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.