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Chapter 10.2 Mendel’s Laws of Heredity I. Gregor Mendel father of genetics – branch of biology that studies heredity investigated heredity – the passing of traits from parents to offspring was 1st to predict how traits are transferred from one generation to the next II. Mendel studied pea plants because . . . peas reproduce sexually, with egg & sperm sperm is transferred to egg by pollination – he could control in a lab to do an experiment A. Abbreviations in Heredity 1. P1 = parents 2. F1 = first filial generation (filial means offspring) 3. F2 = second filial generation (offspring mate w/ each other) B. C. Each organism has 2 genes that control each of the traits located on its chromosomes 1. Allele – a form/copy of a gene 2. For every trait, there are 2 alleles – 1 from father, 1 from mother Mendel first worked with purely green plants (GG) & purely yellow plants (gg) – when mated, they formed a hybrid: 1. Offspring were green (but were Gg) 2. Dominant = observed trait (G) 3. Recessive = hidden trait (g) 4. 5. 6. 7. Phenotype = the way an organism looks; what you can physically see eye color, hair color, height Genotype = the genes/alleles an organism has in its chromosomes Tt, Bb, LL, aa Homozygous = containing 2 of the same alleles (dominant or recessive) TT or tt, BB or bb Heterozygous = containing 2 different alleles (only dominant) Tt, Bb, Ll, Aa III. Mendel’s 2 Laws of Heredity A. The Law of Segregation - Every organism has 2 alleles per gene, but when gametes are created, a gamete gets only 1 allele 1. During fertilization, 2 gametes randomly pair to produce 4 combinations of alleles 2. 2 organisms can look alike, but have different allele combinations B. The Law of Independent Assortment – genes for different traits are inherited independent of each other 1. You won’t look exactly like either your mom or your dad – you’re a mix of both of their traits 2. Example: Mom AaBbCcDd Dad aabbccdd You AabbccDd , aaBbCcdd, etc. Gregor Mendel rap Gregor Mendel monk song