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Parthenogenesis.
Yes because the amoeba is dividing in half which does in term represent reproduction and is producing more of its own species.
because each trait you have is either recessive or dominant depending on your gene type, and the action of your alleles.
All Red, no white.
They all happen to be unicellular.
well all genes comes in pair one is dominant and other is recessive but gametes do not come in pair as only one can come from the parent.
all of the offspring's genes come from one parent.
Parthenogenesis.
genes 23 from each parent
Depending on the type of organism and how many chromosomes it has, all of them come from the parent when the organism splits in the process of mitosis.
They come from the same 'place' that all other Living Creatures Genes come from - Three Billion Years of Biological Evolution.
Yes because the amoeba is dividing in half which does in term represent reproduction and is producing more of its own species.
Genes, hereditary units located in the chromosomes, determine the characteristics transferred from parent to offspring. They consist of a sequence of deoxyribonucleic acids (DNA) and ribonucleic acid (RNA) that bear genetic information.
Sure. All it takes is for a recessive blue-eye gene to be carried by each parent. Recessive genes can hang around through many generations and never come out until they meet another one from the other parent. When there's one of each, the brown-eye genes will always win, so after a while you don't know if the blue-eye genes are there or not until they show up. But somewhere back in the line there would have to be one blue-eyed parent on each side for this to happen.
because each trait you have is either recessive or dominant depending on your gene type, and the action of your alleles.
Since all amoebas asexually reproduce, they are all the same age, and thus they are all as old as the first amoeba to ever exist on Earth.
All Red, no white.