<h2>CHAPTER XX<br/> <span class="small">WANDERING FRUITS AND SEEDS</span></h2>
<p class="hanging">Ships and stowaway seeds—Tidal drift—Sheep, broom, migrating birds—Crows
and acorns—Ice—Squirrels—Long flight of birds—Seeds in
mud—Martynia and lions—The wanderings of Xanthium—Cocoanut
and South Sea Islands—Sedges and floods—Lichens of Arctic and
Antarctic—Manna of Bible—The Tumble weeds of America—Catapult
and sling fruits—Cow parsnips—Parachutes, shuttlecocks, and kites—Cotton—The
use of hairs and wings—Monkey's Dinner-bell—Sheep-killing
grasses.</p>
<p><span class="dropcap">T</span>HE ways in which fruits and seeds are scattered abroad
over the face of the earth form one of the most
fascinating chapters in the story of Plant Life.</p>
<p>There is an infinite number of ingenious contrivances, so
many indeed that it is not at all easy to explain them.</p>
<p>However, suppose yourself seated on a grassy cliff near
Eastbourne or Brighton.</p>
<p>Looking lazily out over the blue waters, you see Norwegian
timber ships and steamers of all kinds, from the
little coasting "Puffing Billy" to the huge liner departing
for Australia or South Africa.</p>
<p>Plants are probably using every steamer; in the straw of
the packing cases, in the cargoes of corn or grain, in the ore,
and in the ballast, there are sure to be seeds. Such stowaways
are mostly weeds, but of course many valuable
garden, farm, orchard, and forest seeds are being intentionally
exported.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_255" id="Page_255">255</SPAN></span>
Looking down on the seashore, you will notice the high-water
mark, a yellowish brown line of floated rubbish which
is quite distinct even at a distance. If you now go down
and examine it closely (not a particularly pleasant operation,
seeing that so much is in a decomposing condition) you will
find many seeds amongst the corks and bits of straw, seaweed,
and objectionable, if lively, animalcula, and very
likely also pieces of plants, such as willow branches, which
might quite easily take root.</p>
<p>On the coast of Norway, and on our own western seaboard,
the fruits of a West Indian bean (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Entada scandens</i>)
are occasionally to be found, and its seeds are probably able
to germinate. We know that in long-past geological ages they
were floating round the estuary of the Thames, where they
occur as fossils. It has been found by experiment that fruits
and seeds are not killed although they have floated for a
year or more in salt water. Thus ocean currents are utilized
to carry fruits and seeds.</p>
<p>But from our comfortable seat on the South Downs, still
more can be learnt of wandering seeds. The wind which
blows across the downs carries with it hundreds of winged
or hairy fruits, all of them exquisitely fashioned as miniature
airships, aeroplanes, or other winged contrivances. The wind
is an important distributer of seeds.</p>
<p>One of the South Down sheep is trailing behind it a piece of
bramble which has caught in its wool; others, which have been
grazing on the broken cliff-edge where Agrimony, Forget-me-not,
and Burdock are flourishing, are certain to have spiny
or sticky fruits entangled in their wool. Animals therefore
carry seeds in their wool or fur. If it should happen to
be a fine, sunny afternoon, and if there are any plants of
Broom near by, it is quite likely that you may, every now
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_256" id="Page_256">256</SPAN></span>
and then, hear a faint, sudden crack. This will be the Broom
at work scattering its seeds by itself. The little pod, when
it dries, contracts in such a way that it splits with a sudden
explosive pop, and the seeds are sent flying to a distance of
three or four feet. This curious fact was observed in 1546
by the naturalist Boek. The Whin and many other plants
act in the same way, for the dry fruit becomes elastic and
coils up spirally, flinging away the seed.</p>
<p>But here also, on the southern shore of England, we are
at a main station of arrival and departure for migrating
birds. A Landrail or other marsh bird might be flushed in
France, and might quite easily cross the Channel with
French mud sticking to its plumage. In this mud, or in its
crop, there may be seeds or fruits which will be left in an
English pond. This method is probably a very important
one, for these plants growing in duck-haunted places are
amongst the most widely distributed of all.</p>
<p>Mr. Reid has a very interesting discussion on this point.
