When neither copy of an allele is completely expressed or completely masked, it is called Incomplete Dominance. When incomplete dominance is present, then the offspring will have a blend of both parental phenotypes but will always be a slight bit slower to one parent than the other.
When neither copy of an allele is completely expressed or completely masked, it is called Incomplete Dominance. When incomplete dominance is present, then the offspring will have a blend of both parental phenotypes but will always be a slight bit slower to one parent than the other.
dominance :) i think its dominance.
heterozygous gene. In this situation, both alleles are different and both are expressed, resulting in a blending or mixing of their traits.
it is neither dominance nor codominance so stop saying what yall think!
Codominance is when both alleles in a gene pair are fully expressed in the phenotype, resulting in a blending or combination of traits. Incomplete dominance is when neither allele is completely dominant, leading to a phenotype that is a mix of the two alleles.
Codominance is when both alleles in a gene pair are fully expressed in the phenotype, resulting in a blending or combination of traits. Incomplete dominance is when neither allele is completely dominant, leading to a phenotype that is a mix of the two alleles.
When neither copy of an allele is completely expressed or completely masked, it is called Incomplete Dominance. When incomplete dominance is present, then the offspring will have a blend of both parental phenotypes but will always be a slight bit slower to one parent than the other.
When neither copy of an allele is completely expressed or completely masked, it is called Incomplete Dominance. When incomplete dominance is present, then the offspring will have a blend of both parental phenotypes but will always be a slight bit slower to one parent than the other.
When neither copy of an allele is completely expressed or completely masked, it is called Incomplete Dominance. When incomplete dominance is present, then the offspring will have a blend of both parental phenotypes but will always be a slight bit slower to one parent than the other.
Both of the alleles must be recessive. The trait expressed is a recessive trait.
The three types of dominance are complete dominance, incomplete dominance, and codominance. In complete dominance, one allele is fully expressed over another. In incomplete dominance, neither allele is completely dominant, resulting in a blending of traits. In codominance, both alleles are expressed equally, leading to a distinct phenotype that shows features of both alleles.
The form of inheritance in which two (different) alleles are both expressed is called codominance. An example of codominance is the orange and black coat of a type of calico cat called a tortoiseshell. Both the orange allele and the black allele for coat color are expressed.