DIFFERENT FORMS OF REVERSION - IN
PURE OR UNCROSSED BREEDS, AS IN
PIGEONS, FOWLS, HORNLESS CATTLE
AND SHEEP, IN CULTIVATED
PLANTS - REVERSION
IN FERAL ANIMALS AND PLANTS - REVERSION IN
CROSSED
VARIETIES AND SPECIES - REVERSION
THROUGH BUD-PROPAGATION, AND BY
SEGMENTS IN THE SAME FLOWER
OR FRUIT - IN DIFFERENT PARTS OF THE BODY
IN
THE SAME ANIMAL - THE
ACT OF CROSSING A DIRECT CAUSE OF REVERSION,
VARIOUS CASES OF, WITH INSTINCTS - OTHER
PROXIMATE CAUSES OF
REVERSION - LATENT
CHARACTERS - SECONDARY SEXUAL CHARACTERS - UNEQUAL
DEVELOPMENT OF THE TWO SIDES
OF THE BODY - APPEARANCE WITH ADVANCING AGE
OF CHARACTERS DERIVED FROM
A CROSS - THE GERM WITH ALL ITS LATENT
CHARACTERS A WONDERFUL OBJECT - MONSTROSITIES - PELORIC
FLOWERS DUE IN
SOME CASES TO REVERSION.
The great principle of inheritance
to be discussed in this chapter has been recognised
by agriculturists and authors of various nations, as
shown by the scientific term Atavism, derived
from atavus, an ancestor; by the English terms
of Reversion, or Throwing back; by the
French Pas-en-arrière; and by the German Rueck-schlag,
or Rueck-schritt. When the child resembles
either grandparent more closely than its immediate
parents, our attention is not much arrested, though
in truth the fact is highly remarkable; but when the
child resembles some remote ancestor, or some distant
member in a collateral line, - and we must
attribute the latter case to the descent of all the
members from a common progenitor, - we feel
a just degree of astonishment. When one parent
alone displays some newly-acquired and generally inheritable
character, and the offspring do not inherit it, the
cause may lie in the other parent having the power
of prepotent transmission. But when both parents
are similarly characterised, and the child does not,
whatever the cause may be, inherit the character in
question, but resembles its grandparents, we have one
of the simplest cases of reversion. We continually
see another and even more simple case of atavism,
though not generally included under this head, namely,
when the son more closely resembles his maternal
than his paternal grandsire in some male attribute,
as in any peculiarity in the beard of man, the horns
of the bull, the hackles or comb of the cock, or, as
in certain diseases necessarily confined to the male
sex; for the mother cannot possess or exhibit such
male attributes, yet the child has inherited them,
through her blood, from his maternal grandsire.
The cases of reversion may be divided
into two main classes, which, however, in some instances,
blend into each other; namely, first, those occurring
in a variety or race which has not been crossed, but
has lost by variation some character that it formerly
possessed, and which afterwards reappears. The
second class includes all cases in which a distinguishable
individual, sub-variety, race, or species, has at some
former period been crossed with a distinct form, and
a character derived from this cross, after having
disappeared during one or several generations, suddenly
reappears. A third class, differing only in the
manner of reproduction, might be formed to include
all cases of reversion effected by means of buds,
and therefore independent of true or seminal generation.
Perhaps even a fourth class might be instituted, to
include reversions by segments in the same individual
flower or fruit, and in different parts of the body
in the same individual animal as it grows old.
But the two first main classes will be sufficient
for our purpose.
Reversion to lost Characters by
pure or uncrossed forms. - Striking instances
of this first class of cases were given in the sixth
chapter, namely, of the occasional reappearance, in
variously-coloured pure breeds of the pigeon, of blue
birds with all the marks which characterise the wild
Columba livia. Similar cases were given
in the case of the fowl. With the common ass,
as we now know that the legs of the wild progenitor
are striped, we may feel assured that the occasional
appearance of such stripes in the domestic animal
is a case of simple reversion. But I shall be
compelled to refer again to these cases, and therefore
will here pass them over.
The aboriginal species from which
our domesticated cattle and sheep are descended, no
doubt possessed horns; but several hornless breeds
are now well established. Yet in these - for
instance, in Southdown sheep - “it
is not unusual to find among the male lambs some with
small horns.” The horns, which thus occasionally
reappear in other polled breeds, either “grow
to the full size, or are curiously attached to the
skin alone and hang loosely down, or drop off."
The Galloways and Suffolk cattle have been hornless
for the last 100 or 150 years, but a horned calf, with
the horn often loosely attached, is occasionally born.
There is reason to believe that sheep
in their early domesticated condition were “brown
or dingy black;” but even in the time of David
certain flocks were spoken of as white as snow.
During the classical period the sheep of Spain are
described by several ancient authors as being black,
red, or tawny. At the present day, notwithstanding
the great care which is taken to prevent it, particoloured
lambs and some entirely black are occasionally dropped
by our most highly improved and valued breeds, such
as the Southdowns. Since the time of the famous
Bakewell, during the last century, the Leicester sheep
have been bred with the most scrupulous care; yet
occasionally grey-faced, or black-spotted, or wholly
black lambs appear. This occurs still more frequently
with the less improved breeds, such as the Norfolks.
As bearing on this tendency in sheep to revert to
dark colours, I may state (though in doing so I trench
on the reversion of crossed breeds, and likewise on
the subject of prepotency) that the Rev. W. D. Fox
was informed that seven white Southdown ewes were
put to a so-called Spanish ram, which had two small
black spots on his sides, and they produced thirteen
lambs, all perfectly black. Mr. Fox believes
that this ram belonged to a breed which he has himself
kept, and which is always spotted with black and white;
and he finds that Leicester sheep crossed by rams
of this breed always produce black lambs: he has
gone on recrossing these crossed sheep with pure white
Leicesters during three successive generations,
but always with the same result. Mr. Fox was
also told by the friend from whom the spotted breed
was procured, that he likewise had gone on for six
or seven generations crossing with white sheep, but
still black lambs were invariably produced.
Similar facts could be given with
respect to tailless breeds of various animals.
For instance, Mr. Hewitt states that chickens bred
from some Rumpless fowls, which were reckoned so good
that they won a prize at an exhibition, “in
a considerable number of instances were furnished with
fully developed tail-feathers.” On inquiry,
the original breeder of these fowls stated that, from
the time when he had first kept them, they had often
produced fowls furnished with tails; but that these
latter would again reproduce rumpless chickens.
Analogous cases of reversion occur
in the vegetable kingdom; thus “from seeds gathered
from the finest cultivated varieties of Heartsease
(Viola tricolor), plants perfectly wild both
in their foliage and their flowers are frequently
produced;" but the reversion in this instance is
not to a very ancient period, for the best existing
varieties of the heartsease are of comparatively modern
origin. With most of our cultivated vegetables
there is some tendency to reversion to what is known
to be, or may be presumed to be, their aboriginal
state; and this would be more evident if gardeners
did not generally look over their beds of seedlings,
and pull up the false plants or “rogues”
as they are called. It has already been remarked,
that some few seedling apples and pears generally resemble,
but apparently are not identical with, the wild trees
from which they are descended. In our turnip
and carrot-beds a few plants often “break” - that
is, flower too soon; and their roots are generally
found to be hard and stringy, as in the parent-species.
By the aid of a little selection, carried on during
a few generations, most of our cultivated plants could
probably be brought back, without any great change
in their conditions of life, to a wild or nearly wild
condition: Mr. Buckman has effected this with
the parsnip; and Mr. Hewett C. Watson, as
he informs me, selected, during three generations,
“the most diverging plants of Scotch kail, perhaps
one of the least modified varieties of the cabbage;
and in the third generation some of the plants came
very close to the forms now established in England
about old castle-walls, and called indigenous.”
