trinabial fluffer
it's a incomplete flower.
yes
incomplete
A snapdragon is an example of an incomplete dominance because when a snapdragon plant having red flowers is crossed with another plant having white flowers, all F1 plants bear red flowers but in F2 generation, the plant population segregates in to 1 red : 2 pink : 1 white flowered plants ratio.
Glass + Incomplete building + Flowers = Orangery
yellowbells
You get aspects of each trait displayed. Like, if one cat had a solid colored orange fur, and it's mate was brown, you could get a mottled cat. Or if one parent has brown eyes, and the other green, hazel eyes could occur.
An incomplete flower is when a flower doesn't have one of these characteristics, stamen, a pistil, petals, and sepals. An incomplete flower lacks one of these.
In incomplete dominance, the phenotype of the heterozygous individual will be intermediate between the two homozygous phenotypes. For example, if one allele leads to red flowers and another allele leads to white flowers, a heterozygous individual will have pink flowers.
Incomplete dominance occurs when neither allele is completely dominant over the other, resulting in a phenotype that is a blend of both traits. For example, if one allele represents red flowers and the other represents white flowers, the offspring may exhibit pink flowers. In this case, both alleles contribute to the phenotype without one overshadowing the other.
Incomplete dominance
An example of incomplete dominance is when a white flower and red flower mate and create a pink flower. The white and red colors mix creating the pink. Neither allele is dominant, resulting in a combination of the two.