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From W. E. Darwin   22 March [1864]

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Summary

Sends drawings of the pollen from Chinese Primula plants with styles and pistils of different lengths; observations on sizes and condition of their pollen.

Author:  William Erasmus Darwin
Addressee:  Charles Robert Darwin
Date:  22 Mar [1864]
Classmark:  DAR 108: 86–7, 175–7
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-4434

Matches: 15 hits

  • … Sends drawings of the pollen from Chinese Primula plants with styles and pistils of …
  • … different lengths; observations on sizes and condition of their pollen. …
  • … quite perfect with very little imperfect pollen. No 3 had tolerably short pistil (tho’ I …
  • … 3 had to open the stamens under 1 inch & get the pollen out. The …
  • … seem generally to have more imperfect pollen & to vary in size very much. I can easily get …
  • … column : ‘Short-styled | Long-stamen & bigger pollen’ pencil Top of 2d column : ‘Equal to …
  • … also sent sketches of Primula sinensis pollen on 12 March 1864 and with his letter of [15  …
  • … that I had to dissect the stamens of 8 or 10 flowers to get the pollen I have drawn, there …
  • … was a great deal imperfect pollen, but the large ones drawn seemed perfect grains. No (4) …
  • … I was so surprised at the various sizes in pollen of No 2.  that I got another M.  styled …
  • … as no (3). I am sure I did not mix the pollens as I did them on separate glasses, & in No …
  • … CD discussed William’s examination of the pollen of the plants here numbered 3 and 5 in ‘ …
  • … pp.  220 and 222, noting that the large pollen sizes were probably due ‘not to their …
  • … the high number of small and shrivelled pollen grains explained the fact that although the …
  • … probably means that he was surprised by the pollen of the plant in the sketch numbered 3, …

To W. E. Darwin   [14–17 May 1864]

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Summary

Instructions on measuring pollen of dimorphic plants.

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  William Erasmus Darwin
Date:  [14–17 May 1864]
Classmark:  DAR 97: A3
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-4479

Matches: 9 hits

  • … Instructions on measuring pollen of dimorphic plants. …
  • … Down] P.S.  I begin to think it would be far safer to measure pollen dry . Some time try …
  • … not put thin glass over dry scattered pollen & secure thin glass over the slide by 2  …
  • … Cowslip to be measured dry. — The Pulmonaria pollen looks very different size dry. — Look …
  • … small grains of Pulmonaria angustifolia pollen, as CD had mentioned in his letter of 14  …
  • … responded to CD’s request to observe the pollen dry in his letter of 18 May [1864] . See …
  • … May 1864] . William had already sketched pollen for CD from the two forms of wild yellow …
  • … CD had asked William to soak the yellow cowslip pollen the longest before measuring it; he …
  • … For CD’s interest in the shrivelled pollen-grains from long-styled Pulmonaria flower-buds, …

From John Scott   10 June [1864]

Summary

Sends Passiflora paper [see 4485].

Sends seeds of peloric Antirrhinum crossed by normal form and sends results of his experiments [table of crosses].

Author:  John Scott
Addressee:  Charles Robert Darwin
Date:  10 June [1864]
Classmark:  DAR 51: B22; DAR 177: 109
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-4526

Matches: 13 hits

  • … 0. ” ” ” ” (P.  No.  2) by pollen Peloric Anthirrhinum (P.  No.  1) Verso of table : ‘M …
  • … 113. 20. 2270. ” 897.  by pollen of Peloric Anthirrhinum (P.  No.  1) 3. Normal …
  • … 10. 10. 1097. 110. 20. 2194. ” 867.  by pollen of Peloric Anthirrhinum (P.  No.  2) 4. …
  • … 20. 2668. ” 1055. (P.  No.  1) by pollen of Normal Anthirrhinum 5. Peloric Anthirrhinum  …
  • … 20. 2724. ” 1077. (P.  No.  2) by pollen of Normal Anthirrhinum 6. Peloric Anthirrhinum  …
  • … 24. 0. ” ” ’ ” (P.  No.  1) by own pollen 7. Peloric Anthirrhinum 24. 0. ” ” ’ ” ( …
  • … P.  No.  2) by own pollen 8. Peloric Anthirrhinum 12. 0. ” ” ’ ” ( …
  • … P.  No.  1) by pollen Peloric Anthirrhinum (P.  No.  2) 9. Peloric Anthirrhinum 12. …
  • … 10. 10. 1264. 126. 20. 2528. 1000. ” by own pollen 2. Normal Anthirrhinum 10. 8. 908. …
  • … succeeded in fertilising peloric with own-pollen … My experiments were performed on two …
  • … plants: both proved utterly impregnable by own-pollen, though both before & after and at …
  • … the time of trying experiments with own-pollen, they were …
  • … readily fertilised by pollen of normal; while the former likewise proved perfectly good on …

From W. E. Darwin   18 May [1864]

Summary

Sends Pulmonaria anthers, with measurements of styles and pollen counts.

