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Darwin, Charles, 1809-1882

"On the Origin of Species By Means of Natural Selection, or, the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life"

But still there
are many hermaphrodite animals which certainly do not habitually pair,
and a vast majority of plants are hermaphrodites. What reason, it may
be asked, is there for supposing in these cases that two individuals
ever concur in reproduction? As it is impossible here to enter on
details, I must trust to some general considerations alone.
In the first place, I have collected so large a body of facts,
showing, in accordance with the almost universal belief of breeders,
that with animals and plants a cross between different varieties, or
between individuals of the same variety but of another strain, gives
vigour and fertility to the offspring; and on the other hand, that
CLOSE interbreeding diminishes vigour and fertility; that these facts
alone incline me to believe that it is a general law of nature
(utterly ignorant though we be of the meaning of the law) that no
organic being self-fertilises itself for an eternity of generations;
but that a cross with another individual is occasionally--perhaps at
very long intervals--indispensable.
On the belief that this is a law of nature, we can, I think,
understand several large classes of facts, such as the following,
which on any other view are inexplicable. Every hybridizer knows how
unfavourable exposure to wet is to the fertilisation of a flower, yet
what a multitude of flowers have their anthers and stigmas fully
exposed to the weather! but if an occasional cross be indispensable,
the fullest freedom for the entrance of pollen from another individual
will explain this state of exposure, more especially as the plant's
own anthers and pistil generally stand so close together that
self-fertilisation seems almost inevitable.


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