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12 Jul 2018

Canaries: Green (wild-type) Pied phenotype Yellow type

Canaries are popular pets and easy to breed in captivity. Additionally, they display great phenotypic diversity, which allows you to do some interesting genetic investigations with them.

When you take a canary from a true-breeding green strain and cross it with a canary from a true-breeding yellow strain, all offspring display the pied phenotype. Based on this you suspect that this color variation is inherited by a gene with a co-dominant inheritance pattern (showing both phenotypic traits in hybrid phenotypes).

You decide to test this hypothesis. To do so, you take pairs of your hybrid F1 individuals (of pied phenotype), and cross them to produce an F2 generation.

After many dozens of crosses and hundreds of offspring, you arrive at the peculiar ratio of:

3/16 green : 6/16 pied : 7/16 yellow

Which of the following hypotheses are consistent with these data? (Note that not all of these hypotheses are mutually exclusive. Assume that the two genes are independently assorting)

Hint: This problem is very hard to work from the given ratios to what is happening genetically. It is easier to "work backwards" and start with each choice below, and see if you can obtain all or important aspects of the results of your cross when making the assumption that the answer choice is correct.

Select all that apply:

Select one or more:

a. At least one of the genes involved is sex linked.

b. One gene controls production of darker pigment (melanin which appears green when mixed with yellow). A second gene acts as a patterning gene with one allele causing expression and the other non-expression of melanin and when in the heterozygous condition each allele controls melanin expression on different parts of the body so long as the bird's genotype of the first gene allows for the production of melanin.

c. this is a single-gene trait with co-dominance

d. one of the two genes involved displays complete dominance, while the other displays co-dominance.

e. the genes involved are epistatically interacting

f. more than one gene is involved

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Deanna Hettinger
Deanna HettingerLv2
13 Jul 2018

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