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The recessive allele.
The answer is that The difference is that dominant dominates, and recessive is dominated.
dominant-appears in first generation recessive-seems to dissapear
A dominant allele is an allele that can take over a recessive allele, so if you have a dominant allele and a recessive allele, then the offspring will most likely have a dominant allele over a recessive allele. The dominant allele is expressed over the recessive allele.
It should be a dominant allele--a dominant allele's trait will be expressed over the recessive allele's trait.
The Allele That Is Covered By The Dominant Allele Is The Recessive Allele.
A genotype in which there are both a dominant and a recessive allele is called heterozygous.
Recessive allele.
If you have 2 dominant alleles, the gene will be dominant, if you have 2 recessive alleles, the gene will be recessive. But if you have 1 recessive and 1 dominant, the Dominant allele will mask the recessive one.
An allele that's masked by a dominant gene is called a "Recessive"recessiverecessive traitThe recessive allele. Often depicted as the "small r" in examples: Rr, R=dominant, r= recessive.
The recessive allele.
The trait received is recessive.
YES ALWAYS!!! Even if you have for example, Aa (A being the dominant allele and a being the recessive allele) that trait will always be dominant!
The answer is that The difference is that dominant dominates, and recessive is dominated.
In _____, one allele is dominant to a recessive allele.
Yes, they are different. A recessive allele gets its name because when in the presence of a dominant allele, it will "recede" and not show, hence the name for the dominant allele.
You need two recessive alleles to get their trait, but only one dominant allele to get that trait. A dominant allele basically overrides a recessive one if they are together, but the recessive gene can show up in offspring.