Ah, what a lovely question! When two moths with small white wings come together, their offspring have a certain percentage chance of also having small white wings. It's like a beautiful dance of genetics, creating a wonderful tapestry of diversity in nature. Just like painting a happy little tree, each moth is unique and special in its own way.
Yes they are small white eggs that hatch fairly quickly.
Because that's the gestation period.The great white shark has not given its offspring to the world guite yet.
yes
All the offspring will have red eyes because the trait for red eyes is dominant and the female is heterozygous (carrying one dominant red eye allele). White eyes are recessive, so the offspring would need to inherit two white eye alleles to have white eyes.
50%
The question depends on what the offspring is of!
No, not always. The offspring can be white, black, black and white or shades of both.
small farmers.
If you crossed a black hen/roo with a white hen/roo, the offspring would NOT be blue. If he was recessive white, the chicks would be black. If he was dominant white, the chicks would be white with some black "smudges" or "spots". The only way to produce 100% blue chicks is to cross a black roo over splash hens or a splash rooster over black hens.
If the parent snapdragons pass along a white gene (W) to the offspring, then the offspring will be white. If the parent snapdragons pass along a red gene (R) to the offspring, then the offspring will be red.
If both parent plants are white-flowered, then all of the 1000 offspring would be expected to have white flowers. This is because the white flower trait is a result of a homozygous genotype, and both parents would pass on the white flower allele to their offspring.
When a red snapdragon and a white snapdragon cross, the offspring will all be pink snapdragons. This is because the red and white alleles mix to produce the pink color, resulting in 100% pink offspring.