Human Heredity: Principles and Issues (MindTap Course List)
Human Heredity: Principles and Issues (MindTap Course List)
11th Edition
ISBN: 9781305251052
Author: Michael Cummings
Publisher: Cengage Learning
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Chapter 3, Problem 4QP
Summary Introduction

To define: The Mendel’s law of independent assortment.

Introduction: The Mendelian genetics was created by Gregor Mendel who was an Austrian monk, who worked on a pea plant to observe the pattern of inheritance of certain characters from the parent plant to the offsprings. He termed genes as factors that were passed from one generation to another. He proposed three laws, which are known as Mendel’s law of genetics.

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Briefly describe Mendel’s rule of inheritance: segregation and independent assortment
Solve this problem using the rules of probability instead of Punnet squares, bifurcation forks, or mental visualization. Flower position, stem length, and seed shape were three of the traits that Mendel studied. Each is controlled by an independently assorting gene and has dominant and recessive expression as follows: • Axial inflorescence (flowers originate along the stems) is dominant over terminal (flowers on top of the stem). Long (“tall") stem is dominant over short stem (“dwarf"). • Round seed is dominant over wrinkled. Let's use the symbols Fa/fa for genes determining axial vs. terminal (fa from "false umbel," a type of inflorescence); Le/le for tall vs. dwarf (le is for length); R/r for round vs. wrinkled seeds (the Latin word rugosus means wrinkled). Notice that the phenotype "tall plant" may be conferred by the genotype Lele or Lele; this can be abbreviated as Le-, where the dash represents the alternative allele. The homozygous lele will show the recessive phenotype. Since…
Mendel's principle of segregation [Select] [Select] demonstrates why a pea plant can be tall with round seeds or short with round seeds * Previous demonstrates that offspring get one copy of each chromosome from each parent demonstrates that the inheritance of one trait can affect the inheritance of another trait. even when they're on different chromosomes demonstrates that when populations are segregated they are more likely to evolve quickly

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Human Heredity: Principles and Issues (MindTap Course List)

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