The results suggest that the genes for eye color (Red-Eyes and Purple-Eyes) and wing type (Normal Wings and Vestigial Wings) assort independently, indicating the principles of Mendelian inheritance.
When a True Breeding Red-Eyed fly with Vestigial Wings (R_Vgvg) is crossed with a True Breeding Purple-Eyed fly with Normal Wings (rrVGVG), the F1 progeny will be heterozygous for both traits (RrVgvg). This is due to the dominance of Red-Eyes and Normal Wings. In a Test cross using these F1 flies, if the genes assort independently, you would expect a 1:1:1:1 ratio of phenotypes (Red-Eyes/Normal Wings, Red-Eyes/Vestigial Wings, Purple-Eyes/Normal Wings, Purple-Eyes/Vestigial Wings).
The observed result of 1/2 having Red-Eyes and Vestigial Wings and the other 1/2 having Purple-Eyes and Normal Wings aligns with this expected ratio. It indicates that the genes for eye color and wing type are segregating independently during gamete formation, following Mendel's Law of Independent Assortment.
In conclusion, the 1:1 ratio of phenotypes in the Test cross supports the hypothesis that the genes for eye color and wing type are located on different chromosomes or are sufficiently far apart on the same chromosome to assort independently. This observation reflects the principles of Mendelian inheritance and independent assortment of genes.