The crow or rook could quite well cross the British Channel
now. In the days when Britain was covered with ice and
snow, the gap between the French and the English shore was
only half the present width. There was at that time
much flat land with oak forest bordering the French
coast.</p>
<p>Mr. Reid shows that it is probable that rooks regularly
carry about acorns in the cup, for he found seedling oaks
associated with empty acorn husks, stabbed and torn in a
peculiar way. "On October 29th of 1895, in the middle of an
extensive field, bordered by an oak copse and scattered trees,
I saw a flock of rooks feeding and passing singly backwards
and forwards to the oaks. On driving the birds away, and
walking to the middle of the field I found hundreds of empty
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_257" id="Page_257">257</SPAN></span>
acorn husks and a number of half-eaten, pecked acorns."<SPAN name="FNanchor_114" id="FNanchor_114" href="#Footnote_114" class="fnanchor">[114]</SPAN>
So that crows may have brought the acorns that colonized
Britain with oak forest in the earliest historical period.</p>
<p>Another means of dispersal is not so obvious on the South
Downs. In the Arctic region a glacier breaks away at its
tongue into icebergs, which float off and are stranded somewhere
perhaps hundreds of miles distant. Upon these icebergs
are stones and soil and plants which may be carried to
a great distance from their original place. In the Glacial
period or Great Ice Age, ice may have been an important
help in distributing plants, but at present it is difficult to
find a good example.</p>
<p>From all this it is clear that in order to carry plants to
new countries and new homes, everything that moves on the
earth's surface can be employed. Not only the wind, but
ocean currents, river waters, icebergs, and floating ice are
used. Migrating birds, mammals, and especially the most
restless and unsettled animal of all, viz. man, are at work
consciously and deliberately, or unconsciously and accidentally,
carrying the seeds to form new forest, grasslands, or
harvests in other countries.</p>
<p>The subject is in truth so vast that it is difficult to select
the most interesting and important cases.</p>
<p>The way in which squirrels, rats, voles, and lemmings
devour nuts and the like often leads to the distribution of
the fruit. A squirrel may, like a human being, forget where
its store was buried, or be driven from the place. Then
some of those forgotten nuts will grow into trees.</p>
<p>Birds are known to travel enormous distances. It is said
that one little Arctic bird travels from Heligoland to
Morocco in a single flight. It would not, at first sight,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_258" id="Page_258">258</SPAN></span>
seem likely that seeds and fruits could be carried by birds;
yet Darwin saw that this might possibly be the case. The
mud and slime in which so many birds find the small insects
which they require is full of seeds. An Austrian botanist,
Kerner von Marilaun, examined the mud scraped from the
beaks, feathers, and legs of a number of wading and marsh-birds.
He found in it the seeds of no less than thirty-one
different water and marsh plants (Grasses, Sedges, Toad-rush,
etc.). This showed, as is very often the case, that
Darwin was the first to discover a very important point. It
is also interesting to find that these ugly little freshwater mud
and marsh plants are at home almost everywhere, from the
Arctic circle to Tierra del Fuego and from Peru to Japan.</p>
<p>The most extraordinary cases known of sticking fruits and
spines are the Martynias and Harpagophytons of South
Africa. The fruit is covered by hooked claws, and becomes
a regular pest wherever it occurs. Deer, antelopes, and
other animals get their hoofs entangled in the fruit, and
the wretched creatures have to limp about until the hard
thorny fruit is trodden to pieces. Dr. Livingstone says that
the fruit gets into the nostrils of grazing animals which
cannot possibly remove it themselves, and so have to wait
patiently till the herdsman comes to take it out. According
to Lord Avebury, lions may sometimes be destroyed by these
horrible fruits. When a lion is rolling on the sand, the claws
(an inch long) stick in his skin, and when the lion tries to
tear it away with his teeth his mouth gets full of the fruits
and he cannot eat, and perishes miserably of starvation.<SPAN name="FNanchor_115" id="FNanchor_115" href="#Footnote_115" class="fnanchor">[115]</SPAN></p>
<div><SPAN name="a_cocoanut_grove_in_ceylon" id="a_cocoanut_grove_in_ceylon"></SPAN></div>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="mw" src="images/i_259.jpg" alt="" /> <div class="caption"> <p class="small"><i>Stereo Copyright, Underwood & Underwood</i><span class="j2"><i>London and New York</i></span></p> <p class="smcap">A Cocoanut Grove in Ceylon</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>Some of our common British fruits are most perfectly
planned to stick or entangle themselves in the wool of sheep
or in people's clothes. These, such as the Goosegrass
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_259" id="Page_259">259</SPAN></span>
(Robin-run-the-Hedge), Burdock, Forget-me-not, Sanicle,
Avens, etc., have very often been described. It is only
necessary to examine one's clothes after a walk through
rough, broken ground to discover some of them, and the
ingenuity and neatness of their tiny hooks, harpoons, or
prongs can then be realized. We shall give one or two
instances of some other spiny plants. There is, for instance,
Xanthium, which is one of the Daisy flowers or Composites.
