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MENDEL & GENETICS Peas, Peas, Peas, Peas Studying Mendel’s Peas (Sing to tune of “Eating Goober Peas”) Peas, Peas, Peas, Peas Studying Mendel’s Peas (Sing to tune of “Eating Goober Peas”)
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Gregor Mendel 1822-1884 Austrian monk High school science teacher Discovered laws of inheritance
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Gregor Mendel Studied pea plants Easy to study Many traits only have 2 forms 7 different traits Stem height Seed shape Seed color Seed coat color Pod shape Pod color Flower position
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A Closer Look at Pea Traits Stem Height 2 forms Tall stems Short stems All traits have 2 forms, a dominant & a recessive
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2 types of Alleles (forms of a trait) Dominant allele Always shows up if present Dominant allele Always shows up if present Recessive allele May be present but masked if paired with a dominant allele Only shows up if paired with another recessive alleles
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Examples of common traits Tongue rolling Can roll tongue - dominant Can’t roll tongue - recessive You have 2 alleles for this trait Tongue rolling Can roll tongue - dominant Can’t roll tongue - recessive You have 2 alleles for this trait
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Where do your alleles come from? One from mom One from dad One from mom One from dad
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What does this mean? If you can roll your tongue, you have either 2 dominant alleles Or 1 dominant and 1 recessive If you can roll your tongue, you have either 2 dominant alleles Or 1 dominant and 1 recessive
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What does this mean? If you can’t roll your tongue, you have 2 recessive alleles If you can’t roll your tongue, you have 2 recessive alleles
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MENDEL & GENETICS PART 2
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CHROMOSOMES & YOUR CELLS Where do they come from?
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Chromosomes & Body cells All cells have chromosomes Number of chromosomes for an organism is unique Humans - 46 chromosomes Dogs - 78 chromosomes Silkworms - 56 chromosomes All cells have chromosomes Number of chromosomes for an organism is unique Humans - 46 chromosomes Dogs - 78 chromosomes Silkworms - 56 chromosomes
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How do they get there? By mitosis, of course! Remember - mitosis creates new cells that are identical to the original cell So that means a cell with 46 chromosomes will create a new cell with 46 chromosomes! By mitosis, of course! Remember - mitosis creates new cells that are identical to the original cell So that means a cell with 46 chromosomes will create a new cell with 46 chromosomes!
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But what about our sex cells? Sex cells are created through a process called meiosis New cells have half the number of chromosomes New cells are not identical to original cells Sex cells are created through a process called meiosis New cells have half the number of chromosomes New cells are not identical to original cells
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Why is this important? Remember, all organisms have a unique number of chromosomes On offspring may not survive if the number of chromosomes is incorrect Remember, all organisms have a unique number of chromosomes On offspring may not survive if the number of chromosomes is incorrect
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Why is this important? (con’t) Think about how you were created, a sperm fertilized an egg. The sperm donated half the chromosomes (23) The egg donated the other half of the chromosomes (23) Think about how you were created, a sperm fertilized an egg. The sperm donated half the chromosomes (23) The egg donated the other half of the chromosomes (23)
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So why is it important that sex cells have half the number of chromosomes? Your turn to write an answer
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