136 HEREDITY AND EVOLUTION IN PLANTS 



axis and foliar organs were both derived from an ancestral 

 thallus, branching dichotomously. 1 



The structural differences in the two generations are, 

 on the basis of this hypothesis, considered as due almost, 

 if not entirely, to differences in environment, the main 

 factor being the gradual transition from aquatic to dry- 

 land surroundings. Where the environment is uniform 

 and the same for both generations, as for Dictyota, the 

 gametophyte and sporophyte are identical in external 



FIG. 68. Diclyola, dicholoma. Left, sporogonial plant; right, sperma- 

 gonial (gametophytic) plant. (After \V. D. Hoyt.) 



organs and general appearance (Fig. 68). In any event 

 the hypothesis postulates a homology between the various 

 organs of the two generations, however much these parts 

 may differ in external appearance 'as a result of individual 

 variation and environmental influence. 



110. A Third Hypothesis. Viewing the matter from 

 the standpoint of individual development (ontogeny) Lang 

 has developed the onto genetic hypothesis of alternation. 



1 In a forked manner, resulting from the occurrence of two growing 

 points at the tips of the axes. 



