a dog
Disruptive selection can eliminate intermediate phenotypes by favoring extreme phenotypes, leading to a bimodal distribution. This selection occurs when individuals with extreme traits have a higher fitness than those with intermediate traits, resulting in the reduction of the intermediate phenotype in the population.
Incomplete dominance is a genetic scenario where the heterozygous condition results in a phenotype that is intermediate between the two homozygotes. It is seen in traits where neither allele is completely dominant over the other, leading to a blending of traits in the heterozygous individual.
When the heterozygous condition exists as an intermediate between the two homozygotes, it is known as incomplete dominance. In this scenario, neither allele is dominant, resulting in a blending of the two traits. This leads to a phenotype that is a mix or intermediate of the two homozygous phenotypes.
javier josue
Stabilizing selection occurs when organisms with intermediate phenotypes are selected for.
The term for this condition is called "incomplete dominance." This occurs when the hybrid offspring display a phenotype that is a blend or intermediate of the traits shown by the parent organisms.
Disruptive selection occurs when selective pressures favor extreme phenotypes over intermediate phenotypes within a population. This can lead to increased diversity as individuals with traits at both ends of the spectrum have a reproductive advantage. As a result, disruptive selection can promote speciation by encouraging the divergence of populations with distinct traits.
Disruptive selection occurs when the extreme phenotypes in a population are favored over intermediate phenotypes. This can lead to the divergence of a population into two distinct groups with different traits.
Incomplete dominance is a genetic concept where neither allele is completely dominant over the other, resulting in a blending of traits. This impacts the expression of traits by producing an intermediate phenotype that is a mix of the two parental traits.
Gene shuffling is when the natural trait of a single phenotype favours over the extreme traits over the intermediate.
incomplete dominance
incomplete dominance