An offspring can inherit a recessive trait if both of its parents are homozygous for the dominant allele.
In order for a recessive trait to appear in the offspring, it must inherit a recessive allele for that trait from both parents.
If one parent is homozygous recessive for a trait, all of their offspring will inherit one copy of the recessive allele. Therefore, 100% of the offspring will inherit the recessive allele from a homozygous recessive parent.
The likelihood that the offspring of individuals IV-3 and IV-4 will inherit the trait depends on the specific genetic inheritance pattern of the trait. If the trait is determined by a dominant gene, there is a 50 chance that the offspring will inherit the trait. If the trait is determined by a recessive gene, there is a 25 chance that the offspring will inherit the trait.
When discussing genetics, recessive trait refers to the fact that the offspring of two parents must inherit two copies of a gene to expose the trait. This would mean that both parents must be carriers of said gene in order for their offspring to show a recessive trait.
The offspring will all inherit one copy of the dominant allele (from the heterozygous parent) and one copy of the recessive allele (from the homozygous recessive parent). This results in all offspring being heterozygous for the trait.
If both parents carry a recessive gene for a particular trait, there is a 25% chance that their offspring will inherit two copies of the recessive gene and exhibit the corresponding trait. This can be determined through genetic Punnett square analysis to predict the probability of different genetic outcomes in offspring.
Recessive traits. This means that the trait is only expressed when an individual inherits two copies of the recessive allele for that trait, one from each parent.
100% of the offspring will display the dominant trait because the homozygous dominant parent can only pass on the dominant allele. The offspring will inherit one dominant allele from the dominant parent and one recessive allele from the recessive parent, resulting in a heterozygous genotype expressing the dominant trait.
Traits that typically will only be expressed in offspring if they inherit two copies of the genes for the trait are called Recessive traits. - Nikkkki
Their offspring will have dominant genes. However, if these offspring have offspring with an amimal with recessive genes, the recessive genes will show up.
No. Parents with the dominant phenotype might be heterozygous in their genotype. This means they could carry both the dominant and recessive allele for a trait. So they could both pass the recessive allele to an offspring, who would then have the homozygous recessive genotype and recessive phenotype.
In a cross between two individuals with a dominant phenotype but carrying a recessive trait, the recessive trait would not be visibly expressed in the offspring (since they don't inherit two copies of the recessive allele). However, they would be carriers of the recessive trait, meaning they could pass it on to future generations.