A wing feather and a contour feather of an ordinary and a silky fowl. The peculiar ragged appearance of the silky feathers is due to the absence of the little hooks or barbules which hold the barbs together. The silky condition is recessive.
As we have already seen, Mendel considered that in the gamete there was either a definite something
corresponding to the dominant character or a definite something corresponding to the recessive character, and that these somethings whatever they were could not coexist in any single gamete. For these somethings we shall in future use the term factor. The factor, then, is what corresponds in the gamete to the unit-character that appears in some shape or other in the development of the zygote. Tallness in the pea is a unit-character, and the gametes in which it is represented are said to contain the factor for tallness. Beyond their existence in the gamete and their mode of transmission we make no suggestion as to the nature of these factors.
Two double and an ordinary single primula flower. This form of double is recessive to the single.
Fowls' combs. A, pea; B, rose; C, single; D, walnut.
On Mendel's view there was a factor corresponding to the dominant character and another factor corresponding to the recessive character of each alternative pair of unit-characters, and the characters were alternative because no gamete could carry more than one of the two factors belonging to the alternative pair. On the other hand, Mendel supposed that it always carried either one or the other of such a pair. As experimental work proceeded,