The two separate alleles of each parent. E.g. one parent is Aa and the other is AA. The top side would have 'A' in each column and the left side would have 'A' in one row and 'a' in the other.
If you are in seventh grade like me and the books name is Life Science the answer isTT and tt.
The mother is on the left, and the dad is on the top.
Genotype is the letters eg Tt heterozygous, TT homozygous Dominant or tt homozygous recessive.
The offspring.
moochus mar
Zygotes
the females genes should usually be placed along the left side of a punnett square. its simple once you get the hang of it.oh, and the males genes are usually placed along the top.
The letters on the outside of the Punnett square stand for the alleles of each parent. One parent's alleles are written across the top of the square, and the other parent's alleles are written along the left side of the square. The pairs of alleles inside the square represent all the possible genotypes for their offspring.
Adenine (A) Thymine (T) <--only in DNA Guanine (G) Cytosine (C) Uracil (U) <--only in RNA A pairs with T in DNA A pairs with U in RNA G pairs with C in both DNA and RNA
H H H HH HH h Hh Hh This representation has the male across the top of the Punnett square and the female along the vertical axis. The formatting is almost certainly going to be messed up once I post this, for which I apologize.
You have a square the is split into fourths. 2 and 2 in bottom. It looks like a window. On top of the two top squares you put the alleles of the first parent. On the left you put the to alleles of the other parent. And you basically get one allele from each parent and put it in the square and it gives you the probably outcomes of the offspring.
zygotes
the females genes should usually be placed along the left side of a punnett square. its simple once you get the hang of it.oh, and the males genes are usually placed along the top.
The letters on the outside of the Punnett square stand for the alleles of each parent. One parent's alleles are written across the top of the square, and the other parent's alleles are written along the left side of the square. The pairs of alleles inside the square represent all the possible genotypes for their offspring.
The letters to the left are the two alleles (the genotype) of one parent and the letters above is the other parents genotype. If the letter is capital it means the trait is dominant and if the letter is lowercase, it's recessive
Two letters which represent that parent's traits. They might be called alleles (its been a while).
Adenine (A) Thymine (T) <--only in DNA Guanine (G) Cytosine (C) Uracil (U) <--only in RNA A pairs with T in DNA A pairs with U in RNA G pairs with C in both DNA and RNA
H H H HH HH h Hh Hh This representation has the male across the top of the Punnett square and the female along the vertical axis. The formatting is almost certainly going to be messed up once I post this, for which I apologize.
You have a square the is split into fourths. 2 and 2 in bottom. It looks like a window. On top of the two top squares you put the alleles of the first parent. On the left you put the to alleles of the other parent. And you basically get one allele from each parent and put it in the square and it gives you the probably outcomes of the offspring.
Not if your the parent taking care of the child.
A punnet square. The genotype of one parent is written across the top and the genotype of the other parent is written down the side.XBBBBBBBbBbBbThe genotypes of the offspring (in this case BB or Bb), are filled in by combining the genes of the parents.
metophase
Divergent boundaries.