Antirrhinum Majus Striatum. 
127 
ready employed, taking care that the boundaries between 
the individual groups corresponded as closely as pos- 
sible with those of the previous year. I succeeded in 
c 
I 
.'/. ft. b. 
Fig. 22. Antirrhinum inajus hiteum rubro-striatum. A, B, 
C, curves showing the degree of striping amongst the 
offspring of three insect-fertilized plants, 1897. g< lemon 
yellow, almost without red stripes; s, narrowly striped; 
b, broadly striped; R, uniform red. See table, page 125. 
recording the rather scanty offspring of four coarsely 
striped parents. The result is given below. (The indi- 
vidual seed-parents of 1897 are denoted as Ai--A4.) 
OFFSPRING OF THE COARSELY STRIPED SEED-PARENTS. 
Stripes 
Less than 4 mm broad 
1-5 mm broad 
1-6 mm broad 
Broad fields 
Uniform red 
AI 
A z 
A 3 
A* 
Totals 





3 
2 
6 
8 
19 
5 
4 
6 
9 
24 
7 
8 
5 
6 
26 
2 

2 
5 
9 
Totals 17 
14 
19 
28 
78 
These figures are exhibited graphically in Fig. 23B. 
As the extent of this experiment was relatively small 
and especially as the proportion of self-colored plants 
appeared to me very small, I repeated it in the following 
year. I chose from the broad striped bed of this culture 
