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The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestic

Charles Darwin

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Book Excerpt: 
. . .All the higher animals, and the few insects which have been domesticated, have separated sexes, and must inevitably unite for each birth. With respect to the crossing of hermaphrodites, the subject is too large for the present volume, and will be more properly treated in a succeeding work. In my 'Origin of Species,' however, I have given a short abstract of the reasons which induce me to believe that all organic beings occasionally cross, though perhaps in some cases only at long intervals of time.[192] I will here just recall the fact that many plants, though hermaphrodite in structure, are unisexual in function;—such as those called by C. K. Sprengel dichogamous, in which the pollen and stigma of the same flower are matured at different periods; or those called by me reciprocally dimorphic, in which the flower's own pollen is not fitted to fertilise its own stigma; or again, the many kinds in which curious mechanical contrivances exist. . . Read More

Community Reviews

A continuation of volume 1 it still has the same scientific descriptions but related to a different set of animals and groups of species along with the plants and crops we are most familiar with. Very in-depth but my copy being for the kindle was lacking images which would have improved and develope

Darwin struggles to understand inheritance

Basic understanding of genetics came more than a generation after Darwin died. Here he describes numerous variations of inheritance and struggles to organize them into one system. Knowing how that came out, his thought process shows how brilliant he was.