The most dominant traits are the ones that control organisms genes.
The presence of a dominant allele is not always required to explain common traits in a population. Polygenic inheritance, where multiple genes contribute to a trait, can lead to common traits without a dominant allele. Additionally, environmental factors can also play a significant role in shaping common traits among a population.
The two most straight forward ways are: - If both parents have the trait, and one of their children does not, it must be recessive. - If neither parent has the trait, and one of their children does, it must be dominant.
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.
Mendel's law of dominance states that if you have a pair of genes then the one that shows up in the offspring is most likely the dominant gene because the dominant is passed along more often than the recessive.
the sun has a smiley face because in most childhood stories or fables the sun is always the one to give encouragement or happiness so when people picture a sun they think of a smiley face.
These traits are called dominant traits. They will overcome the recessive gene and the dominant trait will be expressed. A recessive gene needs two alleles present in its genotype to be expressed.
Yes, there is no possibility of a Recessive trait being dominant.
The most dominant traits are the ones that control organisms genes.
it is because that trait is more dominant. when a dominant and a recessive trait combine it is most likely that hte dominant trait will be expressed. it is only when a recessive trait combines with an another recassive trait that hte trait gets expressed(which is rare and not so commonly occuring)
Dominate them. Recessive alleles do not show in your phenotype unless you have two of the same recessive allele. But if you inherit one dominant and one recessive, it is the dominant that always shows in your phenotype.
smiley faces are a sense of expession when happy, sad. lonely. and satisfied. I like smileys, I'm smiley!!!http://www.bitwisegifts.com/page/bg/ctgy/smiley-face-historyThis is a smiley face:
Some are dominant ... some of the most noteworthy negative ones: color blindness, hemophilia are recessive.
The presence of a dominant allele is not always required to explain common traits in a population. Polygenic inheritance, where multiple genes contribute to a trait, can lead to common traits without a dominant allele. Additionally, environmental factors can also play a significant role in shaping common traits among a population.
In genetics, "dominant" refers to an allele that will be expressed in the phenotype if present, masking the expression of the corresponding recessive allele. This means that even if an individual has one dominant allele and one recessive allele for a particular trait, the dominant allele's phenotype will be visible.
The two most straight forward ways are: - If both parents have the trait, and one of their children does not, it must be recessive. - If neither parent has the trait, and one of their children does, it must be dominant.
Recessive traits are only visible if an individual inherits two copies of the recessive allele, one from each parent. If an individual has only one copy of the recessive allele, the dominant allele will be expressed, masking the recessive trait.