Heterozygous
its different because adominant allele is in charge
A hybrid is formed for example when a homozygous dominant (AA) individual is crossed with homozygous recessive (aa) individual. all the individuals which are produced in F1 generation are hybrids (Aa) in case of a hybrid only dominant allele is expressed, while the recessive allele remains suppressed due to dominant recessive relationship.
incomplete dominance source: PH Bio textbook
The recessive allele.
The answer is that The difference is that dominant dominates, and recessive is dominated.
its different because adominant allele is in charge
For a recessive allele to produce a recessive phenotype, the individual must have two copies, one from each parent. An individual with one dominant and one recessive allele for a gene will have the dominant phenotype.
If an individual has one recessive allele and one dominant allele, they are known as heterozygous. The dominant trait will be expressed.
The homozygous dominant individual can only pass on the dominant allele and the homozygous recessive individual can only pass on the recessive allele, therefore all offspring will be heterozygous and have the dominant phenotype.
This would depend on whether the allele for dimples is dominant or recessive. If the allele for dimples is dominant and the no dimples allele is recessive then the phenotype of the individual would be dimpled. If the allele for no dimples is dominant and the allele for no dimples is recessive then the dimples will not be expressed. If these alleles are codominant then the dimples will be expressed but not as much as in an individual who has both alleles for dimples.
This would depend on whether the allele for dimples is dominant or recessive. If the allele for dimples is dominant and the no dimples allele is recessive then the phenotype of the individual would be dimpled. If the allele for no dimples is dominant and the allele for no dimples is recessive then the dimples will not be expressed. If these alleles are codominant then the dimples will be expressed but not as much as in an individual who has both alleles for dimples.
YES ALWAYS!!! Even if you have for example, Aa (A being the dominant allele and a being the recessive allele) that trait will always be dominant!
The Allele That Is Covered By The Dominant Allele Is The Recessive Allele.
This would depend on whether the allele for dimples is dominant or recessive. If the allele for dimples is dominant and the no dimples allele is recessive then the phenotype of the individual would be dimpled. If the allele for no dimples is dominant and the allele for no dimples is recessive then the dimples will not be expressed. If these alleles are codominant then the dimples will be expressed but not as much as in an individual who has both alleles for dimples.
A genotype in which there are both a dominant and a recessive allele is called heterozygous.
A hybrid is formed for example when a homozygous dominant (AA) individual is crossed with homozygous recessive (aa) individual. all the individuals which are produced in F1 generation are hybrids (Aa) in case of a hybrid only dominant allele is expressed, while the recessive allele remains suppressed due to dominant recessive relationship.
If you have a heterozygous (one dominant and one recessive) individual, it will only express the dominant allele in complete dominance; if it's codominance then some sort of "combined property" resulting from both the dominant and recessive allele would be expressed. On the other hand if you have a homozygous (both dominant or both recessive) you needn't bother.