It would depend on if the dominant genes are the same or different.
Say the dominant alleles were different. In this case, they are co-dominant.
If they are the same and both dominant homosytus.
You will have the dominant phenotype for that trait.
Their offspring will have dominant genes. However, if these offspring have offspring with an amimal with recessive genes, the recessive genes will show up.
Recessive traits are shadowed by Dominant genes. In other words, the Dominant gene covers the Recessive.
This is called co-dominance, when neither trait is dominant nor recessive to the other one, hence making them equally strong.
Capital letters on Punnett Squares represent dominant genes, while lowercase letters represent recessive genes. For example, if the trait "T" is a tall gene and the trait "t" is a short gene. When you get your results (if both parents are heterozygous for tallness, Tt) you get four possible results, 1 TT (homozygous tall), 2 Tt (twice, heterozygous tall Tt), and 1 tt (homozygous short). If there is a dominant gene there, that gene will be displayed. Only if there are two recessive genes will the recessive trait be displayed.
Codominant
homozygous or 2 dominant or 2 recessive.
A dominant trait is expressed when two different genes for the same trait are present.
Non-Mendelian traits are:A trait with no clearly dominant alleleA trait with four allelesA trait controlled by many genes
dominant
You will have the dominant phenotype for that trait.
RR
a trait controlled by many genes
Their offspring will have dominant genes. However, if these offspring have offspring with an amimal with recessive genes, the recessive genes will show up.
It is called a dominant trait
dominant
Pure dominant = two dominant genes that make a "pure dominant" trait. Pure Recessive = two recessive genes that make a "pure recessive" trait.