Author:  William Erasmus Darwin
Addressee:  Charles Robert Darwin
Date:  18 May [1864]
Classmark:  DAR 110: A83–6, A94
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-4500

Matches: 12 hits

  • … Sends Pulmonaria anthers, with measurements of styles and pollen counts. …
  • … bad Long styled out of 193 pollen grains 140 were good 53 — bad. if you like, I will …
  • … tell me. I cannot judge wh.  has most pollen. I got Mamma’s letter about Menyanthes. I …
  • … 3 of the others. So I took it off the glass after drawing and compared its pollen with …
  • … long styled pollen, and there is no doubt that it is long styled. x I know also to be long …
  • … concluding that from the condition of the pollen in the long-styled form, and from the …
  • … calculation of the comparative bad & good pollen in the long & short. of course it cannot …
  • … to guess, also I dare say in some cases pollen tipped up on end or squashed may have …
  • … more imperfect in the long than in the short. I took pollen from 2 plants of each kind. …
  • … I found as follows in Short styled out of 265 pollen grains 247 were good 18 — …
  • … William had already observed smaller pollen grains from long-styled forms of Pulmonaria …
  • … asked for this comparison of good and bad pollen grains from the short-styled and long- …

To W. E. Darwin   3 May [1864]

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Summary

Thanks WED for measuring cowslip pollen. Sends dimorphic flowers.

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  William Erasmus Darwin
Date:  3 May [1864]
Classmark:  DAR 97: A8, A10
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-4480

Matches: 9 hits

  • … Thanks WED for measuring cowslip pollen. Sends dimorphic flowers. …
  • … any. Yours affect. | C.  Darwin May 3 d . — You had better brush off the pollen. — P.S.   …
  • … Will you notice in the young anthers, perhaps pollen is shed whether there …
  • … seems to be more pollen in the one form than in the other? — I am too bad to observe it. …
  • … in 1863 and 1864, and measured the pollen of the red equal-styled cowslip in 1864 and …
  • … for me. — Very many thanks for measures of pollen of red cowslip: I am very much surprised …
  • … grew from John Scott’s plant resembled the pollen from the short-styled form but included …
  • … p.  427. For CD’s general remarks on pollen size in heterostyled species, including …
  • … 30 April 1864] and n.  2. CD wrote that the pollen of the equal- styled plants that he …

From W. E. Darwin   [after 19 May 1864]

Summary

[Outline sketches of pollen from long- and short-styled yellow cowslips and from a red cowslip.]

Author:  William Erasmus Darwin
Addressee:  Charles Robert Darwin
Date:  [after 19 May 1864]
Classmark:  DAR 108: 83
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-4369

Matches: 7 hits

  • … Outline sketches of pollen from long- and short-styled yellow cowslips and from a red …
  • … have not been found. It is not known who struck through the sketch of red cowslip pollen. …
  • … E.  Darwin to W.  E.  Darwin, [18 May 1864] , CD had asked that the cowslip pollen also be …
  • … sketched dry; the pollen in this memorandum appears to …
  • … be dry compared with the pollen in the memorandum from W.  E.  Darwin of [30  …
  • … filed by CD with the sketch of wet cowslip pollen on which he recorded measurements by …
  • … William of both dry and wet cowslip pollen, ‘1864–1865’ (see memorandum from W.  E.   …

From W. E. Darwin   [30 April 1864]

Summary

[Outline sketches of pollen from long- and short-styled yellow cowslips and from red cowslip, magnified 350x.]

Author:  William Erasmus Darwin
Addressee:  Charles Robert Darwin
Date:  [30 Apr 1864]
Classmark:  DAR 108: 84
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-4478

Matches: 5 hits

  • … Outline sketches of pollen from long- and short-styled yellow cowslips and from red …
  • … 30 th 1864’ ink Below sketch of red cowslip pollen : ‘Mid-styled i.e.  style just below & …
  • … of their original size. William sketched pollen of the long-styled and short-styled forms …
  • … of flowers , pp.  234–8. In another sketch of pollen from the same three forms of cowslip, …
  • … two of William’s sketches of dry and wet pollen. For CD’s ongoing work on the relationship …

To P. H. Gosse   7 April [1864]

Summary

Discusses microscopic observation of pollen tubes.

