AUTOGAMY BY LENGTHENING OF STAMENS. 335 



in which this is observed to occur: — the Moschatel {Adoxa Moachatellina), most 

 of the species of the Knawel (Scleranthus), Pcederota Bonarota, of wide dis- 

 tribution in the Southern Alps, the curious Aponogeton distachyon, native to 

 South Africa, and a large number of Cruciferse, Saxifragacese, Willow-herbs, 

 ■Geraniacese, Convolvulaceae, and Oaryophyllacese. 



Of the large family of the Cruciferse we may mention Arabia ccerulea, 

 Braya alpina, Gardamine alpina, and Rhizobotrya alpina, all of which are small- 

 flowered species growing in the upland hollows of high mountains, and in addition 

 the annual or biennial species named Lepidium, campestre, L. sativum, Sisym- 

 brium Alliaria, S. Thalianum, Thlaspi alliaceum and Thlaspi arvense. In these 

 plants the stigma is sessile on the ovary in the shape of a small round cushion, 

 which becomes visible the moment the imbricate petals of the bud begin to 

 move apart. At this period only cross-poUination can take place, as all the 

 ■anthers in the flower itself are still closed; but the four long stamens now grow 

 up along the wall of the ovary until the anthers are exactly on the same level as 

 the stigma. The anthers have dehisced by that time, and their pollen cannot but 

 be deposited on the receptive cells at the periphery of the stigmatic cushion. 

 Another observation which has been repeatedly confirmed, is that only one of the 

 four anthers parts with its pollen to the adjacent stigma, while the rest, though 

 ■quite close to the stigma, are not in immediate contact with it. The pollen of 

 these three anthers is apparently placed there so that it may be carried ofi" by 

 the small flies which visit these cruciferous plants and transferred by them to 

 younger blossoms. 



The Saxifrages (e.g. Saxifraga androsacea) here in question have two linear 

 or oblong stigmas. After the anthers are raised, the pollen is usually brushed off 

 them on to the sides of the stigma near its base. But here again it is note- 

 'worthy that for the most part only one of the five anthers devotes its pollen to 

 the process of autogamy, whilst the others remain a little below the stigmas, and 

 ■do not come into contact with them. 



In a number of small-flowered Willow-herbs (Epilobvimi collinum,, E. montanuTn, 

 E. parvifiorum, &c.) the stigma is composed of four thickish divergent lobes 

 -arranged in a cross with four angles between them. Upon, the first parting of the 

 petals, which always happens early in the morning, the anthers may be seen to be 

 underneath the mature cruciform stigma, but in the course of that very day the 

 filiform filaments grow to a suflBcient length to place the anthers in the re-entrant 

 angles of the cross. Meanwhile, dehiscence has taken place, and by the evening 

 of the first day autogamy ensues. During the night the petals close up, and 

 the flower droops a little; the next morning the petals open again, and it is then 

 evident that the fllaments have grown rather longer, two or three pollen-covered 

 ■anthers standing above the stigma and partially concealing it. The place occupied 

 by the stigma on the previous day is now filled by an assemblage of anthers laden 

 with pollen, which is brushed off by insects and transported to other flowers. 

 "Thus we flnd in these Willow-herbs that on the first morning cross-fertilization 



