Salvia, of
+Trifolium pratense, Phaseolus multiflorus, etc., will fail more or less
+completely to produce seeds if the bees confine their visits to the
+perforations. The perforated flowers of those species, which are capable
+of fertilising themselves, will yield only self-fertilised seeds, and
+the seedlings will in consequence be less vigorous. Therefore all plants
+must suffer in some degree when bees obtain their nectar in a felonious
+manner by biting holes through the corolla; and many species, it might
+be thought, would thus be exterminated. But here, as is so general
+throughout nature, there is a tendency towards a restored equilibrium.
+If a plant suffers from being perforated, fewer individuals will be
+reared, and if its nectar is highly important to the bees, these in
+their turn will suffer and decrease in number; but, what is much more
+effective, as soon as the plant becomes somewhat rare so as not to grow
+in crowded masses, the bees will no longer be stimulated to gnaw holes
+in the flowers, but will enter them in a legitimate manner. More seed
+will then be produced, and the seedlings being the product of
+cross-fertilisation will be vigorous, so that the species will tend to
+increase in number, to be again checked, as soon as the plant again
+grows in crowded masses.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+GENERAL RESULTS.
+
+Cross-fertilisation proved to be beneficial, and self-fertilisation
+injurious.
+Allied species differ greatly in the means by which cross-fertilisation
+is favoured and self-fertilisation avoided.
+The benefits and evils of the two processes depend on the degree of
+differentiation in the sexual elements.
+The evil effects not due to the combination of morbid tendencies in the
+parents.
+Nature of the conditions to which plants are subjected when growing near
+together in a state of nature or under culture, and the effects of such
+conditions.
+Theoretical considerations with respect to the interaction of
+differentiated sexual elements.
+Practical lessons.
+Genesis of the two sexes.
+Close correspondence between the effects of cross-fertilisation and
+self-fertilisation, and of the legitimate and illegitimate unions of
+heterostyled plants, in comparison with hybrid unions.
+
+The first and most important of the conclusions which may be drawn from
+the observations given in this volume, is that cross-fertilisation is
+generally beneficial, and self-fertilisation injurious. This is shown by
+the difference in height, weight, constitutional vigour, and fertility
+of the offspring from crossed and self-fertilised flowers, and in the
+number of seeds produced by the parent-plants. With respect to the
+second of these two propositions, namely, that self-fertilisation is
+generally injurious, we have abundant evidence. The structure of the
+flowers in such plants as Lobelia ramosa, Digitalis purpurea, etc.,
+renders the aid of insects almost indispensable for their fertilisation;
+and bearing in mind the prepotency of pollen from a distinct individual
+over that from the same individual, such plants will almost certainly
+have been crossed during many or all previous generations. So it must
+be, owing merely to the prepotency of foreign pollen, with cabbages and
+various other plants, the varieties of which almost invariably
+intercross when grown together. The same inference may be drawn still
+more surely with respect to those plants, such as Reseda and
+Eschscholtzia, which are sterile with their own pollen, but fertile with
+that from any other individual. These several plants must therefore have
+been crossed during a long series of previous generations, and the
+artificial crosses in my experiments cannot have increased the vigour of
+the offspring beyond that of their progenitors. Therefore the difference
+between the self-fertilised and crossed plants raised by me cannot be
+attributed to the superiority of the crossed, but to the inferiority of
+the self-fertilised seedlings, due to the injurious effects of
+self-fertilisation.
+
+With respect to the first proposition, namely, that cross-fertilisation
+is generally beneficial, we likewise have excellent evidence. Plants of
+Ipomoea were intercrossed for nine successive generations; they were
+then again intercrossed, and at the same time crossed with a plant of a
+fresh stock, that is, one brought from another garden; and the offspring
+of this latter cross were to the intercrossed plants in height as 100 to
+78, and in fertility as 100 to 51. An analogous experiment with
+Eschscholtzia gave a similar result, as far as fertility was concerned.
+In neither of these cases were any of the plants the product of
+self-fertilisation. Plants of Dianthus were self-fertilised for three
+generations, and this no doubt was injurious; but when these plants were
+fertilised by a fresh stock and by intercrossed plants of the same
+stock, there was a great difference in fertility between the two sets of
+seedlings, and some difference in their height. Petunia offers a nearly
+parallel case. With various other plants, the wonderful effects of a
+cross with a fresh stock may be seen in Table 7/C. Several accounts have
+also been published of the extraordinary growth of seedlings from a
+cross between two varieties of the same species, some of which are known
+never to fertilise themselves; so that here neither self-fertilisation
+nor relationship even in a remote degree can have come into play. (12/1.
+See 'Variation under Domestication' chapter 19 2nd edition volume 2 page
+159.) We may therefore conclude that the above two propositions are
+true,--that cross-fertilisation is generally beneficial and
+self-fertilisation injurious to the offspring.
+
+That certain plants, for instance, Viola tricolor, Digitalis purpurea,
+Sarothamnus scoparius, Cyclamen persicum, etc., which have been
+naturally cross-fertilised for many or all previous generations, should
+suffer to an extreme degree from a single act of self-fertilisation is a
+most surprising fact. Nothing of the kkind has been observed in our
+domestic animals; but then we must remember that the closest possible
+interbreeding with such animals, that is, between brothers and sisters,
+cannot be considered as nearly so close a union as that between the
+pollen and ovules of the same flower. Whether the evil from
+self-fertilisation goes on increasing during successive generations is
+not as yet known; but we may infer from my experiments that the increase
+if any is far from rapid. After plants have been propagated by
+self-fertilisation for several generations, a single cross with a fresh
+stock restores their pristine vigour; and we have a strictly analogous
+result with our domestic animals. (12/2. Ibid chapter 19 2nd edition
+volume 2 page 159.) The good effects of cross-fertilisation are
+transmitted by plants to the next generation; and judging from the
+varieties of the common pea, to many succeeding generations. But this
+may merely be that crossed plants of the first generation are extremely
+vigorous, and transmit their vigour, like any other character, to their
+successors.
+
+Notwithstanding the evil which many plants suffer from
+self-fertilisation, they can be thus propagated under favourable
+conditions for many generations, as shown by some of my experiments, and
+more especially by the survival during at least half a century of the
+same varieties of the common pea and sweet-pea. The same conclusion
+probably holds good with several other exotic plants, which are never or
+most rarely cross-fertilised in this country. But all these plants, as
+far as they have been tried, profit greatly by a cross with a fresh
+stock. Some few plants, for instance, Ophrys apifera, have almost
+certainly been propagated in a state of nature for thousands of
+generations without having been once intercrossed; and whether they
+would profit by a cross with a fresh stock is not known. But such cases
+ought not to make us doubt that as a general rule crossing is
+beneficial, any more than the existence of plants which, in a state of
+nature, are propagated exclusively by rhizomes, stolons, etc. (their
+flowers never producing seeds), (12/3. I have given several cases in my
+'Variation under Domestication' chapter 18 2nd edition volume 2 page
+152.) (their flowers never producing seeds), should make us doubt that
+seminal generation must have some great advantage, as it is the common
+plan followed by nature. Whether any species has been reproduced
+asexually from a very remote period cannot, of course, be ascertained.
+Our sole means for forming any judgment on this head is the duration of
+the varieties of our fruit trees which have been long propagated by
+grafts or buds. Andrew Knight formerly maintained that under these
+circumstances they always become weakly, but this conclusion has been
+warmly disputed by others. A recent and competent judge, Professor Asa
+Gray, leans to the side of Andrew Knight, which seems to me, from such
+evidence as I have been able to collect, the more probable view,
+notwithstanding many opposed facts. (12/4. 'Darwiniana: Essays and
+Reviews pertaining to Darwinism' 1876 page 338.)
+
+The means for favouring cross-fertilisation and preventing
+self-fertilisation, or conversely for favouring self-fertilisation and
+preventing to a certain extent cross-fertilisation, are wonderfully
+diversified; and it is remarkable that these differ widely in closely
+allied plants,--in the species of the same genus, and sometimes in the
+individuals of the same species. (12/5. Hildebrand has insisted strongly
+to this effect in his valuable observations on the fertilisation of the
+Gramineae: 'Monatsbericht K. Akad. Berlin' October 1872 page 763.) It is
+not rare to find hermaphrodite plants and others with separated sexes
+within the same genus; and it is common to find some of the species
+dichogamous and others maturing their sexual elements simultaneously.
+The dichogamous genus Saxifraga contains proterandrous and proterogynous
+species. (12/6. Dr. Engler 'Botanische Zeitung' 1868 page 833.) Several
+genera include both heterostyled (dimorphic or trimorphic forms) and
+homostyled species. Ophrys offers a remarkable instance of one species
+having its structure manifestly adapted for self-fertilisation, and
+other species as manifestly adapted for cross-fertilisation. Some
+con-generic species are quite sterile and others quite fertile with
+their own pollen. From these several causes we often find within the
+same genus species which do not produce seeds, while others produce an
+abundance, when insects are excluded. Some species bear cleistogene
+flowers which cannot be crossed, as well as perfect flowers, whilst
+others in the same genus never produce cleistogene flowers. Some species
+exist under two forms, the one bearing conspicuous flowers adapted for
+cross-fertilisation, the other bearing inconspicuous flowers adapted for
+self-fertilisation, whilst other species in the same genus present only
+a single form. Even with the individuals of the same species, the degree
+of self-sterility varies greatly, as in Reseda. With polygamous plants,
+the distribution of the sexes differs in the individuals of the same
+species. The relative period at which the sexual elements in the same
+flower are mature, differs in the varieties of Pelargonium; and Carriere
+gives several cases, showing that the period varies according to the
+temperature to which the plants are exposed. (12/7. 'Des Varieties' 1865
+page 30.)
