Page:Aspects of nature in different lands and different climates; with scientific elucidations (IA b29329668 0002).pdf/127

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  • [Footnote: *nean). Bombyx pini alone (the spider which infests the

Scotch fir, and is the most destructive of all forest insects), is visited, according to Ratzeburg, by thirty-five parasitical Ichneumonides.

If these considerations have led us to the proportion borne by the species of plants cultivated in gardens to the entire amount of those which are already either described or preserved in herbariums, we have still to consider the proportion borne by the latter to what we conjecture to be the whole number of forms existing upon the earth at the present time; i. e. to test the assumed minimum of such forms by the relative numbers of species in the different families, therefore, by uncertain multipliers. Such a test, however, gives for the lowest limit or minimum number results so low as to lead us to perceive that even in the great families,—our knowledge of which has been of late most strikingly enriched by the descriptions of botanists,—we are still acquainted with only a small part of existing plants. The Repertorium of Walpers completes Decandolle's Prodromus of 1825, up to 1846: we find in it, in the family of Leguminosæ, 8068 species. We may assume the ratio, or relative numerical proportion of this family to all phænogamous plants, to be 1/21—as we find it 1/10 within the tropics, 1/18 in the middle temperate, and 1/33 in the cold northern zone. The described Leguminosæ would thus lead us to assume only 169400 existing phænogamous species on the whole surface of the earth, whereas, as we have shewn, the Compositæ indicate more than 160000 already known species. The discordance is instructive, and]*