Menachem Mendel Schneerson

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    “Who made what?” After learning the different variations of genetic traits passed down to the offspring, my team and I were influenced to conduct research regarding the genetic variations of fruit flies. “Which mode of inheritance do the yellow body and curly wing trait follow?” After coordinating research, it is evident that: Because only 2 yellow bodies can only reproduce other yellow bodies, Curly wings can have either Curly or Wild-wing off spring, and the characteristics of dominant and…

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    Essay On Random Breeding

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    The results of the statistical comparison of genetic variability between the wild and founding population suggests that because the assumption figure is less than 0.5 (see table 2) the null hypothesis could not be dismissed. This meant that there is was no difference between the wild and founding population’s genetic variability. In relation to conservation biology, this finding is rather optimistic. Due to the fact that the two populations genetic variability is close to one-another allows for…

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    The Importance Of Knowledge

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    The natural sciences are very much paradigmatic in nature. As outlined by Thomas Kuhn, the natural sciences are revolutionary as opposed to “normal”; Kuhn argues that in “normal science”, scientific progress is limited to the scope of the current paradigm itself. Revolutionary science deals with paradigm shifts, in which there is a change in the basic assumptions of a scientific theory. Paradigmatic thinkers, however, are often disregarded and brushed off due to their dynamic views. For example,…

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    Gregor Mendel was a scientist from Moravia who became famous for founding the science of genetics. He worked with cross breeding pea plants, focusing on several different characteristics. When he found that breeding a green and yellow pea plant, always turned out with yellow colored offspring, he ended up making the terms "dominant" and "recessive". Sadly, Mendel's work wasn't found important until decades later in the 20th century, but the things he discovered are still important to us today.…

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    Gregor Mendel was a famous scientist. He was born in Austria in 1822 and died in 1884. He studied peas in his backyard. He had many plants but his favorite one was his pea plants. His parents were pioneers and he lived as a monk his whole life. He was a scientist and grew up loving to study peas. Gregor discovered many things with peas. He learned what forms and colors they could be. He also learned that the outer shells could be smooth or wrinkled. He learned that the inside of the…

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    Homozygous Phenotypes

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    The concept of “blending” as championed by such scholars as Aristotle and Hippocrates states that any trait that an offspring receives is the average of both of its parents. This concept was widely believed until Mendel’s experiments. Incomplete dominance occurs when the heterozygous phenotype is an intermediate between both of the homozygous genotypes. This concept is demonstrated best through the inheritance of petal color in a snapdragon. In a heterozygote the phenotype would be pink, a mix…

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    Csilla Szepe

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    Examining the inheritance patterns of genes of Drosophila melanogaster controlling some traits of eye color, body color, and wing shape by analyzing dihybrid crosses Csilla Szepe Introduction Our report will describe the experiment of three dihybrid crosses where we would like to understand if certain traits of Drosophila melanogaster follow the pattern of autosomal, unlinked inheritance. The subject of our experiment is the fruit fly because it has a short, two week long life-cycle that allows…

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    Gregor Mendel was born into an ethnic German family his name was originally Johann but was given the name Gregor when he joined the Augustan friars He was the son of Anton and Rosine Mendel. He had two siblings, his older sister veronica, and a younger sister named Theresia. He grew up on a farm that his family had owned for at least 130 years. When he was little he worked as a gardener and studied beekeeping. When grew older he attended gymnasium (a type of school with a strong emphasis on…

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    Fruit Fly Lab Report

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    found on the same chromosomes that also determine their sex. Fruit flies have several characteristics that make them excellent subjects for genetic studies. Gregor Mendel was born 1822, and he is known as “Father of Genetics”. He initially studied the inheritance of just one pair of contrasting traits. Mendel begins his experiment with…

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    Chromosomal Inheritance

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    Chromosomal inheritance relates to how a person has 2 sets of chromosomes, 46 in total, that they inherited their parents. Chromosomes carry the genes, particularly the alleles that the offspring inherit. Gregor Mendel had no understanding of chromosomes when conducting his studies. He experimented and tested peas and discovered that some genes were dominated (showed up) while others were recessive (hidden). What he didn’t know was that chromosomes contained the genes that were responsible for…

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