Fragaria Chilensis is the last great species or subdivision that we now have to consider.
2
Of the first of these, the Fragaria Indica, or "Indian" strawberry, there is little to say.
3
It is clear that the incompatibility system in Fragaria is gametophytic, however, the genetic mechanism behind this remains elusive.
4
Fragaria vesca was used as a completely self-compatible reference sample, and the genome-wide variations were identified and subsequently annotated.
5
Fragaria: circumnutation of another and younger stolon, traced from 8 A.M. to 10.30 P.M.
6
Wray, Leonard, on Fragaria.
7
This holds good with Euonymus, Rhamnus catharticus, Ilex, Fragaria, all or at least most of the before-named Labiatae, Scabiosa atro-purpurea, and Echium vulgare.
8
No such concentrated ambrosia ever graced the feasts of the Olympian gods, for they were restricted to the humble Fragaria vesca, or Alpine species.
9
Eleven second-generation lines of Fragaria viridis with different compatibility were obtained by manual self-pollination, which can be displayed directly by the level of fruit-set rate.
10
The Alpine strawberry (Fragaria vesca), which grows wild throughout the northern hemisphere, does not appear capable of much variation and development under cultivation.
11
As we have seen, the Fragaria vesca, or the Alpine species of Europe, is substantially the same to-day as it was a thousand years ago.
12
The first, and for a long time the only one of which we have any record, is the Fragaria vesca, or the "Alpine" strawberry.
13
Fragaria: circumnutation of stolon, kept in darkness, traced on vertical glass, from 10.45 A.M. May 18th to 7.45 A.M. on 19th.