Unlike most of this order, its little fruits possess no wind-hairs.
The outside of the head of flowers is covered by
strong curved little crooks. These get so entangled in wool
or hair that they become a perfect pest to wool merchants.
In 1814 Xanthium was unknown in the Crimea, but by 1856
it had covered the whole of the peninsula. In 1828 the
Russian cavalry horses brought it on their manes and tails
into Wallachia, from whence it travelled to Servia. Servian
pigs carried it into Hungary. In 1830 it was taken in wool to
Vienna. By 1871 it had reached Paris and Edinburgh. In
1860 Frauenfeld saw horses in Chile whose manes and tails
were so felted together with thousands of these fruits that
the animals could scarcely walk. In Australia, where it first
appeared in 1850, it has caused a very serious loss to the
wool merchants and squatters. The loss has been put at
50 per cent. by some authorities.<SPAN name="FNanchor_116" id="FNanchor_116" href="#Footnote_116" class="fnanchor">[116]</SPAN></p>
<p>We have already alluded to the transference of fruits and
seeds by ocean currents. In the <em>Challenger</em> expedition, no
less than ninety-seven kinds of marine floating fruits were
observed.</p>
<p>Amongst these the most important is the Cocoanut. The
nut sold in this country is not the whole fruit, but only the
inside shell. In the natural state this is enclosed in a dense
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_260" id="Page_260">260</SPAN></span>
mass of fibres, which form the valuable "coir" used for
brushmaking and a variety of purposes.</p>
<p>The entire outside of the fruit is covered by a smooth
white skin. The whole fruit is about the size of a man's
head, and is so light that it floats easily in the water. It
has in fact been carried by the waves to uninhabited islands
all over the South Seas. It is a very great blessing to
Polynesia, for a tree yields thirty to fifty nuts, and four of
these nuts will furnish enough food for one day. Coprah and
the oil extracted by boiling the inside are also valuable.
Spirit or toddy can be made from the young buds. The
leaves are used for thatching and the trunk for timber.</p>
<p>There are other very curious palm fruits which are also
carried by water. Sir Joseph Hooker mentions the large,
round fruits of Nipa, as big as a cannon-ball, turned over by
the paddles of the steamer in the muddy waters at the
Ganges mouth (<cite>Himalayan Journal</cite>).</p>
<p>In this country a search in the rubbish left by a spate or
freshet along a riverside is sure to furnish many floating
fruits or seeds. Most of these are small and rather difficult
to see. Perhaps the most interesting are those of the
Sedges. The real fruit is only about one-sixteenth of an
inch in size, but it is enclosed in a little sack or bag a quarter
of an inch long and with a narrow opening, so that it floats
quite easily. Many willow branches, pondweeds, hornweeds,
and the like, are also found in the rubbish left by floods, and
these can often take root.</p>
<p>It is, however, in the exquisite modifications of those
fruits which are blown by the wind that we find the most
beautiful contrivances of all. They are effective also.
