SEARCH
You are in browse mode. You must login to use MEMORY

   Log in to start


From course:

Unit 3 Part 1 - Chapter 14 (Mendelian Genetics) - DAY 1

» Start this Course
(Practice similar questions for free)
Question:

What was the hypothesis for heredity before Mendel? How was it disproven?

Author: AMRIT KAUR



Answer:

- In the 1800s, the explanation of heredity was the “blending” hypothesis (when they believed that physical traits were a mix of the parents traits) - BUT when Mendel crossed contrasting, true-breeding white- and purple-flowered pea plants, all of the F1 hybrids were purple​ (not a mix of white and purple!) - This result was not predicted by the blending hypothesis - When Mendel crossed the F1 hybrids, many of the F2 plants had purple flowers, but some had white - Mendel discovered a ratio of about three purple flowers to one white flower in the F2 generation


0 / 5  (0 ratings)


- In the 1800s, the explanation of heredity was the “blending” hypothesis (when they believed that physical traits were a mix of the parents traits)
- BUT when Mendel crossed contrasting, true-breeding white- and purple-flowered pea plants, all of the F1 hybrids were purple​ (not a mix of white and purple!)
- This result was not predicted by the blending hypothesis
- When Mendel crossed the F1 hybrids, many of the F2 plants had purple flowers, but some had white
- Mendel discovered a ratio of about three purple flowers to one white flower in the F2 generation
1 answer(s) in total