When Gregor Mindel crossed homozygous tall plants with homozygous short plants,he got hetrozygous tall plants. Tall plants will dominate any small pea plants in the same area.
The traits for tall were dominant over short traits. Perhaps both alleles can code for protein, but the dominant product is expressed in the phenotype.
He got a tall plant. The tall gene is a dominant trait so when he crossed them he got a tall instead of a small.
the gene which has strong characteristic dominated the other
The pea plants grew tall because tall is dominant TT
he made a table to show what kind a plane he will get he used T for tall and t for short
I believe they were genetically altered to form a mix of tall/short plants, instead of purebred tall and purebred short pea plants.
That all offspring were both tall and short
He produced hybrid pea plants that were tall.
Pea Plant
Gregor Mendel used pea plants for his hereditary experiments
He looked at the stars. Mendel is known for his experiments and research in plant genetics.
When Mendel crossed a true-breeding short plant with a true-breeding tall plant, all the offspring were tall. Which term describes the gene for tallness?
Gregor Mendel took two true-breeding plants with contrasting traits and cross-pollinated them, producing offspring with genes for both characteristics. He used selective breeding.
one tall allele and one short allele
Pea Plant
Mendel studied plant inheritance.
Gregor Mendel
he was famous for the pea plant
Gregor Johann Mendel.
Gregor Mendel used pea plants for his hereditary experiments
He looked at the stars. Mendel is known for his experiments and research in plant genetics.
Gregor Mendel....with his pea plant studies
pea pod plants
Mendel did his experiments by using pea plants with various traits like the color of the flower, the shape of the seeds, the height of the plants etc and studied how those traits behave when crossed. For example, what happens when a short plant with red color flowers was crossed with a tall plant with purple colored flower etc.
Gregor Mendel took two different colored pea plants: one had traits for white plants and the other had traits for a red plant. When Mendel cross bred the two plants, a plant with traits for a pink plant grew. This is how Mendel contributed to the understanding of inherited traits.