302 



A TEXTBOOK OF BOTANY 



[Cn. VI, 7 



A very special and rare form of asexual reproduction is 

 found in PARTHF|Nr >mr * rFgTffl r *' the development of an egg 

 cell to a plant without fertilization. This is known in 

 relatively few plants, which include especially the Composite 

 fajaaily, though it is frequent in the reproduction of Insects. 

 Closely related thereto are cases of pnT.YTCTvmRYnArj, in 

 which cells of the embryo sac other than the egg cell de- 



velop into apparent embryos? 

 which, however, are really 

 vegetative structures of the 

 nature of branches. Both 

 parthenogenesis and poly- 

 embryony are too rare to 

 play any appreciable part in 

 plant reproduction as a whole, 

 and have their chief interest 

 as showing the plasticity of 

 natural processes. 



A question must arise at 

 this point as to whether any 

 differences exist between the 

 sexually and asexually pro- 

 duced offspring of the same 

 plant. Jt seems clear th%t 

 jn general the asexually p^o- 

 FIG. 214. The spore cases and juced individuals are Jesg 

 spores of a common Moid ; x 38. Variable in their characters 



(From Strasburger.) rTTi - ' -- rT~ 



than the sexually produced, 

 t>if Pr ar e notable exception^ At all events it is cus- 



tomary among gardeners to employ asexual propagation when 

 they wish to retain a variety true to some valued character, but 

 to use sexual or seed reproduction when trying for novelties. 



7. THE ORIGIN AND SIGNIFICANCE OF SEX - 



In the preceding sections, the two fusing sexual nuclei, 

 the male and the female, have been treated as functionally 



