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Question
State Mendel’s law of dominance. How did he deduce the law? Explain with the help of a suitable example.
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Solution
This law states that traits are controlled by distinct units called factors (genes), which occur in pairs. In a monohybrid cross, the dominant allele expresses itself and masks the effect of the recessive allele. However, the recessive allele is not lost; it remains hidden in the F1 generation and appears again in the next generation. According to this law, only one of the parental traits is expressed in the F1 generation, while both traits appear in the F2 generation. For example, when pea plants with round seeds (RR) are crossed with plants having wrinkled seeds (rr), all the seeds in the F1 generation are round (Rr). When these F1 plants are self-pollinated, both round and wrinkled seeds appear in the F2 generation in a 3 : 1 ratio. Thus, the dominant trait (round seeds) is expressed in F1, while the recessive trait (wrinkled seeds), though suppressed earlier, reappears in F2.

