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STAAR REVIEW—GENETICS, NATURAL SELECTION, & ARTIFICIAL SELECTION/ SELECTIVE BREEDING —CATEGORY 4 Genetics: The study of heredity Gregor Mendel: The father of genetics Alleles: Genes that code for different versions of a trait (represented by capital and lower case letters) Chromosomes: Specific location of the inherited traits (genes) in our cells Phenotype: The physical appearance of an individual (ex: green eyes, tongue roller, hitchhikers thumb, blood type, etc.) Genotype: The actual alleles a person has in order to get a specific phenotype; Represented by capital and lowercase letters (ex: TT, Tt, or tt) Dominant: Alleles in which the traits always show up—They mask other traits; Represented with a capital letter (ex: T=hitchhikers thumb) Recessive: Alleles in which the traits are masked by dominant alleles—They only show up if paired with another recessive allele (ex: t=regular thumb) Homozygous: Two of the same alleles (ex: TT (homozygous dominant) or tt (homozygous recessive—only way recessive phenotype will show up in offspring)). Heterozygous: Two different alleles (ex: Tt (Dominant allele masks recessive allele in this case, so dominant phenotype will still show up) Natural Selection: Nature “selects” which individuals will survive—those with the best characteristics/those who are better adapted to their environment (ex: Green bugs show up more on tree bark than brown bugs and therefore have less chance for long-term survival and die out quicker); “Survival of the Fittest” Charles Darwin: Noted for his research on Natural Selection—specifically on the Galapagos Islands (ex: varying beak structure in finches—suited for that they eat) Artificial Selection: Humans select (not nature) individuals with desired traits and breed them; “selective breeding” (ex: breeding of dogs) 1. Ears of corn weren’t always as big as they are now (Humans crossed them until the current size became most abundant/common) 2. Carrots weren’t always orange—Long ago, they were purple, yellow, and white (Humans took “rare” orange carrots and crossed them until eventually they became most commonly grown color) 3. Percherons—Horses that were bred to do heavy work (Humans crossed horses that were bigger/stronger to produce a new breed)