FOOTNOTES: CHAPTER X.
[1] Buffon, Hist. Nat., Oiseaux, 1780, VII, p. 3.
[2] Ibid., VIII, p. 115.
[3] Keeble, Jour. Gen., 1912, II, p. 173.
[4] Animals and Plants, ed. 1, 1868, II, pp. 180-5.
[5] Animals and Plants, ed. 1, 1868, II, p. 165.
[6] Species and Varieties, 1905, p. 471.
[7] Correns, Festschr. med.-nat. Ges. zur 84 Versamml. Deutsch. Naturf. u. Aertze. Münster i. W., 1912.
[8] This is a case of a somewhat different order and I mention it partly for that reason as an illustration of the complexity which such negative instances may present. The difficulty is that though the buffalo and the zebu can breed together, the foetus is too large to be born alive. (See Ackermann Ber. d. Ver. f. Naturk., Kassel, 1898, p. 69. Prof. S. Nathusius, of Halle, who has great experience in crossing Bovidae, tells me that he has always failed to cross the buffalo with other species.)
[9] In a paper to be published in the Report of the Genetic Conference, Paris, 1911, Bellair states that he obtained some partially fertile hybrids in the cross N. sylvestris × tabacum. As to the various degrees of sterility in hybrids between Nicotiana species see Lock, R. H., Ann. Roy. Bot. Gardens. Peradeniya, IV, 1909, p. 195.