A good name would be Hikari-Means "light" in Japanese (for female). Or Sasuke- Means golden (for male)
I have a few more wolves if any of you peeps out there mind? One is a male he is a hazle color with amber eyes and he is a pup at the moment, he is really nice though.
A tan-ish female cub with light green eyes she is really sweet and compassionet.
A black female wolf cub with white on her chest, she can be a bitch sometimes, but she is okay.
A female wolf that is blue gray, like a blue roan almost, with blue eyes, she is wise and kind.
A male alpha that is gray with amber eyes. A female that is white with touches of hazel. A female that is a light tan with darker tan under belly and blaze that starts from her forehead and goes to her muzzle then to her chest and spreads, becoming the underbelly, a scar on her lower chest, over her eyes, not blinding though and 2 small furless patchs on her side and purple eyes.
NO JAPANESSE ANWERS
no
female
it would be xyx
I have green eyes my hubs has hazel colour, neither green or blue!, we have 3 children eldest is bright blue male second is green eyed girl and youngest is brown eyed male,(the only one who looks like mum, who has green eyes)
A Heterozygous female with a white eyed male.
hazel
Female=Fergie Male= Will.I.Am
No
When Morgan mated a white-eyed male fruit fly with a red-eyed female fruit fly, the first generation offspring all had red eyes. In the next generation, because females would have the X chromosome for white eyes, about half the offspring would have white eyes. The offspring with white eyes were all male, meaning he discovered eye color in fruit flies showed a sex-linked trait. The result of this was a generation of red eyed and white eyed individuals. If the red eyed female was heterozygous, this is possible.
A Heterozygous female with a white eyed male.
When Morgan mated a white-eyed male fruit fly with a red-eyed female fruit fly, the first generation offspring all had red eyes. In the next generation, because females would have the X chromosome for white eyes, about half the offspring would have white eyes. The offspring with white eyes were all male, meaning he discovered eye color in fruit flies showed a sex-linked trait. The result of this was a generation of red eyed and white eyed individuals. If the red eyed female was heterozygous, this is possible.
When Morgan mated a white-eyed male fruit fly with a red-eyed female fruit fly, the first generation offspring all had red eyes. In the next generation, because females would have the X chromosome for white eyes, about half the offspring would have white eyes. The offspring with white eyes were all male, meaning he discovered eye color in fruit flies showed a sex-linked trait. The result of this was a generation of red eyed and white eyed individuals. If the red eyed female was heterozygous, this is possible.