Mendel's law of inheritance full experiment
Answers
Answered by
2
Mendel after carefully study selected the pea plant for many reasons:
The pea plants were easy to grow and maintain
It has many clearly distinct and contrasting characters.
The pea plant is an annual plant and so many generations of the plant can be studied in a short period of time.
Peas are naturally self-pollinating but can also be cross-pollinated.
Mendel made a list of contrasting characters which he studied:
Mendel structured his experiments in a way that he would observe one pair of contrasting characters at one time. He began his experiments using purebred lines for contrasting characters.
He cross-pollinated two pure lines for contrasting characters and the resultant offsprings were called F1 generation(also called the first filial generation). The F1 generations were then self-pollinated which gave rise to the F2 generation of second filial generation.
Results of Mendel’s Experiments
Let us look at the results of Mendel’s experiments on crossing a pure tall pea plant with a pure short pea plant.
In the F1 generation, Mendel observed that all plants were tall. there were no dwarf plants.
In the F2 generation, Mendel observed that 3 of the offsprings were tall whereas 1 was dwarf.
Similar results were found when Mendel studied other characters.
Mendel observed that in the F1 generation, the characters of only one parent appeared whereas, in the F2 generation, the characters of the other parent also appeared.
The characters that appear in the F1 generation are called as dominant traits and those that appear for the first time in the F2 generation are called as recessive traits.
Conclusions
The genes that are passed from the parents to the offsprings exist in pairs. These pairs are called as alleles.
When the two alleles are the same, they are called homozygous. When both the alleles are different, they are called as heterozygous.
Dominant characters are described using capital letters and recessive using small letters. For example, the dominant genes for tallness in a pea plant are written as TT and recessive genes as tt. The heterozygous genes are written as Tt where the plant appears tall has the recessive gene which might express itself in the future generations.
The appearance of the plant is known as the phenotype whereas the genetic makeup of the plant is called the genotype. So, a plant with Tt genes appears tall phenotypically but has a recessive gene.
During gametogenesis, when the chromosomes become half in the gametes, there is a 50% chance of either of the alleles to fuse with that of the other parent to form a zygote.
The pea plants were easy to grow and maintain
It has many clearly distinct and contrasting characters.
The pea plant is an annual plant and so many generations of the plant can be studied in a short period of time.
Peas are naturally self-pollinating but can also be cross-pollinated.
Mendel made a list of contrasting characters which he studied:
Mendel structured his experiments in a way that he would observe one pair of contrasting characters at one time. He began his experiments using purebred lines for contrasting characters.
He cross-pollinated two pure lines for contrasting characters and the resultant offsprings were called F1 generation(also called the first filial generation). The F1 generations were then self-pollinated which gave rise to the F2 generation of second filial generation.
Results of Mendel’s Experiments
Let us look at the results of Mendel’s experiments on crossing a pure tall pea plant with a pure short pea plant.
In the F1 generation, Mendel observed that all plants were tall. there were no dwarf plants.
In the F2 generation, Mendel observed that 3 of the offsprings were tall whereas 1 was dwarf.
Similar results were found when Mendel studied other characters.
Mendel observed that in the F1 generation, the characters of only one parent appeared whereas, in the F2 generation, the characters of the other parent also appeared.
The characters that appear in the F1 generation are called as dominant traits and those that appear for the first time in the F2 generation are called as recessive traits.
Conclusions
The genes that are passed from the parents to the offsprings exist in pairs. These pairs are called as alleles.
When the two alleles are the same, they are called homozygous. When both the alleles are different, they are called as heterozygous.
Dominant characters are described using capital letters and recessive using small letters. For example, the dominant genes for tallness in a pea plant are written as TT and recessive genes as tt. The heterozygous genes are written as Tt where the plant appears tall has the recessive gene which might express itself in the future generations.
The appearance of the plant is known as the phenotype whereas the genetic makeup of the plant is called the genotype. So, a plant with Tt genes appears tall phenotypically but has a recessive gene.
During gametogenesis, when the chromosomes become half in the gametes, there is a 50% chance of either of the alleles to fuse with that of the other parent to form a zygote.
Similar questions