ORGANIC EVOLUTION 



129 



remarkably in the size and predominance to which the 

 sporophyte has attained. 



The fern (Pteris) . The gametophyte of the fern will serve 

 well to connect with preceding studies. It is a little heart- 

 shaped thallus (called the pro- 

 thallium), hardly exceeding a 

 quarter of an inch in diameter 

 when grown. Its structure is 

 even more simple than that of 

 the thallus of a liverwort. 

 There is the same copious 

 development of rhizoids, con- 

 necting it with the soil, but 

 there is less differentiation of 

 the tissues of the thallus itself, 

 there being no sharp distinction 

 of special assimilatory paren- 

 chyma and no pores. The 

 growing point is in the notched 



FIG. 77. The fern, a, the gameto- 

 phyte phase, inverted and seen 



from lower 



from which it grew; r, rhizoids tip, protected as before by the 

 lobes extended at either side of 



p, the growing point in the bottom 

 of the apical notch ; o, archegonia 

 and t, antheridia ; b,a. single arche- 

 gonhlm in vertical section ; e, egg 

 cell; c, a single antheridium, with 

 developing sperm cells ; d, a single 

 mature sperm cell. 



it. The archegonia and anthe- 

 ridia are developed on the 

 under side of the thallus, and 

 open downward; the former are arranged in a cluster, 

 nearer the growing point (fig. 77). The sperms are motile 

 and swim about when mature, if favoring rain or dew give 

 them opportunity. Many of them mature in advance of 

 the maturing of the eggs of the same thallus, thus favoring 

 cross-fertilization. 



Thus, it will be seen there is quite a general similarity 

 between the prothallium of the fern and the thallus of a 

 simple liverwort. But this phase of the fern is least 



