genotype of the parents -
parents will be heterozygous dominant.
e.g. take the example of Mendel's pea cross.
if parent is heterozygous dominant then the genotype will be Tt and Tt
now if you will do a cross then the result you will get is this -
Tt X Tt
result - TT, Tt, Tt, tt
it gives a 3 : 1 ratio i.e. three tall and one dwarf.
Source: "tumul v" Yahoo.answers
The answer is genotype
A genotype is decided from two alleles. One of these alleles comes from the father, and one comes from the mother. Thus it should be clear that the genotype can be different from both parents. For instance, suppose the father has genotype AA, and the mother has genotype aa. In this case, the child will have genotype Aa, which neither parent has.
genotype
The alleles that are passed from parents to offspring
Genotype is the coded for traitPhenotype is the visible characteristicSo in the case where both parents had heterozygous dominant Brown eyes (Bb - big B for brown, dominant gene; little b for blue recessive gene); it is possible for the child to have blue eyes, by being homozygous recessive (bb).However this is an educated guess, as your question does not make sense.
It depends on the parents' genes. If both parent have a Pp genotype, then the offspring has a 25% chance of having a PP genotype. But if both parents have a PP genotype then its 100%.
The answer is genotype
What fraction of the offspring of parents each with the genotype KkLlMm will be KKLlMm?
A genotype is decided from two alleles. One of these alleles comes from the father, and one comes from the mother. Thus it should be clear that the genotype can be different from both parents. For instance, suppose the father has genotype AA, and the mother has genotype aa. In this case, the child will have genotype Aa, which neither parent has.
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genes.
If both parents have the same phenotype, but the offspring did not share that phenotype, then it is likely that the parents have a dominant phenotype, but the offspring has a recessive phenotype, which means that the offpring's genotype would be homozygous recessive, and it's parents' genotypes would be heterozygous. For example, the parents may both have the genotype Bb, which gives them black fur. Approximately 25% of their offspring should have the genotype bb, which gives them the phenotype of white fur.
genotype
i don't know that's my answer
The parents can pass on only the alleles of their genotypes to their offspring. Therefore, the offspring genotypes and phenotypes are dependent solely upon the alleles inherited from the parents.
If both parents are genotype BB, the child can only be blood type B. The child's genotype would also be BB.
That depends entirely on the genotypes of the parents.