[417] Lindley's 'Theory of Horticulture,' p. 333.
[418] 'Gardener's Chronicle,' 1865, p. 626; 1866, pp. 290, 730; and Verlot, 'Des Variétés,' p. 75.
[419] 'Gardener's Chronicle,' 1843, p. 628. In this article I suggested the following theory on the doubleness of flowers.
[420] Quoted by Gärtner, 'Bastarderzeugung,' s. 567.
[421] 'Gardener's Chronicle,' 1866, p. 901.
[422] Lindley, 'Theory of Horticulture,' p. 175-179; Godron, 'De l'Espèce,' tom. i. p. 106: Pickering, 'Races of Man;' Gallesio, 'Teoria della Riproduzione,' 1816, p. 101-110. Meyen ('Reise um Erde,' Th. ii. s. 214) states that at Manilla one variety of the banana is full of seeds; and Chamisso (Hooker's 'Bot. Misc.,' vol. i. p. 310) describes a variety of the bread-fruit in the Mariana Islands with small fruit, containing seeds which are frequently perfect. Burnes, in his 'Travels in Bokhara,' remarks on the pomegranate seeding in Mazenderan, as a remarkable peculiarity.
[423] Ingledew, in 'Transact. of Agricult. and Hort. Soc. of India,' vol. ii.
[424] 'De la Fécondation,' 1862, p. 308.
[425] Hooker's 'Bot. Misc.,' vol. i. p. 99; Gallesio, 'Teoria della Riproduzione,' p. 110.
[426] 'Transact. Linn. Soc.,' vol. xvii. p. 563.