incomplete dominance
No, ferns do not have cones or flowers.
A seed plant that produces flowers , and a seed plant that doesn't produce flowers. Because that plant that produces flowers grows the flower over and over again , and so does the plant that doesn't produce flowers
not really. that would be co-dominance. incomplete dominance is when a heterozygote genotype is expressed as intermediate between the two alleles. for example: if you cross a red snapdragon (RR) with a white snapdragon (WW) all the offspring will be RW which will code for a different color, such as pink.
Nectar usually built up in plant glands, called nectaries, situated at the base of the petals in flowers.
iuh
iris snapdragon sunflowers
honeysuckle
The genus of a snapdragon is called "antirrhinum." The species is known as "snapdragon." The genus includes lots of other shrubs and flowers, but the snapdragon is the only one located in North America.
A snapdragon is an example of an incomplete dominance because when a snapdragon plant having red flowers is crossed with another plant having white flowers, all F1 plants bear red flowers but in F2 generation, the plant population segregates in to 1 red : 2 pink : 1 white flowered plants ratio.
The scientific name of a snapdragon is Antirrhinum majus.
Snapdragon, Soldaster and Sweet Pea are flowers. They begin with the letter S.
· Salvia · Snapdragon · Snowball · Sunflower · Sweet Pea
Sweet pea, sunflower, salvia, snowball and snapdragon are flowers. They begin with the letter S.
multiple alleles
A Snapdragon is a flower with the more technical name of Antirrhinum. The flower has received this "nickname" by it's resemblance to the face of a dragon. These flowers can be found in Europe, North America and northern Africa.
no
Salvia, snapdragon, snowball, soldaster, statice, stephanotis, sunflower and sweet pea are flowers.