however, a constant character for each, in so far that healthy plants, grown in the same soil, are only subject to unimportant variations in this character.
In experiments with this character, in order to be able to discriminate with certainty, the long axis of 6—7 ft. was always crossed with the short one of ¾ ft. to 1½ ft.
Each two of the differentiating characters enumerated above were united by cross-fertilisation. There were made for the
1st | trial | 60 | fertilisations | on | 15 | plants. |
2nd | ❞ | 58 | ❞ | ❞ | 10 | ❞ |
3rd | ❞ | 35 | ❞ | ❞ | 10 | ❞ |
4th | ❞ | 40 | ❞ | ❞ | 10 | ❞ |
5th | ❞ | 23 | ❞ | ❞ | 5 | ❞ |
6th | ❞ | 34 | ❞ | ❞ | 10 | ❞ |
7th | ❞ | 37 | ❞ | ❞ | 10 | ❞ |
From a larger number of plants of the same variety only the most vigorous were chosen for fertilisation. Weakly plants always afford uncertain results, because even in the first generation of hybrids, and still more so in the subsequent ones, many of the offspring either entirely fail to flower or only form a few and inferior seeds.
Furthermore, in all the experiments reciprocal crossings were effected in such a way that each of the two varieties which in one set of fertilisations served as seed-bearers in the other set were used as pollen plants.
The plants were grown in garden beds, a few also in pots, and were maintained in their naturally upright position by means of sticks, branches of trees, and strings stretched between. For each experiment a number of pot plants were placed during the blooming period in a greenhouse, to serve as control plants for the main experiment
lessly took to have been an inch, but the translation here given is evidently correct.]