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Mendel’s Laws of Heredity

Explore Gregor Mendel's groundbreaking work on heredity, genetics, and the passing of traits from parents to offspring. Discover the significance of studying pea plants and the key principles of inheritance including dominance and segregation.

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Mendel’s Laws of Heredity

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  1. Mendel’s Laws of Heredity Why we look the way we look...

  2. What is heredity? • Heredity: passing of characteristics (traits) from parents to offspring • Genetics: the study of heredity

  3. Gregor Mendel • The first person to predict how ______ are transferred from parents to offspring. • Called the “______ ___ _______.” • Studied pea plants extensively

  4. Why Study Pea Plants? • Reproduce sexually 2. They have both male and female sex cells (gametes) on the same flower. 3. Their traits are easy to isolate.

  5. Mendel crossed them… Mendel transferred pollen from plant to plant and studied the resulting offspring pea plants. • Fertilization: the uniting of male and female gametes • Cross: combining gametes from parents with different traits Parent Generation Mendel removed the male parts of each flower to prevent uncontrolled pollination. F1 Generation

  6. Mendel’s Conclusions?

  7. 1. Law of Inheritance • Inheritance is determined by factors passed from parents to offspring. Today these are called genes. • The different forms of the same gene are called alleles. • Example: one for black, one for tan, and one for white

  8. 2. Principle of Dominance • Some alleles are dominant, others are recessive. Recessive Traits - can be hidden whenever a dominant allele is present - represented with a lowercase letter *Dominant Traits • represented with uppercase letters • mask recessive traits

  9. 3. Law of Segregation • The two alleles for a trait must separate when gametes are formed • A parent randomly passes only one allele for each trait to each offspring

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