Reversion in Animals and Plants
which have run wild. - In the cases hitherto
considered, the reverting animals and plants have not
been exposed to any great or abrupt change in their
conditions of life which could have induced this tendency;
but it is very different with animals and plants which
have become feral or run wild. It has been repeatedly
asserted in the most positive manner by various authors,
that feral animals and plants invariably return to
their primitive specific type. It is curious on
what little evidence this belief rests. Many
of our domesticated animals could not subsist in a
wild state; thus, the more highly improved breeds of
the pigeon will not “field” or search
for their own food. Sheep have never become feral,
and would be destroyed by almost every beast of prey.
In several cases we do not know the aboriginal parent-species,
and cannot possibly tell whether or not there has
been any close degree of reversion. It is not
known in any instance what variety was first turned
out; several varieties have probably in some cases
run wild, and their crossing alone would tend to obliterate
their proper character. Our domesticated animals
and plants, when they run wild, must always be exposed
to new conditions of life, for, as Mr. Wallace
has well remarked, they have to obtain their own food,
and are exposed to competition with the native productions.
Under these circumstances, if our domesticated animals
did not undergo change of some kind, the result would
be quite opposed to the conclusions arrived at in
this work. Nevertheless, I do not doubt that the
simple fact of animals and plants becoming feral,
does cause some tendency to reversion to the primitive
state; though this tendency has been much exaggerated
by some authors.
I will briefly run through the recorded
cases. With neither horses nor cattle is
the primitive stock known; and it has been shown in
former chapters that they have assumed different
colours in different countries. Thus the
horses which have run wild in South America are generally
brownish-bay, and in the East dun-coloured; their heads
have become larger and coarser, and this may be
due to reversion. No careful description
has been given of the feral goat. Dogs which have
run wild in various countries have hardly anywhere
assumed a uniform character; but they are probably
descended from several domestic races, and aboriginally
from several distinct species. Feral cats, both
in Europe and La Plata, are regularly striped;
in some cases they have grown to an unusually
large size, but do not differ from the domestic animal
in any other character. When variously-coloured
tame rabbits are turned out in Europe, they generally
reacquire the colouring of the wild animal; there
can be no doubt that this does really occur, but we
should remember that oddly-coloured and conspicuous
animals would suffer much from beasts of prey
and from being easily shot; this at least was
the opinion of a gentleman who tried to stock his woods
with a nearly white variety; and when thus destroyed,
they would in truth be supplanted by, instead
of being transformed into, the common rabbit.
We have seen that the feral rabbits of Jamaica,
and especially of Porto Santo, have assumed new
colours and other new characters. The best known
case of reversion, and that on which the widely-spread
belief in its universality apparently rests, is
that of pigs. These animals have run wild
in the West Indies, South America, and the Falkland
Islands, and have everywhere acquired the dark
colour, the thick bristles, and great tusks of
the wild boar; and the young have reacquired longitudinal
stripes. But even in the case of the pig, Roulin
describes the half-wild animals in different parts
of South America as differing in several respects.
In Louisiana the pig has run wild, and is said
to differ a little in form, and much in colour,
from the domestic animal, yet does not closely
resemble the wild boar of Europe. With pigeons
and fowls, it is not known what variety was first
turned out, nor what character the feral birds
have assumed. The guinea-fowl in the West
Indies, when feral, seems to vary more than in the
domesticated state.
With respect to plants run wild, Dr.
Hooker has strongly insisted on what slight
evidence the common belief in their power of reversion
rests. Godron describes wild turnips,
carrots, and celery; but these plants in their
cultivated state hardly differ from their wild prototypes,
except in the succulency and enlargement of certain
parts, - characters which would be surely
lost by plants growing in a poor soil and struggling
with other plants. No cultivated plant has run
wild on so enormous a scale as the cardoon (Cynara
cardunculus) in La Plata. Every botanist
who has seen it growing there, in vast beds, as high
as a horse’s back, has been struck with its peculiar
appearance; but whether it differs in any important
point from the cultivated Spanish form, which
is said not to be prickly like its American descendant,
or whether it differs from he wild Mediterranean species,
which is said not to be social, I do not know.
Reversion to Characters derived
from a Cross, in the case of Sub-varieties, Races,
and Species. - When an individual having
some recognizable peculiarity unites with another
of the same sub-variety, not having the peculiarity
in question, it often reappears in the descendants
after an interval of several generations. Every
one must have noticed, or heard from old people of
children closely resembling in appearance or mental
disposition, or in so small and complex a character
as expression, one of their grandparents, or some
more distant collateral relation. Very many anomalies
of structure and diseases, of which instances have
been given in the last chapter, have come into a family
from one parent, and have reappeared in the progeny
after passing over two or three generations.
The following case has been communicated to me on good
authority, and may, I believe, be fully trusted:
a pointer-bitch produced seven puppies; four were
marked with blue and white, which is so unusual a colour
with pointers that she was thought to have played
false with one of the greyhounds, and the whole litter
was condemned; but the gamekeeper was permitted to
save one as a curiosity. Two years afterwards
a friend of the owner saw the young dog, and declared
that he was the image of his old pointer-bitch Sappho,
the only blue and white pointer of pure descent which
he had ever seen. This led to close inquiry,
and it was proved that he was the great-great-grandson
of Sappho; so that, according to the common expression,
he had only 1-16th of her blood in his veins.
Here it can hardly be doubted that a character derived
from a cross with an individual of the same variety
reappeared after passing over three generations.
When two distinct races are crossed,
it is notorious that the tendency in the offspring
to revert to one or both parent-forms is strong, and
endures for many generations. I have myself seen
the clearest evidence of this in crossed pigeons and
with various plants. Mr. Sidney states that,
in a litter of Essex pigs, two young ones appeared
which were the image of the Berkshire boar that had
been used twenty-eight years before in giving size
and constitution to the breed. I observed in the
farmyard at Betley Hall some fowls showing a strong
likeness to the Malay breed, and was told by Mr. Tollet
that he had forty years before crossed his birds with
Malays; and that, though he had at first attempted
to get rid of this strain, he had subsequently given
up the attempt in despair, as the Malay character
would reappear.
This strong tendency in crossed breeds
to revert has given rise to endless discussions in
how many generations after a single cross, either with
a distinct breed or merely with an inferior animal,
the breed may be considered as pure, and free from
all danger of reversion. No one supposes that
less than three generations suffices, and most breeders
think that six, seven, or eight are necessary, and
some go to still greater lengths. But neither
in the case of a breed which has been contaminated
by a single cross, nor when, in the attempt to form
an intermediate breed, half-bred animals have been
matched together during many generations, can any
rule be laid down how soon the tendency to reversion
will be obliterated. It depends on the difference
in the strength or prepotency of transmission in the
two parent-forms, on their actual amount of difference,
and on the nature of the conditions of life to which
the crossed offspring are exposed. But we must
be careful not to confound these cases of reversion
to characters gained from a cross, with those given
under the first class, in which characters originally
common to both parents, but lost at some former
period, reappear; for such characters may recur after
an almost indefinite number of generations.
The law of reversion is equally powerful
with hybrids, when they are sufficiently fertile to
breed together, or when they are repeatedly crossed
with either pure parent-form, as with mongrels.
It is not necessary to give instances, for in the
case of plants almost every one who has worked on
this subject from the time of Koelreuter to the present
day has insisted on this tendency. Gaertner has
recorded some good instances; but no one has given
more striking cases than Naudin. The tendency differs
in degree or strength in different groups, and partly
depends, as we shall presently see, on the fact of
the parent-plants having been long cultivated.
