It will get taller but you also can tell by how small it was before and how big it is now.
It can provide different looks because each allele gives a different look
In this case, the recessive allele is the one that is masked by the dominant allele. In watermelon color genetics, the green color is typically dominant over the striped pattern. So, the recessive allele is the one responsible for the striped pattern and the dominant allele is the one for the green color.
The phenotype of a tobacco plant with the genotype Cc would likely exhibit the dominant trait associated with the dominant allele 'C'. The recessive allele 'c' would not be expressed in the presence of the dominant allele, resulting in a phenotypic trait characteristic of the dominant allele.
The heterozygous genotype would be Gg. This means the individual has one dominant green allele (G) and one recessive yellow allele (g). The dominant trait (green in this case) would be expressed in the phenotype of the individual.
It could mean somebody just look at you in a diffrent way then what other people do
Alleles are different forms of a gene that can produce varying traits or characteristics, such as eye color or hair texture. When we inherit alleles from our parents, the combination we receive influences how we look. For example, if one parent passed on a dominant allele for brown eyes and the other a recessive allele for blue eyes, the dominant brown allele would likely determine our eye color. Thus, alleles play a key role in determining our physical appearance.
In a heterozygous individual, the alleles for a trait are different. Each allele may be represented by a different letter (e.g., Aa), where one allele is dominant and the other is recessive. The dominant allele is typically expressed in the phenotype, while the recessive allele is not unless the individual is homozygous recessive.
It can provide different looks because each allele gives a different look
An allele is a specific form of a gene that codes for a particular trait or characteristic. Alleles can result in different variations of the trait, such as eye color or blood type, depending on which allele is inherited from each parent.
It's spelt homozygous, which may explain the difficulty when you tried to look it up haha. I don't know your level of knowledge, but it refers to genetics. There are two alleles (allele = different type of a gene) at each locus (locus = physical location of a gene on a chromosome) on a chromosome. If these alleles are the same, they are considered homozygous. I'll give an example: we have a snake that either has spots or it doesn't, and spots is the dominant phenotype (phenotype = physically expressed trait). If it has spots, then it has the S allele, and if it doesn't have spots, it has the s allele (spots is uppercase and no spots is lowercase). If the organism does not have spots, then it is homozygous recessive with two s alleles (ss). If it had spots but had one S allele and one s allele (Ss) then it is heterozygous (two different alleles). If it had spots and had two S alleles (SS) then it is homozygous dominant. I hope that clarified.
(Apex) Patterns can help explain observations 😊
Unfortunatly, that is a very specific topic to find in any magazine. But, if you look on different bathroom design websites, you will find an article to help you.
rain all depends on the water cycle. It takes a long time to explain but look at thisif that doesn't help and you want specifics then look at this This is the best i have
In this case, the recessive allele is the one that is masked by the dominant allele. In watermelon color genetics, the green color is typically dominant over the striped pattern. So, the recessive allele is the one responsible for the striped pattern and the dominant allele is the one for the green color.
because you can look up different subjects and learn about them!
The phenotype of a tobacco plant with the genotype Cc would likely exhibit the dominant trait associated with the dominant allele 'C'. The recessive allele 'c' would not be expressed in the presence of the dominant allele, resulting in a phenotypic trait characteristic of the dominant allele.
The heterozygous genotype would be Gg. This means the individual has one dominant green allele (G) and one recessive yellow allele (g). The dominant trait (green in this case) would be expressed in the phenotype of the individual.