THE FRUIT AND SEED-DISPERSAL 



289 



Dissemination by Wind and Watkr. 



Wore frequently the motor impulse is from without, the chief 

 agents being wind, icater or some moving animal. Wind acts directly 

 upon small seeds, such as those of Orchids, 

 scattering them as it would so much dust. 

 It may act less directly where the seeds are 

 larger, and the dehiscent fruit is borne on 

 a stiff stalk, as in the gaping follicles of 

 the Aconite, which, shaken by the wind, 

 scatter their seeds all round the parent 

 (Fig. 227): or in the Poppy (Fig. 231) or 

 Canterbury Bell, which do the same ; but 

 here the dehiscence is b}' pores, the prin- 

 ciple being that of the Pepper-Box. 



The wind would no doubt influence the 

 fall of any seeds ; but the development 

 upon them of tufts of hair, or of broad 

 thin wing-like surfaces, enhances its effect 

 upon their transfer, even where the seeds 

 are relatively large. Such developments 

 are sometimes upon the seed itself, as in the 

 case of dehiscent fruits : or they may be ^"^- '3'- 



,, , ^. Capsule of Poppy opening by 



formed by the carpellary walls where the pores below the star-shaped 



. -4. u 1 • i sUsma. (After Fipiicr.) 



iruit IS one-seeded, or where it breaks into 



one-seeded parts. The development of hairs on the seeds themselves 



is seen in the "Willow and Poplar, in Cotton (Fig. 232), and in the 



/(";■- 



Fig. 23;. 

 Seed of Cotton with superficial hairs. 

 (.Alter Figuier.) 



Fig. 233. 



Fruit of \'alerian. 



Figtiier.) 



(After 



Willow-herb. When in any of these the fruit splits, the seeds are set 

 free, each with its hairy parachute, which supports it in the breeze, 



B.E. T 



