A species.
answer: true breeding plant
A pure-bred plant that is homozygous for the traits being transfered.Alternatively a plant that is produced asexually/ vegetatively through cloning
a true breeding plant always produces offspring with the same trait as the parent(s).
A true-breeding plant is one that produces offspring with the same traits as the parent when self-pollinated or cross-pollinated with another true-breeding plant. This indicates that the plant is homozygous for a particular trait and will consistently pass on that trait to its offspring.
The progeny or descendants of a person, animal, or plant considered as a group.
Plants that produce identical offspring through self-fertilization are referred to as true breeding or pure breeding plants. Hybrids are the result of crossing two different plant varieties or species, leading to offspring with a mix of traits from the parents.
The physical appearance of offspring is determined by a combination of genes from both parents. Offspring may inherit physical traits such as eye color, hair texture, height, and facial features from their parents. Due to the combination of genetic material, offspring may resemble one or both parents, or even have a unique blend of traits that differ from either parent.
The phenotype of offspring plants refers to their observable traits, such as their physical appearance, behavior, or other characteristics. These traits result from the interaction between the plant's genetic makeup (genotype) and environmental factors. Offspring plants may exhibit a combination of traits inherited from their parents, leading to variations in their phenotype.
They may not share the same properties as their parents. Plants that reproduce asexually have the same traits (like an immunity to a disease) however if a plant reproduced sexually it may not have the same traits.
Plants are offspring like their parents because of their parents DNA this happens because of fertilization
Young plants and animals resemble their parents due to genetic inheritance. Each parent passes on their genes to their offspring, which determine the physical characteristics and traits of the offspring. This process ensures that offspring share similarities with their parents.
Mendel started out with plants that "bred true". That is, when tall plants were self-pollinated (or cross-pollinated with others like them), plants in following generations were all tall; when the short plants were self-pollinated (or cross- pollinated with others like them) the plants in following generations were all short.