296 



METAMOIIPHY. 



Portulaca ! 



Ribes! 



Saxifraga ! 



Dancus. 



Ixora. 



Scrissa ! 



Gardenia ! 



Lonicei'a ! 



Sambucus. 



Viburnum. 



Scabiosa. 

 Campanula ! 



Platycodon ! 



Calluna ! 



Azalea ! 



Rhododendron ! 

 Arbutus ! 

 Erica ! 

 Anagallis ! 

 Piimula ! 

 Jasminum I 



Syiinga ! 

 Vinca ! 

 Nerium ! 



Allamanda ! 



Tabemaimontana. 

 Calystegia ! 



Convolvulus ! 



Ipomsea. 

 Datura ! 

 Petunia ! 



Solanum ! 



Orobanche. 



Gentiana. 



Mimulus. 

 Antirrhinum ! 



Gratiola ! 



Digitalis ! 

 Linaria! 



Veronica ! 



Calceolaria ! 



Achimenes. 



Gloxinia ! 



Clerodendron ! 



Bignonia. 



Cyclamen ! 



Mirabilis. 



Laurus ! 



Gladiolus ! 



Crocus ! 



Iris! 

 Galanthus ! 



Leucojum ! 



Stembergia ! 



Hippeastrum. 

 Narcissus ! 

 Orchis ! 



Catasetum ! 



Hydrocharis. 



Asphodelus. 

 Tulipa ! 



SciDa. 

 Convallaria ! 



Fi-itillaria ! 

 Lilium ! 

 Hyacinthus ! 

 Polianthes ! 

 Hemerocallis ! 

 Colchicum ! 

 Sagittaria ! 

 Tradescantia ! 



Commelyna ! 



Tofieldia. 



Petalody of the pistils. Taken by itself, this is much 

 less common than the corresponding change in the 

 stamens. It generally affects the style and stigma 

 only, as happens normally in PetalostyUs, Iris, &c., 

 but this is by no means always necessarily the case. 

 In some of the cultivated varieties of Anemone and 

 Ranunculus all the parts of the flower remain in their 

 normal state, except the pistils, which latter assume 

 a petaloid appearance. 



Many of the double flowers owe their peculiar ap- 

 pearance to the combination of the following appear- 

 ances a petal-like form of the stamens, increase in 



