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A dwarf plant cannot have a dominant allele because it has recessive genes. You should look at the genotype, punnett square, of a dwarf plant for the probability of the dwarf plant having a dominant allele. :):):):) hoped this helped, otherwise, sorry! did my best....

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10y ago
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14y ago

There are no dominant alleles because if there are dominant alleles present, they overtake the allele for dwarfism.

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14y ago

no!

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Q: Can a dwarf pea plant ever have a dominant allele?
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Can a short pea plant ever be a hybrid for the trait of stem height?

yea for sizzle


Does a Tt plant have the same genotype as a TT plant?

Nope! TT is the dominant phenotype (what ever it may be) and tt is the recessive phenotype (what ever that may be).So say T is the allele for Tall plants, t is the allele for short plants. TT would be show the tall phenotype while tt would show the short phenotype. If the genotype was Tt, the phenotype would be tall as well because the T is dominant and masks the phenotype of t (short plants).


What describes the man's trait and the alleles in his sperm cells if he inherited the dominant allele from his mother and recessive allele from his father?

As long as you aren't talking about a trait or gene that behaves co-dominately or some other exception, the man would have the dominant trait show up and his alleles would be dominant and recessive (or Dd if you are using letter symbols for the alleles- upper case being the dominant allele from the mom's egg and lower case for the recessive allele from the dad's sperm). So for example if we are talking about the gene for earlobes we can use the letter E to represent the two alleles or genetic variations: E for un-attached earlobes and e for attached earlobes. A sex cell (sperm or egg) has one allele each so that when they unite to make an embryo the new person has 2 alleles- one from each parent. So if the man inherited a dominant allele E from his mom and a recessive allele e from his father then he would have Ee as his "genotype"(what alleles he has). His "phenotype" is what trait he shows, which would be what ever is dominant-- in this case E equals un-attached earlobes.


Can a short pea plant ever be a hybrid?

No, the short pea trait is recessive and the tall pea plant trait is dominant. This means that if the plant is a hybrid, it has to be a tall pea plant. The dominant traits "mask" the recessive traits. The plant take one trait from their mom and one from their dad. If either the mom or the dad was not a tall, not hybrid pea plant then their kids would have to be tall be cause they would have one dominant, tall trait


How can two parents with dominant allele have a child with recessive allele?

Even though the parents may both have dominant it is a random selection. Also somewhere down the family line there is probably a recessive. *Both parents have a dominant and recessive phenotype (Bb), so there's a 25% chance of having a child with recessive phenotypes (bb).

Related questions

Can A Dwarf Pea Plant Can Ever Have A Dominant Allele?

no!


Would a dominant allele ever return to a population?

If a population does not have a particular dominant allele, it could return to the population through the immigration of new individuals carrying the dominant allele.


Can a short pea plant ever be a hybrid for the trait of stem height?

yea for sizzle


Does a Tt plant have the same genotype as a TT plant?

Nope! TT is the dominant phenotype (what ever it may be) and tt is the recessive phenotype (what ever that may be).So say T is the allele for Tall plants, t is the allele for short plants. TT would be show the tall phenotype while tt would show the short phenotype. If the genotype was Tt, the phenotype would be tall as well because the T is dominant and masks the phenotype of t (short plants).


What describes the man's trait and the alleles in his sperm cells if he inherited the dominant allele from his mother and recessive allele from his father?

As long as you aren't talking about a trait or gene that behaves co-dominately or some other exception, the man would have the dominant trait show up and his alleles would be dominant and recessive (or Dd if you are using letter symbols for the alleles- upper case being the dominant allele from the mom's egg and lower case for the recessive allele from the dad's sperm). So for example if we are talking about the gene for earlobes we can use the letter E to represent the two alleles or genetic variations: E for un-attached earlobes and e for attached earlobes. A sex cell (sperm or egg) has one allele each so that when they unite to make an embryo the new person has 2 alleles- one from each parent. So if the man inherited a dominant allele E from his mom and a recessive allele e from his father then he would have Ee as his "genotype"(what alleles he has). His "phenotype" is what trait he shows, which would be what ever is dominant-- in this case E equals un-attached earlobes.


Can a short pea plant ever be a hybrid?

No, the short pea trait is recessive and the tall pea plant trait is dominant. This means that if the plant is a hybrid, it has to be a tall pea plant. The dominant traits "mask" the recessive traits. The plant take one trait from their mom and one from their dad. If either the mom or the dad was not a tall, not hybrid pea plant then their kids would have to be tall be cause they would have one dominant, tall trait


What is the best minecraft skin ever?

A Dwarf


Who is the richest dwarf ever?

We don't know yet.


Is it ever sunny on dwarf planets?

well that is just a rubbish question.. dwarf planets?? dwarfts are perfectly normorlll !!


Will your dwarf hamster ever love you?

it realy depends on how you treat it.


What is the phenotypic ratio of a monohybrid cross?

In a monohybrid cross with one parent homozygous dominant and the other homozygous recessive The phenotype of the F1 offspring will be 100% that of the parent with the dominant allele. A cross of two of the F1 offspring will be 75% phenotypically like the dominant allele and 25% will be hommozygous recessive or 3 to 1


Can you put a teddy bear hamster with a dwarf hamster?

No, you should never under any circumstances, ever put a dwarf hamster with a teddy bear hamster.