Seeds are often so small as to be like dust particles, and
such may be carried in the air to almost incredible distances.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_261" id="Page_261">261</SPAN></span>
That of <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Goodyera repens</i> weighs only 1/200,000,000 of a pound,
that of <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Monotropa</i>, ·000,000,006 lb. It is no doubt by the
wind that the spores of lichens are carried from one
mountain to another. On a map of the world the distance
from the Arctic to the Antarctic, between the North
and South Poles, seems enormous. Moreover, the amount of
water, desert, tropical forest, and cultivated land in this
extent of country is very great. There are but few rocks
on which lichens could manage to grow. And yet of the
Antarctic Lichens in the South Polar regions, and which are
also European species, more than 73 per cent. are found in
the Arctic or North Polar regions.<SPAN name="FNanchor_117" id="FNanchor_117" href="#Footnote_117" class="fnanchor">[117]</SPAN></p>
<p>An Arctic lichen spore probably travelled from Scandinavia
to the German and Swiss Alps, another journey took
it to the Atlas Mountains, thence to Abyssinia, again to
Mount Kenia, and from there, somehow, it wandered to the
South Orkneys or King Edward VII Land.</p>
<p>While talking of lichens, one must not forget the Manna
of the Bible (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Lecanora esculenta</i>) and two other species,
which form warted, wrinkled masses on rocks. It breaks off
and may be carried away by the wind, or in heavy rain it
may be washed into depressions of the soil, where a man can
pick up 8 to 12 lb. in a day.</p>
<p>It "is used as a substitute for corn in years of famine—being
ground in the same way and baked into bread.... It is
also remarkable that all the great so-called rains of manna,
of which news has come from the East to Europe, especially
those of the years 1824, 1828, 1841, 1846, 1863, and 1864,
occurred at the beginning of the year, between January and
March, i.e. at the time of the heaviest rains.... The inhabitants
of the district actually thought that the manna had
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_262" id="Page_262">262</SPAN></span>
fallen from heaven, and quite overlooked the fact that this
vegetable structure grew and developed (although only in
isolated patches and principally as crusts on stones) in the
immediate neighbourhood of the spots where they collected
it."<SPAN name="FNanchor_118" id="FNanchor_118" href="#Footnote_118" class="fnanchor">[118]</SPAN></p>
<p>Amongst the wind-blown fruits and seeds there are cases in
which entire plants are dragged out of the soil and hurried
away by the wind, which rolls them over and over. They
may be blown along for days together. The seeds drop out
by the way. In this country one rarely sees anything of the
sort, but in the Prairies of North America, when under
cultivation, these tumble-weeds are a serious and expensive
pest. Sometimes the farmers dig trenches to catch them, or
they may put up fences against which the tumble-weeds
become piled or heaped up until they blow over the top.</p>
<p>It is not very much use to give the names of these weeds,
for they are mostly rare or not British species. Such tumble-weeds
are generally nearly spherical in general form and
have a short, rather weak, root which is easily torn out of
the ground. In some grasses, such as "Old Witch," a well-known
pest of the United States, the grass-stalk, with many
flowers on it, is pulled out of its sheath and blown away.</p>
<p>But it is more usual for the fruits or seeds themselves to
break off the parent plant, and to be carried away by the
wind. To this end we find the most extraordinary changes.
Although the flower may droop from its stalk, the latter
becomes upright and grows quite a considerable length when
the seed or fruit is dispatched on its wanderings. This will
raise the fruit or seed as high as possible above the surrounding
grasses.</p>
<p>Then in some cases the fruit opens to allow the seed to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_263" id="Page_263">263</SPAN></span>
escape. Small holes appear in it, or the fruit splits. As the
dry, elastic, withered stalk swings to and fro in the wind,
the seeds are swung out of these openings, and starting with
a certain momentum the wind will carry them often to a
surprising distance from their parents. In wet or rainy
weather these holes or slits generally close together, and no
seeds are sent forth on their travels. The little holes in the
top of a poppy-head by which the seeds are swung out
have little flaps, which close over and shut them up in wet
weather.</p>
<p>Some plants make a sort of catapult to sling or hurl their
fruits. Kerner von Marilaun was the first to describe some
of these curious arrangements. He had brought home some
fruits of <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Dorycnium herbaceum</i> and laid them on his writing-table.