+
+This extraordinary diversity in the means for favouring or preventing
+cross- and self-fertilisation in closely allied forms, probably depends
+on the results of both processes being highly beneficial to the species,
+but directly opposed in many ways to one another and dependent on
+variable conditions. Self-fertilisation assures the production of a
+large supply of seeds; and the necessity or advantage of this will be
+determined by the average length of life of the plant, which largely
+depends on the amount of destruction suffered by the seeds and
+seedlings. This destruction follows from the most various and variable
+causes, such as the presence of animals of several kinds, and the growth
+of surrounding plants. The possibility of cross-fertilisation depends
+mainly on the presence and number of certain insects, often of insects
+belonging to special groups, and on the degree to which they are
+attracted to the flowers of any particular species in preference to
+other flowers,--all circumstances likely to change. Moreover, the
+advantages which follow from cross-fertilisation differ much in
+different plants, so that it is probable that allied plants would often
+profit in different degrees by cross-fertilisation. Under these
+extremely complex and fluctuating conditions, with two somewhat opposed
+ends to be gained, namely, the safe propagation of the species and the
+production of cross-fertilised, vigorous offspring, it is not surprising
+that allied forms should exhibit an extreme diversity in the means which
+favour either end. If, as there is reason to suspect, self-fertilisation
+is in some respects beneficial, although more than counterbalanced by
+the advantages derived from a cross with a fresh stock, the problem
+becomes still more complicated.
+
+As I only twice experimented on more than a single species in a genus, I
+cannot say whether the crossed offspring of the several species within
+the same genus differ in their degree of superiority over their
+self-fertilised brethren; but I should expect that this would often
+prove to be the case from what was observed with the two species of
+Lobelia and with the individuals of the same species of Nicotiana. The
+species belonging to distinct genera in the same family certainly differ
+in this respect. The effects of cross- and self-fertilisation may be
+confined either to the growth or to the fertility of the offspring, but
+generally extends to both qualities. There does not seem to exist any
+close correspondence between the degree to which their offspring profit
+by this process; but we may easily err on this head, as there are two
+means for ensuring cross-fertilisation which are not externally
+perceptible, namely, self-sterility and the prepotent fertilising
+influence of pollen from another individual. Lastly, it has been shown
+in a former chapter that the effect produced by cross and
+self-fertilisation on the fertility of the parent-plants does not always
+correspond with that produced on the height, vigour, and fertility of
+their offspring. The same remark applies to crossed and self-fertilised
+seedlings when these are used as the parent-plants. This want of
+correspondence probably depends, at least in part, on the number of
+seeds produced being chiefly determined by the number of the
+pollen-tubes which reach the ovules, and this will be governed by the
+reaction between the pollen and the stigmatic secretion or tissues;
+whereas the growth and constitutional vigour of the offspring will be
+chiefly determined, not only by the number of pollen-tubes reaching the
+ovules, but by the nature of the reaction between the contents of the
+pollen-grains and ovules.
+
+There are two other important conclusions which may be deduced from my
+observations: firstly, that the advantages of cross-fertilisation do not
+follow from some mysterious virtue in the mere union of two distinct
+individuals, but from such individuals having been subjected during
+previous generations to different conditions, or to their having varied
+in a manner commonly called spontaneous, so that in either case their
+sexual elements have been in some degree differentiated. And secondly,
+that the injury from self-fertilisation follows from the want of such
+differentiation in the sexual elements. These two propositions are fully
+established by my experiments. Thus, when plants of the Ipomoea and of
+the Mimulus, which had been self-fertilised for the seven previous
+generations and had been kept all the time under the same conditions,
+were intercrossed one with another, the offspring did not profit in the
+least by the cross. Mimulus offers another instructive case, showing
+that the benefit of a cross depends on the previous treatment of the
+progenitors: plants which had been self-fertilised for the eight
+previous generations were crossed with plants which had been
+intercrossed for the same number of generations, all having been kept
+under the same conditions as far as possible; seedlings from this cross
+were grown in competition with others derived from the same
+self-fertilised mother-plant crossed by a fresh stock; and the latter
+seedlings were to the former in height as 100 to 52, and in fertility as
+100 to 4. An exactly parallel experiment was tried on Dianthus, with
+this difference, that the plants had been self-fertilised only for the
+three previous generations, and the result was similar though not so
+strongly marked. The foregoing two cases of the offspring of Ipomoea and
+Eschscholtzia, derived from a cross with a fresh stock, being as much
+superior to the intercrossed plants of the old stock, as these latter
+were to the self-fertilised offspring, strongly supports the same
+conclusion. A cross with a fresh stock or with another variety seems to
+be always highly beneficial, whether or not the mother-plants have been
+intercrossed or self-fertilised for several previous generations. The
+fact that a cross between two flowers on the same plant does no good or
+very little good, is likewise a strong corroboration of our conclusion;
+for the sexual elements in the flowers on the same plant can rarely have
+been differentiated, though this is possible, as flower-buds are in one
+sense distinct individuals, sometimes varying and differing from one
+another in structure or constitution. Thus the proposition that the
+benefit from cross-fertilisation depends on the plants which are crossed
+having been subjected during previous generations to somewhat different
+conditions, or to their having varied from some unknown cause as if they
+had been thus subjected, is securely fortified on all sides.
+
+Before proceeding any further, the view which has been maintained by
+several physiologists must be noticed, namely, that all the evils from
+breeding animals too closely, and no doubt, as they would say, from the
+self-fertilisation of plants, is the result of the increase of some
+morbid tendency or weakness of constitution common to the closely
+related parents, or to the two sexes of hermaphrodite plants.
+Undoubtedly injury has often thus resulted; but it is a vain attempt to
+extend this view to the numerous cases given in my Tables. It should be
+remembered that the same mother-plant was both self-fertilised and
+crossed, so that if she had been unhealthy she would have transmitted
+half her morbid tendencies to her crossed offspring. But plants
+appearing perfectly healthy, some of them growing wild, or the immediate
+offspring of wild plants, or vigorous common garden-plants, were
+selected for experiment. Considering the number of species which were
+tried, it is nothing less than absurd to suppose that in all these cases
+the mother-plants, though not appearing in any way diseased, were weak
+or unhealthy in so peculiar a manner that their self-fertilised
+seedlings, many hundreds in number, were rendered inferior in height,
+weight, constitutional vigour and fertility to their crossed offspring.
+Moreover, this belief cannot be extended to the strongly marked
+advantages which invariably follow, as far as my experience serves, from
+intercrossing the individuals of the same variety or of distinct
+varieties, if these have been subjected during some generations to
+different conditions.
+
+It is obvious that the exposure of two sets of plants during several
+generations to different conditions can lead to no beneficial results,
+as far as crossing is concerned, unless their sexual elements are thus
+affected. That every organism is acted on to a certain extent by a
+change in its environment, will not, I presume, be disputed. It is
+hardly necessary to advance evidence on this head; we can perceive the
+difference between individual plants of the same species which have
+grown in somewhat more shady or sunny, dry or damp places. Plants which
+have been propagated for some generations under different climates or at
+different seasons of the year transmit different constitutions to their
+seedlings. Under such circumstances, the chemical constitution of their
+fluids and the nature of their tissues are often modified. (12/8.
+Numerous cases together with references are given in my 'Variation under
+Domestication' chapter 23 2nd edition volume 2 page 264. With respect to
+animals, Mr. Brackenridge 'A Contribution to the Theory of Diathesis'
+Edinburgh 1869, has well shown that the different organs of animals are
+excited into different degrees of activity by differences of temperature
+and food, and become to a certain extent adapted to them.) Many other
+such facts could be adduced. In short, every alteration in the function
+of a part is probably connected with some corresponding, though often
+quite imperceptible change in structure or composition.
+
+Whatever affects an organism in any way, likewise tends to act on its
+sexual elements. We see this in the inheritance of newly acquired
+modifications, such as those from the increased use or disuse of a part,
+and even from mutilations if followed by disease. (12/9. 'Variation
+under Domestication' chapter 12 2nd edition volume 1 page 466.) We have
+abundant evidence how susceptible the reproductive system is to changed
+conditions, in the many instances of animals rendered sterile by
+confinement; so that they will not unite, or if they unite do not
+produce offspring, though the confinement may be far from close; and of
+plants rendered sterile by cultivation. But hardly any cases afford more
+striking evidence how powerfully a change in the conditions of life acts
+on the sexual elements, than those already given, of plants which are
+completely self-sterile in one country, and when brought to another,
+yield, even in the first generation, a fair supply of self-fertilised
+seeds.
+
+But it may be said, granting that changed conditions act on the sexual
+elements, how can two or more plants growing close together, either in
+their native country or in a garden, be differently acted on, inasmuch
+as they appear to be exposed to exactly the same conditions? Although
+this question has been already considered, it deserves further
+consideration under several points of view. In my experiments with
+Digitalis purpurea, some flowers on a wild plant were self-fertilised,
+and others were crossed with pollen from another plant growing within
+two or three feet's distance. The crossed and self-fertilised plants
+raised from the seeds thus obtained, produced flower-stems in number as
+100 to 47, and in average height as 100 to 70. Therefore the cross
+between these two plants was highly beneficial; but how could their
+sexual elements have been differentiated by exposure to different
+conditions? If the progenitors of the two plants had lived on the same
+spot during the last score of generations, and had never been crossed
+with any plant beyond the distance of a few feet, in all probability
+their offspring would have been reduced to the same state as some of the
+plants in my experiments,--such as the intercrossed plants of the ninth
+generation of Ipomoea,--or the self-fertilised plants of the eighth
+generation of Mimulus,--or the offspring from flowers on the same
+plant,--and in this case a cross between the two plants of Digitalis
+would have done no good. But seeds are often widely dispersed by natural
+means, and one of the above two plants or one of their ancestors may
+have come from a distance, from a more shady or sunny, dry or moist
+place, or from a different kind of soil containing other organic or
+inorganic matter. We know from the admirable researches of Messrs. Lawes
+and Gilbert that different plants require and consume very different
+amounts of inorganic matter. (12/10. 'Journal of the Royal Agricultural
+Society of England' volume 24 part 1.) But the amount in the soil would
+probably not make so great a difference to the several individuals of
+any particular species as might at first be expected; for the
+surrounding species with different requirements would tend, from
+existing in greater or lesser numbers, to keep each species in a sort of
+equilibrium, with respect to what it could obtain from the soil. So it
+would be even with respect to moisture during dry seasons; and how
+powerful is the influence of a little more or less moisture in the soil
+on the presence and distribution of plants, is often well shown in old
+pasture fields which still retain traces of former ridges and furrows.
