Transcript Heredity
Heredity
Chapter 5, Day 4
Child Development
The Basic Rules of Heredity
Heredity is the passing on, or transmission, of
biological traits from parent to child
A child’s hair color, eye color, skin color as
well as their height or the way they look are all
determined, in part, from the genetic
information inherited from the parents.
Chromosomes
Chromosomes are tiny structures found within
cells that contain the genetic information that
is passed on from one generation to the next
Most of the cells in your body contain 23 pairs
of chromosomes
A fertilized egg contains 46 chromosomes, 23
from the sperm(dad) and 23 from the ovum
(mom)
Genes
A gene is a section of a chromosome that
determines or affects a characteristic or trait
Genes come in pairs
The 46 chromosomes form the person’s DNA
DNA is the complex molecule that makes-up
genes.
DNA contains the genetic code
DNA molecule has a specific gene for height, another
for weight, another for eye color, etc.
Dominant and Recessive Traits
Individuals carry two genes for each trait
When the genes are the same, that characteristic
automatically shows
Two Dominant genes – characteristic automatically shows
Two Recessive genes – characteristic automatically shows
When the genes are different, the characteristic
is controlled, or dominated by the Dominant gene
One Dominant + one Recessive – Dominant shows
Dominant Hierarchy
Dominant hierarchy
Tall dominates short
Brown eyes dominate blue eyes
Dark hair dominates blonde hair
Sex Chromosomes
The gender of the child is determined at
conception
Each egg carries an X-chromosome
Each sperm carries either an X- or a Ychromosome
Sex Determination
Sperm (X) + Egg (X) = Girl (XX)
Sperm (Y) + Egg (X) = Boy (XY)
Multiple Births
The delivery of more than one baby (i.e., twins,
triplets, quadruplets) is called a multiple birth
Multiple births carry greater risk to the mother
and the fetus’
Identical Twins
Identical twins develop from a single fertilized
egg or zygote
Have the same inherited traits
Are the same sex (because they develop from identical
embryos)
Fraternal Twins
Fraternal twins develop from two eggs released
at the same time from the ovary and are
fertilized by two sperm
No more alike than any other siblings
May or may not be the same sex
Other Multiple Births
Triplets, quadruplets, and other multiple births
are less common than twins
Caused by more than one egg being released and
some of those eggs splitting.
Could result in a combination of Identical and
Fraternal twins
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to become pregnant.
Options for Infertile Couples
Adoption
Artificial Insemination – the father’s sperm is injected
into the mother’s uterus
In vitro Fertilization – egg is extracted and egg and
sperm are combined in the lab. The fertilized egg is
then inserted into the mother’s uterus
Ovum Transfer – donated egg plus in vitro fertilization
Surrogate Mother – fertilized egg is inserted into
surrogate or artificial insemination process
Individual Activity
Heredity In the Works – Follow the
instructions on the handout. Will Discuss as a
Class
Culture Matters Essay – Follow the
instructions on the handout. TURN IN
TODAY!
HOMEWORK – What Is In My Genes? DUE
NEXT CLASS