When Mendel crossed short tt pea plants (homozygous recessive) with short pea plants that were heterozygous for height (Tt), the offspring would display a phenotypic ratio of 1 short (tt) to 1 tall (Tt). This is because the short plants (tt) can only contribute recessive alleles, while the heterozygous plants (Tt) can contribute either a dominant (T) or a recessive (t) allele. Therefore, half of the offspring would be tall and half would be short.
All the offspring were tall plants. This is because the tall trait is dominant over the short trait in Mendel's experiments on pea plants.
When Mendel crossed purebred tall tea plants with purebred short tea plants, all the offspring in the first generation (F1) exhibited the tall phenotype. This outcome demonstrated the concept of dominance, where the tall trait masked the short trait. When Mendel allowed these F1 plants to self-pollinate, the second generation (F2) revealed a 3:1 ratio of tall to short plants, indicating that the short trait was still present as a recessive trait. This experiment laid the foundation for Mendel's laws of inheritance.
When Gregor Mendel crossed true-breeding tall plants with true-breeding short plants, all the offspring were tall because the tall trait is dominant over the short trait. In this cross, the tall plants contributed a dominant allele, while the short plants contributed a recessive allele. Since the presence of just one dominant allele is sufficient to express the tall phenotype, all the F1 offspring exhibited the tall trait. This foundational experiment established key principles of inheritance.
Gregor Mendel discovered that when he crossed a tall plant with a short plant, all the resulting offspring were tall. This indicated that the trait for tallness was dominant over the trait for shortness.
All of the offspring had at least one dominant tall allele. All of the offspring in the F1 generation were heterozygous "Tt" meaning they each had one tall allele "T" and one short allele "t". It also suggest that one parent was homozygous tall TT and the other was homozygous short "tt."
All the offspring were tall plants. This is because the tall trait is dominant over the short trait in Mendel's experiments on pea plants.
When Mendel crossed purebred tall tea plants with purebred short tea plants, all the offspring in the first generation (F1) exhibited the tall phenotype. This outcome demonstrated the concept of dominance, where the tall trait masked the short trait. When Mendel allowed these F1 plants to self-pollinate, the second generation (F2) revealed a 3:1 ratio of tall to short plants, indicating that the short trait was still present as a recessive trait. This experiment laid the foundation for Mendel's laws of inheritance.
When Gregor Mendel crossed true-breeding tall plants with true-breeding short plants, all the offspring were tall because the tall trait is dominant over the short trait. In this cross, the tall plants contributed a dominant allele, while the short plants contributed a recessive allele. Since the presence of just one dominant allele is sufficient to express the tall phenotype, all the F1 offspring exhibited the tall trait. This foundational experiment established key principles of inheritance.
I think not as tall is the dominant allele here.T = tallt = shortTT X ttall would beTt======and tall.
In his first set of experiments, Mendel crossed purebred pea plants with different traits, such as tall and short plants. He observed the inheritance patterns in the offspring of these crosses over several generations. Mendel showed that traits are inherited independently and proposed the laws of segregation and independent assortment.
i believe his results were that after cross pollinating to non-purebred pea plants, the offspring were all tall like the female,and when he crossed the other two, he received three tall pea plants and one short
dominant
3.1
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?
dominant
When Mendel crossed two hybrid plants for stem height, three fourths of the F1 plants always had tall stems. One fourth of the plants had short stems.Mendel always got a dazzling and great result. It was always 3/4 that were tall and 1/4 that were short
Dominant