I think it's a true-Bred plant
a true breeding plant always produces offspring with the same trait as the parent(s).
answer: true breeding plant
A species.
The parent plant is homozygous dominant for the trait(s) observed. This can be called a 'true-breeding' plant as well.
Plants are offspring like their parents because of their parents DNA this happens because of fertilization
A true breeding plant is genetically homozygous. It produces the same type of plants on self fertilization. These plants are very useful for creating hybrids.
No, asexual reproduction in plants produces offspring that are genetically identical to the parent plant. This means that the resulting plants will have the same characteristics and appearance as the parent plant.
A true breeding pea plant means that when it self-pollinates, it produces offspring with the same trait as the parent plant. This indicates that the plant is homozygous for that particular trait and will consistently pass it on to its offspring.
Plants that produce identical offspring through self-fertilization are referred to as true breeding or pure breeding plants. Hybrids are the result of crossing two different plant varieties or species, leading to offspring with a mix of traits from the parents.
It is called sexual reproduction when a plant generation produces eggs and sperm. This process involves the fusion of these reproductive cells to create offspring with genetic diversity.
Each offspring plant inherits half of its genetic material from each parent. This means that offspring plants have a 50-50 combination of genes from the mother and father.
Mendel started out with plants that "bred true". That is, when tall plants were self-pollinated (or cross-pollinated with others like them), plants in following generations were all tall; when the short plants were self-pollinated (or cross- pollinated with others like them) the plants in following generations were all short.