Antirrhinum Majns Striatitin. 
129 
One of them, A, consists almost solely of finely striped 
individuals and contains no red ones. The other, B, 
consists almost entirely of broadly striped ones together 
with 11-36% of uniformly red ones. But the separation 
is not nearly so sharp as between the striped on the one 
hand and the red on the other, inasmuch as the two 
curves overlap. 
Fig. 23. Antirrhinum majus hitcum rubro-striatum. Curves 
to illustrate the distribution of color amongst the off- 
spring of self-fertilized individuals from the culture on 
which Fig. 22 is based. Experiment in selection with 
broadly and narrowly striped flowers. Curves represent- 
ing the offspring: A, of the finely striped seed-parents 
Bi_B 4 ; B, of the broadly striped seed-parents Ai_A 4 . 
See tables on pp. 127 and 128. For the signification of 
g, Sj b, R, see previous figure. 
We now come to the most important part of the ex- 
periment, the question of the inheritance of the red 
character. On account of this greater importance I had 
already given it previously much attention. 
Here we are concerned not merely with the inheri- 
tance of the red flowers in general, but with the study 
of the special cases already distinguished. First we have 
to consider the red seed variants, then the bud-variants 
and lastly the single red flowers on striped racemes. 
Finally it should be possible to test the red stamens of 
