NCERT Solutions for Class 10 Science Chapter 8: Heredity
These Class 10 Science Chapter 8 solutions cover Heredity from the NCERT textbook (session 2026–27). Every in-text “Questions” set and the end-of-chapter “Exercises” are reproduced verbatim and solved in clear, exam-ready language — including Mendel’s experiments, dominant and recessive traits, independent inheritance, how traits get expressed and sex determination in human beings.
Class 10 Science Chapter 8 Solutions – Overview
Chapter 8, Heredity, explains how characteristics are passed from parents to offspring and how variation builds up over generations. It begins with the accumulation of variation during reproduction — small inaccuracies in DNA copying create minor differences in asexual reproduction, while sexual reproduction generates much greater diversity. The heart of the chapter is Mendel’s work on garden peas, which revealed dominant and recessive traits, the F1 and F2 patterns, the 3:1 ratio for one trait and the 9:3:3:1 ratio that proves traits are inherited independently. It then shows how genes (on chromosomes) control traits through proteins, and finally explains sex determination in human beings — women are XX, men are XY, and the child’s sex depends on whether it inherits an X or a Y chromosome from the father.
Key Concepts & Definitions
Heredity: the transmission of characters (traits) from parents to their offspring through genes.
Variation: the differences in characters among individuals of a species; sexual reproduction creates far more variation than asexual reproduction.
Gene: a section of DNA that carries information for making one protein; genes control traits.
Allele: the two versions of a gene a child carries — one from each parent — for a given trait (e.g. T and t).
Dominant trait: the trait that is expressed even when only one copy is present (e.g. T, tallness). Recessive trait: the trait expressed only when both copies are the recessive version (e.g. tt, shortness).
F1 and F2 generations: the first and second filial (offspring) generations in a cross.
Chromosome: an independent piece of DNA. Body cells have chromosomes in pairs (one from each parent); germ cells carry only one of each pair.
Sex chromosomes: the pair that decides sex — XX in females, XY in males.
Monohybrid cross (one trait): Tt × Tt → 1 TT : 2 Tt : 1 tt (genotype) = 3 tall : 1 short (phenotype) — the 3:1 ratio.
Dihybrid cross (two traits): RrYy × RrYy → phenotype ratio 9 : 3 : 3 : 1 — proof of independent inheritance.
Sex determination: Mother XX × Father XY → XX (girl) and XY (boy) in a 1 : 1 ratio; the father’s contribution (X or Y) decides the sex.
In-text Questions — Answers (Page 129)
1. If a trait A exists in 10% of a population of an asexually reproducing species and a trait B exists in 60% of the same population, which trait is likely to have arisen earlier?
2. How does the creation of variations in a species promote survival?
In-text Questions — Answers (Page 133)
1. How do Mendel’s experiments show that traits may be dominant or recessive?
2. How do Mendel’s experiments show that traits are inherited independently?
3. A man with blood group A marries a woman with blood group O and their daughter has blood group O. Is this information enough to tell you which of the traits – blood group A or O – is dominant? Why or why not?
4. How is the sex of the child determined in human beings?
NCERT Exercises — Solutions
1. A Mendelian experiment consisted of breeding tall pea plants bearing violet flowers with short pea plants bearing white flowers. The progeny all bore violet flowers, but almost half of them were short. This suggests that the genetic make-up of the tall parent can be depicted as (a) TTWW (b) TTww (c) TtWW (d) TtWw
2. A study found that children with light-coloured eyes are likely to have parents with light-coloured eyes. On this basis, can we say anything about whether the light eye colour trait is dominant or recessive? Why or why not?
3. Outline a project which aims to find the dominant coat colour in dogs.
4. How is the equal genetic contribution of male and female parents ensured in the progeny?
Extra Practice Questions
Short Answer Type Questions
Q1. Define heredity and variation.
Q2. Why did Mendel choose the garden pea (Pisum sativum) for his experiments?
Q3. Distinguish between dominant and recessive traits with an example.
Q4. A woman is XX and a man is XY. Why is the father, and not the mother, said to determine the sex of the child?
Q5. Why does asexual reproduction produce only minor variations?
Long Answer Type Questions
Q1. Explain Mendel’s monohybrid cross using tallness and shortness in pea plants, with genotypes and ratios.
Q2. How do genes control characteristics (traits) in an organism? Explain with the example of plant height.
Q3. Explain sex determination in human beings with the help of a cross.
