272 THE STRUCTURE OF FLOWERS. 



have become regularly autogamous, while others are now 

 anemophilous, it may be due to the fact that, if a flower has 

 been entomophilous and even strongly protandrous, the first 

 stage of degradation is to bring the essential organs to a 

 homogamoiis state. If they stop there, and become autoga- 

 mous as well, which is the nsual result, then the flower will 

 remain persistently self -fertilising, as, e.g., Shepherd's-purse, 

 Chickweed, Knot-grass, etc. 



If, however, the flower had been protogynous, such as 

 early-flowering Hellebores, Primus communis or some Alpine 

 species, with "long-lived stigmas," then this protogyny, 

 associated with other degradations of the corolla, etc., which 

 only tend to increase it, has ended with anemophily. 



In the first case the androecium of protandrons flowers 

 has come down from its previous highly differentiated state, 

 so as to be homogamous with the stigmas. T^rom the other 

 or protogynous condition, the gynoecium has not been brought 

 back again so as to be homogamous with the anthers and 

 pollen, but, on the contrary, it may have become even 

 further differentiated, and so has now no fertiliser to depend 

 upon except the wind. 



