Abstract
Mr. Kitchener having been kind enough to send me the above letter, I may, perhaps, be allowed to add a few additional notes. Since writing the former paper I have had the opportunity of examining three other species of Viola, V. calcarata, elatior, and lactea, all of which present a remarkable contrast to V. tricolor in a very curious point of structure. In V. tricolor the stigma is brought into close contact with the lowest petal by a very peculiar “knee” in the style, the effect of which is so completely to close up the central cavity of the flower as to render it extremely difficult for any large insect to insert its proboscis into the spur. In all the three species above-named, which I believe to be fertilised by bees, the style is nearly straight, so as to leave a considerable gap between the stigma and lower petal, quite large enough for the insertion of the proboscis of a bee. In none of these is there the least indication of the black triangular streak on the style which I take to serve, in V. tricolor, the purpose of guiding the Thrips to the nectary. The ring of anthers is also perfectly closed, as described by Miss Dowson in the case of the Dog and Sweet Violet, there being no opening for the admission of the small insect, as in the pansy. A striking difference in the form of the stigma also favours the same conclusion as to the mode of fertilisation.
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BENNETT, A. Fertilisation of the Pansy.—Ground Ivy. Nature 8, 143 (1873). https://doi.org/10.1038/008143b0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/008143b0
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