well it could be yellow for like yy of b
The genotype of a plant producing green peas would be "yy," indicating that it carries two recessive alleles for yellow peas. The dominant allele for yellow peas is represented by "Y."
Parental Phenotypes are when the offspring of two parents look like one of the two parents. for example, if a green wrinkled pea is crossed with a heterozygous yellow round pea the offspring are 1/4 yellow round, 1/4 green wrinkled, 1/4 yellow wrinkled, and 1/4 green round. the yellow round and green wrinkled look like the parents so they have parental phenotypes, whereas the yellow wrinkled and the green round have combinations of the parental phenotypes thus they have recombinant phenotypes.
Both round and yellow. This is because roundness (R) and yellowness (Y) are dominant traits and would mask the recessive traits for wrinkledness and greenness. The genotype RrYy results in a 9:3:3:1 phenotypic ratio of round yellow, round green, wrinkled yellow, and wrinkled green peas.
If green pea pods are dominant over yellow pea pods, all offspring from the cross will have green pea pods. This is because the dominant trait (green) will mask the recessive trait (yellow) in the heterozygous offspring. The genotype of the offspring will be heterozygous for the pod color trait.
Let Y represent the dominant allele, and yrepresent the recessive allele. Let us also assume that "pure" means homozygous for that trait ("pure' is not the usual term for this, "homozygous" is) So, the two genotypes of the parents of the cross are: Parent 1: YY Parent 2: yy To solve a problem like this, one always has to determine what kind(s) of gametes each parent can produce. Both parents are homozygous for their respective traits, so in this case, each parent can only produce one kind of gamete: Parent 1 can only produce Ygametes, and Parent 2 can only produce y gametes. Therefore, every one of their offspring will have the following genotype: Yy Since every one of the offspring of the cross carries a Y allele, and Y is dominant, all of the offspring will be yellow.
Identify the genotype trait of the seed color is yellow or green?
25%
The genotype of a plant producing green peas would be "yy," indicating that it carries two recessive alleles for yellow peas. The dominant allele for yellow peas is represented by "Y."
In pea plants, round seeds are dominant (R) over wrinkled seeds (r), and yellow seeds are also dominant (Y) over green seeds (y). A hybrid round pure yellow pea would have the genotype RrYY, where "Rr" indicates it is heterozygous for the round seed trait and "YY" indicates it is homozygous for the yellow seed trait.
The heterozygous genotype would be Gg. This means the individual has one dominant green allele (G) and one recessive yellow allele (g). The dominant trait (green in this case) would be expressed in the phenotype of the individual.
The genotype of the offspring with yellow pods is likely homozygous dominant (YY) or heterozygous (Yy), assuming yellow pods are dominant over green. The possible genotypes of the offspring with green pods would be homozygous recessive (yy), as green is the recessive trait. If both yellow-podded parents are heterozygous (Yy), some offspring could also be yellow (YY or Yy) while others could be green (yy).
The possible phenotypes of the offspring from a cross between yellow and red parental plants depend on the inheritance pattern of the traits. If yellow is dominant over red, the offspring could display either yellow or red phenotypes, with yellow being more prevalent. If the traits follow incomplete dominance, the offspring might show a blend of the two colors, resulting in orange. The exact phenotypic ratios would also depend on whether the parental plants are homozygous or heterozygous for their respective colors.
Parental Phenotypes are when the offspring of two parents look like one of the two parents. for example, if a green wrinkled pea is crossed with a heterozygous yellow round pea the offspring are 1/4 yellow round, 1/4 green wrinkled, 1/4 yellow wrinkled, and 1/4 green round. the yellow round and green wrinkled look like the parents so they have parental phenotypes, whereas the yellow wrinkled and the green round have combinations of the parental phenotypes thus they have recombinant phenotypes.
This is one of the classic experiments carried out by Gregor Mendel. If you cross pure-breeding green pod plants with pure-breeding yellow pod plants the offspring (F1 generation) will all have green pods. This means that green pod is dominant and yellow pod is recessive. To explain the results, pure-breeding green pod plants must have the genotype GG (homozygous dominant) and yellow pod plants must be gg (homozygous recessive). When they are crossed the F1 offspring will receive a G allele from the green parent and a g allele from the yellow parent, so they will all have the genotype Gg ie they will be heterozygous.
The genotype for round green peas is typically represented as "RRyy," where "R" stands for the dominant allele for round shape and "y" represents the recessive allele for yellow color. In this case, the round shape is dominant over the wrinkled shape, while green color is recessive to yellow. Thus, the round green peas are homozygous for the round shape and homozygous recessive for the color trait.
Both round and yellow. This is because roundness (R) and yellowness (Y) are dominant traits and would mask the recessive traits for wrinkledness and greenness. The genotype RrYy results in a 9:3:3:1 phenotypic ratio of round yellow, round green, wrinkled yellow, and wrinkled green peas.
If green pea pods are dominant over yellow pea pods, all offspring from the cross will have green pea pods. This is because the dominant trait (green) will mask the recessive trait (yellow) in the heterozygous offspring. The genotype of the offspring will be heterozygous for the pod color trait.