Cross-pollination is most commonly effected by insects (especially bees). There are a great many contrivances for pollination; some flowers are protandrous (Echium vulgare, Borago officin.), others are heterostylous (long-and short-styled: Pulmonaria officin.); the corona (ligules) is a protection against rain, and excludes certain insects. Some are barren when self-pollinated (Pulmonaria officinalis, Echium vulgare); others which have but little honey, may, failing insect-pollination, fertilise themselves, and in Myosotis versicolor this regularly occurs by the growth of the corolla during flowering, so that the anthers are brought into contact with the stigma. Honey is secreted on the hypogynous disc.—About 1,150 species, growing especially in the northern temperate zone, Mucilage is found (e.g. in the officinal root of Cynoglossum officinale, in the root of Symphytum): red dyes are found in some roots (e.g. Alkanet-root, the root of Alkanna tinctoria, which is also medicinal; S. E. Europe, Asia Minor); some are poisonous: Cynoglossum, Echium, Anchusa, etc. Several species are ornamental plants. Heliotropium (Peru) is cultivated chiefly on account of its pleasant scent; essential oils are otherwise very rare.
Fig. 573.-Myosotis. Inflorescence and gynœceum.
Order 3. Verbenaceæ. The majority are shrubs; a few are herbs or trees (Teak-tree); some are lianes. The branches are often square. The leaves are opposite or verticillate, without stipules; in some compound. The inflorescences are racemes, spikes, capitula, or dichasia. Five sepals; five petals in a gamopetalous, zygomorphic corolla, which is often bilabiate, but rarely to such an extent as in the Labiatæ, and the upper lip in some is larger than the under, in others smaller; stamens four didynamous, or two; the ovary is entire (not grooved or divided), 1- or 2-locular, or, as in the Labiatæ, divided into four loculi with an erect ovule in each, but in some the anterior carpel is suppressed. One terminal style. The fruit is, e.g. in Verbena, a 4 partite schizocarp with nut-like fruitlets; in Vitex (digitate leaves) a drupe with a 4-locular stone; in Clerodendron a similar fruit, with four free stones; in Lantana a bilocular stone, or two unilocular stones. The radicle is turned downwards. Endosperm small or absent.—Lippia, Stachytarpheta, Bouchea, Priva, Citharexylon, Callicarpa, etc.—The Verbenaceæ are closely allied to the Labiatæ; they differ especially in the ovary not being 4-lobed with gynobasic style, but undivided, almost spherical or ovoid with a terminal style. Again, the leaves are not so constantly opposite, and the inflorescences are various.
730 species; especially in the Tropics; there are several in America, especially Lantana-species; shrubby weeds.—Many of those mentioned are ORNAMENTAL PLANTS, especially Verbena; Vitex agnus castus is a S. European shrub. Lippia citriodora (S. Am.) etc., have strongly-scented leaves; the Teak tree (Tectona grandis) is one of the largest trees in East India, and has a very hard wood.
Avicennia is allied to this order; it inhabits the Mangrove swamps on tropical coasts. The endosperm emerges from the ovule, carrying the embryo with it; the embryo ultimately bursts the endosperm and lies free in the loculus of the fruit; this is then filled by the embryo with its large, green cotyledons, which are borne on an already hairy or rooted stem. The seedling thus developed falls from the tree, together with the fruit, and strikes root in the mud. One special cell of the endosperm at an earlier period becomes a highly-developed organ of suction, growing into a much-branched sac, very rich in protoplasm.
Order 4. Labiatæ. The special characteristics are: the square stem, the opposite leaves (without stipules), the inflorescences which are formed by two double unipared scorpioid cymes, the labiate corolla, the 4 didynamous stamens (the posterior being entirely suppressed) (Fig. [574]), and the 4-partite schizocarp with nut-like fruitlets. The floral formula is S5, P5, A5 (the posterior stamen is generally absent), G2.
Fig. 574.—Diagram of Lamium album: sv dichasia.
They are chiefly aromatic plants (herbs, shrubs, e.g. Lavender, or trees), volatile oil being formed in internal cells or in the glandular hairs, which cover all green parts. The stem is always more or less markedly square; the leaves are borne upon the flat sides, and are simple and penninerved, but vary in the other characters. The inflorescences are double unipared scorpioid cymes, which may be situated at some distance from one another in the axils of the foliage-leaves (Fig. [575] A), but frequently when the subtending leaves are bract-like, they are crowded into spike-like inflorescences (Lavandula, Mentha, Salvia, etc.), each of the so-called “whorls” (verticillaster, glomerulus) being a double unipared scorpioid cyme (Fig. [574]). (Solitary flowers are found in e.g. Scutellaria, and Origanum). The calyx is strongly gamosepalous, 5-toothed, often bilabiate (Fig. [575] B). The corolla is strongly bilabiate (Figs. [575], [576], etc.), with 2 lobes in the upper lip and 3 lobes in the under lip (an approach to regularity occurs only when the upper lip is small, and thus resembles one lobe, as in Mentha (Fig. [578]) and Lycopus, so that the corolla approaches the 4-merous corolla of Veronica and Plantago). The posterior stamen in the diagram (Fig. [574*]) is entirely suppressed; in most of the genera the posterior lateral stamens are the smaller (Fig. [575] D), and are entirely suppressed in some (see below); in others, e.g. Nepeta, they are the longer. 2 stamens are found in Salvia, Rosmarinus, Lycopus, etc. The two halves of the anthers are often separated from one another, and are placed at an angle with each other. The gynœceum has 1 style with a bifid extremity (Fig. [575] C) bearing the stigma; the true bilocular ovary is divided by a false partition-wall into 4 loculi, each with 1 erect ovule (Fig. [575] H). These 4 loculi project so strongly that the ovary becomes deeply 4-lobed with the style situated in the centre of the lobes and at their base, “gynobasic” (Figs. [575], [579]). A ring-like, often crenate, nectary surrounds the base of the ovary (Fig. [575] G, H). The embryo in this order, as in the Verbenaceæ, is directed downwards (Fig. [575] J) (it is directed upwards in the Boraginaceæ, which have an entirely similar fruit). Endosperm absent.