scientific 
pedigree-culture. 
B. ELEMENTARY SPECIES. 
II. Elementary species in nature. 32 Viola tricolor, Draba verna, 
Primula acaulis, and other examples. Euphorbia pecacuanha. Prunus 
maritima. Taraxacum and Hieracium. 
III. Elementary species of cultivated plants. 63 Beets, apples, pears, 
clover, flax and coconut. 
IV. Selection of elementary species. 92 Cereals. Le Couteur. Running 
out of varieties. Rimpau and Risler, Avena fatua. Meadows. Old 
Egyptian cereals. Selection by the Romans. Shirreff. Hays. 
C. RETROGRADE VARIETIES. 
V. Characters of retrograde varieties. 121 Seed varieties of pure, not 
hybrid origin. Differences from elementary species. Latent characters. 
Ray-florets of composites. [xiii] Progressive red varieties. Apparent 
losses. Xanthium canadense. Correlative variability. Laciniate leaves 
and petals. Compound characters. 
VI. Stability and real atavism. 154 Constancy of retrograde varieties. 
Atavism in Ribes sanguineum Albidum, in conifers, in Iris pallida. 
Seedlings of Acacia. Reversion by buds. 
VII. Ordinary or false atavism. 185 Vicinism or variation under the 
influence of pollination by neighboring individuals. Vicinism in 
nurseries. Purifying new and old varieties. A case of running out of 
corn in Germany. 
VIII. Latent characters. 216 Leaves of seedlings, adventitious buds, 
systematic latency and retrogressive evolution. Degressive evolution. 
Latency of specific and varietal characters in wheat-ear carnation, in 
the green dahlias, in white campanulas and others. Systematic latency 
of flower colors. 
IX. Crossing of species and varieties. 247 Balanced and unbalanced, or
species and variety crosses. Constant hybrids of Oenothera muricata 
and _O. biennis_. Aegilops, Medicago, brambles and other instances. 
X. Mendel's law of balanced crosses. 276 Pairs of antagonistic 
characters, one active and one latent. Papaver somniferum. [xiv] 
Mephisto Danebrog. Mendel's laws. Unit- characters. 
D. EVERSPORTING VARIETIES. 
XI. Striped flowers. 309 _Antirrhinum majus luteum rubro-striatum_ 
with pedigree. Striped flowers, fruits and radishes. Double stocks. 
XII. "Five leaved" clover. 340 Origin of this variety. Periodicity of the 
anomaly. Pedigree- cultures. Ascidia. 
XIII. Polycephalic poppies. 369 Permanency and high variability. 
Sensitive period of the anomaly. Dependency on external conditions. 
XIV. Monstrosities. 400 Inheritance of monstrosities. Half races and 
middle races. Hereditary value of atavists. Twisted stems and 
fasciations. Middle races of tricotyls and syncotyls. Selection by the 
hereditary percentage among the offspring. 
XV. Double adaptations. 430 Analogy between double adaptations and 
anomalous middle races. Polygonum amphibium. Alpine plants. 
Othonna crassifolia. Leaves in sunshine and shadow. Giants and 
dwarfs. Figs and ivy. Leaves of seedlings. 
E. MUTATIONS. 
XVI. Origin of the peloric toad-flax. 459 Sudden and frequent origin in 
the wild state. Origin in the experiment-garden. Law of repeated 
mutations. Probable origin of other pelories. 
[xv] XVII. The production of double flowers. 488 Sudden appearance 
of double flowers in horticulture. Historical evidence. Experimental 
origin of Chrysanthemum segetum plenum. Dependency upon 
nourishment. Petalody of stamens. 
XVIII New species of Oenothera. 516 Mutations of Oenothera 
lamarckiana in the wild state near Hilversum. New varieties of _O. 
laevifolia_, _O. brevistylis_, and _O. nanella_. New elementary species, 
_O. gigas_, _O. rubrinervis_, albida, and oblonga. _O. lata_, a pistillate 
form. Inconstancy of _O. scintillans_. 
XIX. Experimental pedigree-cultures. 547 Pedigree of the mutative 
products of Oenothera lamarckiana in the Botanical Garden at 
Amsterdam. Laws of mutability. Sudden and repeated leaps from an 
unchanging main strain. Constancy of the new forms. Mutations in all
directions. 
XX. Origin of wild species and varieties. 576 Problems to solve. 
Capsella heegeri. Oenothera biennis cruciata. Epilobium hirsutum 
cruciatum. Hibiscus Moscheutos. Purple beech. Monophyllous 
strawberries. Chances of success with new mutations. 
XXI. Mutations in horticulture. 604 Chelidonium majus lacinatum. 
Dwarf and spineless varieties. Laciniate leaves. Monophyllous and 
broom-like varieties. [xvi] Purple leaves. Celosia. Italian poplar. Cactus 
dahlia. Mutative origin of Dahlia fistulosa, and Geranium praetense in 
the experiment-garden. 
XXII. Systematic atavism. 630 Reappearance of ancestral characters. 
Primula acaulis umbellata. Bracts of crucifers. Zea Mays cryptosperma. 
Equisetum, Dipsacus sylvestris torsus. Tomatoes. 
XXIII. Taxonomic anomalies. 658 Specific characters occurring in 
other cases as casual anomalies. Papaver bracteatum monopetalum. 
Desmodium gyrans and monophyllous varieties. Peltate leaves and 
ascidia. Flowers on leaves. Leaves. Hordeum trifurcatum. 
XXIV. Hypothesis of periodical mutations. 686 Discovering mutable 
strains. Periods of mutability and constancy. Periods of mutations. 
Genealogical trees. Limited life-time of the organic kingdom. 
F. FLUCTUATIONS. 
XXV. General laws of fluctuations. 715 Fluctuating variability. 
Quetelet's law. Individual and partial fluctuations. Linear variability. 
Influence of nutrition. Periodicity curves. 
XXVI. Asexual multiplication of extremes. 742 Selection between 
species and intra-specific selection. Excluding individual [xvii] 
embryonic variability. Sugar-canes. Flowering cannas. Double lilacs. 
Other instances. Burbank's method of selection. 
XXVII. Inconstancy of improved races 770 Larger variability in the 
case of propagation by seed, progression and regression after a single 
selection, and after repeated selections. Selection experiments with 
corn. Advantages and effect of repeated selection. 
XXVIII. Artificial and natural selection. 798 Conclusions. Specific and 
intra-specific selection. Natural selection in the field. Acclimatization. 
Improvement-selection of sugar-beets by various methods. Rye. 
Hereditary percentage and centgener power as marks by which 
intraspecific selection may be guided.
Index 827 
[1] A. INTRODUCTION 
LECTURE I 
DESCENT:    
    
		
	
	
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