HYBRID VIGOR OR HETEROSIS 153 



reached. The resulting inbred strains would have about 

 the same amount of development as the original inbred 

 strains, but would probably differ from them in appear 

 ance through the possession of diflerent combinations of 

 characters. The principal point is that the vigor and size 

 lost by inbreeding are immediately restored by crossing, 

 but lost again on further inbreeding. It is a transit^)ry 

 effect, for the most part, impossil)le of fixation. 



Increases in yield of grain are also fre^juently ob- 

 tained when ordinary commercial varieties of maize are 

 crossed. Rarely are the increases greater than 10 per 

 cent., however, and even this is more commonly to be 

 expected when varieties of somewhat different iypa are 

 used; for example, flint and dent. Most varieties of corn 

 are now so widely crossed and furthermore are so near 

 the limit of production that great advances are not to be 

 expected. Collins ^^ has obtained especially large incre- 

 ments in >deld by hybridizing typos of com from different 

 geographical regions. Three different varieties of corn 

 from the southwest — Hopi, Brownsville and Hairy Mexi- 

 can — each gave an increase of 100 per cent, or more when 

 crossed with a variety from China having seeds with a 

 different type of endosperm. 



Even before the plants are obtained there is a striking 

 effect of crossing in an immediate increase in the size of 

 seed. This was noted by Roberts, ^^''^ and established very 

 clearly by Collins and Kempton ^ through pollinating 

 ears of maize with a mixture of the plants own pollen and 

 of a different sort. By taking advantage of the phenom- 

 enon of double or ** endosperm** fertilization, the 

 experiment was so designed that the ontrTossed seeds 

 could be distinguished by differences in endosponn color. 



