Naw, gurl, it aint even a lil possible.
that is what im figuring out, sorry :(
In a cross between a homozygous recessive parent (AA) and a heterozygous parent (Aa), the possible genotypes of the offspring are 50% homozygous recessive (AA) and 50% heterozygous (Aa). Therefore, the probability that an offspring will be homozygous recessive is 50%.
The probability is 50%. There are four probabilities: dominant homozygous, recessive homozygous, or heterozygous.
If you are heterozygous this means you carry both a dominant and recessive allele. if you are heterozygous for a recessive trait then you will have a dominant and recessive allele. example: let T represent tall and t represent short. a person with heterozygous for a recessive trait will have 'Tt'.
A genotype consisting of two different alleles is a heterozygote.
In a heterozygous offspring, the recessive allele is present but not expressed because the dominant allele masks its effects.
If they both are heterozygous and the recessive gene is blue it can happen
heterozygous recessive
A gene that shows no impact on a trait in a heterozygous state is called a recessive gene. In a heterozygous individual, the dominant gene will determine the trait expressed, while the recessive gene remains hidden.
That is heterozygous. Some scientist call these "hybrids"(no joke)The person is heterozygous for that trait and will have the dominant phenotype.An organism with both a dominant and recessive allele for a specific trait is called an heterozygote. They are heterozygous for this trait.
Heterozygous means that you are carrying 1 dominant trait and 1 recessive trait.If an allelic pair has one dominant and other recessive gene it is called heterozygous.
An example of a heterozygous recessive genotype is when an individual carries one dominant allele and one recessive allele for a particular trait. One example could be a person with the genotype Aa, where "A" represents the dominant allele and "a" represents the recessive allele.