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Show 274 OONCL UDING REMARKS CHAP. VI. ness. With P. elatior some of the flowers on the same plant have become equal-styled, instead of all of them as in the other species. Mr. Scott has suggested that the equal-styled varie~ ties arise through reversion to \he fonner hon1ostyled condition of the genus. This view is supported by the remarkable fidelity with which the equal-styled variation is transmitted after it has once appeared. I have shown in Chapter XIII. of my 'Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication,' that any cause which disturbs the constitution tends to in~ duce reversion, and it is chiefly the cultivated species of Primula which becon1e equal-styled. Illegitimate fertilisation, which is an abnormal process, is likewise an exciting cause; and with illegitimately descended long-styled plants of P. Sinensis, I have observed the first appearance and subsequent stages of this variation. vVith some other plants of P. Sinensis of similar parentage the flowers appeared to have reverted to their original wild condition. Again, some hybrids between P. veris and vulgaris were stricti y equal-sty led, and others made a near approach to this structure. All these facts support the view that this variation results, at least in part, fro1n reversion to the original state of the genus, before the species had become heterostyled. On the other hand, some considerations indicate, as previously remarked, that the aboriginal parent-form of Primula had a pistil which exceeded the stamens in length. The fertility of the equal-styled varieties has been somewhat modified, being sometimes greater anJ sometimes less than that of a legitimate union. Ano~h~r view, however, may be taken with respect to the ongm of the equal-styled varieties, and their appearance may be compared with that of hermaphrodites amongst CHAP. VI. ON HETEROSTYLED PLANTS. 275 animals which properly have their sexes separated; for the two sexes are combined in a monstrous hermaphrodite in a somewhat similar manner as the two sexual forms are combined in the same flower of an equal-sty led variety of a heterosty led species. Final remarks.-The existence of plants which have been rendered heterostyled is a highly remarkable phenomenon, as the two or three forms of the same undoubted species differ not only in important points of structure, but in the nature of their reproductive powers. As far as structure is concerned, the two sexes of many animals and of some plants differ to an extreme degree ; and in both kingdoms the same species may consist of males, fe1nales, and hermaphro. dites. Certain hermaphrodite cirripedes are aided in their reproduction by a whole cluster of what I have called complemental males, which differ wonderfully from the ordinary hermaphrodite form. With ants we have males and females, and two or three castes of sterile females or workers. With Termites there are as Fritz Muller has shown, both winged and wingless' males and females, besides the workers. But in none of these eases is there any reason to believe that the several males or several females of the same species differ in their sexual powers, except in the atrophied condition of the reproductive organs in the workers of social insects. Many hermaphrodite animals must unite for reproduction, but the necessity of such union apparently depends solely on their structure. On the other hand, with heterostyled dimorphic species there are two females and two sets of males, and with trimorphic species three females and three sets of males, which differ essentially in their sexual T 2 |