+Nevertheless, as the proportional numbers of the surrounding plants in
+two neighbouring places is rarely exactly the same, the individuals of
+the same species will be subjected to somewhat different conditions with
+respect to what they can absorb from the soil. It is surprising how the
+free growth of one set of plants affects others growing mingled with
+them; I allowed the plants on rather more than a square yard of turf
+which had been closely mown for several years, to grow up; and nine
+species out of twenty were thus exterminated; but whether this was
+altogether due to the kinds which grew up robbing the others of
+nutriment, I do not know.
+
+Seeds often lie dormant for several years in the ground, and germinate
+when brought near the surface by any means, as by burrowing animals.
+They would probably be affected by the mere circumstance of having long
+lain dormant; for gardeners believe that the production of double
+flowers and of fruit is thus influenced. Seeds, moreover, which were
+matured during different seasons, will have been subjected during the
+whole course of their development to different degrees of heat and
+moisture.
+
+It was shown in the last chapter that pollen is often carried by insects
+to a considerable distance from plant to plant. Therefore one of the
+parents or ancestors of our two plants of Digitalis may have been
+crossed by a distant plant growing under somewhat different conditions.
+Plants thus crossed often produce an unusually large number of seeds; a
+striking instance of this fact is afforded by the Bignonia, previously
+mentioned, which was fertilised by Fritz Muller with pollen from some
+adjoining plants and set hardly any seed, but when fertilised with
+pollen from a distant plant, was highly fertile. Seedlings from a cross
+of this kind grow with great vigour, and transmit their vigour to their
+descendants. These, therefore, in the struggle for life, will generally
+beat and exterminate the seedlings from plants which have long grown
+near together under the same conditions, and will thus tend to spread.
+
+When two varieties which present well-marked differences are crossed,
+their descendants in the later generations differ greatly from one
+another in external characters; and this is due to the augmentation or
+obliteration of some of these characters, and to the reappearance of
+former ones through reversion; and so it will be, as we may feel almost
+sure, with any slight differences in the constitution of their sexual
+elements. Anyhow, my experiments indicate that crossing plants which
+have been long subjected to almost though not quite the same conditions,
+is the most powerful of all the means for retaining some degree of
+differentiation in the sexual elements, as shown by the superiority in
+the later generations of the intercrossed over the self-fertilised
+seedlings. Nevertheless, the continued intercrossing of plants thus
+treated does tend to obliterate such differentiation, as may be inferred
+from the lessened benefit derived from intercrossing such plants, in
+comparison with that from a cross with a fresh stock. It seems probable,
+as I may add, that seeds have acquired their endless curious adaptations
+for wide dissemination, not only that the seedlings would thus be
+enabled to find new and fitting homes, but that the individuals which
+have been long subjected to the same conditions should occasionally
+intercross with a fresh stock. (12/11. See Professor Hildebrand's
+excellent treatise 'Verbreitungsmittel der Pflanzen' 1873.)
+
+From the foregoing several considerations we may, I think, conclude that
+in the above case of the Digitalis, and even in that of plants which
+have grown for thousands of generations in the same district, as must
+often have occurred with species having a much restricted range, we are
+apt to over-estimate the degree to which the individuals have been
+subjected to absolutely the same conditions. There is at least no
+difficulty in believing that such plants have been subjected to
+sufficiently distinct conditions to differentiate their sexual elements;
+for we know that a plant propagated for some generations in another
+garden in the same district serves as a fresh stock and has high
+fertilising powers. The curious cases of plants which can fertilise and
+be fertilised by any other individual of the same species, but are
+altogether sterile with their own pollen, become intelligible, if the
+view here propounded is correct, namely, that the individuals of the
+same species growing in a state of nature near together, have not really
+been subjected during several previous generations to quite the same
+conditions.
+
+Some naturalists assume that there is an innate tendency in all beings
+to vary and to advance in organisation, independently of external
+agencies; and they would, I presume, thus explain the slight differences
+which distinguish all the individuals of the same species both in
+external characters and in constitution, as well as the greater
+differences in both respects between nearly allied varieties. No two
+individuals can be found quite alike; thus if we sow a number of seeds
+from the same capsule under as nearly as possible the same conditions,
+they germinate at different rates and grow more or less vigorously. They
+resist cold and other unfavourable conditions differently. They would in
+all probability, as we know to be the case with animals of the same
+species, be somewhat differently acted on by the same poison, or by the
+same disease. They have different powers of transmitting their
+characters to their offspring; and many analogous facts could be given.
+(12/12. Vilmorin as quoted by Verlot 'Des Varieties' pages 32, 38, 39.)
+Now, if it were true that plants growing near together in a state of
+nature had been subjected during many previous generations to absolutely
+the same conditions, such differences as those just specified would be
+quite inexplicable; but they are to a certain extent intelligible in
+accordance with the views just advanced.
+
+As most of the plants on which I experimented were grown in my garden or
+in pots under glass, a few words must be added on the conditions to
+which they were exposed, as well as on the effects of cultivation. When
+a species is first brought under culture, it may or may not be subjected
+to a change of climate, but it is always grown in ground broken up, and
+more or less manured; it is also saved from competition with other
+plants. The paramount importance of this latter circumstance is proved
+by the multitude of species which flourish and multiply in a garden, but
+cannot exist unless they are protected from other plants. When thus
+saved from competition they are able to get whatever they require from
+the soil, probably often in excess; and they are thus subjected to a
+great change of conditions. It is probably in chief part owing to this
+cause that all plants with rare exceptions vary after being cultivated
+for some generations. The individuals which have already begun to vary
+will intercross one with another by the aid of insects; and this
+accounts for the extreme diversity of character which many of our long
+cultivated plants exhibit. But it should be observed that the result
+will be largely determined by the degree of their variability and by the
+frequency of the intercrosses; for if a plant varies very little, like
+most species in a state of nature, frequent intercrosses tend to give
+uniformity of character to it.
+
+I have attempted to show that with plants growing naturally in the same
+district, except in the unusual case of each individual being surrounded
+by exactly the same proportional numbers of other species having certain
+powers of absorption, each will be subjected to slightly different
+conditions. This does not apply to the individuals of the same species
+when cultivated in cleared ground in the same garden. But if their
+flowers are visited by insects, they will intercross; and this will give
+to their sexual elements during a considerable number of generations a
+sufficient amount of differentiation for a cross to be beneficial.
+Moreover, seeds are frequently exchanged or procured from other gardens
+having a different kind of soil; and the individuals of the same
+cultivated species will thus be subjected to a change of conditions. If
+the flowers are not visited by our native insects, or very rarely so, as
+in the case of the common and sweet pea, and apparently in that of the
+tobacco when kept in a hothouse, any differentiation in the sexual
+elements caused by intercrosses will tend to disappear. This appears to
+have occurred with the plants just mentioned, for they were not
+benefited by being crossed one with another, though they were greatly
+benefited by a cross with a fresh stock.
+
+I have been led to the views just advanced with respect to the causes of
+the differentiation of the sexual elements and of the variability of our
+garden plants, by the results of my various experiments, and more
+especially by the four cases in which extremely inconstant species,
+after having been self-fertilised and grown under closely similar
+conditions for several generations, produced flowers of a uniform and
+constant tint. These conditions were nearly the same as those to which
+plants, growing in a garden clear of weeds, are subjected, if they are
+propagated by self-fertilised seeds on the same spot. The plants in pots
+were, however, exposed to less severe fluctuations of climate than those
+out of doors; but their conditions, though closely uniform for all the
+individuals of the same generation, differed somewhat in the successive
+generations. Now, under these circumstances, the sexual elements of the
+plants which were intercrossed in each generation retained sufficient
+differentiation during several years for their offspring to be superior
+to the self-fertilised, but this superiority gradually and manifestly
+decreased, as was shown by the difference in the result between a cross
+with one of the intercrossed plants and with a fresh stock. These
+intercrossed plants tended also in a few cases to become somewhat more
+uniform in some of their external characters than they were at first.
+With respect to the plants which were self-fertilised in each
+generation, their sexual elements apparently lost, after some years, all
+differentiation, for a cross between them did no more good than a cross
+between the flowers on the same plant. But it is a still more remarkable
+fact, that although the seedlings of Mimulus, Ipomoea, Dianthus, and
+Petunia which were first raised, varied excessively in the colour of
+their flowers, their offspring, after being self-fertilised and grown
+under uniform conditions for some generations, bore flowers almost as
+uniform in tint as those on a natural species. In one case also the
+plants themselves became remarkably uniform in height.
+
+The conclusion that the advantages of a cross depend altogether on the
+differentiation of the sexual elements, harmonises perfectly with the
+fact that an occasional and slight change in the conditions of life is
+beneficial to all plants and animals. (12/13. I have given sufficient
+evidence on this head in my 'Variation under Domestication' chapter 18
+volume 2 2nd edition page 127.) But the offspring from a cross between
+organisms which have been exposed to different conditions, profit in an
+incomparably higher degree than do young or old beings from a mere
+change in the conditions. In this latter case we never see anything like
+the effect which generally follows from a cross with another individual,
+especially from a cross with a fresh stock. This might, perhaps, have
+been expected, for the blending together of the sexual elements of two
+differentiated beings will affect the whole constitution at a very early
+period of life, whilst the organisation is highly flexible. We have,
+moreover, reason to believe that changed conditions generally act
+differently on the several parts or organs of the same individual
+(12/14. See, for instance, Brackenridge 'Theory of Diathesis' Edinburgh
+1869.); and if we may further believe that these now slightly
+differentiated parts react on one another, the harmony between the
+beneficial effects on the individual due to changed conditions, and
+those due to the interaction of differentiated sexual elements, becomes
+still closer.
