Mendel's Work (Edexcel GCSE Biology)

Revision Note

Lára Marie McIvor

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Mendel's Work

  • Gregor Mendel was an Austrian monk

  • He studied mathematics and natural history at the University of Vienna

  • In the mid-19th century, Mendel carried out breeding experiments on plants

  • He studied how characteristics were passed on between generations of plants

  • For example, he conducted studies with pea plants and looked at how the height characteristic was inherited

    • In the first experiment, he crossed a tall pea plant with a dwarf pea plant

    • In the second experiment, he crossed two of the tall offspring together

Mendel pea plant crosses (1), downloadable IGCSE & GCSE Biology revision notes

The pea plant crosses were originally carried out by Mendel to investigate the inheritance of characteristics

  • One of his observations was that the inheritance of each characteristic is determined by ‘units’ that are passed on to descendants unchanged

  • Using the example above, Mendel showed that height in pea plants was the result of separately inherited ‘hereditary units’ passed down from each parent plant to the offspring plants – this particular experiment showed that the ‘unit’ for tall plants (T) was dominant over the ‘unit’ for short plants (t)

  • He also carried out experiments to show how other characteristics of pea plants are inherited in the same way

    • E.g. Flower colour

Mendel's conclusions

  • Three important conclusions about hereditary in plants were reached

    • Characteristics are determined by 'hereditary units' and these hereditary units are passed on from parent to offspring unchanged

    • The offspring receives one 'hereditary unit' from each parent

    • Hereditary units can be dominant or recessive ( a dominant characteristic is always expressed when present)

Understanding Mendel's work

  • His work eventually provided the foundation for modern genetics

  • The importance of Mendel’s discovery was not recognised until after his death:

    • His studies were totally new to science in the 19th century

    • There was no knowledge of the mechanisms behind his findings (DNA, genes and chromosomes had not been discovered yet)

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Lára Marie McIvor

Author: Lára Marie McIvor

Expertise: Biology Lead

Lára graduated from Oxford University in Biological Sciences and has now been a science tutor working in the UK for several years. Lára has a particular interest in the area of infectious disease and epidemiology, and enjoys creating original educational materials that develop confidence and facilitate learning.