Yes indeed, and you always will!
Yeah. You can still carry the gene of the reddish brown hair.
Recessive gene is one which is supressed and do not show their characteristics and dominant gene is one which show their characteristics for example if a father has brown hair and mother has black hairs and if their son has black hair then in this case gene which has characteristics of black is dominant and the other which has characteristics of brown colour is recessive
Yes. You both carry the gene for blue eyes as a recessive gene.
Probably brown. It depends on what the parents carry as a recessive gene.
Yes, if the parents carry the gene for green eyes as a recessive gene.
Probably blue. Though brown is possible if you both carry brown as a recessive gene.
yes my yellow lab has a mom that's a black lab and a dads that's yellow and they had black, yellow and Brown labs so you will get a mix NO. Two chocolate labs will ALWAYS have chocolate labs. Chocolates are double recessive which means they only carry the recessive chocolate Gene.
White fur color is recessive and brown is dominant. The white mouse has a genotype of bb and the brown mouse has a genotype of BB. All offspring would be heterozygous with a genotype of BB and brown fur.
Yes. Blue eyes are a recessive genetic trait, which means that a brown- or green-eyed person can still carry a gene for blue eyes. In this case, the blue-eyed gene is recessive, or subordinate, to the green- or brown-eyed gene. To be blue-eyed, an individual must have a recessive blue-eyed gene from both its mother and father.
The boys genotype consisted of two recessive genes coding for brown hair.
yes because their ginger babies NO! Yes, you can. it's a recessive gene and is therefore only about a 25% chance if you both carry the gene.
That depends on what the allele codes for, and the natural selection pressured on them. for example: say we have a population of rabbits with Bb genes, where the B allele codes for a dominate black trait and b codes for a recessive brown trait. If the landscape is black and the rabbits need to blend in to avoid predators then the dominate black fur color is selected over generations. If the landscape is brown then the recessive trait will be selected for. In the dominantly selected group the recessive gene could still exist, just covered up the dominate gene phenotypically (they can be Bb or BB genotypes). In the recessively-selected group only the recessive gene is left (bb genotypes only).