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A red flower and a yellow flower mating to produce an orange flower. (Apex)
No I think its a incomplete flower.
kenneth stank
Complete dominance is when the F1 offspring look like one of the two parents. Incomplete dominance is when neither allele for a gene is completely dominant over the other which leads to a phenotype (physical look or characteristic) somewhere between the two parents. An example of complete dominance would be in Mendel's classic pea cross experiment, with yellow peas being dominant to green peas. More peas would be yellow than green. An example of incomplete dominance would be with snapdragons. If a red true breeding snapdragon were crossed with a white true breeding snapdragon, the F1 generation offspring would all be pink, because neither the 'red' allele nor the 'white' allele was completely dominant over the other leading to a hybridization in color somewhere between the two parents.
If you cross a red 4 O'clock with a white 4 O'clock, the phenotype will be pink This is because red has incomplete dominance over white, so the alleles blend. If yellow is crossed with white, the flowers are always yellow.
A trait that exhibits incomplete dominance is one in which the heterozygous offspring will have a phenotype that is a blend between the two parent organisms.Here are some examples:A red and a yellow flower mating to produce an orange flowerA white cat and black cat having gray kittensA red flower and a yellow flower mating to produce an orange flower.
Incomplete dominance. Since neither gene is dominant over the other, both traits are shown, thus giving a combination of colors. The same thing happens when a red flower and white flower crossbreed and produce pink offspring--the genotype for color is equally dominant and combines an allele from both parents.
A red flower and a yellow flower mating to produce an orange flower.
Yellow flowers do have seeds. The marigold is an example of a yellow flower that has seeds. If you save the flower head at the end of blooming, you will have seeds for next year.
No, Jasmine Sampaguita are not complete flowers. They do not have stamens, carpels, or seeds. They are only reproduced through cuttings.
1 red 2 pink 1 white
Yellow