Although the tendency to reversion is extremely general
with nearly all mongrels and hybrids, it cannot be
considered as invariably characteristic of them; there
is, also, reason to believe that it may be mastered
by long-continued selection; but these subjects will
more properly be discussed in a future chapter on
Crossing. From what we see of the power and scope
of reversion, both in pure races and when varieties
or species are crossed, we may infer that characters
of almost every kind are capable of reappearance after
having been lost for a great length of time. But
it does not follow from this that in each particular
case certain characters will reappear: for instance,
this will not occur when a race is crossed with another
endowed with prepotency of transmission. In some
few cases the power of reversion wholly fails, without
our being able to assign any cause for the failure:
thus it has been stated that in a French family in
which 85 out of above 600 members, during six generations,
had been subject to night-blindness, “there
has not been a single example of this affection in
the children of parents who were themselves free from
it."
Reversion through Bud-propagation - Partial
Reversion, by segments in the same flower or fruit,
or in different parts of the body in the same
individual animal. - In the eleventh chapter,
many cases of reversion by buds, independently of
seminal generation, were given - as when a
leaf-bud on a variegated, curled, or laciniated variety
suddenly reassumes its proper character; or as when
a Provence-rose appears on a moss-rose, or a peach
on a nectarine-tree. In some of these cases only
half the flower or fruit, or a smaller segment, or
mere stripes, reassumed their former character; and
here we have with buds reversion by segments.
Vilmorin has also recorded several cases with
plants derived from seed, of flowers reverting by
stripes or blotches to their primitive colours:
he states that in all such cases a white or pale-coloured
variety must first be formed, and, when this is propagated
for a length of time by seed, striped seedlings occasionally
make their appearance; and these can afterwards by
care be multiplied by seed.
The stripes and segments just referred
to are not due, as far as is known, to reversion to
characters derived from a cross, but to characters
lost by variation. These cases, however, as Naudin
insists in his discussion on disjunction of character,
are closely analogous with those given in the eleventh
chapter, in which crossed plants are known to have
produced half-and-half or striped flowers and fruit,
or distinct kinds of flowers on the same root resembling
the two parent-forms. Many piebald animals probably
come under this same head. Such cases, as we shall
see in the chapter on Crossing, apparently result
from certain characters not readily blending together,
and, as a consequence of this incapacity for fusion,
the offspring either perfectly resemble one of their
two parents, or resemble one parent in one part and
the other parent in another part; or whilst young
are intermediate in character, but with advancing age
revert wholly or by segments to either parent-form,
or to both. Thus young trees of the Cytisus
adami are intermediate in foliage and flowers between
the two parent-forms; but when older the buds continually
revert either partially or wholly to both forms.
The cases given in the eleventh chapter on the changes
which occurred during growth in crossed plants
of Tropaeolum, Cereus, Datura, and Lathyrus are all
analogous. As however these plants are hybrids
of the first generation, and as their buds after a
time come to resemble their parents and not their
grandparents, these cases do not at first appear to
come under the law of reversion in the ordinary sense
of the word; nevertheless, as the change is effected
through a succession of bud-generations on the same
plant, they may be thus included.
Analogous facts have been observed
in the animal kingdom, and are more remarkable, as
they occur strictly in the same individual, and not
as with plants through a succession of bud-generations.
With animals the act of reversion, if it can be so
designated, does not pass over a true generation,
but merely over the early stages of growth in the same
individual. For instance, I crossed several white
hens with a black cock, and many of the chickens were
during the first year perfectly white, but acquired
during the second year black feathers; on the other
hand, some of the chickens which were at first black
became during the second year piebald with white.
A great breeder says, that a Pencilled Brahma hen
which has any of the blood of the Light Brahma in her,
will “occasionally produce a pullet well pencilled
during the first year, but she will most likely moult
brown on the shoulders and become quite unlike her
original colours in the second year.” The
same thing occurs with Light Brahmas if of impure
blood. I have observed exactly similar cases with
the crossed offspring from differently coloured pigeons.
But here is a more remarkable fact: I crossed
a turbit, which has a frill formed by the feathers
being reversed on its breast, with a trumpeter; and
one of the young pigeons thus raised showed at first
not a trace of the frill, but, after moulting thrice,
a small yet unmistakably distinct frill appeared on
its breast. According to Girou, calves produced
from a red cow by a black bull, or from a black cow
by a red bull, are not rarely born red, and subsequently
become black.
In the foregoing cases, the characters
which appear with advancing age are the result of
a cross in the previous or some former generation;
but in the following cases, the characters which thus
reappear formerly appertained to the species, and
were lost at a more or less remote epoch. Thus,
according to Azara, the calves of a hornless race
of cattle which originated in Corrientes, though at
first quite hornless, as they become adult sometimes
acquire small, crooked, and loose horns; and these
in succeeding years occasionally become attached to
the skull. White and black bantams, both of which
generally breed true, sometimes assume as they grow
old a saffron or red plumage. For instance, a
first-rate black bantam has been described, which
during three seasons was perfectly black, but then
annually became more and more red; and it deserves
notice that this tendency to change, whenever it occurs
in a bantam, “is almost certain to prove hereditary."
The cuckoo or blue-mottled Dorking cock, when old,
is liable to acquire yellow or orange hackles in place
of his proper bluish-grey hackles. Now, as Gallus
bankiva is coloured red and orange, and as Dorking
fowls and both kinds of bantams are descended from
this species, we can hardly doubt that the change which
occasionally occurs in the plumage of these birds
as their age advances, results from a tendency in
the individual to revert to the primitive type.
Crossing as a direct cause of Reversion. - It
has long been notorious that hybrids and mongrels
often revert to both or to one of their parent-forms,
after an interval of from two to seven or eight, or
according to some authorities even a greater number
of generations. But that the act of crossing
in itself gives an impulse towards reversion, as shown
by the reappearance of long-lost characters, has never,
I believe, been hitherto proved. The proof lies
in certain peculiarities, which do not characterise
the immediate parents, and therefore cannot have been
derived from them, frequently appearing in the offspring
of two breeds when crossed, which peculiarities never
appear, or appear with extreme rarity, in these same
breeds, as long as they are precluded from crossing.
As this conclusion seems to me highly curious and
novel, I will give the evidence in detail.
My attention was first called to this
subject, and I was led to make numerous experiments,
by MM. Boitard and Corbie having stated that,
when they crossed certain breeds, pigeons coloured
like the wild C. livia, or the common dovecot,
namely, slaty-blue, with double black wing-bars,
sometimes chequered with black, white loins, the tail
barred with black, with the outer feathers edged
with white, were almost invariably produced.
The breeds which I crossed, and the remarkable results
attained, have been fully described in the sixth chapter.
I selected pigeons, belonging to true and ancient
breeds, which had not a trace of blue or any of
the above specified marks; but when crossed, and
their mongrels recrossed, young birds were continually
produced, more or less plainly coloured slaty-blue,
with some or all of the proper characteristic
marks. I may recall to the reader’s memory
one case, namely, that of a pigeon, hardly distinguishable
from the wild Shetland species, the grandchild
of a red-spot, white fantail, and two black barbs,
from any of which, when purely-bred, the production
of a pigeon coloured like the wild C. livia
would have been almost a prodigy.
I was thus led to make the experiments,
recorded in the seventh chapter, on fowls.
I selected long-established, pure breeds, in which
there was not a trace of red, yet in several of
the mongrels feathers of this colour appeared;
and one magnificent bird, the offspring of a black
Spanish cock and white Silk hen, was coloured almost
exactly like the wild Gallus bankiva.
All who know anything of the breeding of poultry
will admit that tens of thousands of pure Spanish and
of pure white Silk fowls might have been reared
without the appearance of a red feather.
The fact, given on the authority of Mr. Tegetmeier,
of the frequent appearance, in mongrel fowls,
of pencilled or transversely-barred feathers,
like those common to many gallinaceous birds,
is likewise apparently a case of reversion to a character
formerly possessed by some ancient progenitor of
the family. I owe to the kindness of this
same excellent observer the inspection of some neck-hackles
and tail-feathers from a hybrid between the common
fowl and a very distinct species, the Gallus
varius; and these feathers are transversely
striped in a conspicuous manner with dark metallic
blue and grey, a character which could not have
been derived from either immediate parent.
