The Dominant allele hoped this helped! :)
No, a recessive trait will only show in the offspring if there is no dominant allele masking it. The trait that will always show in the offspring is the dominant allele, provided one parent was homozygous for it.
No, a recessive trait will only show in the offspring if there is no dominant allele masking it. The trait that will always show in the offspring is the dominant allele, provided one parent was homozygous for it.
It overpowers and masks the other allele
The dominant allele will always show over the recessive, and both can be passed onto the offspring. To find out exactly which genotypes the children can have you need to make a punnet square!
The type of allele known for skipping a generation is the recessive allele because it is almost always hidden.
If you mean allele, then the answer is a recessive allele. A recessive allele is dominated by a dominant allele, and generally does not show up physically.
No, a recessive trait will only show in the offspring if there is no dominant allele masking it. The trait that will always show in the offspring is the dominant allele, provided one parent was homozygous for it.
No, a recessive trait will only show in the offspring if there is no dominant allele masking it. The trait that will always show in the offspring is the dominant allele, provided one parent was homozygous for it.
YES ALWAYS!!! Even if you have for example, Aa (A being the dominant allele and a being the recessive allele) that trait will always be dominant!
An allele that is always expressed when it is present is the dominant allele.
The dominant allele.
It overpowers and masks the other allele
The dominant allele will always show over the recessive, and both can be passed onto the offspring. To find out exactly which genotypes the children can have you need to make a punnet square!
Yes, they are different. A recessive allele gets its name because when in the presence of a dominant allele, it will "recede" and not show, hence the name for the dominant allele.
The type of allele known for skipping a generation is the recessive allele because it is almost always hidden.
incomplete dominance source: PH Bio textbook
it is present (shown) whenever it is present ( see Punnett Square) it will overthrow a recessive allele as long as it is there. it's effect is that you will get a certain trait for that allele. A Punnett Squar will help you the most.