Unable to exchange orchids because of his illness.

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  Philip Henry Gosse
Date:  7 Apr [1864]
Classmark:  American Philosophical Society (Mss.B.D25.298)
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-4454

Matches: 5 hits

  • … Discusses microscopic observation of pollen tubes. Unable to exchange orchids because of …
  • … 1864 . Gosse had asked CD how to identify pollen-tubes in orchids (see letter from P.   …
  • … Ap 7. My dear Sir If you place large sized pollen on the stigma of any plant & 12° or 18  …
  • … you will easily see the tubes. If the pollen be minute it is almost necessary to dissect …
  • … once get to know their appearance with any pollen as with geranium, you will never mistake …

From W. E. Darwin   14 April [1864]

Summary

Observations on [length of style and length of filament and stigmas of] Pulmonaria.

Author:  William Erasmus Darwin
Addressee:  Charles Robert Darwin
Date:  14 Apr [1864]
Classmark:  DAR 110: A68–74
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-4462

Matches: 9 hits

  • … affect son | W.  E D. I can do as much pollen work as ever you like 2.1 but … plant 2.2] …
  • … circled red crayon Verso of enclosure 1 : ‘Pollen-grains’ pencil Enclosure 2 : ‘2’ red …
  • … 13 th ’ pencil Verso of enclosure 2 : ‘Shape of stigma and size of pollen-grains’ pencil …
  • … this seems the same as in long styled) The pollen in the 2 short styled kinds is exactly …
  • … 2 Longstyled, & you see the short styled pollen is decidedly the largest    I have made …
  • … size. CD believed that differences in pollen sizes and in the relative sizes of some other …
  • … styled anthers have much [ inter ]larger pollen grains according to William than long- …
  • … this plainly’. CD discussed comparative pollen sizes of Pulmonaria angustifolia in Forms …
  • … flowers , p.  106. He also concluded that the pollen of the shorter-styled form was larger …

From William Erasmus Darwin   [15 March 1864]

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Summary

Has drawn all three forms of primroses CD sent "with same result". Has found no pink variety with middle style.

Author:  William Erasmus Darwin
Addressee:  Charles Robert Darwin
Date:  [15 Mar 1864]
Classmark:  DAR 108: 85, 173–4
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-4416

Matches: 8 hits

  • … middle-styled seems very imperfect in its pollen, but if any thing is the least bit bigger …
  • … one flower of the middle seemed to have pollen not unlike Short styled but it was so very …
  • … reference to earlier sketches of Primula pollen (see n.  3, below). The Tuesday between …
  • … their original size, are apparently of pollen from the Chinese primrose ( P.  sinensis ) ( …
  • … 108: 88, dated 12 March 1864. These are of pollen from short-styled and long-styled forms …
  • … flowers , p.  220, CD acknowledged William’s drawings of the pollen of one of the equal- …
  • … styled plants, adding that the pollen resembled, in the small size of the grains, that of …
  • … DAR 108. William may have made sketches of pollen from the pot of Chinese primrose he had …

From J. D. Hooker   [26 or 27 April 1864]

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Summary

JDH on John Scott.

Curious about the rationale of pollen prepotence.

Working on variation in New Zealand flora.

Author:  Joseph Dalton Hooker
Addressee:  Charles Robert Darwin
Date:  [26 or 27] Apr 1864
Classmark:  DAR 101: 214–17
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-4472

Matches: 8 hits

  • … John Scott. Curious about the rationale of pollen prepotence. Working on variation in New …
  • … of his experiment with the prepotent polyanthus pollen. In Cross and self fertilisation , …
  • … pp.  388–400, CD discussed prepotent pollen under the heading ‘The Means which …
  • … It would be curious to make out more concerning the rationale of action of pollen— thus— …
  • … do the pollen grains of Auricula burst soonest on their own stigma or on that of …
  • … Cowslip. —& sooner on the Cowslip than the cowslips own pollen grains do. — …
  • … Do the pollen tubes develop quicker— is it that they beat the cowslip tubes in the race to …
  • … or ensure Flowers being fertilised with Pollen from a distinct Plant’ ( ibid. , p.  388). …

From Emma and Charles Darwin to W. E. Darwin   [20 May 1864]

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Summary

CD much obliged for specimen and drawings.

