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Chapter 10
Chapter 10

... what external appearance the offspring will have. (We now call these factors genes or alleles) ...
NCEA Level 2 Biology (91157) 2016
NCEA Level 2 Biology (91157) 2016

... Therefore, only one chromosome from each homologous pair is placed in the gametes. Therefore, genetic variation is achieved / increased when the chromosomes pairs are separated because each new cell has a different combination of chromosomes / allele from each. During segregation, only one chromosom ...
Foundations of Biology
Foundations of Biology

... indistinguishable gametes ©2000 Timothy G. Standish ...
11-1
11-1

... • During sexual repro, male & female repro cells in a process called fertilization. • Fertilization produces a new cell which develops into an embryo encased in a seed. ...
DNA chips
DNA chips

... Readout using micro-flow cells or optic fiber arrays ...
linkage map
linkage map

... Allow uptake of chromosome fragments into rodent cells. Most will be incorporated into rodent genome, but are still recognizable by their banding. ...
Infographic - Simons VIP Connect
Infographic - Simons VIP Connect

... Most people have 23 pairs of chromosomes, for a total of 46. ...
Sex Determination
Sex Determination

... indistinguishable gametes ©2000 Timothy G. Standish ...
Heredity
Heredity

... color. The reason is that you may have several different genes that control these traits. One trait that is controlled by a single gene is tongue rolling. You can either roll your tongue into a U-shape or you can't. If one of your parents has the trait (if one of your parents can roll his or her ton ...
Heredity - adaptingtotheenviroment
Heredity - adaptingtotheenviroment

... The process by which parents pass characteristics or traits on to their children B. True of people, plants, and other organisms where there are parents and offspring C. A way that some diseases and disorders are passed from parents to offspring ...
Heredity By Cindy Grigg 1 What makes children look like their
Heredity By Cindy Grigg 1 What makes children look like their

... The process by which parents pass characteristics or traits on to their children B. True of people, plants, and other organisms where there are parents and offspring C. A way that some diseases and disorders are passed from parents to offspring ...
Heredity - adaptingtotheenviroment
Heredity - adaptingtotheenviroment

... The process by which parents pass characteristics or traits on to their children B. True of people, plants, and other organisms where there are parents and offspring C. A way that some diseases and disorders are passed from parents to offspring ...
Document
Document

... “bully” female with a heterozygous male. What proportion of the resulting offspring would you expect to be bullies? (a) None. (b) 25% (c) 50% ...
WORKING WTH THE FIGURES
WORKING WTH THE FIGURES

... the union of a monosomic from a first-division nondisjunction in a female and a disomic from a second-division nondisjunction in a male, assuming the gametes were functional? Answer: A gamete from a first-division nondisjunction would be an egg without the chromosome in question (n - 1); while a gam ...
after
after

... Some sub-populations overlap Some are more isolated We can look at populations at many different scales – micro to meta ...
mousegeneticssescience
mousegeneticssescience

... 3. What do you think their parents looked like? Their parents probably look similar to their kittens, they might have had spots and they are from the same cat family. Gizmo Warm-up The rules of inheritance were discovered in the 19th century by Gregor Mendel. With the Mouse Genetics (One Trait) Gizm ...
chromosome3
chromosome3

... a) Lethal in humans, common in plants (1) Fetus is usually aborted (a) Accounts for 15% of spontaneous abortions (2) A few survive a few days after birth, but have birth defects in almost all organs 4. Types a) Autopolyploidy (1) Extra set of chromosomes from the same species (2) Causes (a) Fertiliz ...
Meiosis and Fertilization
Meiosis and Fertilization

... eggs – which are produced by a different type of cell division called meiosis. During fertilization the sperm and egg unite to form a single cell called the zygote which contains all the chromosomes from both the sperm and the egg. The zygote divides into two cells by mitosis, then these cells each ...
Heredity and How Traits Change
Heredity and How Traits Change

... • Traits are inherited as genes pass from parent to offspring. • Scientists study genetics to learn more about the development of organisms as well as the development of disease. Scientists also can learn more about how organisms are related by studying ...
Regional chromosomal localization of N-ras, K-ras-1, K-ras
Regional chromosomal localization of N-ras, K-ras-1, K-ras

... of human cancers. ...
Rock-Around-the-Clock PDF document
Rock-Around-the-Clock PDF document

... expanded it to cover 22 different strains of peas, studying seven different traits. Every time the second generation (F2) had the same 3:1 ratio. He hypothesized that every trait is controlled by two factors that are capable of being inherited. (See Punnett Square.) He believed that if the factors a ...
Pedigree notes ppt
Pedigree notes ppt

... – One allele must come from the mother and one comes from the father – The actual allele is decided through haploid _____ (sperm and egg) formation during meiosis – A zygote is the result of sperm fertilizing an _____ ...
heredity article and questions
heredity article and questions

... The process by which Segments of DNA that parents pass characteristics or carry instructions for the traits traits on to their children of an offspring True of people, plants, Something that comes in and other organisms where pairs there are parents and Both A and B are correct. offspring None of th ...
fundamentals of genetics - Doral Academy Preparatory
fundamentals of genetics - Doral Academy Preparatory

... Mendel crossed traits – one of the P traits failed to appear in the F1 plants. An every case, the trait reappeared in the F2 generation at a ratio of 3:1. This pattern lead Mendel to hypothesize that one factor in the pair may prevent the other from having an effect. • Dominant Trait masks or domina ...
Imprinted gene expression in hybrids: perturbed
Imprinted gene expression in hybrids: perturbed

... hybrids (Zechner et al., 2004). These hybrid effects were observed in crosses between a mixed M. musculus domesticus strain and lab stocks of M. spretus. To be definitive about where the incompatibilities lie between M. musculus and M. spretus (or M. m. castaneus, see below), reciprocal crosses betw ...
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Hybrid (biology)



In biology a hybrid, also known as cross breed, is the result of mixing, through sexual reproduction, two animals or plants of different breeds, varieties, species or genera. Using genetic terminology, it may be defined as follows. Hybrid generally refers to any offspring resulting from the breeding of two genetically distinct individuals, which usually will result in a high degree of heterozygosity, though hybrid and heterozygous are not, strictly speaking, synonymous. a genetic hybrid carries two different alleles of the same gene a structural hybrid results from the fusion of gametes that have differing structure in at least one chromosome, as a result of structural abnormalities a numerical hybrid results from the fusion of gametes having different haploid numbers of chromosomes a permanent hybrid is a situation where only the heterozygous genotype occurs, because all homozygous combinations are lethal.From a taxonomic perspective, hybrid refers to: Offspring resulting from the interbreeding between two animal species or plant species. See also hybrid speciation. Hybrids between different subspecies within a species (such as between the Bengal tiger and Siberian tiger) are known as intra-specific hybrids. Hybrids between different species within the same genus (such as between lions and tigers) are sometimes known as interspecific hybrids or crosses. Hybrids between different genera (such as between sheep and goats) are known as intergeneric hybrids. Extremely rare interfamilial hybrids have been known to occur (such as the guineafowl hybrids). No interordinal (between different orders) animal hybrids are known. The third type of hybrid consists of crosses between populations, breeds or cultivars within a single species. This meaning is often used in plant and animal breeding, where hybrids are commonly produced and selected, because they have desirable characteristics not found or inconsistently present in the parent individuals or populations.↑ ↑ ↑ ↑
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