Mendel's "factors" are now known as genes.
recessive trait
Yes, Mendel's principles of inheritance, such as the law of segregation and the law of independent assortment, apply to many other organisms beyond pea plants. These principles have been found to hold true in various animals, plants, and even humans, demonstrating their widespread relevance in genetics.
Unless the alleles are codominate (which Mendel did not have in pea plants), one will be dominate and will be what you see (phenotype) and one will be recessive and you will not see it.
The discovery of DNA in the 1950s provided strong support for Mendel's ideas on inheritance. Understanding that genes are made up of DNA and that they are passed down from parents to offspring helped to confirm Mendel's principles of heredity.
Yes, Mendel observed that certain traits in his pea plant study were consistently passed down from one generation to the next, indicating that they were inherited in a predictable manner according to his laws of inheritance.
Doron Mendels was born in 1944.
Joseph Mendels has written: 'Concepts of depression' -- subject(s): Affective disorders
60
F1 generation
gregor
alleles
law of segregation
turd
GENE
Gregor Mendel was a priest.
They were homozygous.
they were all hybrids