Trait B is likely to have arisen earlier. In an asexually reproducing population, a trait present in a larger fraction of individuals has probably had more time to spread through reproduction.
Variations create differences among individuals. If environmental conditions change, some variations may give certain individuals a survival advantage, allowing them to reproduce and helping the species continue.
Mendel crossed pure tall pea plants with pure short pea plants. All F₁ plants were tall, showing that tallness was dominant over shortness. When F₁ plants self-pollinated, short plants reappeared in F₂, showing that the short trait was present but recessive.
In a dihybrid cross, Mendel crossed pea plants differing in two traits, such as seed shape and colour. In F₂, new combinations appeared and the traits assorted in a 9:3:3:1 ratio. This showed that inheritance of one trait did not affect inheritance of the other.
No. This information alone is not enough to decide dominance. The father with blood group A must carry both A and O alleles (AO), while the mother is OO, so the daughter can be OO. To determine dominance, we need to know how alleles are expressed in heterozygous individuals; blood group A is expressed over O, but that cannot be concluded from only this family data.
Human females have XX sex chromosomes and males have XY. The mother always contributes an X chromosome. The father contributes either X or Y. If the sperm carrying X fertilises the egg, the child is XX female; if the sperm carrying Y fertilises it, the child is XY male.
- a. TTWW
- b. TTww
- c. TtWW
- d. TtWw
All progeny have violet flowers, so the tall parent must contribute dominant W. About half are short when crossed with tt, so the tall parent is heterozygous Tt. Therefore TtWW fits.
(c) TtWW
No. The observation only shows that the trait can be inherited from parents to children. To decide whether it is dominant or recessive, we need controlled crosses or family data showing how the trait behaves in heterozygous combinations.
Collect data on coat colour of many parent dogs and their puppies over several generations. Record crosses between pure-breeding parents of different colours if possible. If all F₁ offspring show one colour and the other colour reappears in later generations, the F₁ colour is likely dominant. A large sample is needed because dog coat colour can involve more than one gene.
Gametes contain only one set of chromosomes because they are formed by meiosis. During fertilisation, one male gamete and one female gamete fuse, restoring the normal chromosome number. Thus the zygote receives one set of genes from each parent.