SEED DISTRIBUTION. 



369 



674. Many plants possess attractive devices, and offer o. substantial 

 reward, as a price for the distribution of their seeds. Fruits and berries are 

 devoured by birds and other animals ; the seeds within, often passing un- 

 harmed, may be carried long distances. Starchy and albuminous seeds and 



Fig 471 

 Seeds of geutn showing the hooklets where the end of the style is Icneed. 



grains are also devoured, and while many such seeds are destroyed, others 

 are not injured, and finally are lodged in suitable places for growth, often 

 remote from the original localit}-. Thus animals willingly or unwillingly 

 become agents in the dissemination of plants over the earth. Man in the 

 development of commerce is often responsible for the wide distribution of 

 harmful as well as beneficial species. 



675. Other plants are more independent, and mechanisms are emploj'ed 

 for violently ejecting seeds from the pod or fruit. The unequal tension of 

 the pods of the common vetch (Vicia sativa) when drying causes the valves 

 to contract unequally, and on a dry summer day the valves twist and pull in 

 opposite directions until they suddenly snap apart, and the seeds are thrown 

 forcibly for some distance. In the impatiens, or touch-me-not as it is better 

 known, when the pods are ripe, often the least touch, or a pinch, or jar, sets 

 the five valves free, they coil up suddenly, and the small seeds are whisked 

 for several yards in all directions. During autumn, on dry days, the pods 

 of the witch hazel contract unequall}', and the valves are suddenly spread 

 apart, when the seeds, as from a catapult, are hurled away. 



Other plants have learned how useful the '• wind " may be if the seeds are 

 provided with "floats," "parachutes,'' or winged devices which buoy them 



