Males
There is no servant syndrome, It is likely that you are thinking albeit with bad spelling of Savant Syndrome. and it is recessive
A recessive gene
A recessive trait can only be passed along if both parents carry at least one of the recessive genes to the child. If both parents manifest the trait (that is, if both parents have both recessive genes), then the child will manifest (that is, carry both recessive genes and display) the recessive trait. If one parent manifests and the other parent only carries the trait (that is, carries one dominant and one recessive gene) then the child will definitely carry and have a 50% chance of manifesting. If both parents carry the recessive, the child is 25% likely not to carry the trait at all, 50% likely to carry and 25% likely to manifest the trait.
it can be either if one parent has it and the other doesn't then it can be dominant. say both parents have it with them it depends on who has more likely chance to get it. did i help at all?
He likely doesn't have one. He is a perfected being. However, if you are talking about the fictionalized accounts of him in some superhero story, he likely has the weakness that if he does something against God's will, he will "fall from grace" and lose his immortality.
Most likely from another relative as a recessive trait.
One can determine whether a pedigree trait is dominant or recessive by observing how the trait is passed down through generations. If the trait appears in every generation, it is likely dominant. If the trait skips generations, it is likely recessive. Genetic testing can also help confirm the inheritance pattern of the trait.
If 50% of the offspring show the dominant phenotype and 50% show the recessive phenotype, it is likely that one parent is heterozygous (Aa) for the trait and the other parent is homozygous recessive (aa). This would result in a 1:1 ratio of offspring showing each phenotype.
Yes, dominant and recessive genes play a role in determining physical traits in offspring. Dominant genes are more likely to be expressed in the phenotype, while recessive genes are typically masked unless an individual inherits two copies of the recessive allele. This interplay between dominant and recessive genes contributes to the variety of physical characteristics seen in offspring.
If seed shape did not have a clearly recessive form
More information is needed. The percent of offspring that will display the recessive trait from parents with Hh and HH will be different than the percent of offspring that will display the recessive trait from parents with hh and Hh.
The offspring would have a 50% chance of being heterozygous and showing the dominant trait and a 50% chance of being homozygous for the recessive trait.