wall of the mother-cell, thus leaving the grains separate in the anther. In entomophilous plants, on the contrary, the pollen is often viscid, or else studded with points, so that it may in some way adhere to the legs, bodies, or probosces of insect visitors.
While, as a rule, the pollen grains are free in the anther cells, there are two families, those of the Orchids and the Milkweeds, in which the grains are developed in a peculiar manner. In these families, but especially in the former, the grains cohere to one another by means of a viscid matter, and thus form one mass, technically known as a pollinium (Fig. 6). The cohesion is brought about by the walls of the mother-cells remaining, and so binding the grains more or less completely together. The
While in ordinary cases pollen is yellow, there are instances in which this feature varies. For example, in one form of flower of loose-strife (Lythrum salicaria) it is green. In the willow-herb (Epilobium angustifolium) it is blue. In the tulip it is black, and in mullein (Verbascum) it is red.
The seeds of flowering plants are produced by the action of the pollen on the stigma. Though both bulb and seed bear in themselves the potentiality of the future plant, the two are very different. This difference can be well stated by saying that the bulb perpetuates the individual, and the seed the species. When the