Trihybrid Cross Calculator Punnett Square
Use this Trihybrid Cross Calculator to generate gametes, a full 64-cell Punnett square, genotype ratios, phenotype ratios, probability results, and step-by-step Mendelian inheritance explanations for three genes at once. The calculator supports custom parent genotypes, custom trait letters, independent assortment, complete dominance assumptions, phenotype pattern queries, and probability checks for trihybrid genetics problems.
Interactive Trihybrid Cross Calculator
Generate a Trihybrid Punnett Square
Probability Query
Use the current parent setup from the Trihybrid Cross tab, then ask for a phenotype pattern. Use uppercase for dominant phenotype and lowercase for recessive phenotype. Example: A-B-cc means dominant A trait, dominant B trait, recessive c trait.
Single-Gene Probability Helper
Classic Trihybrid Ratio Shortcut
For the classic cross \(AaBbCc \times AaBbCc\), each heterozygous gene gives a \(3:1\) phenotype ratio. Multiplying three \(3:1\) ratios gives the full trihybrid phenotype ratio.
Result
Trihybrid Inheritance Visual
Trihybrid Cross Calculator: Complete Guide
A trihybrid cross is a genetics cross that follows three genes or three traits at the same time. A classic example is \(AaBbCc \times AaBbCc\), where each parent is heterozygous for three different genes. A trihybrid cross is more complex than a monohybrid cross or a dihybrid cross because the number of possible gametes and offspring combinations increases quickly. This calculator helps by generating the gametes, building a full Punnett square, counting genotypes, counting phenotypes, and explaining the ratios step by step.
In a simple Mendelian trihybrid cross, each gene has two alleles. A dominant allele is usually written with a capital letter, such as \(A\), and a recessive allele is written with a lowercase letter, such as \(a\). A genotype such as \(AaBbCc\) means the individual is heterozygous at all three loci. If the genes assort independently and each dominant allele fully masks the recessive allele, the phenotype pattern can be predicted using probability multiplication or a Punnett square.
What Is a Trihybrid Cross?
A trihybrid cross studies inheritance of three genes at once. The prefix “tri” means three. If one gene is studied, it is called a monohybrid cross. If two genes are studied, it is called a dihybrid cross. If three genes are studied, it is called a trihybrid cross. The purpose is to predict possible offspring genotypes and phenotypes from two parent genotypes.
Alleles, Genotypes, and Phenotypes
An allele is a version of a gene. A genotype is the allele combination an organism has. A phenotype is the observable trait or trait category that results from the genotype. In simple complete dominance, \(AA\) and \(Aa\) both show the dominant phenotype, while \(aa\) shows the recessive phenotype.
For three genes, the same logic applies independently to each gene. A genotype such as \(AabbCc\) has the dominant phenotype for gene \(A\), the recessive phenotype for gene \(B\), and the dominant phenotype for gene \(C\).
How Many Gametes Does a Trihybrid Parent Make?
The number of gamete types depends on the number of heterozygous gene pairs. A heterozygous pair such as \(Aa\) can pass either \(A\) or \(a\). A homozygous pair such as \(AA\) can only pass \(A\). A homozygous recessive pair such as \(aa\) can only pass \(a\).
Here, \(n\) is the number of heterozygous gene pairs. For \(AaBbCc\), all three gene pairs are heterozygous, so:
The eight gametes from \(AaBbCc\) are:
Why a Trihybrid Punnett Square Has 64 Cells
If each parent produces 8 gamete types, then the Punnett square has \(8\) rows and \(8\) columns. The total number of offspring combinations is:
Each cell represents one possible fertilization event between one gamete from Parent 1 and one gamete from Parent 2. In the classic \(AaBbCc \times AaBbCc\) cross, each of the 64 cells is equally likely if all gametes are equally frequent.
Classic Trihybrid Phenotype Ratio
The classic trihybrid phenotype ratio comes from multiplying the monohybrid \(3:1\) phenotype ratio three times:
This expansion gives:
The eight phenotype categories are:
| Phenotype Pattern | Meaning | Classic Count out of 64 |
|---|---|---|
| \(A-B-C-\) | Dominant phenotype for all three traits | 27 |
| \(A-B-cc\) | Dominant A and B, recessive c | 9 |
| \(A-bbC-\) | Dominant A and C, recessive b | 9 |
| \(aaB-C-\) | Dominant B and C, recessive a | 9 |
| \(A-bbcc\) | Only dominant A phenotype | 3 |
| \(aaB-cc\) | Only dominant B phenotype | 3 |
| \(aabbC-\) | Only dominant C phenotype | 3 |
| \(aabbcc\) | All recessive phenotypes | 1 |
Probability Method for Trihybrid Crosses
A full Punnett square is helpful, but probability is often faster. If the genes assort independently, multiply the probability for each gene. For example, in \(AaBbCc \times AaBbCc\), the probability of the dominant phenotype for one gene is \(3/4\), and the probability of the recessive phenotype is \(1/4\).
