Dominant.
When Mendel crossed a true-breeding short plant with a true-breeding tall plant, all the offspring were tall. Which term describes the gene for tallness?
Incomplete dominance represents an inheritance pattern resulting in offspring with traits that appear to blend when parents are crossed for pure traits. In this pattern, neither trait is completely dominant over the other, leading to a mixture or intermediate phenotype in the offspring.
The offspring of two true-breeding plants is also true-breeding, meaning they will consistently display the same traits as the parents. This is because true-breeding plants are homozygous for a particular trait, so when they are crossed, their offspring will also be homozygous for that trait.
The offspring will get the traits of Homozygous BB .
The offspring are usually sterile.
dominant
dominant
When Mendel crossed a true-breeding short plant with a true-breeding tall plant, all the offspring were tall. Which term describes the gene for tallness?
When Mendel crossed a true-breeding short plant with a true-breeding tall plant, all the offspring were tall. Which term describes the gene for tallness?
When Mendel crossed a true-breeding short plant with a true-breeding tall plant, all the offspring were tall. Which term describes the gene for tallness?
When Mendel crossed a true-breeding short plant with a true-breeding tall plant, all the offspring were tall. Which term describes the gene for tallness?
Dominant
Dominant
To determine whether a tall plant is heterozygous, it should be crossed with a homozygous recessive plant (short plant). If any offspring are short, the tall plant must be heterozygous; if all offspring are tall, the tall plant is likely homozygous dominant. This test cross allows for the observation of inheritance patterns in the offspring.
Their offspring will be heterozygous recessive.
When Mendel crossed a true-breeding short plant with a true-breeding tall plant, all the offspring were tall. Which term describes the gene for tallness?
All offspring would be heterozygous for the gene controlling plant height. This is because if alleles do not segregate, they remain together and are passed on as a unit. The offspring plants would all be tall because the allele for tallness is dominant over the allele for shortness.