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.
Their offspring will be heterozygous recessive.
visual inspection of phenotypic traits.
When Mendel crossed true-breeding pea plants with different traits, he observed that the offspring in the first generation (F1) all displayed one of the parental traits. This led him to propose the Law of Dominance, which states that one trait will mask or dominate another in hybrids.
The blending of the phenotype of the parents in the offspring is known as incomplete. colors of flowers can show incomplete dominance if a red flower is crossed with a white flower and their offspring are pink.
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.
A hybrid.
Punnet square
they can produce fertile offspring
Their offspring will be heterozygous recessive.
first-generation plants
visual inspection of phenotypic traits.
The offspring will get the qualities , traits of homozygous BB.
A heterozygous genotype (e.g. Aa) is not true-breeding because it carries two different alleles for a trait and can produce offspring with different genotypes when crossed. True-breeding genotypes are homozygous for a particular trait (e.g. AA or aa) and will consistently produce offspring with the same genotype when crossed.
True. A hybrid is the offspring resulting from a cross between two different species.
Only in an offspring. They can be crossed to make a liger.
The term "hybrid" in biology means one who carries different alleles for the same trait. For example, a hybrid plant's genotype for height is Hh. When crossing two hybrids, we are performing this operation: Hh x Hh. The offsprings' genotypes can vary from: HH Hh hh