Cow Exercise 1 - Answer Key: Name
Cow Exercise 1 - Answer Key: Name
Cow Exercise 1 - Answer Key: Name
Learning Objectives
After completing this exercise, you will be able to:
In the Strains box, you will find two Hereford cows, called Hereford cow and Hereford bull, and one
cow that does not look like the others, called Polled. The Hereford cows are homozygous (true-breeding)
for the Polled allele.
= female (cow)
= male (bull)
Polled Hereford bull
Answer
Ver. 4
Answer
You can see all the cows resulting from this cross within the Individual tab or a summary of the
experiment by clicking on the Summary tab. Within the Summary tab, all of the organisms are organized
by phenotype.
a) How many progeny did you obtain? What phenotype(s) do you observe?
Answer
b) Fill in the Punnett Squares below with the expected results in the F1 generation for each of the
following situations:
2. What results would you expect if the Polled cow is heterozygous for the Polled allele?
Ver. 4 2
Hint: Remember that the Hereford cows are homozygous (true-breeding) for the Polled
allele.
Expected Genotypic
Ratio:
Expected Phenotypic
Ratio:
c) Can you conclude whether the Polled phenotype is dominant or recessive relative to the Hereford
phenotype after analyzing the progeny that you obtained? Explain.
Answer
d) Increase the number of progeny. What do you observe now? How many phenotypes do you see? Is the
Polled phenotype dominant or recessive to the Hereford phenotype?
• To add additional offspring to a cross, click on the Add more matings button and select the
appropriate number of matings (or crosses) you would like to perform in the pop-up window to add
the appropriate number of additional offspring. Repeat until you have at least 12 cows.
• To start a new experiment, click on the New experiment button. Your current experiment will be
automatically saved for you and can be found in the Saved Experiments panel.
Answer
Answer
4 a) Can a sex-linked allele produce the results that you obtained in question 3? Fill in the Punnett
Square below with the expected results in the case that the Polled allele is sex-linked.
The hallmark of a sex-linked allele is differential partitioning of the allele in females and males. Males have
one X chromosome and, as a result, carry one copy of each sex-linked allele. On the other hand, females
have two X chromosomes and, as a result, carry two copies of each sex-linked allele.
Ver. 4 3
Hereford
Polled
Answer
b) To distinguish between the sex-linked and autosomal possibilities, cross a F1 Polled Cow with a F1
Polled Bull. Fill in the Punnett Squares below with the expected progeny from this cross if the Polled allele
is sex-linked or autosomal. Indicate the expected genotypic and phenotypic ratios you would obtain in each
case.
Sex-Linked Autosomal
F1 Polled F1 Polled
Male Male
Expected Genotypic
Ratio:
Expected Phenotypic
Ratio:
c) Perform the F1 x F1 cross in part (b) in StarGenetics. How many progeny did you observe in each of
the phenotypic classes? Can you conclude whether the Polled allele is autosomal or sex-linked? Explain.
Answer
_____ Hereford females
Conclusions:
d) Now generate more progeny for your cross. Does your answer change as you increase the number of
progeny in your cross? Fill in your results below. Is the Polled allele autosomal or sex-linked? Explain.
Ver. 4 4
Answer
_____ Hereford females
Conclusions:
BONUS QUESTION:
Can you think of another informative cross to distinguish between the sex-linked and autosomal
possibilities? This cross must be different from the F1 Polled Cow x F1 Polled Bull cross in Question 4b.
Specify your informative cross and how it enables you to distinguish between the two possibilities. Then,
perform your cross in StarGenetics, and in the answer box, describe your results and explain how your
results led you to your conclusion.
Answer
Ver. 4 5