Happy Birthday: Gregor Johann Mendel (20 July 1822 – 6 January 1884) was an Austrian-Czech biologist, meteorologist, mathematician, Augustinian friar and abbot of St. Thomas' Abbey in Brno (Brünn), Margraviate of Moravia. Mendel was born in a German-speaking family in the Silesian part of the Austrian Empire (today's Czech Republic) and gained posthumous recognition as the founder of the modern science of genetics. Though farmers had known for millennia that crossbreeding of animals and plants could favour certain desirable traits, Mendel's pea plant experiments conducted between 1856 and 1863 established many of the rules of heredity, now referred to as the laws of Mendelian inheritance.
Mendel worked with seven characteristics of pea plants: plant height, pod shape and colour, seed shape and colour, and flower position and colour. Taking seed colour as an example, Mendel showed that when a true-breeding yellow pea and a true-breeding green pea were cross-bred their offspring always produced yellow seeds. However, in the next generation, the green peas reappeared at a ratio of 1 green to 3 yellow. To explain this phenomenon, Mendel coined the terms "recessive" and "dominant" in reference to certain traits. In the preceding example, the green trait, which seems to have vanished in the first filial generation, is recessive and the yellow is dominant. He published his work in 1866, demonstrating the actions of invisible "factors"—now called genes—in predictably determining the traits of an organism.
The profound significance of Mendel's work was not recognized until the turn of the 20th century (more than three decades later) with the rediscovery of his laws. Erich von Tschermak, Hugo de Vries and Carl Correns independently verified several of Mendel's experimental findings in 1900, ushering in the modern age of genetics.
4 comments:
One of the fascinating what-ifs of history is the fact that Darwin had Mendel's work in his library, yet apparently never read it. If he HAD read it, Origin of Species would be different. Of course, he published it in a hurry after learning that Huxley was about to beat him to it. Back then he referred to "characters" for what we read as "genes".
LOL - I had that VERY thought as I was posting this! Mendel's work was 'lost' to the scientific community for AGES, so Darwin had never heard of it. Just imagine - if Darwin didn't need to wonder or speculate about the nature of inheritance...
Well, they were working around the same time -- Darwin published Origin in the 1859s, and then was in '66..
Indeed. But Darwin, unfortunately, never read Mendel's work. A pity really. Things would've moved faster if he had...
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