THE FACTOR HYPOTHESIS AS APPLIED TO PLANTS 



375 



individuals of the Fi generation which showed the blend. By 

 inbreeding the pink hybrids Correns obtained the perfect 1:2:1 ratio, 

 that is, I red like one grandparent, 2 pink like the hybrid parent, and 

 I white like the other grandparent. Segregation was evidently taking 

 place, the only unusual thing being the appearance of the Fi indi- 

 viduals, and that was explained immediately as failure of dominance 

 (see Fig. 68 . 



The question this introduces, therefore, is that of a mechanism 

 which could account for such a result. The easiest explanation 

 offered is that the red parent was a homozygote for redness (double 

 dose) and the hybrid a heterozygote (single dose) ; the inference is that 



® ® 



Red Parent 



R))X 



Gamete I Gamete 







White Parent 



F, 



0p;.k0 



Sperms 



0«® 



®P,.0 







Fig. 68.— Diagram illustrating blending inheritance, discovered by Correns 

 in Mirahilis Jalapa. {From Coulter a-nd Coulter.) 



a single dose produces pink while a double dose produces red. A 

 theoretical explanation of this occasional difference in the result of 

 double and single doses is as follows. Imagine that the body cells 

 of a plant have a certain capacity for expressing hereditary characters. 

 In such a case, just as a given quantity of solvent can dissolve only a 

 given amount of solute, so the body cells can express hereditary charac- 

 ters only to a definite limited extent. In the four-o'clock a single dose 

 of redness may be thought of as half saturating the body cells, while a 

 double dose completely saturates them. In cases showing complete 

 dominance, however, a single dose completely saturates the cells and a 

 double dose can do nothing more. This analogy assists in visualizing 

 on the one hand the necessary mechanism of blends (apparent failure 