Author:  Emma Wedgwood; Emma Darwin; Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  William Erasmus Darwin
Date:  [20 May 1864]
Classmark:  DAR 97: A7
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-3366

Matches: 4 hits

  • … styled Pulmonaria with own pollen
  • … William mentioned sending drawings of pollen and anthers, as well as a tin case enclosing …
  • … The short-styled Menyanthes is fertile, I know, with own pollen, like the short- …
  • … appeared to be sterile with its own pollen. However, in this letter, CD may be referring …

To W. E. Darwin   [19 May 1864]

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Summary

Mentions WED’s extraordinary discovery of some pollen-grains of different sizes. The observations must be followed up.

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  William Erasmus Darwin
Date:  [19 May 1864]
Classmark:  DAR 210.6: 186
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-5333

Matches: 4 hits

  • … WED’s extraordinary discovery of some pollen-grains of different sizes. The observations …
  • … 1 big anther with its differently sized pollen grains is a quite new & most extraordinary …
  • … larger than all the others; but I never dreamed of the pollen-grains differing. Never mind …
  • … or not search more flowers & measure pollen & keep memorandum how many times you succeed …

From W. E. Darwin   [19 May 1864]

Summary

Sends specimens of Menyanthes with observations and drawings [see Forms of flowers, p. 115].

Author:  William Erasmus Darwin
Addressee:  Charles Robert Darwin
Date:  [19 May 1864]
Classmark:  DAR 110: B43–7
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-4502

Matches: 7 hits

  • … which I send in tin case. Also drawings of pollen & anthers. The long styled had decidedly …
  • … these were William’s measurements of pollen diameters in an unknown unit; he presumably …
  • … No relevant correspondence or additional pollen sketches have been found, but in Forms of …
  • … with the camera many drawings of the pollen-grains’. CD noted the variability of stamen …
  • … For William’s drawings of anthers and pollen, see enclosures 1 and 2. CD noted William’s …
  • … added by CD, shows that the ratio of the diameter of pollen from short-styled flowers …
  • … to the diameter of pollen from long-styled flowers is 100 to 84.2 (see Forms of flowers , …

To W. E. Darwin   14 May [1864]

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Summary

Discusses WED’s observations on polymorphic flowers.

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  William Erasmus Darwin
Date:  14 May [1864]
Classmark:  DAR 97: A1–2, A4–5
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-4495

Matches: 7 hits

  • … originating from individuals producing less pollen in Forms of flowers p.  304. For his …
  • … that the anthers of long styled with smaller pollen-grains contain many more shrivelled & …
  • … heterostyled plants, the anthers, like the pollen-grains, were often smaller in the long- …
  • … styled flowers, which contain the larger pollen-grains, being longer than those of the …
  • … determined that the occurrence of smaller pollen-grains in a long-styled plant was often …
  • … sent sketches of Pulmonaria angustifolia pollen from opened flowers, evidently measured …
  • … CD gave comparative measurements of the pollen-grains. In CD’s diagram, the dotted line …

From W. E. Darwin   18 April 1864

Summary

CD is right about variability [of Pulmonaria]. Encloses observations and diagrams of additional plants.

Author:  William Erasmus Darwin
Addressee:  Charles Robert Darwin
Date:  18 Apr 1864
Classmark:  DAR 110: A77–81b
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-4466

Matches: 7 hits

  • … in some cases than others. I measured the pollen in this shorter filamented one, & as you …
  • … the division in the petals. I measured the pollen of two sets of Long & shorter styled and …
  • … and always smaller than the short styled pollen. I did not measure the stigmas again as it …
  • … reaching up to base of division of sepals pollen in each case exactly same size Some of …
  • … to rather above their tips Measured the pollen in longest & shortest styled Long styled   …
  • … William’s two drawings. On the difference in pollen sizes for Pulmonaria angustifolia and …
  • … at their original size. The sketches of pollen grains are all reproduced at 45 per cent of …

From Philip Henry Gosse   5 April 1864

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Summary

Asks how he can identify pollen-tubes.

Has succeeded in impregnating orchids of widely different genera with each other’s pollinia. "Is not this something new?"

Offers to exchange Catasetum for other varieties.