I have been informed by Mr. B. P. Brent,
that he crossed a white Aylesbury drake and a
black so-called Labrador duck, both of which are true
breeds, and he obtained a young drake closely like
the mallard (A. boschas). Of the musk-duck
(A. moschata, Linn.) there are two sub-breeds,
namely, white and slate-coloured; and these I am informed
breed true, or nearly true. But the Rev. W.
D. Fox tells me that, by putting a white drake
to a slate-coloured duck, black birds, pied with white,
like the wild musk-duck, were always produced.
We have seen in the fourth chapter,
that the so-called Himalayan rabbit, with its
snow-white body, black ears, nose, tail, and feet,
breeds perfectly true. This race is known
to have been formed by the union of two varieties
of silver-grey rabbits. Now, when a Himalayan
doe was crossed by a sandy-coloured buck, a silver-grey
rabbit was produced; and this is evidently a case
of reversion to one of the parent varieties.
The young of the Himalayan rabbit are born snow-white,
and the dark marks do not appear until some time subsequently;
but occasionally young Himalayan rabbits are born of
a light silver-grey, which colour soon disappears;
so that here we have a trace of reversion, during
an early period of life, to the parent-varieties,
independently of any recent cross.
In the third chapter is was shown that
at an ancient period some breeds of cattle in
the wilder parts of Britain were white with dark ears,
and that the cattle now kept half wild in certain
parks, and those which have run quite wild in
two distant parts of the world, are likewise thus
coloured. Now, an experienced breeder, Mr. J.
Beasley, of Northamptonshire, crossed some
carefully selected West Highland cows with purely-bred
shorthorn bulls. The bulls were red, red and
white, or dark roan; and the Highland cows were
all of a red colour, inclining to a light or yellow
shade. But a considerable number of the offspring - and
Mr. Beasley calls attention to this as a remarkable
fact - were white, or white with red ears.
Bearing in mind that none of the parents were
white, and that they were purely-bred animals, it is
highly probable that here the offspring reverted,
in consequence of the cross, to the colour either
of the aboriginal parent-species or of some ancient
and half-wild parent-breed. The following case,
perhaps, comes under the same head: cows
in their natural state have their udders but little
developed, and do not yield nearly so much milk as
our domesticated animals. Now there is some
reason to believe that cross-bred animals
between two kinds, both of which are good milkers,
such as Alderneys and Shorthorns, often turn out
worthless in this respect.
In the chapter on the Horse reasons
were assigned for believing that the primitive
stock was striped and dun-coloured; and details were
given, showing that in all parts of the world stripes
of a dark colour frequently appear along the spine,
across the legs, and on the shoulders, where they
are occasionally double or treble, and even sometimes
on the face and body of horses of all breeds and of
all colours. But the stripes appear most
frequently on the various kinds of duns.
They may sometimes plainly be seen on foals, and subsequently
disappear. The dun-colour and the stripes
are strongly transmitted when a horse thus characterised
is crossed with any other; but I was not able
to prove that striped duns are generally produced from
the crossing of two distinct breeds, neither of
which are duns, though this does sometimes occur.
The legs of the ass are often striped,
and this may be considered as a reversion to the
wild parent-form, the Asinus taeniopus of Abyssinia,
which is thus striped. In the domestic animal
the stripes on the shoulder are occasionally double,
or forked at the extremity, as in certain zebrine
species. There is reason to believe
that the foal is frequently more plainly striped on
the legs than the adult animal. As with the
horse, I have not acquired any distinct evidence
that the crossing of differently-coloured varieties
of the ass brings out the stripes.
But now let us turn to the result of
crossing the horse and ass. Although mules
are not nearly so numerous in England as asses, I have
seen a much greater number with striped legs, and
with the stripes far more conspicuous than in
either parent-form. Such mules are generally
light-coloured, and might be called fallow-duns.
The shoulder-stripe in one instance was deeply
forked at the extremity, and in another instance
was double, though united in the middle. Mr. Martin
gives a figure of a Spanish mule with strong zebra-like
marks on its legs, and remarks, that mules
are particularly liable to be thus striped on their
legs. In South America, according to Roulin,
such stripes are more frequent and conspicuous
in the mule than in the ass. In the United
States, Mr. Gosse, speaking of these animals, says,
“that in a great number, perhaps in nine
out of every ten, the legs are banded with transverse
dark stripes.”
Many years ago I saw in the Zoological
Gardens a curious triple hybrid, from a bay mare,
by a hybrid from a male ass and female zebra.
This animal when old had hardly any stripes; but
I was assured by the superintendent, that when
young it had shoulder-stripes, and faint stripes
on its flanks and legs. I mention this case more
especially as an instance of the stripes being
much plainer during youth than in old age.
As the zebra has such conspicuously
striped legs, it might have been expected that
the hybrids from this animal and the common ass would
have had their legs in some degree striped; but
it appears from the figures given in Dr. Gray’s
‘Knowsley Gleanings,’ and still more plainly
from that given by Geoffroy and F. Cuvier, that
the legs are much more conspicuously striped than
the rest of the body; and this fact is intelligible
only on the belief that the ass aids in giving, through
the power of reversion, this character to its hybrid
offspring.
The quagga is banded over the whole
front part of its body like a zebra, but has no
stripes on its legs, or mere traces of them. But
in the famous hybrid bred by Lord Morton,
from a chesnut, nearly purely-bred, Arabian mare,
by a male quagga, the stripes were “more strongly
defined and darker than those on the legs of the quagga.”
The mare was subsequently put to a black Arabian
horse, and bore two colts, both of which, as formerly
stated, were plainly striped on the legs, and
one of them likewise had stripes on the neck and body.
The Asinus Indicus is characterised
by a spinal stripe, without shoulder or leg
stripes; but traces of these latter stripes may occasionally
be seen even in the adult; and Colonel S. Poole,
who has had ample opportunities for observation,
informs me that in the foal, when first born,
the head and legs are often striped, but the shoulder-stripe
is not so distinct as in the domestic ass; all these
stripes, excepting that along the spine, soon disappear.
Now a hybrid, raised at Knowsley from a female
of this species by a male domestic ass, had all
four legs transversely and conspicuously striped,
had three short stripes on each shoulder, and had
even some zebra-like stripes on its face!
Dr. Gray informs me that he has seen a second hybrid
of the same parentage similarly striped.
From these facts we see that the crossing
of the several equine species tends in a marked manner
to cause stripes to appear on various parts of the
body, especially on the legs. As we do not know
whether the primordial parent of the genus was striped,
the appearance of the stripes can only hypothetically
be attributed to reversion. But most persons,
after considering the many undoubted cases of variously
coloured marks reappearing by reversion in crossed
pigeons, fowls, ducks, &c., will come to the same
conclusion with respect to the horse-genus; and in
this case we must admit that the progenitor of the
group was striped on the legs, shoulders, face, and
probably over the whole body, like a zebra. If
we reject this view, the frequent and almost regular
appearance of stripes in the several foregoing hybrids
is left without any explanation.
It would appear that with crossed
animals a similar tendency to the recovery of lost
characters holds good even with instincts. There
are some breeds of fowls which are called “everlasting
layers,” because they have lost the instinct
of incubation; and so rare is it for them to incubate
that I have seen notices published in works on poultry,
when hens of such breeds have taken to sit. Yet
the aboriginal species was of course a good incubator;
for with birds in a state of nature hardly any
instinct is so strong as this. Now, so many cases
have been recorded of the crossed offspring from two
races, neither of which are incubators, becoming first-rate
sitters, that the reappearance of this instinct must
be attributed to reversion from crossing. One
author goes so far as to say, “that a cross
between two non-sitting varieties almost invariably
produces a mongrel that becomes broody, and sits with
remarkable steadiness." Another author, after
giving a striking example, remarks that the fact can
be explained only on the principle that “two
negatives make a positive.” It cannot,
however, be maintained that hens produced from a cross
between two non-sitting breeds invariably recover
their lost instinct, any more than that crossed fowls
or pigeons invariably recover the red or blue plumage
of their prototypes. I raised several chickens
from a Polish hen by a Spanish cock, - breeds
which do not incubate, - and none of the young
hens at first recovered their instinct, and this appeared
to afford a well-marked exception to the foregoing
rule; but one of these hens, the only one which was
preserved, in the third year sat well on her eggs and
reared a brood of chickens. So that here we have
the appearance with advancing age of a primitive instinct,
in the same manner as we have seen that the red plumage
of the Gallus bankiva is sometimes reacquired
by crossed and purely-bred fowls of various kinds
as they grow old.