+
+That wonderfully accurate observer, Sprengel, who first showed how
+important a part insects play in the fertilisation of flowers, called
+his book 'The Secret of Nature Displayed;' yet he only occasionally saw
+that the object for which so many curious and beautiful adaptations have
+been acquired, was the cross-fertilisation of distinct plants; and he
+knew nothing of the benefits which the offspring thus receive in growth,
+vigour, and fertility. But the veil of secrecy is as yet far from
+lifted; nor will it be, until we can say why it is beneficial that the
+sexual elements should be differentiated to a certain extent, and why,
+if the differentiation be carried still further, injury follows. It is
+an extraordinary fact that with many species, flowers fertilised with
+their own pollen are either absolutely or in some degree sterile; if
+fertilised with pollen from another flower on the same plant, they are
+sometimes, though rarely, a little more fertile; if fertilised with
+pollen from another individual or variety of the same species, they are
+fully fertile; but if with pollen from a distinct species, they are
+sterile in all possible degrees, until utter sterility is reached. We
+thus have a long series with absolute sterility at the two ends;--at one
+end due to the sexual elements not having been sufficiently
+differentiated, and at the other end to their having been differentiated
+in too great a degree, or in some peculiar manner.
+
+The fertilisation of one of the higher plants depends, in the first
+place, on the mutual action of the pollen-grains and the stigmatic
+secretion or tissues, and afterwards on the mutual action of the
+contents of the pollen-grains and ovules. Both actions, judging from the
+increased fertility of the parent-plants and from the increased powers
+of growth in the offspring, are favoured by some degree of
+differentiation in the elements which interact and unite so as to form a
+new being. Here we have some analogy with chemical affinity or
+attraction, which comes into play only between atoms or molecules of a
+different nature. As Professor Miller remarks: "Generally speaking, the
+greater the difference in the properties of two bodies, the more intense
+is their tendency to mutual chemical action...But between bodies of a
+similar character the tendency to unite is feeble." (12/15. 'Elements of
+Chemistry' 4th edition 1867 part 1 page 11. Dr. Frankland informs me
+that similar views with respect to chemical affinity are generally
+accepted by chemists.) This latter proposition accords well with the
+feeble effects of a plant's own pollen on the fertility of the
+mother-plant and on the growth of the offspring; and the former
+proposition accords well with the powerful influence in both ways of
+pollen from an individual which has been differentiated by exposure to
+changed conditions, or by so-called spontaneous variation. But the
+analogy fails when we turn to the negative or weak effects of pollen
+from one species on a distinct species; for although some substances
+which are extremely dissimilar, for instance, carbon and chlorine, have
+a very feeble affinity for each other, yet it cannot be said that the
+weakness of the affinity depends in such cases on the extent to which
+the substances differ. It is not known why a certain amount of
+differentiation is necessary or favourable for the chemical affinity or
+union of two substances, any more than for the fertilisation or union of
+two organisms.
+
+Mr. Herbert Spencer has discussed this whole subject at great length,
+and after stating that all the forces throughout nature tend towards an
+equilibrium, remarks, "that the need of this union of sperm-cell and
+germ-ccell is the need for overthrowing this equilibrium and
+re-establishing active molecular change in the detached germ--a result
+which is probably effected by mixing the slightly-different
+physiological units of slightly-different individuals." (12/16.
+'Principles of Biology' volume 1 page 274 1864. In my 'Origin of
+Species' published in 1859, I spoke of the good effects from slight
+changes in the condition of life and from cross-fertilisation, and of
+the evil effects from great changes in the conditions and from crossing
+widely distinct forms (i.e., species), as a series of facts "connected
+together by some common but unknown bond, which is essentially related
+to the principle of life.") But we must not allow this highly
+generalised view, or the analogy of chemical affinity, to conceal from
+us our ignorance. We do not know what is the nature or degree of the
+differentiation in the sexual elements which is favourable for union,
+and what is injurious for union, as in the case of distinct species. We
+cannot say why the individuals of certain species profit greatly, and
+others very little by being crossed. There are some few species which
+have been self-fertilised for a vast number of generations, and yet are
+vigorous enough to compete successfully with a host of surrounding
+plants. We can form no conception why the advantage from a cross is
+sometimes directed exclusively to the vegetative system, and sometimes
+to the reproductive system, but commonly to both. It is equally
+inconceivable why some individuals of the same species should be
+sterile, whilst others are fully fertile with their own pollen; why a
+change of climate should either lessen or increase the sterility of
+self-sterile species; and why the individuals of some species should be
+even more fertile with pollen from a distinct species than with their
+own pollen. And so it is with many other facts, which are so obscure
+that we stand in awe before the mystery of life.
+
+Under a practical point of view, agriculturists and horticulturists may
+learn something from the conclusions at which we have arrived. Firstly,
+we see that the injury from the close breeding of animals and from the
+self-fertilisation of plants, does not necessarily depend on any
+tendency to disease or weakness of constitution common to the related
+parents, and only indirectly on their relationship, in so far as they
+are apt to resemble each other in all respects, including their sexual
+nature. And, secondly, that the advantages of cross-fertilisation depend
+on the sexual elements of the parents having become in some degree
+differentiated by the exposure of their progenitors to different
+conditions, or from their having intercrossed with individuals thus
+exposed, or, lastly, from what we call in our ignorance spontaneous
+variation. He therefore who wishes to pair closely related animals ought
+to keep them under conditions as different as possible. Some few
+breeders, guided by their keen powers of observation, have acted on this
+principle, and have kept stocks of the same animals at two or more
+distant and differently situated farms. They have then coupled the
+individuals from these farms with excellent results. (12/17. 'Variation
+of Animals and Plants under Domestication' chapter 17 2nd edition volume
+2 pages 98, 105.) This same plan is also unconsciously followed whenever
+the males, reared in one place, are let out for propagation to breeders
+in other places. As some kinds of plants suffer much more from
+self-fertilisation than do others, so it probably is with animals from
+too close interbreeding. The effects of close interbreeding on animals,
+judging again from plants, would be deterioration in general vigour,
+including fertility, with no necessary loss of excellence of form; and
+this seems to be the usual result.
+
+It is a common practice with horticulturists to obtain seeds from
+another place having a very different soil, so as to avoid raising
+plants for a long succession of generations under the same conditions;
+but with all the species which freely intercross by aid of insects or
+the wind, it would be an incomparably better plan to obtain seeds of the
+required variety, which had been raised for some generations under as
+different conditions as possible, and sow them in alternate rows with
+seeds matured in the old garden. The two stocks would then intercross,
+with a thorough blending of their whole organisations, and with no loss
+of purity to the variety; and this would yield far more favourable
+results than a mere exchange of seeds. We have seen in my experiments
+how wonderfully the offspring profited in height, weight, hardiness, and
+fertility, by crosses of this kind. For instance, plants of Ipomoea thus
+crossed were to the intercrossed plants of the same stock, with which
+they grew in competition, as 100 to 78 in height, and as 100 to 51 in
+fertility; and plants of Eschscholtzia similarly compared were as 100 to
+45 in fertility. In comparison with self-fertilised plants the results
+are still more striking; thus cabbages derived from a cross with a fresh
+stock were to the self-fertilised as 100 to 22 in weight.
+
+Florists may learn from the four cases which have been fully described,
+that they have the power of fixing each fleeting variety of colour, if
+they will fertilise the flowers of the desired kind with their own
+pollen for half-a-dozen generations, and grow the seedlings under the
+same conditions. But a cross with any other individual of the same
+variety must be carefully prevented, as each has its own peculiar
+constitution. After a dozen generations of self-fertilisation, it is
+probable that the new variety would remain constant even if grown under
+somewhat different conditions; and there would no longer be any
+necessity to guard against intercrosses between the individuals of the
+same variety.
+
+With respect to mankind, my son George has endeavoured to discover by a
+statistical investigation whether the marriages of first cousins are at
+all injurious, although this is a degree of relationship which would not
+be objected to in our domestic animals; and he has come to the
+conclusion from his own researches and those of Dr. Mitchell that the
+evidence as to any evil thus caused is conflicting, but on the whole
+points to its being very small. From the facts given in this volume we
+may infer that with mankind the marriages of nearly related persons,
+some of whose parents and ancestors had lived under very different
+conditions, would be much less injurious than that of persons who had
+always lived in the same place and followed the same habits of life. Nor
+can I see reason to doubt that the widely different habits of life of
+men and women in civilised nations, especially amongst the upper
+classes, would tend to counterbalance any evil from marriages between
+healthy and somewhat closely related persons.
+
+Under a theoretical point of view it is some gain to science to know
+that numberless structures in hermaphrodite plants, and probably in
+hermaphrodite animals, are special adaptations for securing an
+occasional cross between two individuals; and that the advantages from
+such a cross depend altogether on the beings which are united, or their
+progenitors, having had their sexual elements somewhat differentiated,
+so that the embryo is benefited in the same manner as is a mature plant
+or animal by a slight change in its conditions of life, although in a
+much higher degree.
+
+Another and more important result may be deduced from my observations.
+Eggs and seeds are highly serviceable as a means of dissemination, but
+we now know that fertile eggs can be produced without the aid of the
+male. There are also many other methods by which organisms can be
+propagated asexually. Why then have the two sexes been developed, and
+why do males exist which cannot themselves produce offspring? The answer
+lies, as I can hardly doubt, in the great good which is derived from the
+fusion of two somewhat differentiated individuals; and with the
+exception of the lowest organisms this is possible only by means of the
+sexual elements, these consisting of cells separated from the body,
+containing the germs of every part, and capable of being fused
+completely together.
+
+It has been shown in the present volume that the offspring from the
+union of two distinct individuals, especially if their progenitors have
+been subjected to very different conditions, have an immense advantage
+in height, weight, constitutional vigour and fertility over the
+self-fertilised offspring from one of the same parents. And this fact is
+amply sufficient to account for the development of the sexual elements,
+that is, for the genesis of the two sexes.
+
+It is a different question why the two sexes are sometimes combined in
+the same individual and are sometimes separated. As with many of the
+lowest plants and animals the conjugation of two individuals which are
+either quite similar or in some degree different, is a common
+phenomenon, it seems probable, as remarked in the last chapter, that the
+sexes were primordially separate. The individual which receives the
+contents of the other, may be called the female; and the other, which is
+often smaller and more locomotive, may be called the male; though these
+sexual names ought hardly to be applied as long as the whole contents of
+the two forms are blended into one. The object gained by the two sexes
+becoming united in the same hermaphrodite form probably is to allow of
+occasional or frequent self-fertilisation, so as to ensure the
+propagation of the species, more especially in the case of organisms
+affixed for life to the same spot. There does not seem to be any great
+difficulty in understanding how an organism, formed by the conjugation
+of two individuals which represented the two incipient sexes, might have
+given rise by budding first to a monoecious and then to an hermaphrodite
+form; and in the case of animals even without budding to an
+hermaphrodite form, for the bilateral structure of animals perhaps
+indicates that they were aboriginally formed by the fusion of two
+individuals.
