By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Define heredity and variation
  • 2State Mendel's laws of dominance and segregation
  • 3Work out a monohybrid cross and its ratios
  • 4Distinguish genotype and phenotype
  • 5Explain sex determination and mutation
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Why this chapter matters
Heredity explains how traits pass from parents to offspring through Mendel's laws and genes. The monohybrid cross and its 3:1 and 1:2:1 ratios are classic, high-scoring questions in the TN SSLC exam.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Genetics — Class 10 Science (Samacheer Kalvi)

TN State Board (Samacheer Kalvi) Class 10 Science, Biology — Chapter 18. How characters are passed from parents to offspring.


1. About this chapter

This chapter covers heredityMendel's laws, the monohybrid cross, dominant and recessive traits, DNA and genes, sex determination, and mutation.

2. Mendel and his laws

  • Heredity is the transfer of characters from parents to offspring; variation is the differences among them. Gregor Mendel worked on pea plants.
  • Law of dominance: in a pair of contrasting characters, only the dominant one is expressed in the first generation.
  • Law of segregation: the two factors (alleles) of a character separate during gamete formation and one passes to each gamete.

3. The monohybrid cross

  • Cross of tall (TT) × dwarf (tt) pea plants:
    • F₁ generation: all Tt (tall) — only the dominant trait shows.
    • F₂ generation: TT : Tt : tt = 1 : 2 : 1 (genotype); tall : dwarf = 3 : 1 (phenotype).
  • Genotype = genetic makeup (TT, Tt, tt); phenotype = visible trait (tall/dwarf).

4. DNA, genes and sex determination

  • DNA carries genetic information; a gene is a segment of DNA that controls a character.
  • Sex determination in humans: females XX, males XY. The sperm decides the sex of the child (X → girl, Y → boy).

5. Mutation

  • A mutation is a sudden, heritable change in the DNA/gene. Mutations create variation and can be a raw material for evolution; some cause disorders.

6. Common mistakes

  • Mistake: Confusing genotype and phenotype. Fix: Genotype = genetic makeup (TT/Tt/tt); phenotype = visible trait.
  • Mistake: Saying the F₂ phenotype ratio is 1:2:1. Fix: 1:2:1 is the genotype ratio; the phenotype ratio is 3:1.
  • Mistake: Thinking the mother determines the child's sex. Fix: The father's sperm (X or Y) determines it.

7. Practice (book-back style)

  1. Define heredity and variation.
  2. State Mendel's law of segregation.
  3. In a monohybrid cross, give the F₂ genotype and phenotype ratios.
  4. How is sex determined in humans?
  5. What is a mutation?

8. Answer key

  1. Heredity: transfer of characters from parents to offspring; variation: differences among individuals.
  2. The two alleles of a character separate during gamete formation, one entering each gamete.
  3. Genotype 1 : 2 : 1 (TT : Tt : tt); phenotype 3 : 1 (dominant : recessive).
  4. Females are XX and males XY; the sperm (X or Y) determines the child's sex.
  5. A sudden, heritable change in the DNA or a gene.

9. Quick revision

  • Biology Ch 18 · genetics, Mendel, DNA, sex determination.
  • Mendel (pea): laws of dominance and segregation.
  • Monohybrid F₂: genotype 1:2:1, phenotype 3:1.
  • Genotype = makeup (TT/Tt/tt); phenotype = visible trait.
  • Sex: XX (female), XY (male); sperm decides sex. Mutation = sudden heritable DNA change.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Law of dominance
dominant trait masks the recessive in F₁
Mendel's first principle.
Law of segregation
alleles separate during gamete formation
One allele per gamete.
Monohybrid F₂ ratios
genotype 1:2:1, phenotype 3:1
From Tt × Tt.
Sex determination
XX female, XY male
Sperm (X/Y) decides the sex.
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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Confusing genotype and phenotype
Genotype is the genetic makeup (TT/Tt/tt); phenotype is the visible trait.
WATCH OUT
Saying the F₂ phenotype ratio is 1:2:1
1:2:1 is the genotype ratio; the phenotype ratio is 3:1.
WATCH OUT
Thinking the mother determines the child's sex
The father's sperm (X or Y) determines it.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Concept
Define heredity and variation.
Show solution
Heredity is the transfer of characters from parents to offspring; variation is the differences among individuals.
Q2MEDIUM· Concept
State Mendel's law of segregation.
Show solution
The two alleles of a character separate during gamete formation, so each gamete receives only one allele.
Q3HARD· Cross
In a monohybrid cross (Tt × Tt), give the F₂ genotype and phenotype ratios.
Show solution
Genotype 1 : 2 : 1 (TT : Tt : tt); phenotype 3 : 1 (tall : dwarf).
Q4MEDIUM· Concept
How is sex determined in humans?
Show solution
Females are XX and males XY; the sperm carrying X gives a girl and Y gives a boy, so the father's sperm determines the sex.
Q5EASY· Concept
What is a mutation?
Show solution
A sudden, heritable change in the DNA or a gene.
Q6EASY· Concept
Differentiate genotype and phenotype.
Show solution
Genotype is the genetic makeup (e.g. Tt); phenotype is the observable trait (e.g. tall).

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Biology Chapter 18 of Samacheer Kalvi Class 10 Science.
  • Mendel (pea plant): laws of dominance and segregation.
  • Monohybrid F₂: genotype 1:2:1, phenotype 3:1.
  • Genotype = makeup (TT/Tt/tt); phenotype = visible trait.
  • Sex: XX female, XY male; the sperm decides the sex.
  • Mutation = sudden heritable change in DNA/gene.

Tamil Nadu (TNBSE) marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 5-9 marks across MCQ, cross and short/long answers

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
MCQ11-2Mendel, ratios, sex determination
Cross / Short2-31-2Monohybrid cross and ratios
Long Answer3-50-1Mendel's laws / sex determination
Prep strategy
  • Practise the monohybrid cross with a Punnett square
  • Memorise 1:2:1 (genotype) and 3:1 (phenotype)
  • Separate genotype and phenotype
  • Learn human sex determination (XX/XY)

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Genetic counselling

Understanding inheritance helps predict and explain genetic disorders.

Plant and animal breeding

Mendel's principles guide the breeding of better varieties.

Understanding variation

Heredity and mutation explain diversity within species.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. Draw a Punnett square for crosses
  2. Quote both F₂ ratios correctly
  3. Keep genotype and phenotype distinct
  4. State sex determination clearly

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Work out a dihybrid cross and its 9:3:3:1 ratio.
  • Explain how mutations contribute to evolution.

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

TN SSLC Class 10 Public ExamHigh
Foundation / NTSE BiologyMedium
School unit testsHigh

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Pea plants have clear contrasting traits, a short life cycle, and can be easily self- or cross-pollinated, making them ideal for studying inheritance.

The mother always contributes an X chromosome, while the father's sperm carries either X or Y; the sperm therefore decides whether the child is a girl (XX) or boy (XY).
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 2 June 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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