Dictionary > Gregor Mendel

Gregor Mendel

Definition
noun
Augustinian monk and botanist who formulated the laws of heredity based on his careful breeding experiments on garden pea plants. Later, he was recognized for his seminal works on genetics. For this, he has become the father of genetics.
Supplement
Gregor Johann Mendel was a monk in St. Thomas Monastery in Brünn, Austria. His skills in mathematics were unparalleled during his time. With his skills and devotion (not only to his religion but also in science), he was able to notice predictable pattern of variations in the traits of garden pea plants thriving by the monastery through his cross breeding experiments. For one, it was he who found the occurrence of unit factors being passed on from generation to generation, and these unit factors occur in pairs where one is dominant and the other is recessive. His works were not widely accepted in his time. It was only years after his death that his works were rediscovered and widely accepted. His works founded the Mendelian laws that attempts to explain heredity. Because of his seminal contributions, he was duly recognized as the father of genetics.

 

Watch a short biography video of Gregor Mendel, best known as “The Father of Modern Genetics.”
Credit: Biography

 

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GREGOR MENDEL AND INHERITANCE WORKSHEET (pdf)

GREGOR MENDEL AND INHERITANCE WORKSHEET (pdf)

GREGOR MENDEL & INHERITANCE WORKSHEET

This two-paged worksheet can be used to probe the student’s understanding of Gregor Mendel’s experiments on inheritance. This worksheet includes arranging text block and flowchart order, multiple choice, and Punnett Square exercises.

Subjects: Genetics & Evolution
Lesson: Gene Segregation and Interaction
Grades: 9th, 10th, 11th, 12th
Type: Worksheet

 


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