BSC 2010 Lecture Notes - Lecture 8: Blending Inheritance, Outcrossing, Miscibility

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Homologous chromosomes: pair at meiosis, same sequence. Ploidy vs. dna content in meiosis: diploid- contains two chromosomes from a homologous pair. One from each parent: haploid- contains only one chromosome from a homologous pair. The nature of heredity: observation- offspring generally intermediate in phenotype (trait value) between those of parents. Obvious example: human children with one african and one white parent: proposed explanation. Genetic material miscible like paint: ex: black + white = gray. Logical difficulty with this argument: variation reduced every generation, ultimate consequence is a homogenous population. Gregor mendel- the origin of genetics: austrian farm boy, entered augustinian monastery in 1843, attended u of vienna in early 1850s, learned two things about science. Analyze your data: 1857- began an experimental program to investigate the basis of inheritance with peas, mendel"s experiments. Many varieties that bred true for particular traits: get the same trait through generations. Easy to do controlled crosses: both self and outcross.

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