+
+It is a more difficult problem why some plants and apparently all the
+higher animals, after becoming hermaphrodites, have since had their
+sexes re-separated. This separation has been attributed by some
+naturalists to the advantages which follow from a division of
+physiological labour. The principle is intelligible when the same organ
+has to perform at the same time diverse functions; but it is not obvious
+why the male and female glands when placed in different parts of the
+same compound or simple individual, should not perform their functions
+equally well as when placed in two distinct individuals. In some
+instances the sexes may have been re-separated for the sake of
+preventing too frequent self-fertilisation; but this explanation does
+not seem probable, as the same end might have been gained by other and
+simpler means, for instance dichogamy. It may be that the production of
+the male and female reproductive elements and the maturation of the
+ovules was too great a strain and expenditure of vital force for a
+single individual to withstand, if endowed with a highly complex
+organisation; and that at the same time there was no need for all the
+individuals to produce young, and consequently that no injury, on the
+contrary, good resulted from half of them, or the males, failing to
+produce offspring.
+
+There is another subject on which some light is thrown by the facts
+given in this volume, namely, hybridisation. It is notorious that when
+distinct species of plants are crossed, they produce with the rarest
+exceptions fewer seeds than the normal number. This unproductiveness
+varies in different species up to sterility so complete that not even an
+empty capsule is formed; and all experimentalists have found that it is
+much influenced by the conditions to which the crossed species are
+subjected. The pollen of each species is strongly prepotent over that of
+any other species, so that if a plant's own pollen is placed on the
+stigma some time after foreign pollen has been applied to it, any effect
+from the latter is quite obliterated. It is also notorious that not only
+the parent species, but the hybrids raised from them are more or less
+sterile; and that their pollen is often in a more or less aborted
+condition. The degree of sterility of various hybrids does not always
+strictly correspond with the degree of difficulty in uniting the parent
+forms. When hybrids are capable of breeding inter se, their descendants
+are more or less sterile, and they often become still more sterile in
+the later generations; but then close interbreeding has hitherto been
+practised in all such cases. The more sterile hybrids are sometimes much
+dwarfed in stature, and have a feeble constitution. Other facts could be
+given, but these will suffice for us. Naturalists formerly attributed
+all these results to the difference between species being fundamentally
+distinct from that between the varieties of the same species; and this
+is still the verdict of some naturalists.
+
+The results of my experiments in self-fertilising and cross-fertilising
+the individuals or the varieties of the same species, are strikingly
+analogous with those just given, though in a reversed manner. With the
+majority of species flowers fertilised with their own pollen yield
+fewer, sometimes much fewer seeds, than those fertilised with pollen
+from another individual or variety. Some self-fertilised flowers are
+absolutely sterile; but the degree of their sterility is largely
+determined by the conditions to which the parent plants have been
+exposed, as was well exemplified in the case of Eschscholtzia and
+Abutilon. The effects of pollen from the same plant are obliterated by
+the prepotent influence of pollen from another individual or variety,
+although the latter may have been placed on the stigma some hours
+afterwards. The offspring from self-fertilised flowers are themselves
+more or less sterile, sometimes highly sterile, and their pollen is
+sometimes in an imperfect condition; but I have not met with any case of
+complete sterility in self-fertilised seedlings, as is so common with
+hybrids. The degree of their sterility does not correspond with that of
+the parent-plants when first self-fertilised. The offspring of
+self-fertilised plants suffer in stature, weight, and constitutional
+vigour more frequently and in a greater degree than do the hybrid
+offspring of the greater number of crossed species. Decreased height is
+transmitted to the next generation, but I did not ascertain whether this
+applies to decreased fertility.
+
+I have elsewhere shown that by uniting in various ways dimorphic or
+trimorphic heterostyled plants, which belong to the same undoubted
+species, we get another series of results exactly parallel with those
+from crossing distinct species. (12/18. 'Journal of the Linnean Society
+Botany' volume 10 1867 page 393.) Plants illegitimately fertilised with
+pollen from a distinct plant belonging to the same form, yield fewer,
+often much fewer seeds, than they do when legitimately fertilised with
+pollen from a plant belonging to a distinct form. They sometimes yield
+no seed, not even an empty capsule, like a species fertilised with
+pollen from a distinct genus. The degree of sterility is much affected
+by the conditions to which the plants have been subjected. (12/19.
+'Journal of the Linnean Society Botany' volume 8 1864 page 180.) The
+pollen from a distinct form is strongly prepotent over that from the
+same form, although the former may have been placed on the stigma many
+hours afterwards. The offspring from a union between plants of the same
+form are more or less sterile, like hybrids, and have their pollen in a
+more or less aborted condition; and some of the seedlings are as barren
+and as dwarfed as the most barren hybrid. They also resemble hybrids in
+several other respects, which need not here be specified in
+detail,--such as their sterility not corresponding in degree with that
+of the parent plants,--the unequal sterility of the latter, when
+reciprocally united,--and the varying sterility of the seedlings raised
+from the same seed-capsule.
+
+We thus have two grand classes of cases giving results which correspond
+in the most striking manner with those which follow from the crossing of
+so-called true and distinct species. With respect to the difference
+between seedlings raised from cross and self-fertilised flowers, there
+is good evidence that this depends altogether on whether the sexual
+elements of the parents have been sufficiently differentiated, by
+exposure to different conditions or by spontaneous variation. It is
+probable that nearly the same conclusion may be extended to heterostyled
+plants; but this is not the proper place for discussing the origin of
+the long-styled, short-styled and mid-styled forms, which all belong to
+the same species as certainly as do the two sexes of the same species.
+We have therefore no right to maintain that the sterility of species
+when first crossed and of their hybrid offspring, is determined by some
+cause fundamentally different from that which determines the sterility
+of the individuals both of ordinary and of heterostyled plants when
+united in various ways. Nevertheless, I am aware that it will take many
+years to remove this prejudice.
+
+There is hardly anything more wonderful in nature than the sensitiveness
+of the sexual elements to external influences, and the delicacy of their
+affinities. We see this in slight changes in the conditions of life
+being favourable to the fertility and vigour of the parents, while
+certain other and not great changes cause them to be quite sterile
+without any apparent injury to their health. We see how sensitive the
+sexual elements of those plants must be, which are completely sterile
+with their own pollen, but are fertile with that of any other individual
+of the same species. Such plants become either more or less self-sterile
+if subjected to changed conditions, although the change may be far from
+great. The ovules of a heterostyled trimorphic plant are affected very
+differently by pollen from the three sets of stamens belonging to the
+same species. With ordinary plants the pollen of another variety or
+merely of another individual of the same variety is often strongly
+prepotent over its own pollen, when both are placed at the same time on
+the same stigma. In those great families of plants containing many
+thousand allied species, the stigma of each distinguishes with unerring
+certainty its own pollen from that of every other species.
+
+There can be no doubt that the sterility of distinct species when first
+crossed, and of their hybrid offspring, depends exclusively on the
+nature or affinities of their sexual elements. We see this in the want
+of any close correspondence between the degree of sterility and the
+amount of external difference in the species which are crossed; and
+still more clearly in the wide difference in the results of crossing
+reciprocally the same two species;--that is, when species A is crossed
+with pollen from B, and then B is crossed with pollen from A. Bearing in
+mind what has just been said on the extreme sensitiveness and delicate
+affinities of the reproductive system, why should we feel any surprise
+at the sexual elements of those forms, which we call species, having
+been differentiated in such a manner that they are incapable or only
+feebly capable of acting on one another? We know that species have
+generally lived under the same conditions, and have retained their own
+proper characters, for a much longer period than varieties.
+Long-continued domestication eliminates, as I have shown in my
+'Variation under Domestication,' the mutual sterility which distinct
+species lately taken from a state of nature almost always exhibit when
+intercrossed; and we can thus understand the fact that the most
+different domestic races of animals are not mutually sterile. But
+whether this holds good with cultivated varieties of plants is not
+known, though some facts indicate that it does. The elimination of
+sterility through long-continued domestication may probably be
+attributed to the varying conditions to which our domestic animals have
+been subjected; and no doubt it is owing to this same cause that they
+withstand great and sudden changes in their conditions of life with far
+less loss of fertility than do natural species. From these several
+considerations it appears probable that the difference in the affinities
+of the sexual elements of distinct species, on which their mutual
+incapacity for breeding together depends, is caused by their having been
+habituated for a very long period each to its own conditions, and to the
+sexual elements having thus acquired firmly fixed affinities. However
+this may be, with the two great classes of cases before us, namely,
+those relating to the self-fertilisation and cross-fertilisation of the
+individuals of the same species, and those relating to the illegitimate
+and legitimate unions of heterostyled plants, it is quite unjustifiable
+to assume that the sterility of species when first crossed and of their
+hybrid offspring, indicates that they differ in some fundamental manner
+from the varieties or individuals of the same species.
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+Abutilon darwinii, self-sterile in Brazil.
+moderately self-fertile in England.
+fertilised by birds.
+
+Acacia sphaerocephala.
+
+Acanthaceae.
+
+Aconitum napellus.
+
+Adlumia cirrhosa.
+
+Adonis aestivalis.
+measurements.
+relative heights of crossed and self-fertilised plants.
+self-fertile.
+
+Ajuga reptans.
+
+Allium cepa (blood-red var.)
+
+Anagallis collina (var. grandiflora).
+measurements.
+seeds.
+
+Anderson, J., on the Calceolaria.
+removing the corollas.
+
+Anemone.
+
+Anemophilous plants.
+often diclinous.
+
+Antirrhinum majus (red var.)
+perforated corolla.
+--(white var.).
+--(peloric var.).
+
+Apium petroselinum.
+result of experiments.
+
+Argemone ochroleuca.
+
+Aristolochia.
+
+Aristotle on bees frequenting flowers of the same species.
+
+Arum maculatum.
+
+Bailey, Mr., perforation of corolla.
