Genotype and phenotype are to words that are not related.
Genotype refers to classification by comparing genetics.
Phenotype refers to classification according to the appearance of an organism.
Without knowing the specific phenotypes in question, it is difficult to provide exact genotypes for Patrick. However, genotypes result from the combination of alleles a person inherits from their parents. For example, if a phenotype is related to eye color, genotypes could include combinations of alleles for brown, blue, or green eye color. Patrick's genotypes would depend on the specific alleles he inherits for the given phenotype.
Genotypes are not created by phenotypes, they are the alleles/genes of the organism. Genotypes (in combination with environment) produce phenotypes. It would be expected that the genotypes Bb and BB would produce the phenotype B.
The parents can pass on only the alleles of their genotypes to their offspring. Therefore, the offspring genotypes and phenotypes are dependent solely upon the alleles inherited from the parents.
A genotypic -ratio reflects the genetic configuration of an individual in the population. Several genotypes are possible in a phenotype and the ratio in which the genotypes segregate in a given phenotype is known as its genotypic ratio.
The phenotype pairings which the genotypes of individuals be directly known are homozygous recessive.
Different genotypes can result in the same phenotype through mechanisms such as genetic redundancy or epistasis. Genetic redundancy occurs when multiple genotypes can produce the same gene product, leading to the same phenotype. Epistasis occurs when one gene's expression is influenced by another gene, allowing different genotypes to result in the same observable trait.
A phenotype. Phenotypes are observable, physical traits. Genotypes have to do with the genetic coding. Since hair type is visible, it is a phenotype.
They cannot
The smooth pod phenotype in pea plants is typically associated with a specific gene controlled by a single locus with two alleles: one for smooth pods (dominant) and one for wrinkled pods (recessive). The possible genotypes for the smooth pod phenotype are homozygous dominant (SS) and heterozygous (Ss). Therefore, there are two genotypes that can express the smooth pod phenotype.
Yes, it is possible for two horses to have the same phenotype but different genotypes. Phenotype is the observable characteristics of an organism, while genotype refers to the genetic makeup. Differences in genotype can lead to variations in the genetic composition that may not be visibly apparent in the phenotype.
One way is if an allele for the gene in question is dominant. Homozygotes for the dominant allele and heterozygotes will both have the same phenotype.Organisms have the same phenotype, or physical characteristics. They do not, however, have the same genotype, or genetic makeup. If T represent tall, and t represnts short then the organism will have the genotypes TT and Tt. If you make a Punnett square you will have the same phenotype but different genotypes. Unless some weird mutation occurs....
A phenotype is a physical characteristic. For a human an observed phenotype example would be hair colour (e.g brown) or eye colour (green). An observed phenotype is a physical characteristic that can be seen directly or indirectly (internal organs) caused by an individual's genotype.