The offspring produced is dependent on chances. We can figure out the chances of the kind of offspring such a cross will get by using a Punnett square. Unfortunately the WYSIWYG format on this site will not allow for such a square, so we will give the ratio, the genotypic and phenotypic percentages that such a cross will receive.
Let R = red, W = white and RW = roan.
Roan cow (RW) x White bull (WW)
Offspring: 2 RW : 2 WW
Genotypic ratio: 50% roan and 50% white
Phenotypic ratio: Same as above.
Thus, the offspring of a roan cow crossed with a white bull (presumably of the same breed, being Shorthorn), may come out as white or roan. There is a 50% chance that either will occur.
Jaglions lions can only be found in captivity! There are no jaglions in the wild as jaglions are the offspring between the lion & the jaguar, Lions & jaguars live on different continents & would never come into contact in the wild! So in order for them to produce hybrid offspring together, they would have to be housed together in captivity!
Yes, both twins will be able to get bred and produce offspring.
Yes.
artificial selection
Wolves and dogs are the same species, so they can produce fertile offspring together When a wolf and a dog mate (reproduce) together the offspring is usually called a wolf dog or a half bred because it has the blood (aka genes) of both a wolf and a dog. A wolfdog is an animal with a wolf recently in its lineage. After 5 generations from a pure wolf, the animal is then a domestic dog.
They were'NT bred together. tHe Boston Terrier is a mix of a English Bulldog and A White Terrier. Not a Rat Terrier.
If you mean organisms, then it would be true-bred plants, for example, peas are true-bred plants.
If you mean organisms, then it would be true-bred plants, for example, peas are true-bred plants.
The one made available to you in Pokemon White/Black is always specifically a female. However she can be bred, and her offspring can be male, and these can evolve to Zoroark too.
Jaglions lions can only be found in captivity! There are no jaglions in the wild as jaglions are the offspring between the lion & the jaguar, Lions & jaguars live on different continents & would never come into contact in the wild! So in order for them to produce hybrid offspring together, they would have to be housed together in captivity!
Yes, both twins will be able to get bred and produce offspring.
Mule :)
Yes they do, it is because of their genetics. The toy poodle was bred from miniatures, which in turn were bred from standards. Each generation, the smallest of the offspring were bred together, causing the average size of the offspring to become smaller, as the genes for above average offspring were not being passed on. Eventually when the desired size was reached, the breeding was not as tightly controlled as before, so even within the breed their is a range of sizes. However a toy poodle will never grow to the size of a miniature poodle for example, as the genes for this size have been bred out.
Nothing, it is impossible to breed two bulls together. However, when either of these is a female the offspring would just be called a cross bred animal. A similar circumstance is when you cross a Hereford with a Charolais.
Yes.
Selective breeding is where, say you want a really spotty dog, you would breed a female dog with lots of spots with a male dog with lots of spots. Their offspring would have more spots than a normal dog of that breed, then the offspring with the most spots are bred together. This carries on until you get a dog with the right amount of spots that you want.
I would say Black.