The parents of all our domesticated
animals were of course aboriginally wild in disposition;
and when a domesticated species is crossed with a
distinct species, whether this is a domesticated or
only tamed animal, the hybrids are often wild
to such a degree, that the fact is intelligible only
on the principle that the cross has caused a partial
return to the primitive disposition.
The Earl of Powis formerly imported
some thoroughly domesticated humped cattle from India,
and crossed them with English breeds, which belong
to a distinct species; and his agent remarked to me,
without any question having been asked, how oddly
wild the cross-bred animals were. The European
wild boar and the Chinese domesticated pig are almost
certainly specifically distinct: Sir F. Darwin
crossed a sow of the latter breed with a wild Alpine
boar which had become extremely tame, but the young,
though having half-domesticated blood in their veins,
were “extremely wild in confinement, and would
not eat swill like common English pigs.”
Mr. Hewitt, who has had great experience in crossing
tame cock-pheasants with fowls belonging to five breeds,
gives as the character of all “extraordinary
wildness;" but I have myself seen one exception
to this rule. Mr. S. J. Salter, who raised
a large number of hybrids from a bantam-hen by Gallus
Sonneratii, states that “all were exceedingly
wild.” Mr. Waterton bred some wild
ducks from eggs hatched under a common duck, and the
young were allowed to cross freely both amongst themselves
and with the tame ducks; they were “half wild
and half tame; they came to the windows to be fed,
but still they had a wariness about them quite remarkable.”
On the other hand, mules from the
horse and ass are certainly not in the least wild,
yet they are notorious for obstinacy and vice.
Mr. Brent, who has crossed canary-birds with many
kinds of finches, has not observed, as he informs
me, that the hybrids were in any way remarkably wild.
Hybrids are often raised between the common and musk
duck, and I have been assured by three persons, who
have kept these crossed birds, that they were not
wild; but Mr. Garnett observed that his female
hybrids exhibited “migratory propensities,”
of which there is not a vestige in the common or musk
duck. No case is known of this latter bird
having escaped and become wild in Europe or Asia,
except, according to Pallas, on the Caspian Sea; and
the common domestic duck only occasionally becomes
wild in districts where large lakes and fens abound.
Nevertheless, a large number of cases have been recorded
of hybrids from these two ducks, although so few are
reared in comparison with purely-bred birds of either
species, having been shot in a completely wild state.
It is improbable that any of these hybrids could have
acquired their wildness from the musk-duck having
paired with a truly wild duck; and this is known not
to be the case in North America; hence we must infer
that they have reacquired, through reversion, their
wildness, as well as renewed powers of flight.
These latter facts remind us of the
statements, so frequently made by travellers in all
parts of the world, on the degraded state and savage
disposition of crossed races of man. That many
excellent and kind-hearted mulattos have existed no
one will dispute; and a more mild and gentle set of
men could hardly be found than the inhabitants of the
island of Chiloe, who consist of Indians commingled
with Spaniards in various proportions. On the
other hand, many years ago, long before I had thought
of the present subject, I was struck with the fact
that, in South America, men of complicated descent
between Negroes, Indians, and Spaniards, seldom had,
whatever the cause might be, a good expression.
Livingstone, - and a more unimpeachable authority
cannot be quoted, - after speaking of a half-caste
man on the Zambesi, described by the Portuguese as
a rare monster of inhumanity, remarks, “It is
unaccountable why half-castes, such as he, are so
much more cruel than the Portuguese, but such is undoubtedly
the case.” An inhabitant remarked to Livingstone,
“God made white men, and God made black men,
but the Devil made half-castes." When two races,
both low in the scale, are crossed, the progeny
seems to be eminently bad. Thus the noble-hearted
Humboldt, who felt none of that prejudice against
the inferior races now so current in England, speaks
in strong terms of the bad and savage disposition
of Zambos, or half-castes between Indians and
Negroes; and this conclusion has been arrived at by
various observers. From these facts we may perhaps
infer that the degraded state of so many half-castes
is in part due to reversion to a primitive and savage
condition, induced by the act of crossing, as well
as to the unfavourable moral conditions under which
they generally exist.
Summary on the proximate causes
leading to Reversion. - When purely-bred
animals or plants reassume long-lost characters, - when
the common ass, for instance, is born with striped
legs, when a pure race of black or white pigeons throws
a slaty-blue bird, or when a cultivated heartsease
with large and rounded flowers produces a seedling
with small and elongated flowers, - we are
quite unable to assign any proximate cause. When
animals run wild, the tendency to reversion, which,
though it has been greatly exaggerated, no doubt exists,
is sometimes to a certain extent intelligible.
Thus, with feral pigs, exposure to the weather will
probably favour the growth of the bristles, as is
known to be the case with the hair of other domesticated
animals, and through correlation the tusks will tend
to be redeveloped. But the reappearance of coloured
longitudinal stripes on young feral pigs cannot be
attributed to the direct action of external conditions.
In this case, and in many others, we can only say that
changed habits of life apparently have favoured a
tendency, inherent or latent in the species, to return
to the primitive state.
It will be shown in a future chapter
that the position of flowers on the summit of the
axis, and the position of seeds within the capsule,
sometimes determine a tendency towards reversion;
and this apparently depends on the amount of sap or
nutriment which the flower-buds and seeds receive.
The position, also, of buds, either on branches or
on roots, sometimes determines, as was formerly shown,
the transmission of the proper character of the
variety, or its reversion to a former state.
We have seen in the last section that
when two races or species are crossed there is the
strongest tendency to the reappearance in the offspring
of long-lost characters, possessed by neither parent
nor immediate progenitor. When two white, or
red, or black pigeons, of well-established breeds,
are united, the offspring are almost sure to inherit
the same colours; but when differently-coloured birds
are crossed, the opposed forces of inheritance apparently
counteract each other, and the tendency which is inherent
in both parents to produce slaty-blue offspring becomes
predominant. So it is in several other cases.
But when, for instance, the ass is crossed with A.
Indicus or with the horse, - animals which
have not striped legs, - and the hybrids
have conspicuous stripes on their legs and even on
their faces, all that can be said is, that an inherent
tendency to reversion is evolved through some disturbance
in the organisation caused by the act of crossing.
Another form of reversion is far commoner,
indeed is almost universal with the offspring from
a cross, namely, to the characters proper to either
pure parent-form. As a general rule, crossed
offspring in the first generation are nearly intermediate
between their parents, but the grandchildren and succeeding
generations continually revert, in a greater or lesser
degree, to one or both of their progenitors.
Several authors have maintained that hybrids and mongrels
include all the characters of both parents, not fused
together, but merely mingled in different proportions
in different parts of the body; or, as Naudin
has expressed it, a hybrid is a living mosaic-work,
in which the eye cannot distinguish the discordant
elements, so completely are they intermingled.
We can hardly doubt that, in a certain sense, this
is true, as when we behold in a hybrid the elements
of both species segregating themselves into segments
in the same flower or fruit, by a process of self-attraction
or self-affinity; this segregation taking place either
by seminal or by bud-propagation. Naudin further
believes that the segregation of the two specific
elements or essences is eminently liable to occur
in the male and female reproductive matter; and he
thus explains the almost universal tendency to
reversion in successive hybrid generations. For
this would be the natural result of the union of pollen
and ovules, in both of which the elements of the
same species had been segregated by self-affinity.
