it depends.if you have a homozygous mated with a heterozygous,green being dominant,you would get 50percent
The parent plants want the seeds to go away from the parent plants so that their genes don't compete. That is why they will blow around or catch on a animals coat.
Green is dominant, and albino is recessive. If you cross heterozygous plants, you will end up with about a 3:1 ratio of green to albino.
i dont know all about it but he says that the mother and the father both pass genes to their offspring even though they may not show for example their fathers blue eyes but they show their mothers green eyes. the blue eyes is a recessive gene they will pass to their offspring. so it may skipa generation and come back because the offspring carry that gene. no gene is lost until it has passed 2 generations without a mother or father having it of the offspring have it.
offspring
apple seeds. blueberry seeds. pickle seeds. SMILEZ ALLWAYZ
9082
depends on the genetic composition of the parents
Yy
The probability that an offspring will have wrinkled seeds is 2 in 4 or 50%
the answer is 75% will have red veins
Seeds provide the offspring of a plant with a mechanism which prevents dessication of the embryo, protection from predators and a method of dispersal (think of winged seeds etc.)
All fruits have seeds, it how the plant continues to produce offspring.
yes Green seeds are likely not yet ripe.
49.9%
50% of the offspring are female. Gender determination in offspring is typically governed by a 50/50 chance.
The reason why short plants reappeared in Mendel's F2 generation of pea plants was because their short trait was heterozygous. Both parents carriedÊthat recessive gene, so they passed it on to their offspring.
it can be planted from the offspring sprouted from seeds