anything asexual. it preety much clones itself. also hair is very common for mamals to pass down.
a true breeding plant always produces offspring with the same trait as the parent(s).
No, a recessive trait will only show in the offspring if there is no dominant allele masking it. The trait that will always show in the offspring is the dominant allele, provided one parent was homozygous for it.
No, a recessive trait will only show in the offspring if there is no dominant allele masking it. The trait that will always show in the offspring is the dominant allele, provided one parent was homozygous for it.
The parent plant is homozygous dominant for the trait(s) observed. This can be called a 'true-breeding' plant as well.
True-breeding pea plants always produce offspring with the same traits as the parent plant. This is because they are homozygous for the trait of interest, resulting in consistent expression in the offspring generation.
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.
Trait
True-breeding
One of the allels for a trait to it's offspring.
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.
In a cross between Parent 1 (Tt) and Parent 2 (tt), the possible genotypes of the offspring are Tt and tt. The Tt offspring will be heterozygous and display the dominant trait, while the tt offspring will be homozygous recessive and display the recessive trait. There is a 50% chance (2 out of 4 possibilities) that the offspring will be tt and show the recessive trait. Therefore, 50% of the offspring will display the recessive trait.
I think it's a true-Bred plant