If, on the other hand, pollen which included the elements
of one species happened to unite with ovules
including the elements of the other species, the intermediate
or hybrid state would still be retained, and there
would be no reversion. But it would, as I suspect,
be more correct to say that the elements of both parent-species
exist in every hybrid in a double state, namely, blended
together and completely separate. How this is
possible, and what the term specific essence or element
may be supposed to express, I shall attempt to show
in the hypothetical chapter on pangenesis.
But Naudin’s view, as propounded
by him, is not applicable to the reappearance of characters
lost long ago by variation; and it is hardly applicable
to races or species which, after having been crossed
at some former period with a distinct form, and having
since lost all traces of the cross, nevertheless occasionally
yield an individual which reverts (as in the case
of the great-great-grandchild of the pointer Sappho)
to the crossing form. The most simple case of
reversion, namely, of a hybrid or mongrel to its grandparents,
is connected by an almost perfect series with the
extreme case of a purely-bred race recovering characters
which had been lost during many ages; and we are thus
led to infer that all the cases must be related by
some common bond.
Gaertner believed that only those
hybrid plants which are highly sterile exhibit any
tendency to reversion to their parent-forms. It
is rash to doubt so good an observer, but this conclusion
must I think be an error; and it may perhaps be accounted
for by the nature of the genera observed by him, for
he admits that the tendency differs in different genera.
The statement is also directly contradicted by Naudin’s
observations, and by the notorious fact that perfectly
fertile mongrels exhibit the tendency in a high degree, - even
in a higher degree, according to Gaertner himself,
than hybrids.
Gaertner further states that reversions
rarely occur with hybrid plants raised from species
which have not been cultivated, whilst, with those
which have been long cultivated, they are of frequent
occurrence. This conclusion explains a curious
discrepancy: Max Wichura, who worked exclusively
on willows, which had not been subjected to culture,
never saw an instance of reversion; and he goes so
far as to suspect that the careful Gaertner had not
sufficiently protected his hybrids from the pollen
of the parent-species: Naudin, on the other hand,
who chiefly experimented on cucurbitaceous and other
cultivated plants, insists more strenuously than any
other author on the tendency to reversion in all hybrids.
The conclusion that the condition of the parent-species,
as affected by culture, is one of the proximate causes
leading to reversion, agrees fairly well with the
converse case of domesticated animals and cultivated
plants being liable to reversion when they become feral;
for in both cases the organisation or constitution
must be disturbed, though in a very different way.
Finally, we have seen that characters
often reappear in purely-bred races without our being
able to assign any proximate cause; but when they become
feral this is either indirectly or directly induced
by the change in their conditions of life. With
crossed breeds, the act of crossing in itself certainly
leads to the recovery of long-lost characters, as well
as of those derived from either parent-form.
Changed conditions, consequent on cultivation, and
the relative position of buds, flowers, and seeds on
the plant, all apparently aid in giving this same
tendency. Reversion may occur either through
seminal or bud generation, generally at birth, but
sometimes only with an advance of age. Segments
or portions of the individual may alone be thus affected.
That a being should be born resembling in certain
characters an ancestor removed by two or three, and
in some cases by hundreds or even thousands of generations,
is assuredly a wonderful fact. In these cases
the child is commonly said to inherit such characters
directly from its grandparents or more remote ancestors.
But this view is hardly conceivable. If, however,
we suppose that every character is derived exclusively
from the father or mother, but that many characters
lie latent in both parents during a long succession
of generations, the foregoing facts are intelligible.
In what manner characters may be conceived to lie
latent, will be considered in a future chapter to which
I have lately alluded.
Latent Characters. - But
I must explain what is meant by characters lying latent.
The most obvious illustration is afforded by secondary
sexual characters. In every female all the secondary
male characters, and in every male all the secondary
female characters, apparently exist in a latent state,
ready to be evolved under certain conditions.
It is well known that a large number of female birds,
such as fowls, various pheasants, partridges, peahens,
ducks, &c., when old or diseased, or when operated
on, partly assume the secondary male characters of
their species. In the case of the hen-pheasant
this has been observed to occur far more frequently
during certain seasons than during others. A duck
ten years old has been known to assume both the perfect
winter and summer plumage of the drake. Waterton
gives a curious case of a hen which had ceased laying,
and had assumed the plumage, voice, spurs, and warlike
disposition of the cock; when opposed to an enemy
she would erect her hackles and show fight. Thus
every character, even to the instinct and manner of
fighting, must have lain dormant in this hen as long
as her ovaria continued to act. The females of
two kinds of deer, when old, have been known to acquire
horns; and, as Hunter has remarked, we see something
of an analogous nature in the human species.
On the other hand, with male animals,
it is notorious that the secondary sexual characters
are more or less completely lost when they are subjected
to castration. Thus, if the operation be performed
on a young cock, he never, as Yarrell states, crows
again; the comb, wattles, and spurs do not grow
to their full size, and the hackles assume an intermediate
appearance between true hackles and the feathers of
the hen. Cases are recorded of confinement alone
causing analogous results. But characters properly
confined to the female are likewise acquired; the capon
takes to sitting on eggs, and will bring up chickens;
and what is more curious, the utterly sterile male
hybrids from the pheasant and the fowl act in the same
manner, “their delight being to watch when the
hens leave their nests, and to take on themselves
the office of a sitter." That admirable observer
Reaumur asserts that a cock, by being long confined
in solitude and darkness, can be taught to take charge
of young chickens; he then utters a peculiar cry,
and retains during his whole life this newly acquired
maternal instinct. The many well-ascertained cases
of various male mammals giving milk, show that their
rudimentary mammary glands retain this capacity in
a latent condition.
We thus see that in many, probably
in all cases, the secondary characters of each sex
lie dormant or latent in the opposite sex, ready to
be evolved under peculiar circumstances. We can
thus understand how, for instance, it is possible
for a good milking cow to transmit her good qualities
through her male offspring to future generations;
for we may confidently believe that these qualities
are present, though latent, in the males of each generation.
So it is with the game-cock, who can transmit his superiority
in courage and vigour through his female to his male
offspring; and with man it is known that diseases,
such as hydrocele, necessarily confined to the male
sex, can be transmitted through the female to the
grandson. Such cases as these offer, as was remarked
at the commencement of this chapter, the simplest
possible examples of reversion; and they are intelligible
on the belief that characters common to the grandparent
and grandchild of the same sex are present, though
latent, in the intermediate parent of the opposite
sex.
The subject of latent characters is
so important, as we shall see in a future chapter,
that I will give another illustration. Many animals
have the right and left sides of their body unequally
developed: this is well known to be the case
with flat-fish, in which the one side differs in thickness
and colour, and in the shape of the fins, from the
other; and during the growth of the young fish one
eye actually travels, as shown by Steenstrup, from
the lower to the upper surface. In most flat-fishes
the left is the blind side, but in some it is the right;
though in both cases “wrong fishes,” which
are developed in a reversed manner to what is usual,
occasionally occur, and in Platessa flesus the
right or left side is indifferently developed, the
one as often as the other. With gasteropods or
shell-fish, the right and left sides are extremely
unequal; the far greater number of species are dextral,
with rare and occasional reversals of development,
and some few are normally sinistral; but certain species
of Bulimus, and, many Achatinellae, are
as often sinistral as dextral. I will give an
analogous case in the great Articulate kingdom:
the two sides of Verruca are so wonderfully unlike,
that without careful dissection it is extremely difficult
to recognise the corresponding parts on the opposite
sides of the body; yet it is apparently a mere matter
of chance whether it be the right or the left side
that undergoes so singular an amount of change.
