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During meiosis.
An allele is one form of a gene. Alleles separate into separate sex cells during meiosis.
the law of independent assortment was formulated by Mendel. Alleles separate independently during the process of gamete production. The offspring show traits independent of the parents.
They separate
Alleles separate and go into different gamete cells during Anaphase I of Meiosis.
During segregation blacks were kept separate from whites. This is because blacks were not viewed as equal to the whites.
False. During meiosis, the two alleles for each gene can separate and be distributed to different gametes. This is known as Mendel's law of independent assortment, which allows for new combinations of alleles to be formed in offspring.
separate chromosomes
The answer to this amazing question is alleles!!!! :) alleles
The law of segregation of alleles, the first of Mendel's laws, stating that every somatic cell of an organism carries a pair of hereditary units (now identified as alleles) for each character, and that at meiosis the pairs separate so that each gamete carries only one unit from each pair. This is called the law of segregation.
Heredity
Mendels law of segregation states that alleles in the pair separate when gametes are formed.Mendel's law of segregation states that allele pairs separate or segregate during gamete formation, and randomly unite at fertilization.There are four main concepts related to this principle. They are as follows:A gene can exist in more than one form.Organisms inherit two alleles for each trait.When gametes are produced (by meiosis), allele pairs separate leaving each cell with a single allele for each trait.When the two alleles of a pair are different, one is dominant and the other is recessive.