It's a cross over of rabbit and somthing esle. Thats all I know
Green is dominant, and albino is recessive. If you cross heterozygous plants, you will end up with about a 3:1 ratio of green to albino.
Albinism comes from recessive alleles, so 100% of the children will be albino if both parents are. On the rare event of a germline mutation in this allele in the parents' gametes, there may be a non albino child. Some animals are now entirely albino, google "blind cave tetra".
rabits
Foxes,
Rabits :)
in a rabits mouth
It may have been an albino mountain lion, known in Florida as a panther. However, it is not a panther and belongs to an entirely different genus. Albino mountain lions are rare but not unknown.
The parents of an albino plant are likely to be heterozygous for the gene controlling albinism. This means they carry one normal allele and one albino allele. When these two alleles combine in the offspring, it results in the expression of the albino trait.
While many fungi are white, non parasitic plants must have green chlorophyll to produce carbohydrates. And while albino plants are virtually nonexistent, variegated (green and white striped or mottled) plants exist, largely due to cultivation by humans for their aesthetic value.
do you mean raBBits
no because they are herbivores
There is a very low percentage of having a albino child if you yourself are not albino ==you can have an albino baby==