Incomplete dominance
Incomplete dominance
This is an example of incomplete dominance.
that is an example of mixing mouse colors i guess
By:KeeganKLM
Incomplete dominance
If a heterozygous tall pea plant, Aa, is crossed with a homozygous plant, AA, for the trait, you will have a one in one in four chance of the offspring being heterozygous. You will need to create a square and plug the traits in to see what the odds are.
The offspring would have a 50% chance of being heterozygous and showing the dominant trait and a 50% chance of being homozygous for the recessive trait.
This is probably the result of the brown genes being dominant and the white genes being recessive. this is correct.
The offspring has a 50% chance of the dominate trait (while being heteroygous) and a 50% chance of having the recessive trait ( homozygous recessive).
You can, it's being done more all the time. The offspring of the horse and zebra is called a "zorse". So far however the market for these zorses is very limited.
People. And people being (acting like) people.
100%
Some, yes. For example, a mule is a cross between a male donkey and a female horse (a hinny results when a male horse and female donkey are crossed). In the example given (a cross between a male donkey and a female horse). The offspring (the mule) would have a high probability of being sterile from birth.
This was an example of tallness being a dominant phenotypic trait in pea plants
if you mean in terms of what their offspring will be? then you need to do a monohyrid cross, the gametes being RW and WW sooo x R W W RW WW W RW WW it will be 1:1 ratio of pink to white offspring
The offspring produced is dependent on chances. We can figure out the chances of the kind of offspring such a cross will get by using a Punnett square. Unfortunately the WYSIWYG format on this site will not allow for such a square, so we will give the ratio, the genotypic and phenotypic percentages that such a cross will receive. Let R = red, W = white and RW = roan. Roan cow (RW) x White bull (WW) Offspring: 2 RW : 2 WW Genotypic ratio: 50% roan and 50% white Phenotypic ratio: Same as above. Thus, the offspring of a roan cow crossed with a white bull (presumably of the same breed, being Shorthorn), may come out as white or roan. There is a 50% chance that either will occur.
It is not very possible for ladies to be chipmunks and squirrels to be men. However, a lady could mate with a chipmunk, and a man could mate with a squirrel, but they chance of there being any crossed offspring is very low.