In genetics, a trait is considered dominant when it determines a phenotype over a recessive trait. For example, AA is crossed with AA to make Aa, Aa, Aa, and Aa. If "A" is the dominant trait and "a" is the recessive trait, then since this cross produces heterozygous progeny, they will all show the dominant phenotype. A dominant trait is just how it sounds, it dominates over recessive traits when they are both present.
A dominant trait is a trait contributed by one of the parents that shows up in the offspring due to the expression of the dominant allele over the recessive allele.
For example, dark hair is dominant over light hair. If one of the parents has dark hair and the other parent has light hair then the offspring will have dark hair as that is the dominant trait.
A dominant trait is the trait that will be shown by organism.
A dominant trait is one that shows phenotypically over any recessive alleles if a copy of the dominant allele is on one or both chromosomes at a specific gene locus.
A dominant trait is an inherited characteristic that appears in an offspring if it is contributed from a parent through a dominant allele.
dominant trait means homozygous
The dominant overpowers the recessive traits. The dominant trait is the trait the the offspring will most likely have.
Homozygous means "same" so a homozygous recessive trait would be a same [with parents] trait that is not the stronger trait which is dominant. Dominant is stronger showing trait, recessive is weaker trait. If you are dealing with Punnett squares then tt is homozygous recessive and TT is homozygous dominant. Hope this helped...
It is called a dominant trait
A trait that masks another trait is called dominant, or a dominant trait.
It is the non dominant trait. You would have to have 2 recessive to have that trait but you only need one dominanr=t to have that trait
The dominant overpowers the recessive traits. The dominant trait is the trait the the offspring will most likely have.
Homozygous Dominant for a trait means that an organism has two dominant alleles for that trait. Here's an example: Trait: Widow's Peak Widow's Peak allele: Dominant (D) No widow's peak allele: Reccessive(d) Homozygous Dominant (DD) Homozygous Reccessive (dd) Heterozygous (Dd)
Homozygous means "same" so a homozygous recessive trait would be a same [with parents] trait that is not the stronger trait which is dominant. Dominant is stronger showing trait, recessive is weaker trait. If you are dealing with Punnett squares then tt is homozygous recessive and TT is homozygous dominant. Hope this helped...
The dominant trait for eye color in humans is brown, which means that if one parent has brown eyes and the other has blue eyes, the child is more likely to inherit brown eyes due to the dominant trait.
It is called a dominant trait
A trait that masks another trait is called dominant, or a dominant trait.
Dominant trait is a genetics term. A dominant trait is one which will be expressed if one of the parents has the gene for that trait. A recessive trait is one that will be expressed only if both parents carry the trait.
A dominant trait is part of genetics in which a trait will appear in an offspring if one parent contributes it. For example, if one parent contributes the dominant trait of dark hair and the other contributes the recessive trait of light hair, the offspring would have dark hair.
It is the non dominant trait. You would have to have 2 recessive to have that trait but you only need one dominanr=t to have that trait
Pure dominant = two dominant genes that make a "pure dominant" trait. Pure Recessive = two recessive genes that make a "pure recessive" trait.
a resscessive allele, is hidden when the dominant trait is present
The principle of excessiveness is defined as the explanation of why one trait will not show over another. If a trait is recessive it will not show when a dominant trait is present.