Biology, asked by rebatimeher393, 4 months ago

explain the Mendel's experiment in detail​

Answers

Answered by llJahangirll
1

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.

Answered by baby2006
4

Answer:

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:
  1. First he produced a parent generation of true-breeding plants. ...
  2. Next, he produced a second generation of plants (F1) by breeding two different true-breeding P plants.
  3. . 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
  1. 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.
  2. Mendel was a monk and performed his experiments in the monastery garden. His experimentation largely ended when he was promoted to abbot.
  3. Mendel also ran experiments with honey bees, but found them much more difficult to experiment with.
  4. The idea that an offspring receives one unit of inheritance from each parent is the called the "theory of segregation."

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