Biology HL
Biology HL
4
Chapters
553
Notes
Theme A - Unity & diversity
Theme A - Unity & diversity
Theme B - Form & Function
Theme B - Form & Function
Theme C - Interaction &  Interdependence
Theme C - Interaction & Interdependence
Theme D - Continuity & Change
Theme D - Continuity & Change
IB Resources
Theme D - Continuity & Change
Biology HL
Biology HL

Theme D - Continuity & Change

Unlocking Mendel's Genetics Secrets: Dominant vs. Recessive Traits

Word Count Emoji
484 words
Reading Time Emoji
3 mins read
Updated at Emoji
Last edited on 5th Nov 2024

Table of content

Yo, future biologists! Let's talk about the Godfather of Genetics, Gregor Mendel, and how he rocked the world of biology with some tiny pea plants. 🌿🤘

Why Pea Plants? 🌟

  • Mendel used pea plants because they have easily observable traits, like flower color and seed shape.
  • Fun Fact: Pea plants can either make love to themselves (self-pollinate) or swing with other pea varieties (cross-pollinate).

Traits Mendel Looked At 👀

Mendel was not boring; he picked 7 fun traits, each having 2 forms. For example, height - you’re either tall like a basketball player or dwarf-sized like Tyrion Lannister.

Pure-Breeding Plants 🤓

  • Mendel was so extra he developed pure-breeding pea plants. These are like the Kardashians of the pea world—each generation looks the same.
  • In science-speak: they are "homozygous."

Cross-Pollination Party 😎

  • Mendel crossed different varieties to make hybrid babies (offspring).
  • Surprise: Offspring weren’t a mix of parents. They totally took after one parent. Like if Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie had a kid who only looked like Brad.

F1 and F2 Generations 🧪

  • F1 = First generation. When Mendel let these self-pollinate, their kids (F2) had some surprises.
  • Example: If F1 were all tall, F2 had some dwarf plants sneak back in! Like an unexpected plot twist in a soap opera.
  • The ratio? Usually 3 tall:1 dwarf.

Unlock the Full Content! File Is Locked Emoji

Dive deeper and gain exclusive access to premium files of Biology HL. Subscribe now and get closer to that 45 🌟

Nail IB's App Icon
IB Resources
Theme D - Continuity & Change
Biology HL
Biology HL

Theme D - Continuity & Change

Unlocking Mendel's Genetics Secrets: Dominant vs. Recessive Traits

Word Count Emoji
484 words
Reading Time Emoji
3 mins read
Updated at Emoji
Last edited on 5th Nov 2024

Table of content

Yo, future biologists! Let's talk about the Godfather of Genetics, Gregor Mendel, and how he rocked the world of biology with some tiny pea plants. 🌿🤘

Why Pea Plants? 🌟

  • Mendel used pea plants because they have easily observable traits, like flower color and seed shape.
  • Fun Fact: Pea plants can either make love to themselves (self-pollinate) or swing with other pea varieties (cross-pollinate).

Traits Mendel Looked At 👀

Mendel was not boring; he picked 7 fun traits, each having 2 forms. For example, height - you’re either tall like a basketball player or dwarf-sized like Tyrion Lannister.

Pure-Breeding Plants 🤓

  • Mendel was so extra he developed pure-breeding pea plants. These are like the Kardashians of the pea world—each generation looks the same.
  • In science-speak: they are "homozygous."

Cross-Pollination Party 😎

  • Mendel crossed different varieties to make hybrid babies (offspring).
  • Surprise: Offspring weren’t a mix of parents. They totally took after one parent. Like if Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie had a kid who only looked like Brad.

F1 and F2 Generations 🧪

  • F1 = First generation. When Mendel let these self-pollinate, their kids (F2) had some surprises.
  • Example: If F1 were all tall, F2 had some dwarf plants sneak back in! Like an unexpected plot twist in a soap opera.
  • The ratio? Usually 3 tall:1 dwarf.

Unlock the Full Content! File Is Locked Emoji

Dive deeper and gain exclusive access to premium files of Biology HL. Subscribe now and get closer to that 45 🌟