100% heterozygous pea plants. Showing the dominant trait
In Mendel's experiments, the ratio of tall to short plants in the F2 generation is typically 3:1. This is known as the Mendelian ratio, which is a result of the segregation of alleles during gamete formation and fertilization.
In Mendel's experiments, recessive traits were hidden in the F1 generation. When he crossed pure-breeding plants with contrasting traits, all offspring in the F1 generation exhibited the dominant trait. It was only in the F2 generation, produced by self-pollinating the F1 plants, that the recessive traits reappeared in a 3:1 ratio alongside the dominant traits.
Recessive traits were visible in the F2 generation of Mendel's experiments, where the offspring of the F1 generation showed a 3:1 ratio of dominant to recessive traits.
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.
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3 dominant to 1 recessive
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100% heterozygous pea plants. Showing the dominant trait
In Mendel's experiments, the ratio of tall to short plants in the F2 generation is typically 3:1. This is known as the Mendelian ratio, which is a result of the segregation of alleles during gamete formation and fertilization.
3:1
Mendel used the mathematics in his experiments. He found the ratio of the pea plants who were tall to who were short if every generation and gave the law of inheritance.
Three times as many shorts plants as tall plants.