THE FRUM. 285 



anomalous reproduction are therefore now known, wkicii are 

 intermediate between sexual and non-sexual, between budding 

 and fruiting propagation, viz.,- 



Apogamy, which is budding growth or prolification in place of 

 that which should subserve sexual reproduction. This was dis- 

 covered in Ferns by Prof. Farlow, while a pupil of De Bary, by 

 whom our knowledge of the process has recently been extended, 

 and this name imposed. 1 The production of bulblets in place of 

 seed or embryo answers to this in Flowering plants. 



Parthenogeny , the counterpart analogue of apogani}-, is the 

 non-sexual origination of an embryo extraneous to the embryonal 

 vesicle or even the embryo-sac. However abnormal, its occur- 

 rence is probably not so rare as has been supposed. 



CHAPTER VII. 



THE FRUIT. 



SECTION I. ITS STRUCTURE, TRANSFORMATIONS, AND DEHISCENCE. 



534. The Fruit consists of the matured pistil or gyncecium 

 (as the case may be) , including also whatsoever may be joined 

 to it. It is a somewhat loose and multifarious term, applicable 

 alike to a matured ovaiy, to a cluster of such ovaries, at least 

 when somewhat coherent, to a ripened ovary with catyx and 

 other floral parts adnate to it, and even to a ripened inflores- 

 cence when the parts are consolidated or compacted. Fruits, 

 accordingly, are of various degrees of simplicity or complexity, 

 and should be first studied in the simpler forms, namely, those 

 which have resulted from^a single pistil. Such a fruit consists 

 of Pericarp with whatever may be contained in it and incorpo- 

 rated with it. 



embryo appeared in those seeds which habitually produce them. To this 

 Cffilebogyne offers an exception. The female of this dioecious plant habit- 

 ually matures fertile seeds, with a well-formed embryo, in Europe when there 

 are no male plants in the country. Strasburger ascertained that the embr3 r o 

 thus formed is adventive, the embryonal vesicle perishing. Parthenogenesis, 

 of which Caelebogyne was the most unequivocal case, is thus confirmed, and 

 is shown to occur in most polyembryony ; but it is at the same time explained 

 to be a kind of prolification. 



1 See Farlow, in Proc. Am. Acad. Lx.68; De Bary ,Bot.Zeit.xxxvi. 465-487. 



