Incomplete dominance is where the phenotype of the heterozygote is intermediate to both the heterozygotes. The classic example of this phenomenon is pink snapdragons. If you cross red and white snapdragons, you get pink snapdragons, because neither the red or white allele is dominant to the other.
Incomplete Dominance
Incomplete dominance can create offspring that display a trait not identical to either parent but intermediate to the two. One example of incomplete dominance is a red flower and a white flower crossbreed to form a pink flower.
A)Polygenic Inheritance B) Multiple AllelesC)Incomplete Dominance D) Sex-Linked GenesThe answer is C = incomplete dominancePOSTED BYLexi Garcia Velasquez
True. In incomplete dominance, the heterozygote exhibits an intermediate phenotype that is a blend of the two homozygous phenotypes. This is different from complete dominance, where the dominant allele completely masks the expression of the recessive allele in the heterozygote.
This is known as incomplete dominance, where the heterozygous individual exhibits a phenotype that is intermediate between the two homozygous parents. An example is when a red flower and a white flower cross to produce pink flowers.
Incomplete Dominance
it is incomplete dominance because it runs in the genes
Incomplete Dominance
Incomplete Dominance
Incomplete dominance
Incomplete dominance can create offspring that display a trait not identical to either parent but intermediate to the two. One example of incomplete dominance is a red flower and a white flower crossbreed to form a pink flower.
Incomplete dominance
Incomplete Dominance
Incomplete Dominance - Thia, soy una latina
Incomplete Dominance and Codominance.
incomplete dominance
An example is " I can't have the same incomplete dominance as my aunt" From: Tania V. from North Carolina