MCQs & Assertion–Reason
1. The transmission of characters from parents to offspring is called:
(a) variation (b) heredity (c) reproduction (d) evolution
2. Mendel carried out his classic experiments on:
(a) garden pea (b) maize (c) sweet pea (d) bean
3. In a cross between Tt × Tt, the phenotype ratio in the offspring is:
(a) 1:1 (b) 9:3:3:1 (c) 3:1 (d) 1:2:1
4. The genotype ratio in the F2 generation of a monohybrid cross is:
(a) 3:1 (b) 1:2:1 (c) 1:1 (d) 9:3:3:1
5. A 9:3:3:1 ratio in the F2 generation is obtained from a:
(a) monohybrid cross (b) dihybrid cross (c) test cross (d) back cross
6. The sex chromosomes in a human male are:
(a) XX (b) XY (c) YY (d) XO
7. The sex of a human child is determined by the chromosome inherited from the:
(a) mother (b) father (c) both equally (d) environment
8. A section of DNA that provides information for one protein is called a:
(a) chromosome (b) gene (c) allele (d) gamete
9. In pea plants, if T is for tallness and t for shortness, a short plant has the genotype:
(a) TT (b) Tt (c) tt (d) TtTt
10. Greater variation among individuals is produced by:
(a) asexual reproduction (b) sexual reproduction (c) DNA copying alone (d) cloning
For each Assertion–Reason question, choose: (A) Both true and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion; (B) Both true but the Reason is not the correct explanation; (C) Assertion true, Reason false; (D) Assertion false, Reason true.
A-R 1. Assertion: All F1 plants in Mendel’s cross between tall and short pea plants were tall.
Reason: Tallness is a dominant trait and is expressed even when only one copy of its allele is present.
A-R 2. Assertion: The sex of a human child is decided by the mother.
Reason: The mother contributes an X chromosome to every egg she produces.
A-R 3. Assertion: Sexual reproduction produces greater variation than asexual reproduction.
Reason: In sexual reproduction, genetic material from two different parents is combined in the offspring.
A-R 4. Assertion: A 9:3:3:1 ratio in the F2 generation shows that two traits are inherited independently.
Reason: The genes for the two traits assort independently during gamete formation.
A-R 5. Assertion: Each germ cell carries only one set of genes.
Reason: Halving the gene set in gametes restores the normal chromosome number when two germ cells combine at fertilisation.
Common Mistakes & Exam Tips
Common mistakes to avoid
- Confusing genotype ratio (1:2:1) with phenotype ratio (3:1) in a monohybrid cross.
- Writing that the mother determines the child’s sex — it is the chromosome (X or Y) from the father.
- Saying a trait is dominant or recessive from a single child or one family — dominance is judged from ratios over many offspring.
- Mixing up gene (a piece of DNA coding for a protein) with chromosome (a whole DNA thread carrying many genes).
- Forgetting to show gametes and a Punnett-square layout when explaining a cross — marks are given for working, not just the answer.
How to score full marks in this chapter
For every cross question, write the parental genotypes, the gametes, the cross (Punnett square if asked), and then the genotype and phenotype ratios separately. Learn the three key ratios — 3:1 (monohybrid phenotype), 1:2:1 (monohybrid genotype) and 9:3:3:1 (dihybrid). For sex determination, always state that the mother gives X and the father gives X or Y. Use exact terms — dominant, recessive, allele, gene, chromosome — and keep your definitions precise.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Class 10 Science Chapter 8 Heredity about?
Chapter 8, Heredity, explains how traits are passed from parents to offspring. It covers the accumulation of variation, Mendel’s experiments on pea plants, dominant and recessive traits, independent inheritance (the 9:3:3:1 ratio), how genes control traits through proteins, and sex determination in human beings.
What are the three important ratios in this chapter?
The monohybrid cross gives a 3:1 phenotype ratio and a 1:2:1 genotype ratio in the F2 generation, while a dihybrid cross gives a 9:3:3:1 phenotype ratio, which proves that two traits are inherited independently.
How is the sex of a child determined in humans?
Females are XX and males are XY. The mother always gives an X chromosome. If the father’s sperm carries an X, the child is a girl (XX); if it carries a Y, the child is a boy (XY). So the father’s chromosome decides the child’s sex.
Are these Class 10 Science Chapter 8 solutions free?
Yes. All ClearStudy NCERT Solutions for Class 10 Science are free and follow the official NCERT textbook for session 2026–27, with every in-text and exercise question solved.
