This is a form of incomplete dominance.
if you mean in terms of what their offspring will be? then you need to do a monohyrid cross, the gametes being RW and WW sooo x R W W RW WW W RW WW it will be 1:1 ratio of pink to white offspring
Their offspring will be heterozygous recessive.
Incomplete dominance is a genetic phenomenon where neither allele is completely dominant over the other, resulting in a blended phenotype in heterozygous individuals. In a Punnett square, this means that when two different alleles are crossed, the offspring exhibit a phenotype that is a mix of the traits from both parents. For example, if a red flower (RR) is crossed with a white flower (WW), the resulting offspring (RW) would display a pink flower. This blending effect can be clearly visualized in the Punnett square's outcomes.
visual inspection of phenotypic traits.
The parental organisms that are crossed are typically of two different generations or lines: the P1 generation, which are the original parents, and the F1 generation, which are the offspring resulting from their cross.
if you mean in terms of what their offspring will be? then you need to do a monohyrid cross, the gametes being RW and WW sooo x R W W RW WW W RW WW it will be 1:1 ratio of pink to white offspring
Their offspring will be heterozygous recessive.
Incomplete dominance is a genetic phenomenon where neither allele is completely dominant over the other, resulting in a blended phenotype in heterozygous individuals. In a Punnett square, this means that when two different alleles are crossed, the offspring exhibit a phenotype that is a mix of the traits from both parents. For example, if a red flower (RR) is crossed with a white flower (WW), the resulting offspring (RW) would display a pink flower. This blending effect can be clearly visualized in the Punnett square's outcomes.
The offspring will get the qualities , traits of homozygous BB.
A snapdragon is an example of an incomplete dominance because when a snapdragon plant having red flowers is crossed with another plant having white flowers, all F1 plants bear red flowers but in F2 generation, the plant population segregates in to 1 red : 2 pink : 1 white flowered plants ratio.
An exception to the dominant and recessive pattern in genetics is incomplete dominance, where neither allele is completely dominant over the other. This results in a blending of traits in the offspring. An example of this is in snapdragon flowers, where a red flower crossed with a white flower produces pink flowers.
Only in an offspring. They can be crossed to make a liger.
A hybrid.
F1
If two true-breeding pea plants are crossed their offspring will show the dominant trait. The flowers will be purple or light purple.
Zeus's lovers and offspring and any mortals who crossed her.
Punnet square