00:05 Gregor Mendel observed patterns in plant hybridization. 00:28 Gregor Mendel tracked traits in garden peas 00:44 Mendel observed dominance in hybrid traits 01:01 Hidden traits reappeared in Mendel's plants in the next generation. 01:18 Recessive traits persisted in first hybrids and were passed to the next generation. 01:32 Genes are present in pairs and split during reproduction 01:50 Mendel crossed peas with different traits and observed patterns in the second generation. 02:06 Gregor Mendel conducted experiments on pea plants for eight years to study the inheritance of traits. Crafted by Merlin AI.
Thanks for sharing this video my favourite scientist is mendal its give me knowledge to present my ppt presentation in my college. Good work 😉 for video making group
I am doing some pea hybridization experiments to create new varieties of peas, particularly ones with red or scarlet pods. What's infuriating is that not a lot of gardening hobbyists understand how the process works, or, practice making hybrids themselves. As a result, you have people falsely claiming to have had hybrids the *first year* they ever planted a seed. Like, that ain't how this works. The most frustrating part is when they claim their two pea varieties crosspollinated, that's also the most unlikely thing to happen... Like, ever. Anyone that has had experience growing and hybridizing peas know they self-pollinate before opening their flowers. Once those flower buds are open, it's already too late to attempt crossing them. Peas have to be both the hardest and easiest plant to hybridize, you have to time clipping open the young flower buds in order to sterilize the flower to then receive pollen from another plant. But once that's over with, all you have to do now is wait for the pods to form and see if the process has been successful. In my experience, it has been successful. And I grew the resulting batch of F1 hybrid seeds last year to great results, storing all the F2 seeds they produced for this year come spring. It's this F2 batch I'm hoping to see the red podded peas pop up.
You're an awesome worker.. But these kinda vedio don't get much likes because students are focused in understanding them & they may be forget to like that but internally they knew that it is awesome.
I was hired by The Field Museum for this, and many other animations. They provided the script and historic/scientific expertise as I am an artist, not a scientist. But if you have a project that needs animation, I'm available for hire. You can contact me through my website: www.springshoeanimation.com/. Thanks!
I'm not a scientist, just the animator, so I'm sure someone else can explain it better. Here's a definition: In genetics, a trait that must be contributed by both parents in order to appear in the offspring. Recessive traits can be carried in a person's genes without appearing in that person.
00:05 Gregor Mendel observed patterns in plant hybridization.
00:28 Gregor Mendel tracked traits in garden peas
00:44 Mendel observed dominance in hybrid traits
01:01 Hidden traits reappeared in Mendel's plants in the next generation.
01:18 Recessive traits persisted in first hybrids and were passed to the next generation.
01:32 Genes are present in pairs and split during reproduction
01:50 Mendel crossed peas with different traits and observed patterns in the second generation.
02:06 Gregor Mendel conducted experiments on pea plants for eight years to study the inheritance of traits.
Crafted by Merlin AI.
Explained very well, but the background music is annoying and distracting. Not all kids can focus. Kindly avoid music . Thanks for understanding.
Explained very well in short video,💐💐👏👏 waiting for more such videos
Thanks! Much credit goes to the development (script writers) at the Field Museum.
Thanks for sharing this video my favourite scientist is mendal its give me knowledge to present my ppt presentation in my college. Good work 😉 for video making group
I am doing some pea hybridization experiments to create new varieties of peas, particularly ones with red or scarlet pods. What's infuriating is that not a lot of gardening hobbyists understand how the process works, or, practice making hybrids themselves. As a result, you have people falsely claiming to have had hybrids the *first year* they ever planted a seed. Like, that ain't how this works. The most frustrating part is when they claim their two pea varieties crosspollinated, that's also the most unlikely thing to happen... Like, ever. Anyone that has had experience growing and hybridizing peas know they self-pollinate before opening their flowers. Once those flower buds are open, it's already too late to attempt crossing them. Peas have to be both the hardest and easiest plant to hybridize, you have to time clipping open the young flower buds in order to sterilize the flower to then receive pollen from another plant. But once that's over with, all you have to do now is wait for the pods to form and see if the process has been successful.
In my experience, it has been successful. And I grew the resulting batch of F1 hybrid seeds last year to great results, storing all the F2 seeds they produced for this year come spring. It's this F2 batch I'm hoping to see the red podded peas pop up.
Very catchy way of showing Mendel's approach 👌🏻👌🏻😁
Thanks for watching!
contrary to comments, I loved the music!
Thank you so much✨✨✨✨✨💞
thank you!
That was really good!
Thanks Dindonmaster V!
Really cool animation
Thanks Lana!
good video but the background music is too loud as it overpowers the educational narrative
You're an awesome worker.. But these kinda vedio don't get much likes because students are focused in understanding them & they may be forget to like that but internally they knew that it is awesome.
Very kind. Thank you!
Thanks Pat !! 👍🏻👍🏻
Thank you! I made this a long time ago for The Field Museum but I remember it was a fun one. A great team!
this was very helpful
Thanks!
It helps a lot THANKS👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
So glad!
Thank you so much it is an excellent video which cleared my concept♥️
Thanks much for the comment. I made this so long ago for The Field Museum and I'm glad it is still helpful.
Very Important and easily understandable Video of gregor mendel Sir experiment 💥💫
I'm glad it's clear. Thanks for the comment, rutujabhosale! 🦚
Thank you team👍thnk u very much. Nice wrk
Thanks❤
whats with the scarry music
I relate to Mendel
Thanks..👍👍👍..
Perfect thanks
Mujhe baat Kara sakte hai jisne bhee ye video banai unse please
Hey can we get together for some science project ( content creation)?
I was hired by The Field Museum for this, and many other animations. They provided the script and historic/scientific expertise as I am an artist, not a scientist. But if you have a project that needs animation, I'm available for hire. You can contact me through my website: www.springshoeanimation.com/. Thanks!
Underated💯
What is recessive trait can anyone explain me
I'm not a scientist, just the animator, so I'm sure someone else can explain it better. Here's a definition: In genetics, a trait that must be contributed by both parents in order to appear in the offspring. Recessive traits can be carried in a person's genes without appearing in that person.
Mendel's Baba nu paqalara ba nast we kana.
The kit he use, is it a pen?
If you're talking about him cross fertilizing, I think he used a brush.
el mejor maestro mr alex
School ❌
Youthoob✅
Why he did that tho didn't he had anything to do...😩
MY country Bangladesh 🇧🇩❤️✌️
Same❤
Are Hindi me hi baata dete to 1 million views to ho hi jate
It's too cool..thnks
Thanks for watching!
@@patbradley9817 😊
Nice
Thanks Jayadev!
Amazing
Thanks.it's nice
Thoda Hindi m b btayte yrr but it's ok 😊 smjh aa gya
I like the pertinent background music 🎶
sencillo y bien explicado
Yeah
ach verflixt !
Ressisif صفة متنحية
👍👍