Effects of Cross and Self Fertilisation in the Vegetable Kingdom eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 516 pages of information about Effects of Cross and Self Fertilisation in the Vegetable Kingdom.

Effects of Cross and Self Fertilisation in the Vegetable Kingdom eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 516 pages of information about Effects of Cross and Self Fertilisation in the Vegetable Kingdom.

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.

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Effects of Cross and Self Fertilisation in the Vegetable Kingdom from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.