That depends entirely on the genotypes of the parents.
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.
Fold line are organisms that produce offsprings of different GENOTYPE from their parents and differ among them. They contribute to SPECIES DIVERSITY.
That depends entirely on the genotypes of the parents.
75%
That depends entirely on the genotypes of the parents.
If both parents have genotype AO, it is possible to have a type O child, but this is very rare.
Since there is no information on the genetic make up of the parents only a generalized set of answerscan be given.The chance of an offspring being genetically identical in every way to either or both of its parents is virtually nil.The percentages of individuals that match the genetics of the parents for a few traits can be determined through the use of a punnet square.For example considering a single trait where one parent is homozygous dominant and the other is homozygous recessive zero offspring will have the genotype of either parent.If the parents are heterozygous for a single trait 50% of the offspring will have the genotype of the parents for that trait.The more gene pairs considered the less likely an offspring identical to the parents is possible.
Yes, if both parents have genotype AO.
The offspring's genotype will be AA. Both parents are homozygous dominant, AA, having only dominant alleles to pass on to their offspring. So each parent can pass on only the dominant allele (A) to its offspring. So the offspring will also be homozygous dominant, AA.
If the parents both have the genotype Aa, their children could have the genotypes AA, Aa, or aa. The possible phenotypes for their children would be individuals with type A blood (AA or Aa genotype) or type O blood (aa genotype).
Progeny
The answer is genotype