One plant is known to me in which the flower,
according as it stands on the one or other side of
the spike, is unequally developed. In all the
foregoing cases the two sides of the animal are perfectly
symmetrical at an early period of growth. Now,
whenever a species is as liable to be unequally developed
on the one as on the other side, we may infer that
the capacity for such development is present, though
latent, in the undeveloped side. And as a reversal
of development occasionally occurs in animals of many
kinds, this latent capacity is probably very common.
The best yet simplest instances of
characters lying dormant are, perhaps, those previously
given, in which chickens and young pigeons, raised
from a cross between differently coloured birds, are
at first of one colour, but in a year or two acquire
feathers of the colour of the other parent; for in
this case the tendency to a change of plumage is clearly
latent in the young bird. So it is with hornless
breeds of cattle, some of which acquire, as they grow
old, small horns. Purely bred black and white
bantams, and some other fowls, occasionally assume,
with advancing years, the red feathers of the parent-species.
I will here add a somewhat different case, as it connects
in a striking manner latent characters of two classes.
Mr. Hewitt possessed an excellent Sebright gold-laced
hen bantam, which, as she became old, grew diseased
in her ovaria, and assumed male characters. In
this breed the males resemble the females in all respects
except in their combs, wattles, spurs, and instincts;
hence it might have been expected that the diseased
hen would have assumed only those masculine characters
which are proper to the breed, but she acquired, in
addition, well-arched tail sickle-feathers quite a
foot in length, saddle-feathers on the loins, and
hackles on the neck, - ornaments which, as
Mr. Hewitt remarks, “would be held as abominable
in this breed.” The Sebright bantam is
known to have originated about the year 1800 from
a cross between a common bantam and a Polish fowl,
recrossed by a hen-tailed bantam, and carefully selected;
hence there can hardly be a doubt that the sickle-feathers
and hackles which appeared in the old hen were derived
from the Polish fowl or common bantam; and we thus
see that not only certain masculine characters proper
to the Sebright bantam, but other masculine characters
derived from the first progenitors of the breed, removed
by a period of above sixty years, were lying latent
in this hen-bird, ready to be evolved as soon as her
ovaria became diseased.
From these several facts it must be
admitted that certain characters, capacities, and
instincts may lie latent in an individual, and even
in a succession of individuals, without our being
able to detect the least signs of their presence.
We have already seen that the transmission of
a character from the grandparent to the grandchild,
with its apparent omission in the intermediate parent
of the opposite sex, becomes simple on this view.
When fowls, pigeons, or cattle of different colours
are crossed, and their offspring change colour as
they grow old, or when the crossed turbit acquired
the characteristic frill after its third moult, or
when purely-bred bantams partially assume the red
plumage of their prototype, we cannot doubt that these
qualities were from the first present, though latent,
in the individual animal, like the characters of a
moth in the caterpillar. Now, if these animals
had produced offspring before they had acquired with
advancing age their new characters, nothing is more
probable than that they would have transmitted them
to some of their offspring, which in this case would
in appearance have received such characters from their
grandparents or more distant progenitors. We should
then have had a case of reversion, that is, of the
reappearance in the child of an ancestral character,
actually present, though during youth completely latent,
in the parent; and this we may safely conclude is what
occurs with reversions of all kinds to progenitors
however remote.
This view of the latency in each generation
of all the characters which appear through reversion,
is also supported by their actual presence in some
cases during early youth alone, or by their more frequent
appearance and greater distinctness at this age than
during maturity. We have seen that this is often
the case with the stripes on the legs and faces of
the several species of the horse-genus. The Himalayan
rabbit, when crossed, sometimes produces offspring
which revert to the parent silver-grey breed, and
we have seen that in purely bred animals pale-grey
fur occasionally reappears during early youth.
Black cats, we may feel assured, would occasionally
produce by reversion tabbies; and on young black kittens,
with a pedigree known to have been long pure,
faint traces of stripes may almost always be seen
which afterwards disappear. Hornless Suffolk cattle
occasionally produce by reversion horned animals; and
Youatt asserts that even in hornless individuals
“the rudiment of a horn may be often felt
at an early age.”
No doubt it appears at first sight
in the highest degree improbable that in every horse
of every generation there should be a latent capacity
and tendency to produce stripes, though these may
not appear once in a thousand generations; that in
every white, black, or other coloured pigeon, which
may have transmitted its proper colour during centuries,
there should be a latent capacity in the plumage to
become blue and to be marked with certain characteristic
bars; that in every child in a six-fingered family
there should be the capacity for the production of
an additional digit; and so in other cases. Nevertheless
there is no more inherent improbability in this being
the case than in a useless and rudimentary organ, or
even in only a tendency to the production of a rudimentary
organ, being inherited during millions of generations,
as is well known to occur with a multitude of organic
beings. There is no more inherent improbability
in each domestic pig, during a thousand generations,
retaining the capacity and tendency to develop great
tusks under fitting conditions, than in the young calf
having retained for an indefinite number of generations
rudimentary incisor teeth, which never protrude through
the gums.
I shall give at the end of the next
chapter a summary of the three preceding chapters;
but as isolated and striking cases of reversion have
here been chiefly insisted on, I wish to guard the
reader against supposing that reversion is due to
some rare or accidental combination of circumstances.
When a character, lost during hundreds of generations,
suddenly reappears, no doubt some such combination
must occur; but reversions may be constantly observed,
at least to the immediately preceding generations,
in the offspring of most unions. This has been
universally recognised in the case of hybrids and mongrels,
but it has been recognised simply from the difference
between the united forms rendering the resemblance
of the offspring to their grandparents or more remote
progenitors of easy detection. Reversion is likewise
almost invariably the rule, as Mr. Sedgwick has shown,
with certain diseases. Hence we must conclude
that a tendency to this peculiar form of transmission
is an integral part of the general law of inheritance.
Monstrosities. - A
large number of monstrous growths and of lesser anomalies
are admitted by every one to be due to an arrest of
development, that is to the persistence of an embryonic
condition. If every horse or ass had striped
legs whilst young, the stripes which occasionally appear
on these animals when adult would have to be considered
as due to the anomalous retention of an early character,
and not as due to reversion. Now, the leg-stripes
in the horse-genus, and some other characters in analogous
cases, are apt to occur during early youth and then
to disappear; thus the persistence of early characters
and reversion are brought into close connexion.
But many monstrosities can hardly
be considered as the result of an arrest of development;
for parts of which no trace can be detected in the
embryo, but which occur in other members of the same
class of animals or plants, occasionally appear, and
these may probably with truth be attributed to reversion.
For instance: supernumerary mammae, capable
of secreting milk, are not extremely rare in women;
and as many as five have been observed. When
four are developed, they are generally arranged symmetrically
on each side of the chest; and in one instance a woman
(the daughter of another with supernumerary mammae)
had one mamma, which yielded milk, developed in the
inguinal region. This latter case, when we remember
the position of the mammae in some of the lower
animals on both the chest and inguinal region, is
highly remarkable, and leads to the belief that in
all cases the additional mammae in woman
are due to reversion. The facts given in the
last chapter on the tendency in supernumerary digits
to regrowth after amputation, indicate their relation
to the digits of the lower vertebrate animals, and
lead to the suspicion that their appearance may in
some manner be connected with reversion. But
I shall have to recur, in the chapter on pangenesis,
to the abnormal multiplication of organs, and likewise
to their occasional transposition. The occasional
development in man of the coccygeal vertebrae into
a short and free tail, though it thus becomes in one
sense more perfectly developed, may at the same time
be considered as an arrest of development, and as
a case of reversion. The greater frequency of
a monstrous kind of proboscis in the pig than in any
other mammal, considering the position of the pig
in the mammalian series, has likewise been attributed,
perhaps truly, to reversion.
