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What the Mendel

Author(s): Leah Dudley1, Lindsey Tuominen2

1. East Central University 2. Metropolitan State University

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Summary:
Students practice hypothesis testing using Mendelian genetics for monohybrid and dihybrid crosses. Both corn and Wisconsin Fast Plants are employed.

Licensed under CC Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International according to these terms

Version 1.0.0 - published on 16 May 2018 doi:10.25334/Q4F99W - cite this

Adapted from: A Structured Inquiry Approach to Cotyledon Phenotyping v 1.0

Description

Students will work through hypothesis testing using Mendelian genetics. First developing a hypothesis using the Punnett square method for monohybrid crosses, then testing their hypotheses using monohybrid corn. This will be followed by dihybrid hypothesis development and testing with dihybrid corn. Finally, tests will be constructed for a monohybrid cross and tested with Wisconsin Fast Plant seedling phenotypes. 

Notes

This differs from the original in the use of corn as a precursor to the Wisconsin Fast Plants. One addition that would be easy to make would be to add chi-square analyses. This takes 2 weeks for completion since seeds are sown the first lab and phenotyped the second lab. There are F2 Fast Plants through Carolina Biological that could also be used to expand the current lab.

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