Offspring from foraminifera (forams) typically inherit genetic material from their parents, leading to similarities in traits. However, due to processes like genetic recombination and environmental influences, there can be variations between parents and their offspring. Additionally, some foraminifera can reproduce asexually, resulting in clones that are genetically identical to the parent. Overall, while offspring may share many characteristics with their parents, variations can occur.
My Nan.
What percentage of the possible types of offspring had the same phenotype as the parents
If parents supply different alleles for a certain trait to their offspring, the offspring are described as heterozygous for that trait. This means they possess two different alleles, one inherited from each parent. In contrast, if the offspring received the same allele from both parents, they would be termed homozygous for that trait. The expression of the trait may depend on whether the alleles are dominant or recessive.
true
Hydra may reproduce asexually
it is different
Offspring who have the same parents are called siblings.
all organisms can divide to produce same offspring that are similar to the parents
A species.
75%
That depends entirely on the genotypes of the parents.
My Nan.
75%
Sexual reproduction produces offspring similar to parents. Asexual reproduction causes the offspring to be exactly the same as the one parent.
answer: true breeding plant
What percentage of the possible types of offspring had the same phenotype as the parents
Asexual reproduction through processes such as binary fission or budding produces offspring that are genetically identical to the parent. In sexual reproduction, offspring inherit a combination of genetic material from both parents, resulting in similarities with the parents but not identical copies.