Two.
Offspring receive two sets of the same gene that governs a characteristic, one from each parent. These sets are called alleles, and they can be the same or different. The combination of alleles inherited can determine the traits expressed in the offspring.
one out of four or 25% for monohybrid ratio
Dumb question, im in 11th grade and I know that's a dumb question. Just about everything can be passed down. Height is a gene, eye color is a gene..the list goes on. No offence but you kind of fail at science, I learned this in 6th grade.
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.
When an offspring inherits a dominant gene from one parent and a recessive gene from the other, the dominant trait will typically be expressed in the offspring. This occurs because dominant alleles mask the effects of recessive alleles. For example, if the dominant gene is for brown eyes (B) and the recessive gene is for blue eyes (b), the offspring will have brown eyes (Bb) as the dominant trait prevails.
Offspring inherit two sets of genes for each characteristic, one from each parent. This ensures genetic diversity and variations in traits among offspring.
Two.
Offspring receive two sets of the same gene that governs a characteristic, one from each parent. These sets are called alleles, and they can be the same or different. The combination of alleles inherited can determine the traits expressed in the offspring.
trait
Since the mother would be considered a carrier, the gene will be produced in the offspring. the son will receive that gene and will be colorblind.
one out of four or 25% for monohybrid ratio
Yes. In fact, the gene that controls the butterfly characteristic is a dominant gene so all the offspring will be butterfly.
If the gene for colored spots was not passed from a moth to its offspring, the offspring would not have colored spots. Traits are inherited from parents through genes, so without the gene for colored spots, the offspring would not exhibit this specific physical characteristic.
Dumb question, im in 11th grade and I know that's a dumb question. Just about everything can be passed down. Height is a gene, eye color is a gene..the list goes on. No offence but you kind of fail at science, I learned this in 6th grade.
The offspring from an FF X ff cross will all have the genotype Ff.This is because they receive one allele from each parent, and in this case they can only receive an F from the FF parent and an f from the ff parent.
An offspring typically receives one copy of a gene for a trait from each parent, resulting in two copies of the gene in total. This is known as Mendelian inheritance, where an offspring inherits one allele from the mother and one allele from the father for a specific trait.
Yes, in sexual reproduction, offspring typically inherit one copy of every gene from each parent. This ensures genetic diversity in the offspring and contributes to the variability in traits and characteristics.