A genetics class decides to re-create the garden pea breeding experiments of Gre
ID: 3435587 • Letter: A
Question
A genetics class decides to re-create the garden pea breeding experiments of Gregor Mendel. They grow several garden pea plants from random crosses of purple-flowered plants and test whether the resulting purple flower:white flower ratio is consistent with the expected 3:1 ratio, based on independent assortment of alleles. A concern is that the initial parental plants might have had a low level of heterozygosity, meaning the frequency of purple-flowered offspring could be higher than expected.
With a sample of 120 plants, what percentage of purple flowered plants would be needed to produce a Chi-squared value of 4 or higher for a Goodness of Fit test; thus confirming their fear?
(Make sure to answer as a percentage, not a fraction. Round your percentage to the nearest 1%. Keep in mind that it might not be possible to get an exact Chi-squared value of 4 for 1% incremental changes.)
Explanation / Answer
This is the test with minimum of purple flowered plants would be needed to produce a Chi-squared value of 4 or higher.
Goodness of Fit Test
observed
expected
O - E
(O - E)
Goodness of Fit Test
observed
expected
O - E
(O - E)
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