You have a very good chance of your guinea-pig babies being a mixture. You are very likely to have one long-haired, one like the other parent, and one which could go either way, or be a mixture. Colouring can also vary. You can have the babies being a micture of the parents, or identical to either parent, or a complete throwback to a previous gene. That's probably one of the reasons many people enjoy breeding guinea-pigs - the babies can be a surprise every time!
An impossible freak of nature.
You are truly a sick person.
it depends.if you have a homozygous mated with a heterozygous,green being dominant,you would get 50percent
If a homozygous brown mink is mated with a silver-blue mink, the offspring would all be heterozygous for brown. When crossed with a silver-blue mink, half of the offspring would inherit the silver-blue allele, so out of 8 offspring, 4 would be silver-blue.
You would have one irritated bat and no offspring. Hybrids are only possible with species that are genetically compatible.
A test cross with a homozygous recessive guinea pig (bb) would reveal the genotype of the black guinea pig. If all offspring are black, then the black guinea pig is most likely homozygous dominant (BB). If both black and white offspring are produced, then the black guinea pig is likely heterozygous (Bb).
depends if the black fur gene is dominant.. if it is... then yu would cross BB with bb making all heterozygous genotypes(Bb) therefore, having all possible offspring with black fur so theres a 100% probability of offspring with black fur(:
To determine if a black guinea pig is homozygous or heterozygous for black fur, you would need to cross it with a white guinea pig. If the offspring are all black, then the black guinea pig is homozygous. If any white offspring are produced, then the black guinea pig is heterozygous.
If two different species of lemurs mated, they could potentially produce hybrid offspring, depending on their genetic compatibility. However, such hybrids may be infertile or have reduced fitness due to genetic differences. In nature, mating between different species is relatively rare, as behavioral and ecological factors often prevent it. If hybrids were to occur, they could provide insights into the evolutionary relationships between the species involved.
The Allele that causes guinea pigs to be brown in color is a dominant one and the white guinea pig's alleles are recessive. The brown guinea pig had two dominant alleles for brown color and the white guinea pig had two for white. Since offspring get one allele from each parent they have one dominant brown allele and one recessive white allele. Since the dominant trait is the one that is going to be apparent, it would only make sense for all the offspring to be brown in color.
If two guinea pigs were hybrid for texture and produced eight offspring, and six of the offspring had rough fur, the fraction of offspring with rough fur would be 6/8, which simplifies to 3/4. So, three-fourths of the offspring had rough fur.
well it depends if she mated with 2 different dogs then the puppy would look like its dad(the 1 she mated with). but if they were the same i don't know