Vegetable Teratology. Maxwell T. Masters

Vegetable Teratology - Maxwell T. Masters


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sp. pl.

       Polemonium.

       Phlox!

       Cobœa!

       Rhododendron!

       Erica!

       Rhodora.

       Azalea!

       Compositæ! sp. pl.

       Lonicera!

       Convolvulus!

       Pharbitis.

       Antirrhinum!

       Verbascum!

       Mimulus.

       Digitalis!

       Orobanche.

       Solanum.

       Nicotiana.

       Gentiana!

       Anagallis.

       Primula!

       Lamium!

       Convallaria!

       Lilium!

       Colchicum!

       &c. &c.

      This list does not include those very numerous cases in which this change is associated with more or less complete frondescence or leafy condition of the petals.

      Dialysis of the stamens.—A similar isolation of the stamens occurs occasionally; for instance, when Mallows (Malvaceæ) become double, one of the first stages of the process is often the disjunction of the stamens, and a similar dissociation occurs in Leguminosæ and Compositæ, as in Tragopogon, as related by Kirschleger, in Hypochæris by Wigand, and in Coreopsis by Schlechtendal.

      Fig. 32.—Anomalous form of orange.

      Fig. 33.—Orange. Showing disjunction of carpels, after Maout.

      Fig. 34.—Section of orange shown in fig. 33 after Maout.

      It frequently happens in conjunction with this separation of the carpels one from the other, that a lack of union manifests itself between the margins of the individual carpels themselves. Very numerous cases of this kind have been recorded, and the double tulips of gardens may be referred to as showing this condition very frequently. In connection with this detachment of the carpels, a change in the mode of placentation is often to be observed, or two or more kinds may be seen in the same pistil, as in double-flowered saponarias, many Crucifers, &c., as alluded to under the head of displacements of the placenta.

      FOOTNOTES:

       Table of Contents

      [75] Loc. cit., p. 298.

      [76] Masters in Seemann's 'Journal of Botany,' 1867, p. 158.

      CHAPTER III.

       SOLUTION.


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