Gregor Mendel was a Silesian scientist known as the father of genetics. His famous experiment should not have used the garden pea plant as his experimental organism because this variety of pea plant naturally varies in its genetic makeup.
Try Biography of Gregor Mendel. It has some decent pictures of Mendel and the garden where he planted his peas.
He used pea plants for his genetics experiment.
Yes. Although it's unclear whether anyone actually carried out experiments with Mendel, he learned his trade from a good number of genetics researchers and plant scientists, shared his work with a community of scientists, and worked in an experimental garden (at the Abbey) that he himself did not plant.
A scientist who experimented with garden peas and other plants in his spare time, Mendel discovered the fundamental principles of genetics. Between 1856 and 1863 he grew at least 28,000 pea plants and analyzed characteristics such as height, flower color, and pod shape.
well according to logic i believe it is made in his garden
He studied plants and was a gardener.
Pea Plants
Try Biography of Gregor Mendel. It has some decent pictures of Mendel and the garden where he planted his peas.
Mendel chose peas because they had seven traits that he could study. Peas are easy to grow and they self fertilize.
Mendel's science was influenced by his education in mathematics and physics, as well as the work of various scientists such as Carl Friedrich Gauss on probability theory. Additionally, the practical experience he gained while working in the monastery's garden helped shape his experimental approach to studying inheritance in peas.
He used pea plants for his genetics experiment.
Mendel choose the garden pea because the garden peas have a number of characteristics that are expressed in one of ways.
Gregor Mendel is an Austrian monk that discovered genetics in a monastary garden with pea plants.
He used pea plants.
Yes. Although it's unclear whether anyone actually carried out experiments with Mendel, he learned his trade from a good number of genetics researchers and plant scientists, shared his work with a community of scientists, and worked in an experimental garden (at the Abbey) that he himself did not plant.
garden pea plant
mendel worked in a monastery that was already studying garden peas. because they were readily available to him he experimented with them