Dominant in science means either 'expressed' in genetic terms or 'widely held and accepted as the basis of comparison' in general terms such as "the dominant view".
Heterozygous in biology refers to an individual having two different alleles for a particular gene. This means that one allele is dominant over the other, resulting in a dominant phenotype. Heterozygous individuals display a combination of traits from both alleles.
I read in freshman biology that it is recessive. According to Barry Starr, Stanford University geneticist, bent pinky is a dominant trait.
I am pretty sure the recessive and dominant alleles you are talking about are covered in Biology. Recessive alleles are basically alleles that are received from both parent's DNA that are carries, (dd). However, dominant alleles are (exactly what it says) always expressed. If there is one dominant allele and one recessive allele the dominant allele overpowers the recessive. (DD) and (Dd)overpowers (dd).
Dominant mood refers to the prevailing emotional atmosphere or feeling in a particular situation, setting, or piece of literature. It sets the overall tone and influences the reader's emotional response to the text.
Freckles are considered a dominant trait, as they are caused by a dominant allele. This means that individuals only need to inherit one copy of the allele from either parent in order to have freckles.
recessive (sraight out of my biology lesson!)
Heterozygous in biology refers to an individual having two different alleles for a particular gene. This means that one allele is dominant over the other, resulting in a dominant phenotype. Heterozygous individuals display a combination of traits from both alleles.
in biology, the opposite is recessive in sexual behavior, the opposite is submissive in some terms, the opposite is rare
In genetics it refers to a gene that will always be expressed when present. In behavioral Biology dominance refers to members of a population that are basically in charge.
I read in freshman biology that it is recessive. According to Barry Starr, Stanford University geneticist, bent pinky is a dominant trait.
Submissive; in biology, recessiveRecessive… what exactly does this have to do with Acronyms & Abbreviations?
0 (there is no chance it will be short since tall is dominant over short). Hope this helps! - Biology Student
In Biology, a morph is each of several variant forms of an animal or plant. Polymorphism isthe occurrence of different forms among the members of a population or colony. The dominant morph would be the strongest of the different forms.
yes, if two Bb parents have kids, there is a 3:1 ratio that their children will show a dominant trait (BB Bb Bb bb). For multiple alleles (3 or more) it gets a little more complicated. Some traits, like height, have 1000's of genes affecting them. Consult your biology teacher for more information.Yes. Because to have a dominant trait you can have two dominant alleles or just one dominant and one recessive (because a dominant allele negates the effect of a recessive allele.) To get a recessive trait it takes two recessive alleles as oppose to a dominant trait where it takes only 1 to have a dominant trait. Therefore Dominant traits are more common.
it is impossible because the phenotype and genotype are different this is out of chapter 10 in the biology book on page 336
I am pretty sure the recessive and dominant alleles you are talking about are covered in Biology. Recessive alleles are basically alleles that are received from both parent's DNA that are carries, (dd). However, dominant alleles are (exactly what it says) always expressed. If there is one dominant allele and one recessive allele the dominant allele overpowers the recessive. (DD) and (Dd)overpowers (dd).
Dominant mood refers to the prevailing emotional atmosphere or feeling in a particular situation, setting, or piece of literature. It sets the overall tone and influences the reader's emotional response to the text.