Gregor Mendel
Gregor
Mendel, who is known as the "father of modern genetics,"
was inspired by both his professors at university and his
colleagues at the monastery to study variation in plants, and
he conducted
his study in the monastery's garden. Between 1856 and 1863
Mendel cultivated and tested some 29,000 pea plants i.e.
Pisum sativum . This study showed that one in four pea plants
had
purebred recessive alleles, two out of four were hybrid and
one out of four were purebred dominant. His experiments brought
forth two generalisations which later became known as Mendel's
Laws of Inheritance.
Mendel
read his paper, Experiments on Plant Hybridization,
at two meetings of the Natural History Society of Brünn
in Moravia in 1865. When Mendel's paper was published in
1866 in Proceedings of the Natural History Society of Brünn,
it had little impact and was cited about three times over
the next thirty-five years. His paper received plenty of
criticism
at the time, but is now considered a seminal work.
Mendel
lived around the same time as the British naturalist Charles
Darwin (1809 – 1882) and many have considered a historical
evolutionary synthesis of Darwinian natural selection and Mendelian
genetics during their lifetimes. Mendel had read a German translation
of Darwin's Origin (as evidenced by underlined passages in
the copy in his monastery), after completing his experiments
but before publishing his paper. Some passages in Mendel's
paper are Darwinian in character, evidence that The Origin
of Species influenced Mendel's writing. Darwin did not have
a copy of Mendel's paper, but he did have a book by Focke with
references to it. The leading expert in heredity at this time
was Darwin's half-cousin Francis Galton who had mathematical
skills that Darwin lacked and may have been able to understand
the paper had he seen it. In any event, the modern evolutionary
synthesis did not start until the 1920s, by which time statistics
had become advanced enough to cope with genetics and evolution.

Related Links
• Mendel's
museum of genetics
• 1913
Catholic Encyclopedia entry, "Mendel, Mendalism"
• Online
Mendelian Inheritence in Man
• Augustinian
Abbey of St. Thomas at Brno
• Johann
Gregor Mendel: Why his discoveries were ignored for 35 (72) years

Gregor
Mendel Quotes
The value and utility of any experiment are determined
by the fitness of the material to the purpose for which it is used,
and thus in the case before us it cannot be immaterial what plants
are subjected to experiment and in what manner such experiment
is conducted.
My scientific studies have afforded me great
gratification; and I am convinced that it will not be long before
the whole world acknowledges the results of my work.

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