No. They might have the same phenotype, but would not have the same genotype.
bb
(Apex) A cow with red hairs and a cow with white hairs mate and produce a cow with both red and white hairs.
No its the hair folicles that are striped.
A puppy can inherit spotted fur from its parents if they have spotted fur.
White fur
Well mice have genotypes just like we humans do. Therefore the same way that traits are passed through mice, they are passed through humans.
A zebra dog
depends if the black fur gene is dominant.. if it is... then yu would cross BB with bb making all heterozygous genotypes(Bb) therefore, having all possible offspring with black fur so theres a 100% probability of offspring with black fur(:
Punnett Squares are useful because they allow you to see the chance of what genes will be handed down to the offspring. They are a quick and easy way to determine the chance of a offspring having a certain characteristic
There different genotypes and two different colors Black fur is dominant --> F White fur is recessive --> f The parents are bot Ff (heterozygotes, and because black fur is dominant they have a black fur). If they mate, you get parents: Ff x Ff Offspring: FF Ff Ff ff so 25% will be homozygous for Black fur 2x25=50% will be heterozygous, and have a Black fur and 25% wil be homozygous for White fur. Hence, of their offspring, 75% will have a black fur and 25% will have a white fur
A dalmation
the hunting dog has short, brown/tan and black fur for camouflage in with the backgrounds :)though that for the cape hunting dog or (same breed) the African wild dog
In "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time," Toby the rat has brown fur.
there is really no difference.....most people say dog hair is what it is called when it falls off the dog and fur when it is on the dog...dogs with short fur/hair get less fleas then dogs with long fur/hair.... dogs also with white or light fur get more fleas then dogs with dark or black fur...
They refer to the alleles in a genotype. For the basics of genetics, we can say that each allele is either dominant or recessive. Dominant is represented by an uppercase letter, and recessive a lowercase. If the genotype is AA, it is homozygous dominant. If it is aa it is homozygous recessive. If it is Aa, it is heterozygous. Simply, homozygous means that both of the alleles are the same and heterozygous means it has one of each allele.
it would be cat fur. cats have to shed and they shed a lot so fur will fall off faster then it would on a dog. that's how cats have fluffy fur all the time. lol
Yes, the key is what kind of hair/fur your dog has, or in other words, what breed is your dog. If the dog is a poodle, schnauzer type that has hair, she would most likely not be allergic to it. She might be allergic to dogs that have fur, like black labs etc. The way to tell is if the dog has to get a haircut every 6 months or so, it is because the dog has hair and not fur. Fur falls out at the end of winter and the dog has a summer coat until winter when it gets thicker again. Dogs with hair do not go through that cycle.
I can only tell you my black German sherpherd has white skin - hope this helps.