It's called fragmentation.
If they both are heterozygous and the recessive gene is blue it can happen
No because though the parents are copys the offspring would be 2 sex cells (egg and sperm) and those 2 cells are unique made by the clones body.
Breeding is just breeding any pair of parents together to get offspring, whereas selected breeding is choosing a certain set of parents and targeting a few specific traits you want the offspring to have, such as fur length, coloration, or body shape.
Body size varies among individuals and large parents tend to have large offspring.
The baby grows and develops in the uterus.
This process is called fragmentation, where a broken off part of the parent's body can regenerate into a new individual. This method of asexual reproduction is common in organisms like plants, starfish, and certain worms.
In mammals, the embryo develops with in the specialised part of the oviduct .
In this case, if both parents are heterozygous (Gg for gray and gg for black), their offspring would be expected to follow a 3:1 ratio of gray to black body color. Therefore, out of 200 offspring, approximately 150 would have gray body color and 50 would have black body color.
If the children have both inherited genes from the same parents, you would expect them to look quite similar. But they do not look exactly the same. Each child has inherited different genes from its father, and different genes from its mother, to create a new combination of genes. Each child is a unique person, not exactly like its brothers or sisters, but not completely different either.
If black body color is recessive and gray is dominant, we can assume that the black body color is represented by the genotype "bb". Given that gray is dominant, individuals with gray bodies could be either "GG" or "Gg". Thus, for black body color to appear in offspring from two gray-bodied flies, both parents would need to be carriers of the black body allele (each "Gg" or "gg"). Therefore, if both parents are carriers, the expected ratio of black-bodied offspring would be 25% (1/4). In a sample size of 200 offspring, we would expect around 50 flies to have black bodies.
When the body develops as a whole
Respiratory System . ;)