+
+Bartonia aurea.
+measurements.
+result of experiments.
+
+Bartsia odontites.
+
+Beal, W.J., sterility of Kalmia latifolia.
+on nectar in Ribes aureum.
+
+Bean, the common.
+
+Bees distinguish colours.
+frequent the flowers of the same species.
+guided by coloured corolla.
+powers of vision and discrimination.
+memory.
+unattracted by odour of certain flowers.
+industry.
+profit by the corolla perforated by humble-bees.
+skill in working.
+habit.
+foresight.
+
+Bees, humble, recognise varieties as of one species.
+colour not the sole guide.
+rate of flying.
+number of flowers visited.
+corolla perforated by.
+skill and judgment.
+
+Belt, Mr., the hairs of Digitalis purpurea.
+Phaseolus multiflorus.
+not visited by bees in Nicaragua.
+humming-birds carrying pollen.
+secretion of nectar.
+in Acacia sphaerocephalus and passion-flower.
+perforation of corolla.
+
+Bennett, A.W., on Viola tricolor.
+structure of Impatiens fulva.
+plants flowering in winter.
+bees frequenting flowers of same species.
+
+Bentham, on protection of the stigma in Synaphea.
+
+Beta vulgaris.
+measurements.
+crossed not exceeded by self-fertilised.
+prepotency of other pollen.
+
+Bignonia.
+
+Birds, means of fertilisation.
+
+Blackley, Mr., on anthers of rye.
+pollen carried by wind, experiments with a kite.
+
+Boraginaceae.
+
+Borago officinalis.
+measurements.
+early flowering of crossed.
+seeds.
+partially self-sterile.
+
+Brackenridge, Mr., organism of animals affected by temperature and food.
+different effect of changed conditions.
+
+Brassica oleracea.
+measurements.
+weight.
+remarks on experiments.
+superiority of crossed.
+period of flowering.
+seeds.
+self-fertile.
+--napus.
+--rapa.
+
+Brisout, M., insects frequenting flowers of same species.
+
+Broom.
+
+Brugmansia.
+humming-birds boring the flower.
+
+Bulrush, weight of pollen produced by one plant.
+
+Bundy, Mr., Ribes perforated by bees.
+
+Butschli, O., sexual relations.
+
+Cabbage.
+affected by pollen of purple bastard.
+prepotency of other pollen.
+--, Ragged Jack.
+
+Calceolaria.
+
+Calluna vulgaris.
+
+Campanula carpathica.
+
+Campanulaceae.
+
+Candolle, A. de, on ascending a mountain the flowers of the same species
+disappear abruptly.
+
+Canna warscewiczi.
+result of crossed and self-fertilised.
+period of flowering.
+seeds.
+highly self-fertile.
+
+Cannaceae.
+
+Carduus arctioides.
+
+Carnation.
+
+Carriere, relative period of the maturity of the sexual elements on same
+flower.
+
+Caryophyllaceae.
+
+Caspary, Professor, on Corydalis cava.
+Nymphaeaceae.
+Euryale ferox.
+
+Cecropia, food-bodies of.
+
+Centradenia floribunda.
+
+Cereals, grains of.
+
+Cheeseman, Mr., on Orchids in New Zealand.
+
+Chenopodiaceae.
+
+Cineraria.
+
+Clarkia elegans.
+measurements.
+early flowering of self-fertilised.
+seeds.
+
+Cleistogene flowers.
+
+Coe, Mr., crossing Phaseolus vulgaris.
+
+Colgate, R., red clover never sucked by hive-bees in New Zealand.
+
+Colour, uniform, of flowers on plants self-fertilised and grown under
+similar conditions for several generations.
+
+Colours of flowers attractive to insects.
+not the sole guide to bees.
+
+Compositae.
+
+Coniferae.
+
+Convolvulus major.
+-- tricolor.
+
+Corolla, removal of.
+perforation by bees.
+
+Coronilla.
+
+Corydalis cava.
+-- halleri.
+-- intermedia.
+-- lutea.
+-- ochroleuca.
+-- solida.
+
+Corylus avellana.
+
+Cowslip.
+
+Crinum.
+
+Crossed plants, greater constitutional vigour of.
+
+Cross-fertilisation.
+see Fertilisation.
+
+Crossing flowers on same plant, effects of.
+
+Cruciferae.
+
+Cruger, Dr., secretion of sweet fluid in Marcgraviaceae.
+
+Cuphea purpurea.
+
+Cycadiae.
+
+Cyclamen persicum.
+measurements.
+early flowering of crossed.
+seeds.
+self-sterile.
+-- repandum.
+
+Cytisus laburnum.
+
+Dandelion, number of pollen grains.
+
+Darwin, C., self-fertilisation in Pisum sativum.
+sexual affinities.
+on Primula.
+bud variation.
+constitutional vigour from cross parentage in common pea.
+hybrids of Gladiolus and Cistus.
+Phaseolus multiflorus.
+nectar in Orchids.
+on cross-fertilisation.
+inheritance of acquired modifications.
+change in the conditions of life beneficial to plants and animals.
+
+Darwin, F., structure of Phaseolus multiflorus.
+Pteris aquilina.
+perforation of Lathyrus sylvestris.
+
+Darwin, G., on marriages with first cousins.
+
+Decaisne on Delphinium consolida.
+
+De Candolle, nectar as an excretion.
+
+Delphinium consolida.
+measurements.
+seeds.
+partially sterile.
+corolla removed.
+
+Delpino, Professor, Viola tricolor.
+Phaseolus multiflorus.
+intercrossing of sweet-pea.
+Lobelia ramosa.
+structure of the Cannaceae.
+wind and water carrying pollen.
+Juglans regia.
+anemophilous plants.
+fertilisation of Plantago.
+excretion of nectar.
+secretion of nectar to defend the plant.
+anemophilous and entomophilous plants.
+dioecious plants.
+
+Denny, Pelargonium zonale.
+
+Diagram showing mean height of Ipomoea purpurea.
+
+Dianthus caryophyllus.
+crossed and self-fertilised.
+measurements.
+cross with fresh stock.
+weight of seed.
+colour of flowers.
+remarks on experiments.
+early flowering of crossed.
+uniform colour of self-fertilised.
+seeds.
+few capsules.
+
+Dickie, Dr., self-fertilisation in Cannaceae.
+
+Dictamnus fraxinella.
+
+Digitalis purpurea.
+measurements.
+effects of intercrossing.
+superiority of crossed.
+self-sterile.
+
+Dipsaceae.
+
+Dobbs, bees frequenting flowers of same species.
+
+Dodel, Dr. A., sexual reproduction.
+
+Duhamel on Raphanus sativus.
+
+Dunal, nectar as an excretion.
+
+Dyer, Mr., on Lobelia ramosa.
+on Cineraria.
+
+Earley, W., self-fertilisation of Lathyrus odoratus.
+
+Eaton, Reverend A.E., on Pringlea.
+
+Engelmann, development of sexual forms.
+
+Engler, Dr., on dichogamous Saxifraga.
+
+Entomophilous plants.
+
+Epipactis latifolia, attractive only to wasps.
+
+Erica tetralix.
+perforated corolla.
+
+Erythrina.
+
+Eschscholtzia californica.
+measurements.
+plants raised from Brazilian seed.
+weight.
+seeds.
+experiments on.
+superiority of self-fertilised over crossed.
+early flowering.
+artificially self-fertilised.
+pollen from other flowers more effective.
+self-sterile in Brazil.
+
+Euphrasia officinalis.
+
+Euryale amazonica.
+-- ferox.
+
+Fabricius on Aristolochia.
+
+Fagopyrum esculentum.
+early flowering of crossed plant.
+
+Faivre, Professor, self-fertilisation of Cannaceae.
+
+Farrer, T.H., papilionaceous flowers.
+Lupinus luteus.
+Phaseolus multiflorus.
+Pisum sativum.
+cross-fertilisation of Lobelia ramosa.
+on Coronilla.
+
+Fermond, M., Phaseolus multiflorus.
+Phaseolus coccineus hybridus.
+
+Fertilisation, means of.
+plants sterile, or partially so without insect-aid.
+plants fertile without insect-aid.
+means of cross-fertilisation.
+humming-birds.
+Australian flowers fertilised by honey-sucking birds.
+in New Zealand by the Anthornis melanura.
+attraction of bright colours.
+of odours.
+flowers adapted to certain kinds of insects.
+large amount of pollen-grains.
+transport of pollen by insects.
+structure and conspicuousness of flowers.
+pollen from a distinct plant.
+prepotent pollen.
+
+Fertility, heights and weights, relative, of plants crossed by a fresh
+stock, self-fertilised, or intercrossed (Table 7/C).
+
+Fertility of plants as influenced by cross and self-fertilisation (Table
+9/D).
+relative, of crossed and self-fertilised parents (Table 9/E).
+innate, from a cross with fresh stock (Table 9/F).
+relative, of flowers crossed with pollen from a distinct plant and their
+own pollen (Table 9/G).
+of crossed and self-fertilised flowers.
+
+Flowering, period of, superiority of crossed over self-fertilised.
+
+Flowers, white, larger proportion smelling sweetly.
+structure and conspicuousness of.
+conspicuous and inconspicuous.
+papilionaceous.
+fertilised with pollen from a distinct plant.
+
+Forsythia viridissima.
+
+Foxglove.
+Frankland, Dr., chemical affinity.
+
+Fraxinus ornus.
+
+Fumaria capreolata.
+-- officinalis.
+
+Galium aparine.
+
+Gallesio, spontaneous crossing of oranges.
+
+Galton, Mr., Limnanthes douglasii.
+report on the tables of measurements.
+self-fertilised plants.
+superior vigour of crossed seedlings in Lathyrus odoratus.
+
+Gartner, excess of pollen injurious.
+plants fertilising one another at a considerable distance.
+Lobelia fulgens.
+sterility of Verbascum nigrum.
+number of pollen-grains to fertilise Geum urbanum.
+experiments with pollen.
+
+Gentry, Mr., perforation of corolla.
+
+Geraniaceae.
+
+Geranium phaeum.
+
+Gerardia pedicularia.
+
+Germination, period of, and relative weight of seeds from crossed and
+self-fertilised flowers.
