Measurable in numeric terms.
-Polygenic and multifactorial
Quantitative traits
Continuous variation
No degrees of severity
Most traits studied so far that have very distinct phenotypes
Clearly defined by one or a few genes
-In nature, the majority of traits do not follow this mode of expression
Discrete phenotypes
Quantitative Traits
Mode of study that shows inheritance of quantitative traits.
Quantitative Genetics
Number of copies of these alleles influence the degree of severity of a trait
Contributing alleles (a.k.a. additive alleles)
Color of Wheat Kernels Example
- Alleles A (red) and B (crimson) result in red pigment, while a and b alleles do not produce pigment
One gene variation
F2: 1:2:1 incomplete dominance
increasing Left to right Red and and contributing alleles
Two gene variation
F2: 1:4:6:4:1
aabb: 2Aabb and 2aaBb: AABB
Increasing red and contributing alleles
Three gene variation
F2: 1:6:15:20:15:6:1
increasing red and contributing alleles
More gene pairs result in_______.
“Bell shaped curve”
-Environment “blurs” phenotypic classes.
Samples and Populations
Summary of continuous phenotype variance for a group or a population
ex. Human birth weight
Distribution
Number to individuals in a sample are plotted (according to phenotype) as a histogram.
Distribution for a quantitative trait
Curve of distribution
Lots of phenotypic variance makes a broader curve
Nature is not:
In opposition to nurture
Nature is:
In correspondence with nurture, influencing one another.
How much variation in a phenotype is due to genetic variation versus environmental variation?
Ex: Superior strains of wheat in a field.
Strains=genetics
Field=environment
In humans, environment influences genetics and subtle choices which influence phenotype.
Enviornment affects/quantitative traits
Vp=Vg+Ve+Vg*e
Phenotypic Variance for a trait
genotypic variance contribution of allelic differences at multiple genes
ex. genetic trends in height
Vg
environmental variance contribution from non-genetic sources
ex. impact of nutrition on human height
Ve
genotype-by-enviornment variance
Vg*e