Title: Figure 14'0 Painting of Mendel
1Figure 14.0 Painting of Mendel
2Figure 14.7 Testing two hypotheses for
segregation in a dihybrid cross
3Figure 14.8 Segregation of alleles and
fertilization as chance events
4Figure 14.9 Incomplete dominance in snapdragon
color
5Figure 14.9x Incomplete dominance in carnations
6Figure 14.10 Multiple alleles for the ABO blood
groups
7Figure 14.10x ABO blood types
8Figure 14.11 An example of epistasis
9Figure 14.12 A simplified model for polygenic
inheritance of skin color
10Figure 14.13 The effect of environment of
phenotype
11Figure 14.14 Pedigree analysis
12Figure 14.15 Pleiotropic effects of the
sickle-cell allele in a homozygote
13Figure 14.16 Large families provide excellent
case studies of human genetics
14Figure 14.17 Testing a fetus for genetic
disorders
15Figure 14.0x Mendel
16Figure 14.1 A genetic cross
17Figure 14.2 Mendel tracked heritable characters
for three generations
18Figure 14.x1 Sweet pea flowers
19Figure 14.3 Alleles, alternative versions of a
gene
20Table 14.1 The Results of Mendels F1 Crosses
for Seven Characters in Pea Plants
21Figure 14.x2 Round and wrinkled peas
22Figure 14.4 Mendels law of segregation (Layer 1)
23Figure 14.4 Mendels law of segregation (Layer 2)
24Figure 14.5 Genotype versus phenotype
25Figure 14.6 A testcross