Consider three yellow, round peas, labeled A, B, and C. Each was grown Into a plant and crossed to a plant grown from a green, wrinkled pea. Exactly 100 peas derived from each cross were sorted into phenotypic classes as follows: A: 51 yellow, round 49 green, round B: 100 yellow, round 24 yellow, round 26 yellow, wrinkled 25 green, round 25 green, wrinkled What are the genotypes of plants A, B, and C?
Suppose that the following genes are responsible for different traits:
A - yellow color;
a - green color;
B - round;
b - wrinkled.
Let's make the cross to find out the genotypes of plants:
P (A): AaBB (yellow, round) + aabb (green, wrinkled)
↓
F1: 51 AaBb (yellow, round) + 49 aaBb (green, round)
P (B): AABB (yellow, round) + aabb (green, wrinkled)
↓
F1: 100 AaBb (yellow, round)
P (C): AaBb (yellow, round) + aabb (green, wrinkled)
↓
F1: 24 AaBb (yellow, round) + 26 Aabb (yellow, wrinkled) + 25 aaBb (green, round) + 25 aabb (green, wrinkled)
First, we marked with a dash the unknown second alleles in each genotype hybridity expressing a dominant trait. Then, by correspondence, we select the genotypes of yellow round peas in parent plants A, B and C (we have already entered them above and highlighted them in bold). After that, of course, we added the genotypes of the offsprings (also above).
Thus, the genotype of plant A is AaBB, the genotype of plant B is AABB, and the genotype of plant C is AaBb.
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