When flowers which are properly irregular
in structure become regular or peloric, the change
is generally looked at by botanists as a return to
the primitive state. But Dr. Maxwell Masters,
who has ably discussed this subject, remarks that
when, for instance, all the sepals of a Tropaeolum
become green and of the same shape, instead of being
coloured with one alone prolonged into a spur,
or when all the petals of a Linaria become
simple and regular, such cases may be due merely to
an arrest of development; for in these flowers
all the organs during their earliest condition
are symmetrical, and, if arrested at this stage
of growth, they would not become irregular. If,
moreover, the arrest were to take place at a still
earlier period of development, the result would
be a simple tuft of green leaves; and no one probably
would call this a case of reversion. Dr. Masters
designates the cases first alluded to as regular
peloria; and others, in which all the corresponding
parts assume a similar form of irregularity, as when
all the petals in a Linaria become spurred,
as irregular peloria. We have no right to
attribute these latter cases to reversion, until it
can be shown to be probable that the parent-form,
for instance, of the genus Linaria had had
all its petals spurred; for a change of this nature
might result from the spreading of an anomalous
structure, in accordance with the law, to be discussed
in a future chapter, of homologous parts tending
to vary in the same manner. But as both forms
of peloria frequently occur on the same individual
plant of the Linaria, they probably
stand in some close relation to each other. On
the doctrine that peloria is simply the result of an
arrest of development, it is difficult to understand
how an organ arrested at a very early period of
growth should acquire its full functional perfection; - how
a petal, supposed to be thus arrested, should acquire
its brilliant colours, and serve as an envelope
to the flower, or a stamen produce efficient pollen;
yet this occurs with many peloric flowers.
That pelorism is not due to mere chance variability,
but either to an arrest of development or to reversion,
we may infer from an observation made by Ch.
Morren, namely, that families which have
irregular flowers often “return by these monstrous
growths to their regular form; whilst we never
see a regular flower realise the structure of
an irregular one.”
Some flowers have almost certainly become
more or less completely peloric through reversion.
Corydalis tuberosa properly has one of its
two nectaries colourless, destitute of nectar,
only half the size of the other, and therefore,
to a certain extent, in a rudimentary state; the
pistil is curved towards the perfect nectary, and the
hood, formed of the inner petals, slips off the
pistil and stamens in one direction alone, so
that, when a bee sucks the perfect nectary, the stigma
and stamens are exposed and rubbed against the insect’s
body. In several closely allied genera, as
in Dielytra, &c., there are two perfect nectaries,
the pistil is straight, and the hood slips off on
either side, according as the bee sucks either
nectary. Now, I have examined several flowers
of Corydalis tuberosa, in which both nectaries
were equally developed and contained nectar; in this
we see only the redevelopment of a partially aborted
organ; but with this redevelopment the pistil
becomes straight, and the hood slips off in either
direction; so that these flowers have acquired the
perfect structure, so well adapted for insect
agency, of Dielytra and its allies. We cannot
attribute these coadapted modifications to chance,
or to correlated variability; we must attribute
them to reversion to a primordial condition of
the species.
The peloric flowers of Pelargonium have
their five petals in all respects alike, and there
is no nectary; so that they resemble the symmetrical
flowers of the closely allied Geranium-genus; but the
alternate stamens are also sometimes destitute
of anthers, the shortened filaments being left
as rudiments, and in this respect they resemble
the symmetrical flowers of the closely allied genus,
Erodium. Hence we are led to look at the
peloric flowers of Pelargonium as having probably
reverted to the state of some primordial form, the
progenitor of the three closely related genera
of Pelargonium, Geranium, and Erodium.
In the peloric form of Antirrhinum
majus, appropriately called the “Wonder,”
the tubular and elongated flowers differ wonderfully
from those of the common snapdragon; the calyx
and the mouth of the corolla consist of six equal
lobes, and include six equal instead of four unequal
stamens. One of the two additional stamens is
manifestly formed by the development of a microscopically
minute papilla, which may be found at the base
of the upper lip of the flower in all common snapdragons,
at least in nineteen plants examined by me. That
this papilla is a rudiment of a stamen was well
shown by its various degrees of development in
crossed plants between the common and peloric Antirrhinum.
Again, a peloric Galeobdolon luteum, growing
in my garden, had five equal petals, all striped
like the ordinary lower lip, and included five
equal instead of four unequal stamens; but Mr. R.
Keeley, who sent me this plant, informs me that
the flowers vary greatly, having from four to
six lobes to the corolla, and from three to six
stamens. Now, as the members of the two great
families to which the Antirrhinum and Galeobdolon
belong are properly pentamerous, with some of
the parts confluent and others suppressed, we ought
not to look at the sixth stamen and the sixth
lobe to the corolla in either case as due to reversion,
any more than the additional petals in double flowers
in these same two families. But the case is different
with the fifth stamen in the peloric Antirrhinum,
which is produced by the redevelopment of
a rudiment always present, and which probably reveals
to us the state of the flower, as far as the stamens
are concerned, at some ancient epoch. It
is also difficult to believe that the other four stamens
and the petals, after an arrest of development at a
very early embryonic age, would have come to full
perfection in colour, structure, and function,
unless these organs had at some former period normally
passed through a similar course of growth.
Hence it appears to me probable that the progenitor
of the genus Antirrhinum must at some remote epoch
have included five stamens and borne flowers in some
degree resembling those now produced by the peloric
form.
Lastly, I may add that many instances
have been recorded of flowers, not generally ranked
as peloric, in which certain organs, normally few
in number, have been abnormally augmented.
As such an increase of parts cannot be looked
at as an arrest of development, nor as due to the
redevelopment of rudiments, for no rudiments are
present, and as these additional parts bring the
plant into closer relationship with its natural
allies, they ought probably to be viewed as reversions
to a primordial condition.
These several facts show us in an
interesting manner how intimately certain abnormal
states are connected together; namely, arrests of development
causing parts to become rudimentary or to be wholly
suppressed, - the redevelopment of parts
at present in a more or less rudimentary condition, - the
reappearance of organs of which not a vestige can now
be detected, - and to these may be added,
in the case of animals, the presence during youth,
and subsequent disappearance, of certain characters
which occasionally are retained throughout life.
Some naturalists look at all such abnormal structures
as a return to the ideal state of the group to which
the affected being belongs; but it is difficult to
conceive what is meant to be conveyed by this expression.
Other naturalists maintain, with greater probability
and distinctness of view, that the common bond of
connection between the several foregoing cases is an
actual, though partial, return to the structure of
the ancient progenitor of the group. If this
view be correct, we must believe that a vast number
of characters, capable of evolution, lie hidden in
every organic being. But it would be a mistake
to suppose that the number is equally great in all
beings. We know, for instance, that plants of
many orders occasionally become peloric; but many
more cases have been observed in the Labiatae and Scrophulariaceae
than in any other order; and in one genus of the Scrophulariaceae,
namely Linaria, no less than thirteen species
have been described in a peloric condition. On
this view of the nature of peloric flowers, and bearing
in mind what has been said with respect to certain
monstrosities in the animal kingdom, we must conclude
that the progenitors of most plants and animals, though
widely different in structure, have left an impression
capable of redevelopment on the germs of their descendants.
The fertilised germ of one of the
higher animals, subjected as it is to so vast a series
of changes from the germinal cell to old age, - incessantly
agitated by what Quatrefages well calls the tourbillon
vital, - is perhaps the most wonderful
object in nature. It is probable that hardly a
change of any kind affects either parent, without
some mark being left on the germ. But on the
doctrine of reversion, as given in this chapter, the
germ becomes a far more marvellous object, for, besides
the visible changes to which it is subjected, we must
believe that it is crowded with invisible characters,
proper to both sexes, to both the right and left side
of the body, and to a long line of male and female
ancestors separated by hundreds or even thousands
of generations from the present time; and these characters,
like those written on paper with invisible ink, all
lie ready to be evolved under certain known or unknown
conditions.