Author:  Philip Henry Gosse
Addressee:  Charles Robert Darwin
Date:  5 Apr 1864
Classmark:  DAR 165: 79
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-4451

Matches: 4 hits

  • … Asks how he can identify pollen-tubes. Has succeeded in impregnating orchids of widely …
  • … CD mentioned pollen-tubes in Orchids , pp.  31, 81, 106, 109, 133, 248, 311–12 and 324  …
  • … You frequently allude to the emission of pollen-tubes; can you (without much trouble) tell …
  • … to refer Gosse to Brown 1831 , where pollen-tubes are discussed in detail (see, for …

From John Scott   28 March 1864

Summary

Surprised at CD’s account of Bryanthus.

H. Crüger’s approach to Gongora fertilisation is beset with difficulties.

Reports his work on self-sterility of Oncidium.

Author:  John Scott
Addressee:  Charles Robert Darwin
Date:  28 Mar 1864
Classmark:  DAR 177: 103
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-4438

Matches: 8 hits

  • … plant No.  2. 6 flowers fertilised by pollen of No.  1, did not yield a single capsule. A …
  • … next tried O.  microchilum No.  1 by pollen of O.  divaricatum, cupreum—6 fl.  fertilised …
  • … michrochilum no . 2 . 6 fl.  fertilised by pollen of O.  divaricatum, cupreum produced two …
  • … of O.  divaricatum cupreum fertilised by pollen of michrochilum No.  2 , 3 capsules were …
  • … O.  michrochilum ultimately proved sterile to pollen of O.  ornithorhynchum: though by …
  • … numerous attempts to fertilise either with own-pollen, yet in no case did I succeed though …
  • … the usual symptoms of affection with pollen-tubes—in their shrivelling up & closing of …
  • … plant No.  1: 6 flowers fertilised by pollen of No.  2 , 4 flowers yielded good capsules. …

From Robert Thomson   24 July 1864

Summary

Observations on insects visiting Melastomataceae.

Author:  Robert Thomson
Addressee:  Charles Robert Darwin
Date:  24 July 1864
Classmark:  DAR 178: 117
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-4574

Matches: 5 hits

  • … cell) are densely filled with pollen. When the loculament …
  • … a special condition is slightly pressed the pollen issues from the apical pore; the mass …
  • … particles, but under the microscope the pollen are exceedingly minute ovate cohesive …
  • … with which the Insects are in contact. Pollen masses are also copiously strewed in their …
  • … to the full expansion of the flower (if fully expanded the pollen is discharged from its …

To J. D. Hooker   25 April [1864]

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Summary

CD thinks JDH takes a hard view of Scott’s character, but will not argue further.

Leersia.

Working on homomorphic and heteromorphic crosses in Primula.

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  Joseph Dalton Hooker
Date:  25 Apr [1864]
Classmark:  DAR 115: 231
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-4471

Matches: 5 hits

  • … of power of so-called by me homomorphic & heteromorphic pollen: I fertilised some …
  • … cowslips with own-form pollen & 24 hours afterwards …
  • … put on some polyanthus pollen; & now 29 of the seedlings have flowered & every one is red, …
  • … of the heteromorphic polyanthus pollen, in Origin 4th ed. , p.  321, ‘Illegitimate …
  • … this experiment, performed with the pollen of short-styled dark-red polyanthus placed on …
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Forms of flowers

Summary

Darwin’s book The different forms of flowers on plants of the same species, published in 1877, investigated the structural differences in the sexual organs of flowers of the same species. It drew on and expanded five articles Darwin had published on the…

Matches: 15 hits

  • … male flowers on separate plants) and also noted that their pollen differed in size and shape. He …
  • … of Primrose & Cowslip with short pistils & large-grained pollen are rather more fertile …
  • … of my experiments lead me to suspect that the large-grained pollen suits the long pistils & the …
  • … I think I have made out their good or meaning clearly. The pollen of A is fitted for stigma of B …
  • … both terms referred to the fertilisation of one form with pollen from the same form. At this late …
  • … two forms and that one of these was absolutely sterile with pollen from the same form, while the …
  • … explained to Gray, ‘ I have lately been putting the pollen of the two forms on the division of the …
  • … me as truly wonderful, that the stigma distinguishes the pollen; & is penetrated by the tubes of …
  • … he told Hooker, ‘ In function, but not in appearance, the pollen of these two forms, as tested by …
  • … is so frequent in truly hermaphrodite groups; namely the pollen & stigma of each flower being …
  • … of the plant, with dotted lines indicating which pollen must be applied to each stigma to produce …
  • … He told Gray in October 1865 that with respect to its own pollen, the long-styled form was …
  • … plants raised from Dimorphic species fertilized by their own pollen, are themselves generally …
  • … in a few specimens. It is necessary to compare size of pollen grains & state of stigma ’. …
  • … ‘I will rank no plant as dimorphic without comparing pollen-grains & stigmas’. When Hermann …

Charles Harrison Blackley

Summary

You may not have heard of Charles Harrison Blackley (1820–1900), but if you are one of the 15 million people in the UK who suffer from hay fever, you are indebted to him. For it was he who identified pollen as the cause of the allergy. Darwin was…

Matches: 11 hits

  • … fever, you are indebted to him. For it was he who identified pollen as the cause of the allergy, and …
  • … 5 July 1873 Darwin wrote again, saying:  ‘The power of pollen in exciting the skin & mucous …
  • … changes in his own symptoms, that he was able to single out pollen as the only credible cause. …
  • … He also experimented with fresh, dry and extracts of pollen, administered to his nose, mouth, eyes …
  • … writes: Perhaps where grass is cut & dried; some pollen of the entomophilous division …
  • … was fascinated by Blackley’s experiments testing whether pollen could be carried large distances in …
  • … p. 5). Darwin gave a further example of how coniferous pollen could be carried for hundreds of miles …
  • … with carbolic acid to deter insects.  He concluded that in pollen seasons much higher levels were …
  • … from hay fever in large cities far away from sources of pollen. In his later work, possibly …
  • … Blackley tried to find out the smallest amount of pollen that would initiate and maintain the …
  • … recommending spending summers in suitable locations to avoid pollen.  But his lasting contribution …

Cross and self fertilisation

Summary

The effects of cross and self fertilisation in the vegetable kingdom, published on 10 November 1876, was the result of a decade-long project to provide evidence for Darwin’s belief that ‘‘Nature thus tells us, in the most emphatic manner, that she abhors…

Matches: 20 hits

  • … flowers and the physiological effects of different forms of pollen. Although many plants that Darwin …
  • … many of these were nevertheless fertile with their own pollen. He set out to compare several …
  • … of the young plants when raised from a pistil fertilized by pollen from the same flower, & from …
  • … that Darwin would confirm that this poppy shed its pollen immediately after the flower opened, …
  • … since even those flowers to which he applied foreign pollen had probably already been self …
  • … on which he commented, ‘This complete infertility with own pollen could hardly have remained …
  • … you w d  care, is that a great excess of, or very little pollen produced not the least difference …
  • … On the other hand seeds from this plant, fertilised by pollen from the same flower, weigh less, …
  • … beginning to suspect that the insects which could transfer pollen in sweet peas simply did not exist …
  • … mignonette ( Reseda odorata ) was absolutely sterile with pollen from same plant in spite of the …
  • … there sh d  be some difference in ovules & contents of pollen-grains (for the tubes penetrate …
  • … the same plant!’ ( To J. D. Hooker, 21 May [1868] ) Pollen tubes, or rapidly elongating vegetative …
  • … ovary of a flower; they are triggered to elongate when the pollen touches the stigmatic surface. …
  • … at the lessened fertility when he pollinated plants using pollen from other plants of the same …
  • … the early part of the flowering season quite sterile with pollen from the same plant, though fertile …
  • … as adults forever fixed in close proximity to others, so pollen from widely separated flowers could …
  • … stylar forms of flowers, Darwin had referred to unions where pollen from one form had been applied …
  • … that some forms were absolutely sterile with their own pollen while others had varying degrees of …
  • … Ernst Haeckel, ‘It is really wonderful what an effect pollen from a distinct seedling plant which …
  • … forms of flowers that showed sterility could exist when pollen from one form was applied to the same …

A fly on the flower: From Hermann Müller, 23 October 1867

Summary

In March 1867, Hermann Müller, a young teacher of natural sciences at a provincial Realschule (a type of secondary school that emphasised the natural sciences) in Lippstadt in the Prussian province of Westphalia, sent Darwin two papers on the mosses of…

Matches: 4 hits

  • … order to observe their adaptations for collecting nectar and pollen. A letter he wrote in October …
  • … of the hoverfly mouthparts that are specially adapted for pollen eating. Müller’s discovery seemed …
  • … as pseudotracheae), which were the perfect size for holding pollen grains. He further noted, having …
  • … in different species, depending on the size of the pollen eaten by each type of fly. It is amazing …

Floral Dimorphism

Summary

Sources|Discussion Questions|Experiment Floral studies In 1877 Darwin published a book that included a series of smaller studies on botanical subjects. Titled The different forms of flowers on plants of the same species, it consisted primarily of…

Matches: 2 hits

  • … class was able to readily observe the two sizes of style and pollen within these plants. To observe …
  • … .0254 mm.”[1] Darwin suggested that the difference in pollen sizes between the short and long-styled …

Essay: Evolutionary teleology

Summary

—by Asa Gray EVOLUTIONARY TELEOLOGY When Cuvier spoke of the ‘combination of organs in such order that they may be in consistence with the part which the animal has to play in Nature,’ his opponent, Geoffroy St.-Hilaire, rejoined, ‘I know nothing of…

Matches: 14 hits

  • … meaning. One good illustration of it is furnished by the pollen of flowers. The seeming waste of …
  • … ’ which every one has heard of. Myriads upon myriads of pollen-grains (each an elaborate organic …
  • … a violet, in which there are not many times more grains of pollen produced than there are of seeds …
  • … other flowers also, provided with a large surplus of pollen, and endowed (as the others are not) …
  • … to certain insects, which are thereby induced to convey this pollen from blossom to blossom, that it …
  • … of which are committed to insects, the likelihood that much pollen may be left behind or lost in the …
  • … in orchis-flowers is accounted for by the fact that the pollen is packed in coherent masses, all …
  • … against it when it sucks nectar from the flower, and so the pollen will be bodily conveyed from …
  • … case, that of pine-trees, the vast superabundance of pollen would be sheer waste if the intention …
  • … ’ as the means, no one is entitled to declare that pine-pollen is in wasteful excess. The cheapness …
  • … involved in similar difficulty. The superabundance of the pollen of pine-trees above referred to, …
  • … In the analogous instance of willows a diminished amount of pollen is correlated with direct …
  • … difference in the conveyance would reduce the quantity of pollen produced. It is, we know, in the …
  • … work and material; but why should it begin to produce less pollen? But this is as nothing compared …

Orchids

Summary

Sources|Discussion Questions|Experiment A project to follow On the Origin of Species Darwin began to observe English orchids and collect specimens from abroad in the years immediately following the publication of On the Origin of Species. Examining…

Matches: 2 hits

  • … , which ejects its pollinia with a sticky gland so that the pollen will stick on the head of an …
  • … of the genera Catasetum . This genera of orchid uses a pollen release mechanism that ejects …

From morphology to movement: observation and experiment

Summary

Darwin was a thoughtful observer of the natural world from an early age. Whether on a grand scale, as exemplified by his observations on geology, or a microscopic one, as shown by his early work on the eggs and larvae of tiny bryozoans, Darwin was…

Matches: 2 hits

  • … adapted for cross fertilisation (sticky glands containing pollen masses) or self fertilisation …
  • … to communicate their observations on what happened to the pollen masses. Darwin continued to …

Hermann Müller

Summary

Hermann (Heinrich Ludwig Hermann) Müller, was born in Mühlberg near Erfurt in 1829. He was the younger brother of Fritz Müller (1822–97). Following the completion of his secondary education at Erfurt in 1848, he studied natural sciences at Halle and Berlin…

Matches: 2 hits

  • … at the ways insects were adapted to gather nectar and pollen, just as flowers were adapted to …
  • … in hoverflies that allowed them to consume large amounts of pollen. Further research along these …

Orchids

Summary

Why Orchids? Darwin  wrote in his Autobiography, ‘During the summer of 1839, and, I believe, during the previous summer, I was led to attend to the cross-fertilisation of flowers by the aid of insects, from having come to the conclusion in my…

Matches: 5 hits

  • … puzzles me.— The Fly-Ophrys seems hardly ever to get its pollen masses moved at all, & the …
  • … agency—another part, namely the natural falling out of the pollen-masses, being adapted for self …
  • … in which I ask for information on what kinds of moths the pollen-masses of Orchids have been found …
  • … Hooker, ‘ I shall never rest till I see a Catasetum eject pollen-masses, & a Mormodes twist its …
  • … not only because of its remarkable ability to eject its pollen masses like a catapult, but also …

The evolution of honeycomb

Summary

Honeycombs are natural engineering marvels, using the least possible amount of wax to provide the greatest amount of storage space, with the greatest possible structural stability. Darwin recognised that explaining the evolution of the honey-bee’s comb…

Matches: 2 hits

  • … built back to back, and are used to store honey, nectar, and pollen, and to provide a nursery for …
  • … cells stored the greatest possible amount of honey and pollen with the least possible expenditure of …

Fool's experiments

Summary

‘I love fools' experiments. I am always making them’, was one of the most interesting things the zoologist E. Ray Lankester ever heard Darwin say. ‘A great deal might be written as comment on that statement’, Lankester later recorded, but he limited…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … to Lankester involved placing under a bell jar some pollen from a male flower together with, but …

Darwin in letters, 1864: Failing health

Summary

On receiving a photograph from Charles Darwin, the American botanist Asa Gray wrote on 11 July 1864: ‘the venerable beard gives the look of your having suffered, and … of having grown older’.  Because of poor health, Because of poor health, Darwin…

Matches: 4 hits

  • … whereby each form achieved the highest fertility only with pollen from the other two forms. The …
  • … collecting and measuring flower parts, drawing pictures of pollen-grains, stigmas, and anthers, and …
  • … writing on 14 April [1864] , ‘I can do as much pollen work as ever you like’. Comments on William’s …
  • … Crüger confirmed both his observation of  Catasetum pollen adhering to a humble-bee’s back, …

What is an experiment?

Summary

Darwin is not usually regarded as an experimenter, but rather as an astute observer and a grand theorist. His early career seems to confirm this. He began with detailed note-taking, collecting and cataloguing on the Beagle, and edited a descriptive zoology…

Matches: 2 hits

  • … aim; reproducing natural processes by hand (applying the pollen of one flower to another, immersing …
  • … and counting natural productions (stamens, pistils, pollen seeds; visits of bees to flowers); …

Darwin in letters, 1862: A multiplicity of experiments

Summary

1862 was a particularly productive year for Darwin. This was not only the case in his published output (two botanical papers and a book on the pollination mechanisms of orchids), but more particularly in the extent and breadth of the botanical experiments…

Matches: 2 hits

  • … to observe the effects of repeated crossing with own-form pollen. He also began systematically to …
  • … of styles and stamens and differently coloured and sized pollen grains; only an elaborate system of …

Species and varieties

Summary

On the origin of species by means of natural selection …so begins the title of Darwin’s most famous book, and the reader would rightly assume that such a thing as ‘species’ must therefore exist and be subject to description. But the title continues, …or…

Matches: 2 hits

  • … long pistils; he also noted differences in the size of the pollen in the two forms. Over the next …
  • … was self-sterile, while another was fertile with its own pollen. There seemed to be no universal law …

Scientific Practice

Summary

Specialism|Experiment|Microscopes|Collecting|Theory Letter writing is often seen as a part of scientific communication, rather than as integral to knowledge making. This section shows how correspondence could help to shape the practice of science, from…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … fertility of orchids he has self-pollinated and crossed with pollen of other species. …

Scientific Networks

Summary

Friendship|Mentors|Class|Gender In its broadest sense, a scientific network is a set of connections between people, places, and things that channel the communication of knowledge, and that substantially determine both its intellectual form and content,…

Matches: 3 hits

  • … He discusses how dipterous insects are adapted to eating pollen rather than only to sucking nectar. …
  • … flowers. One is ripening. Dissection of the other shows the pollen accomplishes fertilisation …
  • … interpretation of Acropera pollination is ingenious. Pollen-tubes of some cleistogamous flowers …

Darwin in letters, 1877: Flowers and honours

Summary

Ever since the publication of Expression, Darwin’s research had centred firmly on botany. The year 1877 was no exception. The spring and early summer were spent completing Forms of flowers, his fifth book on a botanical topic. He then turned to the…

Matches: 4 hits

  • … . ‘I will rank no plant as dimorphic without comparing pollen-grains & stigmas’, Darwin …
  • … and painstaking measurements of the size and number of pollen-grains, Darwin compared the fertility …
  • … especially with the aid of insects: the size and shape of pollen-grains, the position of stigmatic …
  • … life to which all organisms are subjected, by producing both pollen and seeds’ ( Forms of flowers …

A tale of two bees

Summary

Darwinian evolution theory fundamentally changed the way we understand the environment and even led to the coining of the word 'ecology'. Darwin was fascinated by bees: he devised experiments to study the comb-building technique of honey bees and…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … is, depressing the keel so that the mechanism which caused pollen to be deposited on the bee would …
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