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Probability and The Punnett Square Gaiser Life Science Know Probability and The Punnett Square What are the chances of flipping a coin and landing on tails? Explain your answer. Evidence The Punnett Square Page 37 Clarifying ?s Probability and The Punnett Square Information probability - The chance/likelihood that something will happen Punnett Square - a chart that shows all possible genetic crosses Example: flipping a coin – 50/50 chance of landing on heads (50/50, 1 in 2, 1:1, ½, 50%) - Mendel was the first scientist to determine that probability could be used to predict genetic crosses. used to determine the probability of a specific outcome - Reginald C. Punnett originated the Punnett Square. Example: Dad’s alleles = Tt, Mom’s alleles = TT T t T TT Tt T TT tT 25% 25% 25% 25% 1 in 4 chance of a specific outcome Offspring has a 100% chance of being tall. Page 38 Clarifying ?s Probability and The Punnett Square Information genotype - an organism’s genetic make-up phenotype - an organism’s physical appearance/visible traits pheno = physical homozygous heterozygous codominance Example: Tt Example: being tall - two identical alleles Example: TT or tt - two different alleles Example: Tt - alleles are neither dominant or recessive – both show up in offspring Example: black chickens & white chickens – the offspring have both black and white feathers Summary: Page 39 Clarifying ?s Probability and The Punnett Square Information probability - The chance/likelihood that something will happen Punnett Square - a chart that shows all possible genetic crosses Example: flipping a coin – 50/50 chance of landing on heads (50/50, 1 in 2, 1:1, ½, 50%) - Mendel was the first scientist to determine that probability could be used to predict genetic crosses. - Reginald C. Punnett originated the Punnett Square. used to determine the probability of a specific outcome Example: Dad’s alleles = Tt, Mom’s alleles = TT T t T TT Tt T TT tT 25% 25% 25% 25% 1 in 4 chance of a specific outcome Offspring has a 100% chance of being tall. Page 38 Clarifying ?s Probability and The Punnett Square Information genotype - an organism’s genetic make-up phenotype - an organism’s physical appearance/visible traits pheno = physical homozygous heterozygous codominance Example: Tt Example: being tall - two identical alleles Example: TT or tt - two different alleles Example: Tt - alleles are neither dominant or recessive – both show up in offspring Example: black chickens & white chickens – the offspring have both black and white feathers Summary: Page 39 This PowerPoint was created from Charlene Shea’s lecture notes by Tim Paterek. It is copyrighted and may not be reproduced outside the Vancouver School District. All pictures came from Google Image Search. To fall within the Fair Use Guidelines, this PowerPoint must be used within the confines of the classroom and may not be published back onto the Internet unless the pictures are removed.