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Chapter Three Study Guide

chap 3

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
5 views2 pages

Chapter Three Study Guide

chap 3

Uploaded by

commonstem
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Chapter Three Study Guide Traits- physical characteristics studied in genetics, they are inherited from parents. Haircolor Eye color Shape of nose Dimples Heredity- The passing of traits from parents to offspring. Genetics- The scientific study of heredity. Gregor Mendel- Father of genetics. Studied cross-pollinated pea plants. Purebred- always produces offspring with the same form of a trait as the parents Purebred short pea plants (tt) *Purebred tall pea pants (TT) Genes- The factors that control traits. An offspring receives genes form both parents. Alleles- Different forms of genes. Some alleles are dominant and some are recessive. Dominate Allele- a trait that always shows up when present. (Capital Letter) Recessive Allele- a trait that is masked when a dominant allele is present. It will only show up when it is paired with another recessive allele, (Lowercase Letter) Hybrids- Have two different alleles for a given trait. Example: T (tall allele), t (short allele) Hybrid plant's alleles: Tt Probability- The likelihood that a particular event will occur. (Chance) Mendel was the first scientist to recognize that probability can be used to predic genetic crosses. Punnett Square: *A chart that shows all the possible combinations of alleles, ———————" “it determines the probability of a particular Punnett Square Phenotype- an organism's physical appearance, it's visible trait. Genotype- The genetic makeup, or allele (red hair, blue eyes, wrinkled seeds) ‘combinations of a specific trait. (Tt, RR, Bb) Heterozygous- an organism that has two Homozygous: an organism with two identical alleles for a trait. Giferent alles fora trait (Tt [hybrid] (TT tall, tt short [purebred]) Codominance: *The alleles are neither dominant nor recessive. * Both alleles are expressed in the offspring “Both letters are written as capitals with superscripts. BW fF) Walter Sutton: *First person to come up with the idea that chromosomes were the key to inheritance. Chromosome Theory of Inheritance: Genes are carried from parent to offspring on chromosomes. [Found in the nucleus.) Sex Cells: ne from each parent. Egg Cell (Female) Sperm Cell (Male) *Each sex cell has exactly half the number of chromosomes found in an organism's body cells. Ex: Grasshopper Egg Cell 12 chromosomes Sperm Cell_ +12 chromosomes 24 chromosomes in a grasshopper’s body cells, The process by which the number of chromosomes is reduced by half to form sex cells. *Punnett squares show how alleles separate when sex cells form during meiosis. Mutations in sex cells can be passed on to offspring. (Be able to give examples)

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