Mendel`s Work PPT.
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Transcript Mendel`s Work PPT.
Chapter 5 section 1
What is heredity?
Heredity is…
the passing of traits from
parents to offspring.
Who first studied
heredity?
born in 1822
Served as a monk
(a type of religious life)
Known as the “father of
genetics”
Worked as
A Gardener in a monastery
Experimented with pea
plants to understand the
process of
heredity
Unraveling a Mystery
Mendel was interested in how traits
(physical characteristics) were passed
down from parents to offspring
He saw that sometimes a trait would
show up in one generation but not the
next.
He decided to study these patterns in
pea plants.
Used pea plants
Grow quickly and have a
fast life cycle (from seed
to offspring)
Could self-pollinate and
cross-pollinate
Pea Plants
Come in many varieties (round
vs. wrinkled seed, purple vs.
white flowers)
Each characteristic had 2 forms
Mendel’s Experiments
Cross-pollinated plants with
contrasting traits. (Ex: tall plant x short
plant)
Had to start with two purebred plants
(true-breeding) plants – plants that are
the result of many generations of the
same trait. (Example: purebred short
plants always come from short parent
plants)
Mendel’s Experiments
Had to control
cross-pollination:
Anthers of flower
are removed from
one plant.
Pollen from another
plant with
contrasting trait is
used to fertilize the
plant with no
anthers
Mendel’s 1st Experiment
Mendel crossed two purebred plants with one
contrasting trait. This was the parental
generation (P generation)
Example: purebred tall plant x purebred short
plant
Result: All offspring were tall. (F1 generation)
X
Parent Tall
P generation
Parent Short
P generation
All Offspring Tall
F1 generation
Conclusion
There are two forms of
each trait. One is dominant
the other recessive.
Dominant trait – the trait
that was present in the F1
generation.
Conclusion
Recessive trait - the trait that
seemed to disappear
Mendel performed a second
experiment to find out what
happened to this trait
Mendel’s 2nd Experiment
Mendel allowed the F1 generation to selfpollinate.
Result: ¾ of the offspring were tall, ¼ were
short (F2 generation)
The recessive trait reappeared in the F2
generation.
Always occurred in the above ratio, didn’t
matter what trait it was (plant height, flower
color, seed shape, etc…)
.
Parent Plants
Offspring
X
Tall
F1 generation
3⁄4 Tall & 1⁄4 Short
F2 generation
Mendel’s Conclusion
Each parent donates one set of
instructions to the offspring.
These instructions are now
known as GENES
What are genes?
Sections of DNA
Genes are represented by
a letter
Sometimes, one gene
controls a trait
Genes Have Two Forms
There are two forms of each gene called alleles.
Organisms inherit one allele from each
parent
Some alleles are dominant over others.
The dominant allele “masks” the presence
of the recessive allele.
If the recessive form of the trait shows,
then the organism must have 2 recessive
alleles.
Alleles
Dominant alleles are symbolized
with capital letters (T, B, X, C)
Recessive alleles are symbolized
with lowercase letters (t, b, x c)
An organism can be purebred
dominant (TT), purebred recessive
(tt), or hybrid (Tt) for a trait
A hybrid individual will show the
dominant trait.
Genes and Mendel’s
Experiments
Parent Generation: tall x short
TT x tt
F1 Generation: All hybrids
All Tt = All Tall
F2 Generation:
¾ inherited at least 1 dominant allele
(T) = Tall
¼ inherited 2 recessive alleles (t) =
short
Mendel’s 1st experiment: Tall is dominant, short recessive
X
Tall parent
Short parent
TT
tt
All Offspring Tall
F1 generation
Tt
Mendel’s 2nd experiment: Tall is dominant, short recessive
X
Tall
F1 generation
F2 generation
Tt
¾ TT or Tt and ¼ tt