232 PRINCIPLES OF POULTRY BREEDING 
D, being the dominant character, will be present in three- 
fourths of the progeny. In one-fourth of the progeny represented 
by D?, the character will be pure. In one-half represented by 
2 Dr, it will be mixed with the recessive, but, owing to its 
dominance, will suppress the recessive (as to appearance). The 
other one-fourth of the progeny, R’, will have only the recessive 
character. 
If the breeding of individuals resulting from the first cross be 
continued, interesting phenomena of this law will appear. D? 
and R? will continue indefinitely to breed true if bred to them- 
selves, as they respectively contain only pure dominant and pure 
recessive characters. Mendel’s law refers specially to the hybrids 
or the apparently crossed portion of the progeny represented 
by 2 Dr. 
When individuals of the Dr group are bred together, their 
offspring will in turn be split in the same algebraic ratio of 
D?+2 Dr+R: 
yes Ae 
which was apparent in the first cross when pure forms were allowed 
to breed together. This ratio will continue indefinitely when the 
hybrids of future generations are bred together. The same will 
hold true-of the dominant and recessive characters possessed by 
the hybrids,—namely, that the dominant character will always 
show in the Dr group even when the recessive is also present. 
In this second generation D? and R? are pure and will breed pure. 
(They are technically called homozygotes.) The other individuals 
resulting from the same cross, represented by the letters 2 Dr, 
are hybrids like their parents (and are technically called hetero- 
zygotes). 
From the above discussion it will be seen that, since the Dr 
group, or mixed group, always exhibit the dominant character, it 
is often a difficult problem to differentiate them from the dominant 
group D? 
To test a dominant, mate it to a recessive, and if all the offspring 
are pure dominants no recessive character will appear. If this 
parent is not pure, but mixed, the offspring will be one-half domi- 
nant and one-half recessive, having followed the combination: 
(Dr) +(RR). 
All hybrids which produce only pure dominant characters may 
