Plants are offspring like their parents because of their parents DNA this happens because of fertilization
Young plants and animals resemble their parents due to genetic inheritance. Each parent passes on their genes to their offspring, which determine the physical characteristics and traits of the offspring. This process ensures that offspring share similarities with their parents.
No, the offspring of identical parents would not always look like the parents because everyone has dominant and recessive traits, where the recessive traits do not show but is still in DNA. That said, recessive traits not shown in parents can be passed on as dominant traits to offspring - making offspring not always identical to its parents. (this is also called genetic variation)
Extinct. As are their parents.
They will have the same basic structure, organs and tissues, and will reproduce in the same way. For instance, ferns will produce ferns, not seaweed. Oak trees will have the same type of bark and leaf shape as their parents, though the exact shape of the tree will depend on its environment.
Mendel started out with plants that "bred true". That is, when tall plants were self-pollinated (or cross-pollinated with others like them), plants in following generations were all tall; when the short plants were self-pollinated (or cross- pollinated with others like them) the plants in following generations were all short.
Offspring inherit a combination of genetic traits from their parents, including physical characteristics like eye color, hair color, and height. They may also inherit certain genetic predispositions to medical conditions or diseases. Additionally, offspring can inherit behavioral traits and personality characteristics from their parents.
Offspring does not look exactly like the parent because in humans, only sexual reproduction is possible, which involves 2 parents which exchange DNA to form offspring with different DNA and genetic information than both parents.
Offspring inherit traits from their parents through a combination of genetic information passed down from both parents. Genes, which are segments of DNA, contain instructions for specific traits. When parents reproduce, their genes mix and combine to determine the traits that their offspring will inherit.
Offspring from foraminifera (forams) typically inherit genetic material from their parents, leading to similarities in traits. However, due to processes like genetic recombination and environmental influences, there can be variations between parents and their offspring. Additionally, some foraminifera can reproduce asexually, resulting in clones that are genetically identical to the parent. Overall, while offspring may share many characteristics with their parents, variations can occur.
They may not share the same properties as their parents. Plants that reproduce asexually have the same traits (like an immunity to a disease) however if a plant reproduced sexually it may not have the same traits.
No. The offspring receive a combination of both parents DNA (roughly half from each parent although the mom contributes more due to mitochondrial DNA). During recombination the DNA of both parents is combined form a unique individual with traits from both the mother and father.
Offspring in sexual reproduction exhibit a combination of traits from both parents, blending their physical characteristics. This results in genetic diversity and variations in appearance among offspring, making each individual unique.