"Next day as I sat reading near the table, one of
the seeds of the Dorycnium was suddenly jerked with great
violence into my face." Some of the neatest catapult fruits
are those of <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Teucrium flavum</i>. (There is a British species,
the Woodsage, but it has not got the same arrangement.)
When the petals have fallen off, the four small fruits are left
inside the cup-like sepals; the flower-stalk when dry is very
elastic, and if an animal touches the sepals it swings violently
and shoots out one of the fruits. But that is by no means
the whole of the process: there are hairs arranged spirally in
the throat of the sepals, and these give a spin or twirling
motion like that of a rifle-bullet to the fruit. The fruit also
flies out of the sepals in a line of flight which is inclined at
an angle of about forty-five degrees to the horizon; at this
angle, as is well known, the trajectory or distance travelled
will be the greatest possible.</p>
<p>But by far the best way to understand these questions is
to try with some common weeds in the country towards
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_264" id="Page_264">264</SPAN></span>
the end of summer or beginning of autumn. If either the
Cow Parsnip or wild Angelica, or Myrrhis, be gathered and
kept till it is quite dry, then if you take it by the stalk and
swing it to the full extent of the arms the fruits fly off to
fifteen (or more) feet away. Every part is elastic—not
only the main stalk, but the thin separate stalks of the
flowers and also the delicate piece by which each half-fruit
is attached. The half-fruits themselves are also so
made that they are of exactly the right shape to take a
long flight.</p>
<p>Ever since the days of Icarus, one of the unsatisfied ambitions
of mankind has been to fly like a bird, to "soar into
the empyrean," and to be no longer chained to the earth's
surface.</p>
<p>It is a very curious study, that of the many and diverse
inventions, almost always useless and very often fatal, by
which men have endeavoured to solve this problem. Every
one of these can be paralleled amongst the many neat contrivances
of wind-borne fruits and seeds. The principle of
the "parachute," which is more or less like an umbrella, is
found in both fruits and seeds. One of the most beautiful
is the Dandelion fruit, where a series of the most exquisite
branched hairs springs from the top of the slender shaft
which carries the little hard fruit. Most of the Composite
or Dandelion order have, however, more of the "shuttlecock"
idea. There is a row or crown of stiff and spreading
or feathery hairs.</p>
<div><SPAN name="cotton_fields_in_georgia_usa" id="cotton_fields_in_georgia_usa"></SPAN></div>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="mw" src="images/i_265.jpg" alt="" /> <div class="caption"> <p class="small"><i>Stereo Copyright, Underwood & Underwood</i><span class="j2"><i>London and New York</i></span></p> <p class="smcap">Cotton-fields in Georgia, U.S.A.</p>
<p>Negroes picking the cotton harvest.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>The classical person above alluded to seems to have
copied the bird's wing, sticking on feathers with wax, which
of course melted in the sun with the usual result to the
inventor of flying machines. Many seeds have regular
wings which act like those of the bat or flying squirrel. One
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_265" id="Page_265">265</SPAN></span>
of the most exquisite of all is the seed of Bignonia. The
Dahlia fruit has also a flying wing, and a great many others
might be mentioned. Major Baden-Powell experimented
with kites, which were supposed to raise a man high enough
in the air to take observations of the enemy's movements.
But a most exquisite "kite" is that of the Lime tree. The
little fruit is hung from a broad, flying bract, and as it very
slowly sinks to the ground it solemnly turns round and
round. That is because the pressure of the air acts on the
flat bract just as it does on an aeroplane, and forces it to
revolve. So the fruit remains a long time in the air, and
may be carried to nearly a hundred yards away from its
parent tree.</p>
<p>The Traveller's Joy (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Clematis</i>) and the Cotton have
their seeds covered all over by many entangled hairs, which
act like a piece of fluff, so that the wind blows the seed
away.</p>
<p>No one has discovered the original wild Cotton plant.
