hh X Hh
You get two recessives; hh and hh
and two heterozygous plants; Hh and Hh
Not if either trait is dominant. Let us say tall is dominant ( I think it is ) and short is recessive. T = tall, and s = short. TT X ss will give heterozygous tall plants. Ts
Tallness is a dominant trait and shortness is a recessive trait according to Mendel's principles of inheritance. When true breeding tall plants (homozygous dominant) are crossed with true breeding short plants (homozygous recessive), all offspring inherit one dominant tall allele, resulting in them being tall.
When Mendel crossed short tt pea plants (homozygous recessive) with short pea plants that were heterozygous for height (Tt), the offspring would display a phenotypic ratio of 1 short (tt) to 1 tall (Tt). This is because the short plants (tt) can only contribute recessive alleles, while the heterozygous plants (Tt) can contribute either a dominant (T) or a recessive (t) allele. Therefore, half of the offspring would be tall and half would be short.
Three types of genotypes that exist for pea plant height are: TT - Homozygous dominant genotype for tall height Tt - Heterozygous genotype for tall height tt - Homozygous recessive genotype for short height
Statement B, "Bill is recessive for height and dominant for hair," most clearly refers to a person's genotype. This statement indicates specific genetic traits (height and hair type) and whether the traits are dominant or recessive in the individual.
Not if either trait is dominant. Let us say tall is dominant ( I think it is ) and short is recessive. T = tall, and s = short. TT X ss will give heterozygous tall plants. Ts
Tallness is a dominant trait and shortness is a recessive trait according to Mendel's principles of inheritance. When true breeding tall plants (homozygous dominant) are crossed with true breeding short plants (homozygous recessive), all offspring inherit one dominant tall allele, resulting in them being tall.
In such a cross, the F1 plants will always be tall, because that is the dominant allele. In the cross described, a homozygous dominant plant was crossed with a homozygous recessive plant; a cross that produces 100% heterozygous offspring. (AaBbCc)
The chance of producing an offspring with the dominant phenotype for height (Tt) and the recessive phenotype for color (gg) is 1/4 or 25%. This is because the genotype for height is determined by one gene and the genotype for color is determined by a different gene, so they are inherited independently of each other.
Three types of genotypes that exist for pea plant height are: TT - Homozygous dominant genotype for tall height Tt - Heterozygous genotype for tall height tt - Homozygous recessive genotype for short height
he called the observed traits dominant and the disapear traits recessive.
The dominant trait for height in a pea plant is tall (TT or Tt). The only instance in which a pea plant will be short is if it carries both recessive alleles (tt).
Statement B, "Bill is recessive for height and dominant for hair," most clearly refers to a person's genotype. This statement indicates specific genetic traits (height and hair type) and whether the traits are dominant or recessive in the individual.
The offspring will likely exhibit the tall phenotype due to the dominance of the tall allele. The genotype of the offspring would be TtRr, with a combination of dominant and recessive alleles for both height and seed shape. This type of cross would result in a 9:3:3:1 ratio of phenotypes in the offspring according to Mendelian genetics.
Eye color is an example of a characteristic that can be inherited as either dominant or recessive. Factors such as skin tone, hair color, and height can also be inherited in a similar manner.
That this person is medium height, because the 1st T is the dominant one but the second t is recessive making the person medium height. :) ^is wrong one allies is dominant
Bill is recessive for height and dominant for hair color.