+
+Gesneria pendulina.
+measurements.
+seeds.
+
+Gesneriaceae.
+
+Geum urbanum, number of pollen-grains for fertilisation.
+
+Glaucium luteum.
+
+Godron, intercrossing of carrot.
+Primula grandiflora affected by pollen of Primula officinalis.
+tulips.
+
+Gould, humming-birds frequenting Impatiens.
+
+Graminaceae.
+
+Grant, Mr., bees of different hives visiting different kinds of flowers.
+
+Gray, Asa, sexual relations of trees in United States.
+on sexual reproduction.
+
+Hallet, Major, on selection of grains of cereals.
+
+Hassall, Mr., number of pollen-grains in Paeony and Dandelion.
+weight of pollen produced by one plant of Bulrush.
+
+Heartsease.
+
+Hedychium.
+
+Hedysarum onobrychis.
+
+Heights, relative, of crossed and self-fertilised plants (Table 7/A).
+
+Heights, weights, and fertility, summary.
+
+Henschel's experiments with pollen.
+
+Henslow, Reverend G., cross-fertilisation in Sarothamnus scoparius.
+
+Herbert on cross-fertilisation.
+pollen brought from distant plants.
+spontaneous crossing of rhododendrons.
+
+Hero, descendants of the plant.
+its self-fertilisation.
+
+Heterocentron mexicanum.
+
+Hibiscus africanus.
+measurements.
+result of experiments.
+early flowering of crossed plant.
+number of pollen-grains for fertilisation.
+
+Hildebrand on pollen of Digitalis purpurea.
+Thunbergia alata.
+experiments on Eschscholtzia californica.
+Viola tricolor.
+Lobelia ramosa.
+Fagopyrum esculentum.
+self-fertilisation of Zea mays.
+Corydalis cava.
+Hypecoum grandiflorum.
+and Hypecoum procumbens.
+sterility of Eschscholtzia.
+experiments on self-fertilisation.
+Corydalis lutea.
+spontaneously self-fertilised flowers.
+various mechanical structure to check self-fertilisation.
+early separation of the sexes.
+on Aristolochia.
+fertilisation of the Gramineae.
+wide dissemination of seeds.
+
+Hoffmann, Professor H., self-fertilised capsules of Papaver somniferum.
+Adonis aestivalis.
+spontaneous variability of Phaseolus multiflorus.
+self-fertilisation of kidney-bean.
+Papaver alpinum.
+sterility of Corydalis solida.
+Linum usitatissimum.
+
+Honey-dew.
+
+Hooker, Dr., Euryale ferox and Victoria regia, each producing several
+flowers at once.
+on sexual relation of trees in New Zealand.
+
+Horse-chestnut.
+
+Humble-bees, see Bees.
+
+Humboldt, on the grains of cereals.
+
+Humming-Birds a means of cross-fertilisation.
+
+Hyacinth.
+
+Hybrid plants, tendency to revert to their parent forms.
+
+Hypecoum grandiflorum.
+-- procumbens.
+
+Iberis umbellata (var. kermesiana).
+measurement.
+cross by fresh stocks.
+remarks on experiments.
+superiority of crossed over self-fertilised seedlings.
+early flowering.
+number of seeds.
+highly self-fertile.
+prepotency of other pollen.
+-- amara.
+
+Impatiens frequented by humming-birds.
+-- barbigera.
+-- fulva.
+-- noli-me-tangere.
+-- pallida.
+
+Inheritance, force of, in plants.
+
+Insects, means of cross-fertilisation.
+attracted by bright colours.
+by odours.
+by conspicuous flowers.
+dark streaks and marks as guides for.
+flowers adapted to certain kinds.
+
+Ipomoea purpurea.
+measurements.
+flowers on same plant crossed.
+cross with fresh stock.
+descendants of Hero.
+summary of measurements.
+diagram showing mean heights.
+summary of observations.
+of experiments.
+superiority of crossed.
+early flowering.
+effects of intercrossing.
+uniform colour of self-fertilised.
+seeds.
+highly self-fertile.
+prepotency of other pollen.
+
+Iris, secretion of saccharine matter from calyx.
+
+Isotoma.
+
+Juglans regia.
+
+Kalmia latifolia.
+
+Kerner, on protection of the pollen.
+on the single daily flower of Villarsia parnassifolia.
+pollen carried by wind.
+
+Kidney-bean.
+
+Kitchener, Mr., on the action of the stigma.
+on Viola tricolor.
+
+Knight, A., on the sexual intercourse of plants.
+crossing varieties of peas.
+sexual reproduction.
+
+Kohl-rabi, prepotency of pollen.
+
+Kolreuter on cross-fertilisation.
+number of pollen-grains necessary for fertilisation.
+sexual affinities of Nicotiana.
+Verbascum phoeniceum.
+experiments with pollen of Hibiscus vesicarius.
+
+Kuhn adopts the term cleistogene.
+
+Kurr, on excretion of nectar.
+removal of corolla.
+
+Labiatae.
+
+Lactuca sativa.
+measurement.
+prepotency of other pollen.
+
+Lamium album.
+-- purpureum.
+
+Lathyrus odoratus.
+measurements.
+remarks on experiments.
+period of flowering.
+cross-fertilisation.
+seeds.
+self-fertile.
+-- grandiflorus.
+-- nissolia.
+-- sylvestris, perforation of corolla.
+
+Lawes and Gilbert, Messrs., consumption of inorganic matter by plants.
+
+Laxton, Mr., crossing varieties of peas.
+
+Lecoq, Cyclamen repandum.
+on Fumariaceae.
+annual plants rarely dioecious.
+
+Leersia oryzoides.
+
+Leguminosae.
+summary on the.
+
+Leighton, Reverend W.A., on Phaseolus multiflorus.
+Acacia magnifica.
+
+Leptosiphon androsaceus.
+
+Leschenaultia formosa.
+
+Lettuce.
+
+Lilium auratum.
+
+Limnanthes douglasii.
+measurements.
+early flowering of crossed.
+seeds.
+highly self-fertile.
+prepotency of other pollen.
+
+Linaria vulgaris.
+seeds.
+self-sterile.
+-- cymbalaria.
+
+Lindley on Fumariaceae.
+
+Link, hypopetalous nectary in Chironia decussata.
+
+Linum grandiflorum.
+-- usitatissimum.
+
+Loasaceae.
+
+Lobelia erinus.
+secretion of nectar in sunshine.
+experiments with bees.
+
+Lobelia fulgens.
+measurements.
+summary of experiments.
+early flowering of self-fertilised.
+seeds.
+sterile unless visited by humble-bees.
+-- ramosa.
+measurements.
+early flowering of crossed.
+seeds.
+self-sterile.
+-- tenuior.
+
+Loiseleur-Deslongchamp, on the grains of cereals.
+
+Lotus corniculatus.
+
+Lubbock, Sir J., cross-fertilisation of flowers.
+on Viola tricolor.
+bees distinguishing colours.
+instinct of bees and insects sucking nectar.
+
+Lupinus luteus.
+measurements.
+early flowering of self-fertilised.
+self-fertile.
+prepotency of other pollen.
+-- pilosus.
+self-fertile.
+
+Lychnis dioica.
+
+MacNab, Mr., on the shorter or longer stamens of rhododendrons.
+
+Mahonia aquifolium.
+-- repens.
+
+Malvaceae.
+
+Marcgraviaceae.
+
+Masters, Mr., cross-fertilisation in Pisum sativum.
+cabbages affected by pollen at a distance.
+
+Masters, Dr. Maxwell, on honey-dew.
+
+Measurements, summary of.
+Table 7/A.
+Table 7/B.
+Table 7/C.
+
+Medicago lupulina.
+
+Meehan, Mr., fertilising Petunia violacea by night moth.
+
+Melastomaceae.
+
+Melilotus officinalis.
+
+Mercurialis annua.
+
+Miller, Professor, on chemical affinity.
+
+Mimulus luteus, effects of crossing.
+crossed and self-fertilised plants.
+measurements.
+cross with a distinct stock.
+intercrossed on same plant.
+summary of observations.
+of experiments.
+superiority of crossed plants.
+simultaneous flowering.
+effects of intercrossing.
+uniform colour of self-fertilised.
+seeds.
+highly self-fertile.
+prepotency of other pollen.
+-- roseus.
+
+Miner, Mr., red clover never sucked by hive-bees in the United States.
+
+Mirabilis, dwarfed plants raised by using too few pollen-grains.
+number of grains necessary for fertilisation.
+
+Mitchell, Dr., on first cousins inter-marrying.
+
+Monochaetum ensiferum.
+
+Moore, Mr., on Cinerarias.
+
+Muller, Fritz, on Posoqueria fragrans.
+experiments on hybrid Abutilons and Bignonias.
+large number of Orchidaceous genera sterile in their native home, also
+Bignonia and Tabernaemontana echinata.
+sterility of Eschscholtzia californica.
+Abutilon darwinii.
+experiments in self-fertilisation.
+self-sterile plants.
+incapacity of pollen-tubes to penetrate the stigma.
+cross-fertilisation by means of birds.
+imperfectly developed male and female Termites.
+food-bodies in Cecropia.
+
+Muller, Hermann, fertilisation of flowers by insects.
+on Digitalis purpurea.
+Calceolaria.
+Linaria vulgaris.
+Verbascum nigrum.
+the common cabbage.
+Papaver dubium.
+Viola tricolor.
+structure of Delphinium consolida.
+of Lupinus lutea.
+flowers of Pisum sativum.
+on Sarothamnus scoparius not secreting nectar.
+Apium petroselinum.
+Borago officinalis.
+red clover visited by hive-bees in Germany.
+insects rarely visiting Fumaria officinalis.
+comparison of lowland and alpine species.
+structure of plants adapted to cross and self-fertilisation.
+large conspicuous flowers more frequently visited by insects than small
+inconspicuous ones.
+Solanum generally unattractive to insects.
+Lamium album.
+on anemophilous plants.
+fertilisation of Plantago.
+secretion of nectar.
+instinct of bees sucking nectar.
+bees frequenting flowers of the same species.
+cause of it.
+powers of vision and discrimination of bees.