To find the probability of \(A-B-cc\), multiply:
This matches the classic ratio category of 9 out of 64.
Exact Genotype Probabilities
Exact genotype probabilities are calculated in the same way. In a heterozygous cross \(Aa \times Aa\), the genotype ratio is:
Therefore:
To find the probability of \(AaBbCc\) in \(AaBbCc \times AaBbCc\):
Since \(1/8=8/64\), the exact genotype \(AaBbCc\) appears in 8 of the 64 cells of the classic trihybrid Punnett square.
Law of Segregation
Mendel’s law of segregation states that allele pairs separate during gamete formation. If an individual has genotype \(Aa\), the allele \(A\) goes into some gametes and the allele \(a\) goes into others. This is why a heterozygous parent can pass either allele.
Law of Independent Assortment
Mendel’s law of independent assortment states that alleles of different genes assort independently into gametes when the genes are not linked. This is the principle that allows \(AaBbCc\) to produce combinations such as \(ABC\), \(ABc\), \(aBC\), and \(abc\). The calculator assumes independent assortment.
When the Classic Ratio Does Not Apply
The classic \(27:9:9:9:3:3:3:1\) ratio only applies under specific assumptions. The parents must be heterozygous for all three genes, the genes must assort independently, the alleles must show complete dominance, all genotype classes must survive equally, and the sample size must be large enough for expected ratios to appear clearly. In real genetics, results can differ because of linkage, epistasis, incomplete dominance, codominance, lethal alleles, sex-linked inheritance, gene interactions, environmental influence, or chance variation.
Trihybrid Cross vs. Dihybrid Cross
A dihybrid cross follows two genes and usually produces a \(9:3:3:1\) phenotype ratio in the classic \(AaBb \times AaBb\) case. A trihybrid cross follows three genes and produces a larger \(27:9:9:9:3:3:3:1\) phenotype ratio. The number of Punnett-square cells also increases from 16 to 64.
How to Use This Trihybrid Cross Calculator
- Enter the three gene letters. Use one letter per gene, such as \(A\), \(B\), and \(C\).
- Select the genotype for Parent 1 at each gene.
- Select the genotype for Parent 2 at each gene.
- Click “Generate Trihybrid Cross.”
- Review the gametes from each parent.
- Scroll through the Punnett square, genotype table, and phenotype ratio table.
- Use the Probability Query tab to calculate a specific phenotype or genotype probability.
Common Mistakes in Trihybrid Crosses
One common mistake is forgetting that a heterozygous trihybrid parent makes 8 gamete types, not 6. The number comes from powers of 2, not from adding alleles:
Another mistake is confusing genotype and phenotype. \(AA\) and \(Aa\) are different genotypes, but under complete dominance they produce the same dominant phenotype. Therefore, genotype ratios have more categories than phenotype ratios.
A third mistake is trying to memorize the full Punnett square instead of using probability. For independent genes, probability multiplication is usually faster:
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a trihybrid cross?
A trihybrid cross is a genetics cross that follows inheritance of three genes or traits at the same time.
How many gametes does AaBbCc produce?
\(AaBbCc\) has three heterozygous gene pairs, so it produces \(2^3=8\) gamete types.
How many cells are in a trihybrid Punnett square?
The classic \(AaBbCc \times AaBbCc\) trihybrid Punnett square has \(8\times8=64\) cells.
What is the classic trihybrid phenotype ratio?
The classic phenotype ratio is \(27:9:9:9:3:3:3:1\), assuming independent assortment and complete dominance.
What does A-B-C- mean?
\(A-B-C-\) means the offspring shows dominant phenotypes for all three genes. The dash means either homozygous dominant or heterozygous is possible.
What does aabbcc mean?
\(aabbcc\) means the offspring is homozygous recessive at all three genes and shows recessive phenotypes for all three traits.
Can the ratio be different from 27:9:9:9:3:3:3:1?
Yes. The ratio can change if genes are linked, dominance is incomplete, traits interact, alleles are lethal, or the inheritance pattern is not simple Mendelian inheritance.
Is probability easier than a 64-cell Punnett square?
Often yes. For independent genes, multiplying single-gene probabilities is faster than filling all 64 cells.
Can I use this calculator for linked genes?
No. This calculator assumes independent assortment. Linked genes require recombination-frequency analysis.
Can this calculator handle incomplete dominance?
The calculator is designed for complete dominance. Incomplete dominance and codominance require different phenotype interpretation.
