Chapter10 Flashcards

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1
Q

Character

A

Any observable feature, or trait, of an organism, whether acquired or inherited.

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2
Q

Traits (2)

A
  1. A descriptive trait: phenotype2. A trait characterized by the genetic makeup: genotype
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3
Q

Self-pollination

A

The pollination of a flower by pollen from the same flower or from another flower on the exact same plant.

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4
Q

Cross-pollination

A

The transfer of pollen from the male reproductive organ (an anther or a male cone) of one plant to the female productive organ (a stigma or a female cone) of another plant. Insects and wind are the main agents of cross-pollination.

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5
Q

True-breeding

A

Sometimes also called a pure-bred, it is an organism that always passes down a certain phenotypic trait to its offspring. An organism is referred to as true breeding for each tart to which this applies, and the term ‘try breeding’ is also used to describe individual genetic traits.

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6
Q

Parental generation

A

The first set of parents crosses i which their genotype is the basis for predicting the genotype of their offspring, which in turn, may be crossed.

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7
Q

F1 generation

A

The first filial generation of offspring of distinctively different parental types. F1 hybrids are used in genetics and selective breeding.

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8
Q

F2 generation

A

The second filial generation produced by interbreeding individuals of an F1 generation and consisting of individuals that exhibit the result of recombination and segregation of genes controlling traits for which stocks of the P1 generation differ.

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9
Q

Testcross

A

When doing genetics research, there are times when we much know for sure if the organism is homozygous or heterozygous. By crossing the unknown dominant with a recessive we can determine the genotype of the unknown. If the unknown is homozygous there is a 100% chance of it passing on a specific trait. If it is heterozygous there is a 50% chance of it passing on that trait.

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10
Q

Monohybrid

A

A hybrid that is heterozygous with respect to a specified gene.

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11
Q

Dihybrid

A

A hybrid that is heterozygous for alleles of two different genes.

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12
Q

Dominance

A

The allele that produces the phenotype in a heterozygous organism.

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13
Q

Recessive

A

The ‘invisible allele’ in a heterozygous organism (Medel’s principal of segregation)

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14
Q

Homozygous

A

Both alleles are the same.

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15
Q

Heterozygous

A

Both alleles are different

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16
Q

Independent assortment (Mendel’s)

A

Alleles of different genes will assort independently of each other during meiosis (unless the genes are near each other on the same chromosome).

17
Q

Incomplete Dominance

A

Sometimes a heterozygous offspring will be intermediate in a phenotype. e.g. red flower + white flower = pink flower

18
Q

Codominance

A

A condition in which both allele for a gene are expressed when present (red cattle + white cattle = roan or spotted cattle)

19
Q

Multiple alleles

A

The state of having more than two alternative contrasting characters controlled by multiple alleles at a single genetic locus

20
Q

Epistasis

A

When more than one gene is required for expression of a phenotype. (being bald makes having a brown hair a mute point)

21
Q

Polygenic Inheritance

A

Polygenic inheritance refers to a single characteristic that is controlled by more than two genes (also called multifactorial inheritance)

22
Q

Pleiotrophy

A

The single gene controlling or influencing multiple (and possibly unrelated) phenotypic traits. An example being phenylketonuria, which is a human disease that affects multiple systems but is causes by one gene defect.