complete dominance....
Incomplete dominance
To determine the type of allele relationship being referred to, I would need specific information about the alleles in question or the context of the example provided. Common types of allele relationships include complete dominance, incomplete dominance, co-dominance, and epistasis. If you can provide more details about the alleles or traits involved, I can give a more precise answer.
Complete dominance occurs when one allele completely masks the effect of another allele at the same gene locus. An example of this is the inheritance of flower color in pea plants, where the allele for purple flowers (P) is completely dominant over the allele for white flowers (p). In this case, both homozygous (PP) and heterozygous (Pp) plants will exhibit purple flowers, while only homozygous recessive (pp) plants will show white flowers. This clear masking of one allele by another is a hallmark of complete dominance.
It is easier to analyze genotype by observing phenotype in organisms with incomplete dominance (also known as codominance), because in incomplete dominance the individual will show a specific phenotype for each situation, whether it is homozygous dominant, heterozygous, or homozygous recessive. For example, in flowers, such as the ones that Mendel studied, a homozygous dominant flower will be red, a homozygous recessive flower will be white, and a heterozygous flower will be pink. In complete dominance, a heterozygous will only express the dominant phenotype, as opposed to incomplete dominance, in which a heterozygous individual will express a phenotype that is representative of both of the dominant and recessive traits. Because heterozygous individuals in complete dominance express the dominant phenotype, it is hard to determine whether the genotype is homozygous dominant or heterozygous for the trait. Hope this helps!
complete dominance....
Yes,it show polyallelism and co dominance which are non mendalian characteristics
Pea plants exhibit complete dominance, which occurs when one allele in a pair masks the effect of the other allele completely. This means that in a heterozygous individual, only the dominant allele is expressed phenotypically.
This type of inheritance is known as incomplete dominance, where the heterozygous offspring show a blend of characteristics from both parents rather than expressing a dominant trait. In this case, the erminette color results from a mix of black and white feathers due to incomplete dominance of black over white.
monkey
Incomplete dominance
To determine the type of allele relationship being referred to, I would need specific information about the alleles in question or the context of the example provided. Common types of allele relationships include complete dominance, incomplete dominance, co-dominance, and epistasis. If you can provide more details about the alleles or traits involved, I can give a more precise answer.
no valen verga
To show dominance in that area
Complete dominance occurs when one allele completely masks the effect of another allele at the same gene locus. An example of this is the inheritance of flower color in pea plants, where the allele for purple flowers (P) is completely dominant over the allele for white flowers (p). In this case, both homozygous (PP) and heterozygous (Pp) plants will exhibit purple flowers, while only homozygous recessive (pp) plants will show white flowers. This clear masking of one allele by another is a hallmark of complete dominance.
It is easier to analyze genotype by observing phenotype in organisms with incomplete dominance (also known as codominance), because in incomplete dominance the individual will show a specific phenotype for each situation, whether it is homozygous dominant, heterozygous, or homozygous recessive. For example, in flowers, such as the ones that Mendel studied, a homozygous dominant flower will be red, a homozygous recessive flower will be white, and a heterozygous flower will be pink. In complete dominance, a heterozygous will only express the dominant phenotype, as opposed to incomplete dominance, in which a heterozygous individual will express a phenotype that is representative of both of the dominant and recessive traits. Because heterozygous individuals in complete dominance express the dominant phenotype, it is hard to determine whether the genotype is homozygous dominant or heterozygous for the trait. Hope this helps!
Incomplete Dominance - Thia, soy una latina