explain the Mendel's experiment in detail
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Mendel followed the inheritance of 7 traits in pea plants, and each trait had 2 forms. He identified pure-breeding pea plants that consistently showed 1 form of a trait after generations of self-pollination. ... Mendel then crossed these pure-breeding lines of plants and recorded the traits of the hybrid progeny.
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QUESTION:
explain the Mendel's experiment in detail
ANSWER:
- Mendel followed the inheritance of 7 traits in pea plants, and each trait had 2 forms. He identified pure-breeding pea plants that consistently showed 1 form of a trait after generations of self-pollination. ... Mendel then crossed these pure-breeding lines of plants and recorded the traits of the hybrid progeny.
- There were three major steps to Mendel's experiments:
- First he produced a parent generation of true-breeding plants. ...
- Next, he produced a second generation of plants (F1) by breeding two different true-breeding P plants.
- . He then produced a third generation of plants (F2) by self-pollinating two F1 generation plants that had the same traits.
- Interesting Facts about Mendel and Inheritance
- Mendel's work was rejected by his fellow scientists while he was alive. It wasn't until later that his work was rediscovered and confirmed through further experimentation.
- Mendel was a monk and performed his experiments in the monastery garden. His experimentation largely ended when he was promoted to abbot.
- Mendel also ran experiments with honey bees, but found them much more difficult to experiment with.
- The idea that an offspring receives one unit of inheritance from each parent is the called the "theory of segregation."
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