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KEY CONCEPT Mendel

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Title: PowerPoint Presentation Author: McDougal Littell Last modified by: Angie Shelton Created Date: 9/14/2006 4:17:10 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: KEY CONCEPT Mendel


1
KEY CONCEPT Mendels research showed that traits
are inherited as discrete units.
2
Mendel laid the groundwork for genetics.
  • Mendel was a German friar who enjoyed gardening.
  • In the mid-1800s he did many experiments crossing
    different types of pea plants
  • He worked at the same time as Charles Darwin,
    read Darwins books, and believed in natural
    selection
  • But nobody made the connection between Mendels
    peas and Darwins ideas until the early 1900s

3
Mendel laid the groundwork for genetics.
  • Traits are distinguishing characteristics that
    are inherited.
  • Genetics is the study of biological inheritance
    patterns and variation.
  • Gregor Mendel showed that traits are inherited as
    discrete units.
  • Many in Mendels day thought traits were blended.

4
Mendels data revealed patterns of inheritance.
  • Mendel made three key decisions in his
    experiments.
  • use of purebred plants
  • controlled breeding
  • observation of seveneither-or traits

5
The seven traits of Mendels peas
6
  • Mendel used pollen to fertilize selected pea
    plants.
  • Purebred plants crossed to produce F1 generation
  • Prevented self-pollination by removing male
    flower parts
  • Mating two organisms is called a cross.

7
  • Purebred organisms always produce identical
    offspring
  • Mendels pea plants always made offspring with
    the same traits as parent plants.
  • This means they had only one type of allele for
    each trait (homozygous).
  • Heterozygous traits have two different alleles,
    but one is dominant over the other. Only dominant
    trait is expressed.

8
  • Mendel allowed the resulting F1 plants to
    self-pollinate.
  • Among the F1 generation, all plants had purple
    flowers
  • F1 plants are all heterozygous
  • Among the F2 generation, some plants had purple
    flowers and some had white

9
  • Mendel observed patterns in the first and second
    generations of his crosses.

10
  • Dominant traits occur about 3 times more than
    recessive traits for all seven traits!

11
  • Mendel drew three important conclusions.
  • Traits are inherited as discrete units.
  • Organisms inherit two copies of each gene, one
    from each parent.
  • The two copies segregateduring gamete formation.
  • The last two conclusions arecalled the law of
    segregation.

12
F1 hybrid
Mimulus lewisii
Mimulus cardinalis
Combining F1 hybrids to make F2 hybrids reveals
lots of variation because recessive alleles are
observed
Examples of F2 hybrids F1 x F1
Schemske and Bradshaw. 1999. PNAS. 9611910-11915
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