Answer:
Drooping the sticks on the table and transcribing the letters on the sides facing up follow Mendel's law of segregation​ by showing the segregation determining which alleles end up in the gamete.
Explanation:
- The Mendel's law of segregation states that the allele pairs always separate and segregate at gamete formation process and they randomly unite at the fertilization.
- When fertilization process is carried, the new organism developed has multiple factors for each trait, one from each parent.
- So the bending or drooping of the sticks and transcribing letter follows that law proposed by Mendel in 1860s.
- This law is also commonly known as the purity of gametes.