The robes of the priests in Egyptian temples were made of
it. It was introduced into Spain by the Arabs when they
invaded that country. When the Spaniards attacked the
half-civilized Indian people of Central and South America,
they found cotton was regularly cultivated there. Its
history in England is rather interesting. In the days of
Queen Elizabeth the great English industry was the production
of woollen cloth from Yorkshire sheep. A penalty
of £20 was imposed, even as late as 1720, on any person
who imported or even wore cotton cloths. Yet this was
unable to stop the growth of the trade which, thanks to the
Flemings and Huguenots who took refuge from religious
persecution in this country, eventually became our gigantic
textile industry employing millions of factory hands.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_266" id="Page_266">266</SPAN></span>
The advantage of these wings and hairs is at once seen if
one compares the time that a fruit or seed takes to fall
through a given height, first with its wings or hairs, and then
after they have been cut off.</p>
<p>An Artichoke fruit, for instance, will take nearly eight
seconds to reach the ground from a height of a few feet.
But if you cut away its hairs, it will touch the ground in
a little more than one second. A Sycamore fruit of which
the wing has been removed falls to the ground in about
a quarter of the time that it takes when it has not been
injured, so that the wing helps it to fly to four times the
distance that it could reach if it had none. The Ash fruit
also remains twice as long in the air as it would do if it had
no wing; and so on.</p>
<p>We shall finish this chapter by describing two very extraordinary
cases.</p>
<p>The Sandbox tree is a native of tropical America. The
fruit, as large as an orange, consists of a number of rounded
pieces, each with a single seed inside. When ripe each piece
splits off, making a noise like the report of a pistol. The
plant is sometimes called the Monkey's Dinner Bell. These
pieces may be thrown to a distance of fifty-seven feet from
the parent plant.</p>
<p>Even more remarkable are the hygroscopic grasses. There
are four of them, which are widely separated as regards
distribution, for one (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Stipa capillata</i>) lives in Russia, another
(<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Stipa spartea</i>) in North America, a third (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Aristida hygrometrica</i>)
is found in Queensland (Australia), and the fourth
(<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Heteropogon contortus</i>) belongs to New Caledonia.</p>
<p>Yet all these four grasses are said to kill sheep, and do so
in a manner that is almost identical. The mechanism is as
follows.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_267" id="Page_267">267</SPAN></span>
The fruit is like that of most grasses, enclosed in a folded
leaf, the bract (or glume), which in these particular cases is
produced into a very long fine tapering hair or awn. This
awn is sensitive to changes in the <em>moisture</em> of the air. It is
strongly hygrometric: in wet weather it straightens itself,
and it coils into corkscrew spirals in dry weather. The
widened part of the base, which contains the grain, tapers
into a sharp, very hard point; upon this there are, on the
outside, many stiff hairs, which point backwards away from
the sharp tip.</p>
<p>Now, suppose this fruit to fall on the ground, the awn or
tail is sure to be entangled in neighbouring grasses or herbs,
but the hard point will rest upon the ground. Every coil
and twist made by the entangled awn or tail will push the
point a little deeper into the earth, and the backward-pointing
stiff hairs will prevent its being pulled out of the
soil.</p>
<p>Therefore all these modified contrivances ensure that the
seed will bury itself.</p>
<p>But supposing that one of these fruits falls upon a
sheep's back. Then an exactly similar process will go
on. The seed will be forced through the skin into the
body of the sheep. In fact, if it should fall above any soft
or vulnerable part of the animal, the sheep will very likely
be killed.</p>
<p>As a matter of fact, sheep are said to be killed by these
grasses in all those four countries, distant though they are
from one another.</p>
<p>We have endeavoured in this chapter to give some faint
notion of the hundreds and thousands of ingenious contrivances
utilized by plants in order to ensure the dispersal
and future prosperity of their children.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_268" id="Page_268">268</SPAN></span>
Every species is always trying to colonize new ground, to
seek fresh fields and new pastures. Plants are not content
to keep to the old habitats, but every species tries to scatter
its pioneers over all the neighbouring country, so that, as
often happens, if it is exterminated or suppressed in one
locality, new generations luxuriate elsewhere.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_269" id="Page_269">269</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />