Gardenia (Rubiaceæ).

This genus, comprising about a hundred known species, is spread over tropical Africa, Asia, and America, and over all the groups of the tropical Pacific. On account of their handsome, white, scented flowers these shrubs are much appreciated by the Pacific islanders, who employ the flowers for personal decoration. Some ten species have been described from the groups of the open Pacific, all of which, with the exception of Gardenia tahitensis, which ranges the South Pacific from Fiji to the Marquesas and Tahiti, are seemingly peculiar to the different archipelagoes. Thus there are some six species endemic to Fiji, one to Samoa, and two to Hawaii.

The Hawaiian Islands are, however, quite isolated in this respect, since the group possesses only peculiar species; whilst a solitary species keeps up the connection between the groups on the south side of the equator. The Gardenias thus tell the same story of complete isolation in Hawaii, and of partial isolation in the archipelagoes of the South Pacific that is repeated by many other Pacific genera. Yet in Hawaii there has subsequently been some inter-island dispersal, since the species are not restricted each to a single island, but are found on two or three islands. The significance of the relation of the Hawaiian Gardenias to those of the combined Fijian and Tahitian areas consists in regarding the two regions, the Hawaiian and the South Pacific, as of equivalent value, and each large Hawaiian island as equivalent to one of the southern archipelagoes.

The Station of the Pacific Gardenias.—Although they may occur in the forests, the Gardenias of the Pacific are most characteristic of dry, thinly vegetated localities, and they have an inclination for the vicinity of the coast. In the Tahitian Group, as we learn from the writings of Nadeaud and Drake del Castillo, Gardenia tahitensis thrives much better on coral islands than on volcanic soils, and, in fact, rarely quits the “région madréporique.” It is sometimes planted in Polynesia near the houses, and both Nadeaud in Tahiti and Cheeseman in Rarotonga consider that it was probably introduced into those islands before the arrival of Europeans. The aborigines may have assisted in the dispersal of the genus to a small extent, but from the presence of peculiar species in Hawaii, Samoa, and Fiji it is apparent that the genus is truly indigenous in the Pacific islands, and long antedated their occupation by man. This is also evident from the station of the species in Hawaii, Samoa, and Fiji. In Hawaii they may be found on the dry forehills in the vicinity of the sea-border. In Samoa, as Reinecke informs us, Gardenia tahitensis is very widely spread in the mountain-forests, whilst the endemic species is found thriving in inundated coast districts. In Fiji I found the Gardenias to be especially characteristic (as is also pointed out by Horne) of the dry districts on the leeward side of the larger islands. On the rolling “talasinga” or “sun-burnt” plains of the north side of Vanua Levu they thrive in numbers; and here their leaf-buds and the extremities of the young shoots are often tipped or covered over with an amber-like gum-resin which the natives chew.

The Mode of Dispersal of the Pacific Gardenias.—The fruits of this genus are usually described as indehiscent. If this were true of Pacific plants it would be very difficult to explain the dispersal of hard, dry fruits an inch in size over this region. In the case of two or three Fijian species, I paid especial attention to this point by examining the plants in fruit. As exhibited in Fiji the fruits are globose, hard, and almost stony, with persistent adherent calyx, the seeds lying horizontally in a pulp at first firm and subsequently softening as the fruit matures. The fruits are not as a rule to be observed opening on the plant; but they are to be seen dehiscing septicidally on the ground beneath, the detached woody valves being scattered around. If one of the fruits gathered from the plant is kept soaking in water for some time it will begin to dehisce; and this is probably what occurs with fallen fruits in wet weather. Dr. Hillebrand regards the fruits of the Hawaiian species as indehiscent. I did not myself examine them, but it is not improbable that, like those in Fiji, they dehisce whilst lying soaking on the ground.

Judged merely from the dispersal standpoint, the fruits of the Fijian Gardenias come near to those of Pittosporum, and both can be in a sense described as baccate capsules. The flat, crustaceous seeds of Gardenia, which are usually two or three millimetres in size, are also well fitted for passing without injury through the digestive canal of a bird. It is likely that the two genera have been dispersed in the Pacific by the same kind of birds; and it should be remarked that their distribution is somewhat similar, both belonging to the warm regions of the Old World.

It might at first appear from some experiments of mine made in Fiji that the dried fruits of Gardenia could be dispersed over oceans by the currents. This receives some support by the preference for a littoral station sometimes shown by G. tahitensis in Tahiti, and by the occurrence of G. zanguebarica in the East African strand-flora (Schimper’s Ind. Mal. Strand-flora, p. 131). It will, however, be pointed out that currents could only have aided the dispersal of the genus to a limited extent. The fresh fruits of Fijian species, with or without the adherent calyx, have little or no buoyancy, and the seeds sink even after drying for months. But it was ascertained that fruits which had been kept for three months floated after four or five weeks’ immersion in sea-water. On examination, however, it was found that the valves gaped a little, being only held in apposition by the adherent calyx, and that water had penetrated into the interior, the pulp being in a state of decay. The fruits were, in fact, kept afloat in the latter part of the experiment partly by the investing calyx and partly by gas generated in the decomposing pulp. Ultimately they broke down altogether and the seeds sank. In the “rough-and-tumble” of ocean-transport this could scarcely be deemed an effective means of dispersal; and in the open sea a fortnight would probably represent the limit of the floating power. It is to the agency that has distributed the genus Pittosporum over the Pacific that we must look for the explanation of the dispersal of Gardenia over the same ocean, namely, to birds.