+
+Muller, Dr. H., hive-bees occasionally perforate the flower of Erica
+tetralix.
+calyx and corolla of Rhinanthus alecterolophus bored by Bombus
+mastrucatus.
+
+Munro, Mr., some species of Oncidium and Maxillaria sterile with own
+pollen.
+
+Myrtaceae.
+
+Nageli on odours attracting insects.
+sexual relations.
+
+Natural selection, effect upon self-sterility and self-fertilisation.
+
+Naudin on number of pollen-grains necessary for fertilisation.
+Petunia violacea.
+
+Nectar regarded as an excretion.
+
+Nemophila insignis.
+measurements.
+early flowering of crossed plant.
+effects of cross and self-fertilisation.
+seeds.
+
+Nepeta glechoma.
+
+Nicotiana glutinosa.
+-- tabacum.
+measurements.
+cross with fresh stock.
+measurements.
+summary of experiments.
+superiority of crossed plants.
+early flowering.
+seeds.
+experiments on.
+self-fertile.
+
+Nolana prostrata.
+measurements.
+crossed and self-fertilised plants.
+number of capsules and seeds.
+self-fertile.
+
+Nolanaceae.
+
+Nymphaea.
+
+Odours emitted by flowers attractive to insects.
+
+Ogle, Dr., on Digitalis purpurea.
+Gesneria.
+Phaseolus multiflorus.
+perforation of corolla.
+case of the Monkshood.
+
+Onagraceae.
+
+Onion, prepotency of other pollen.
+
+Ononis minutissima.
+measurements.
+seeds.
+self-fertile.
+
+Ophrys apifera.
+-- muscifera.
+
+Oranges, spontaneous crossing.
+
+Orchideae.
+excretion of saccharine matter.
+
+Orchis, fly.
+
+Origanum vulgare.
+measurements.
+early flowering of crossed plant.
+effects of intercrossing.
+
+Paeony, number of pollen-grains.
+
+Papaveraceae.
+
+Papaver alpinum.
+-- argemonoides.
+-- bracteatum.
+-- dubium.
+-- orientale.
+-- rhoeas.
+-- somniferum.
+-- vagum.
+measurements.
+number of capsules.
+seeds.
+prepotency of other pollen.
+
+Papillae of the Viola tricolor attractive to insects.
+
+Parsley.
+
+Passiflora alata.
+-- gracilis.
+measurements.
+crossed and self-fertilised.
+seeds.
+self-fertile.
+
+Passifloraceae.
+
+Pea, common.
+
+Pelargonium zonale.
+measurements.
+effects of intercrossing.
+almost self-sterile.
+
+Pentstemon argutus, perforated corolla.
+
+Petunia violacea.
+measurements.
+weight of seed.
+cross with fresh stock.
+relative fertility.
+colour.
+summary of experiments.
+superiority of crossed over self-fertilised.
+early flowering.
+uniform colour of self-fertilised.
+seeds.
+self-sterile.
+
+Phalaris canariensis.
+measurements.
+early flowering of crossed.
+
+Phaseolus coccineus.
+-- multiflorus.
+measurement.
+partially sterile.
+crossed and self-fertilised.
+early flowering of crossed.
+seeds.
+perforated by humble-bees.
+-- vulgaris.
+self-fertile.
+
+Pisum sativum.
+measurements.
+seldom intercross.
+summary of experiments.
+self-fertile.
+
+Plants, crossed, greater constitutional vigour.
+
+Pleroma.
+
+Polemoniaceae.
+
+Pollen, relative fertility of flowers crossed from a distinct plant, or
+with their own.
+difference of results in Nolana prostrata.
+crossed and self-fertilised plants, again crossed from a distinct plant
+and their own pollen.
+sterile with their own.
+semi-self-sterile.
+loss of.
+number of grains in Dandelion, Paeony, and Wistaria sinensis.
+number necessary for fertilisation.
+transported from flower to flower.
+prepotency.
+aboriginally the sole attraction to insects.
+quantity produced by anemophilous plants.
+
+Polyanthus, prepotency over cowslip.
+
+Polygoneae.
+
+Posoqueria fragrans.
+
+Potato.
+
+Poterium sanguisorba.
+
+Potts, heads of Anthornis melanura covered with pollen.
+
+Primrose, Chinese.
+
+Primula elatior.
+-- grandiflora.
+-- mollis.
+-- officinalis.
+-- scotica.
+-- sinensis.
+measurements.
+early flowering of crossed.
+-- veris (var. officinalis).
+measurements.
+result of experiments.
+early flowering of crossed.
+seeds.
+self-fertility.
+prepotency of dark red polyanthus.
+
+Primulaceae.
+
+Pringlea.
+
+Proteaceae of Australia.
+
+Prunus avium.
+-- laurocerasus.
+
+Pteris aquilina.
+
+Radish.
+
+Ranunculaceae.
+
+Ranunculus acris.
+
+Raphanus sativus.
+
+Reinke, nectar-secreting glands of Prunus avium.
+
+Reseda lutea.
+measurements.
+result of experiments.
+self-fertile.
+-- odorata.
+measurements.
+self-fertilised scarcely exceeded by crossed.
+seeds.
+want of correspondence between seeds and vigour of offspring.
+result of experiments.
+sterile and self-fertile.
+
+Resedaceae.
+
+Rheum rhaponticum.
+
+Rhexia glandulosa.
+
+Rhododendron, spontaneous crossing.
+
+Rhododendron azaloides.
+
+Rhubarb.
+
+Ribes aureum.
+
+Riley, Mr., pollen carried by wind.
+Yucca moth.
+
+Rodgers, Mr., secretion of nectar in Vanilla.
+
+Rye, experiment on pollen of.
+
+Salvia coccinea.
+measurements.
+early flowering of crossed.
+seeds.
+partially self-sterile.
+-- glutinosa.
+-- grahami.
+-- tenori.
+
+Sarothamnus scoparius.
+measurements.
+superiority of crossed seedlings.
+seeds.
+self-sterile.
+
+Scabiosa atro-purpurea.
+measurements.
+
+Scarlet-runner.
+
+Scott, J., Papaver somniferum.
+sterility of Verbascum.
+Oncidium and Maxillaria.
+on Primula scotica and Cortusa matthioli.
+
+Scrophulariaceae.
+
+Self-sterile varieties, appearance of.
+
+Self-fertilisation, mechanical structure to check.
+
+Self-sterile plants.
+wide distribution throughout the vegetable kingdom.
+difference in plants.
+cause of self-sterility.
+affected by changed conditions.
+necessity of differentiation in the sexual elements.
+
+Senecio cruentus.
+-- heritieri.
+-- maderensis
+-- populifolius.
+-- tussilaginis.
+
+Sharpe, Messrs., precautions against intercrossing.
+
+Snow-flake.
+
+Solanaceae.
+
+Solanum tuberosum.
+
+Specularia perfoliata.
+-- speculum.
+measurements.
+crossed and self-fertilised.
+early flowering of crossed.
+seeds.
+self-fertile.
+
+Spencer, Herbert, chemical affinity.
+
+Spiranthes autumnalis.
+
+Sprengel, C.K., fertilisation of flowers by insects.
+Viola tricolor.
+colours in flowers attract and guide insects.
+on Aristolochia.
+Aconitum napellus.
+importance of insects in fertilising flowers.
+
+Stachys coccinea.
+
+Stellaria media.
+
+Strachey, General, perforated flowers in the Himalaya.
+
+Strawberry.
+
+Strelitzia fertilised by the Nectarinideae.
+
+Structure of plants adapted to cross and self-fertilisation.
+
+Swale, Mr., garden lupine not visited by bees in New Zealand.
+
+Sweet-pea.
+
+Tabernaemontana echinata.
+
+Tables of measurements of heights, weights, and fertility of plants.
+
+Termites, imperfectly developed males and females.
+
+Thunbergia alata.
+
+Thyme.
+
+Tinzmann, on Solanum tuberosum.
+
+Tobacco.
+
+Transmission of the good effects of a cross to later generations.
+
+Trees, separated sexes.
+
+Trifolium arvense.
+-- incarnatum.
+-- minus.
+-- pratense.
+-- procumbens.
+-- repens.
+
+Tropaeolum minus.
+measurements.
+early flowering of crossed.
+seeds.
+-- tricolor.
+seeds.
+
+Tulips.
+
+Typha.
+
+Umbelliferae.
+
+Urban, Ig., fertilisation of Medicago lupulina.
+
+Vandellia nummularifolia.
+seeds.
+self-fertile.
+
+Vanilla, secretion of nectar.
+
+Verbascum lychnitis.
+-- nigrum.
+-- phoeniceum.
+-- thapsus.
+measurements.
+self-fertile.
+
+Verlot on Convolvulus tricolor.
+intercrossing of Nemophila.
+of Leptosiphon.
+
+Veronica agrestis.
+-- chamaedrys.
+-- hederaefolia.
+
+Vicia faba.
+-- hirsuta.
+-- sativa.
+
+Victoria regia.
+
+Villarsia parnassifolia.
+
+Vilmorin on transmitting character to offspring.
+
+Vinca major.
+-- rosea.
+
+Viola canina.
+-- tricolor.
+measurements.
+superiority of crossed plants.
+period of flowering.
+effects of cross-fertilisation.
+seeds.
+partially sterile.
+corolla removed.
+
+Violaceae.
+
+Viscaria oculata.
+measurement.
+average height of crossed and self-fertilised.
+simultaneous flowering.
+seeds.
+self-fertile.
+
+Wallace, Mr., the beaks and faces of brush-tongued lories covered with
+pollen.
+
+Wasps attracted by Epipactis latifolia.
+
+Weights, relative, of crossed and self-fertilised plants.
+and period of germination of seeds.
+
+Wilder, Mr., fertilisation of flowers with their own pollen.
+
+Wilson, A.J., superior vigour of crossed seedlings in Brassica
+campestris ruta baga.
+
+Wistaria sinensis.
+
+Yucca moth.
+
+Zea mays.
+measurements.
+difference of height between crossed and self-fertilised.
+early flowering of crossed.
+self-fertile.
+prepotency of other pollen.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg Etext of The Effects of Cross & Self-Fertilisation
+in the Vegetable Kingdom, by Charles Darwin
+
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