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Last lesson

Read pages 6 to 9 and write 10 multiple choice questions (each with 4 possible answers) on the subject of species, breeds, varieties, selective breeding and cross-breeding. FINISH for HOMEWORK due next Friday 23 rd October We will also be having a genetics (8A) test that day.

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Last lesson

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  1. Read pages 6 to 9 and write 10 multiple choice questions (each with 4 possible answers) on the subject of species, breeds, varieties, selective breeding and cross-breeding. FINISH for HOMEWORK due next Friday 23rd October We will also be having a genetics (8A) test that day. Mr Porter apologises that he has not marked all your books (IB evening Wednesday night). He’ll collect them in again Monday and mark them Monday night.

  2. Last lesson • How genetic information is transferred • How genes work

  3. Genes Our DNA contain two genes (one from our mother and one from our father) for each characteristic (eye colour, hair colour etc.) Obviously the best looking

  4. Alleles Different genes for the same characteristic (e.g. eye colour) are called alleles. For example, you all have two genes (alleles) for eye colour Pron: “Al – eels”

  5. Which colour eyes?

  6. Which colour eyes? Your eye colour depends on which genes you have. Lets look at the genes for brown and blue eyes. The brown eye gene (B) is dominant and the blue eye gene (b)is recessive

  7. Which colour eyes? (heterozygous) If you have the alleles for eye colour of Bb, you will have brown eyes (because the brown gene is dominant).

  8. Which colour eyes? (homozygous) If you have BB, you will also have brown eyes.

  9. Which colour eyes? (homozygous) Only if you have bb will your eyes be blue (both genes are recessive)

  10. Which colour eyes? Your combination of genes (BB, Bb or bb) is called your genotype. The colour of eyes you actually have is called your phenotype Cats don’t eat their own poo, dogs do!

  11. An example Let’s imagine your mother has Bb genotype and your father also has Bb. Bb Bb

  12. An example Half your mother’s eggs will have B genes and half b (eggs are gametes and only contain one of each pair of genes) eggs B b

  13. An example Half your father’s sperm will have the B gene and half the b gene too. B b Sperm!

  14. Gene diagram (Punnett square) We can look at the possible combinations on a gene diagram

  15. Gene diagram (Punnett square) Here are all the possible combinations for a fertilised egg

  16. Gene diagram This means that there is a 75% chance the baby will have brown eyes (BB or Bb) and only a 25% chance the baby will have blue eyes (bb) BROWN BROWN BROWN BLUE phenotype genotype

  17. Pure breeding If one parent has both dominant genes(BB), any baby will have to have brown eyes. We say the parent is pure breeding. BROWN BROWN BROWN BROWN phenotype

  18. WARNING!

  19. WARNING! This is a simplified explanation. In reality eye colour is a little more complex than this. Please do not go home and accuse your mother of sleeping with the cable guy if both your parents have blue eyes and you have green or brown!

  20. Summary and word sheets

  21. Let’s try some questions!

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