To determine the percentage of offspring with straight hair, we first need to clarify that the question seems to refer to a separate trait since it mentions fur color (black vs. white) rather than hair texture. Assuming "straight hair" is a different trait and not directly related to the fur color, we cannot deduce the percentage of straight-haired offspring without knowing the genetic inheritance pattern for the hair texture. If we had that information, we could use a Punnett square to calculate the expected phenotypic ratios.
There is a 50% chance of a homozygous dominant and a 50% chance of a heterozygous.
The scientist should perform a test cross between the organism and a homozygous recessive organism. If all offspring show the dominant trait, the original organism is homozygous dominant. If some offspring show the recessive trait, the original organism is heterozygous.
The offspring will inherit one dominant allele from the homozygous dominant male and have a 50% chance of inheriting the dominant allele from the heterozygous female. Therefore, the ratio of offspring with the dominant allele to those without will be 1:1.
This job
If one parent is homozygous dominant for all traits (AA) and the other is heterozygous (Aa), the offspring will inherit one dominant allele from the homozygous parent and either a dominant or recessive allele from the heterozygous parent. This results in a 50% chance of the offspring being homozygous dominant (AA) and a 50% chance of being heterozygous (Aa). Therefore, all offspring will express the dominant traits, but their genotypes will vary between AA and Aa. As a result, the smiley faces representing the traits will be uniform in appearance but may differ in genetic makeup.
it depends.if you have a homozygous mated with a heterozygous,green being dominant,you would get 50percent
The homozygous dominant individual can only pass on the dominant allele and the homozygous recessive individual can only pass on the recessive allele, therefore all offspring will be heterozygous and have the dominant phenotype.
Heterozygous induviduals pass the dominant and recessive alleles to offspring
In a heterozygous offspring, the recessive allele is present but not expressed because the dominant allele masks its effects.
100% of the offspring will display the dominant trait because the homozygous dominant parent can only pass on the dominant allele. The offspring will inherit one dominant allele from the dominant parent and one recessive allele from the recessive parent, resulting in a heterozygous genotype expressing the dominant trait.
25%
The probability is 50%. There are four probabilities: dominant homozygous, recessive homozygous, or heterozygous.
There are 3 probabilities: dominant homozygous, recessive homozygous, or heterozygous.
There is a 50% chance of a homozygous dominant and a 50% chance of a heterozygous.
If 75 offspring have a Dominant gene, then the parents must have at least one Dominant gene each. This would make them either Dominant Homozygous (DD) or Heterozygous (Dd) for the Dominant trait.
All the offspring will be heterozygous with a phenotype showing the dominant trait. Let the alleles be H (dominant) and h (recessive). All the gametes from the first individual will be H, and from the other, h. Thus all the offspring must be Hh.
If a heterozygous tall pea plant, Aa, is crossed with a homozygous plant, AA, for the trait, you will have a one in one in four chance of the offspring being heterozygous. You will need to create a square and plug the traits in to see what the odds are.