Dominant Polled Hereford Mutation
Polled (hornless) herefords originated as a mutation. In the early 1900s, Iowan Warren Gammon exploited the mutation by forming a registry to track this genetic mutation. The polled gene is a dominant trait but horned is recessive.
Driving Question
- How could the offspring of the herefords have no horns (polled) if parents are horned?
Probing Questions
- Could this gene happen because of something other than dominant or recessive traits?
- What type of results does Gammon get when he breeds a polled bull to a polled cow?
- What happens when he breeds a horned bull to a polled cow?
- Are horns dominant or recessive?
Classroom Suggestions
Students could:
- Research possibilities of mutations in a population.
- Create a claim for how the offspring became polled.
- Devise a working theory of dominant and recessive traits.
- Create and explain a Punnett square showing how horned (heterozygous recessive) and polled work
Resources
- Oklahoma State Department of Animal Science | Breeds of Livestock, This article explains that polled herefords are a mutation that has been expanded upon for “modern Herefords minus the horns.”
- The Biographical Dictionary of Iowa - University of Iowa Press Digital Editions: Gammon, Burton Osmond "Bert": Biographical account of Iowan Warren Gammon as the founder of the polled hereford breed.
- American Hereford Association } Understanding Horned/Polled and Scurred Traits Explanation of dominant versus recessive traits for horned versus polled in Hereford genetics.
- The Concord Consortium | DNA Mutation Simulation: Simulation for modeling mutation of DNA.
Iowa Core Alignment
HS-LS3-2:Make and defend a claim based on evidence that inheritable genetic variations may result from: (1) new genetic combinations through meiosis, (2) viable errors occurring during replication, and/or (3) mutations caused by environmental factors
Credit Info
Submitted by Kala Miller
Pictures Courtesy of Miranda Miller