they were all hybrids
Mendels' f2 generation produce a 3:1 ratio of tall plants. By crossing true tall with true short , homologous chromosomes, he wound up with three types of plants, true tall, true short, and tall with a short allele.
dominant
TT for the homozygous tall parent, tt for the homozygous short parent and Tt for the heterozygous offspring.
They were all hybrids
Yes, that is what he concluded (statistics can show that he fudged his data, though)
they were all hybrids
first-generation plants
Yes, it is true. Mendels principles apply to anything and everythin that is living.
Mendels' f2 generation produce a 3:1 ratio of tall plants. By crossing true tall with true short , homologous chromosomes, he wound up with three types of plants, true tall, true short, and tall with a short allele.
dominant
dominant
True breeding plants were homozygous for all the characters expressed, hence inheritance of characters was better understood with the help of these plants.
True breeding tall plants would be TT and true breeding short plants would be tt, so TT x tt would illustrate the crossbreeding.
True breeding tall plants would be TT and true breeding short plants would be tt, so TT x tt would illustrate the crossbreeding.
True breeding tall plants would be TT and true breeding short plants would be tt, so TT x tt would illustrate the crossbreeding.
True breeding tall plants would be TT and true breeding short plants would be tt, so TT x tt would illustrate the crossbreeding.
They were all hybrids