Offspring with Gg genes for pod color and those with GG genes both express the dominant allele for green pods. Since G is the dominant allele, both genotypes (Gg and GG) produce the same phenotype, resulting in green pod color. Therefore, the visual appearance of the plants is identical despite their genetic differences.
Genetics - Offspring get genes from both their mother and father. These genes determine the phenotype (outer appearance) of the child, like eye color, skeletal shape, etc., and it is these things that make offspring look like their parents.
They will look alike (same genes)
The chromosomes in a plant cell help the plant reproduce just like animal cells. Even though plants are both male and female they need two of them to reproduce because the sperm from one of the plant cells goes to the other plant cell and copies the chromosomes so that the offspring of the cells are exactly alike.
Deficiency of nitrogen gives pale yellow color to the plant
The sets of genes a parent passes down to their offspring are determined by the genetic material in their sperm or egg cells. During the process of meiosis, genetic material is shuffled and separated into gametes, which combine during fertilization to form the offspring's genetic blueprint. This process results in unique combinations of genes being passed down from each parent to their offspring.
Genes provide the instructions for building proteins that determine the traits offspring inherit from their parents. Offspring inherit a combination of genes from both parents, which contribute to their physical characteristics, such as eye color, height, and hair texture. Genes are passed down through generations, allowing for the transmission of hereditary traits.
nothing can determine what the offspring will look like except for the dominant alleles for eye color
Genetics - Offspring get genes from both their mother and father. These genes determine the phenotype (outer appearance) of the child, like eye color, skeletal shape, etc., and it is these things that make offspring look like their parents.
They will look alike (same genes)
The chromosomes in a plant cell help the plant reproduce just like animal cells. Even though plants are both male and female they need two of them to reproduce because the sperm from one of the plant cells goes to the other plant cell and copies the chromosomes so that the offspring of the cells are exactly alike.
An organism's genes contain instructions that determine its traits. Genes are passed down from parents to offspring through reproduction and can influence physical characteristics, behavior, and other features of an organism. The interaction between an organism's genes and its environment also plays a role in shaping its traits.
The physical appearance of offspring is determined by a combination of genes from both parents. Offspring may inherit physical traits such as eye color, hair texture, height, and facial features from their parents. Due to the combination of genetic material, offspring may resemble one or both parents, or even have a unique blend of traits that differ from either parent.
The offspring plant is likely to exhibit a combination of physical characteristics from both parent plants due to genetic recombination. This means traits such as color, size, or shape may vary from the parents. The offspring may also display new traits not present in either parent, resulting from genetic recombination during pollination.
No. While the new plants will look similar to the parent plants, seeds are the result of assexual reproduction and assexual reproduction means that the offspring are all unique. In other words there will be variation in exactly the same way as children do not look exactly the same as their parents.
A pure tall plant refers to one that has been consistently bred with other tall plants of the same variety to maintain its tall characteristics. A hybrid tall plant, on the other hand, results from cross-breeding two different varieties of plants to create a new plant with varying characteristics, such as height.
Deficiency of nitrogen gives pale yellow color to the plant
Genes are passed from their parents to their offspring. Mendel's principles apply to all organism. Genes that come from their parents are segregate from each other when gametes are formed