The maximum number of offspring that parent organisms can produce varies depending on the species. Some organisms can produce thousands of offspring in a single reproductive event, while others may only produce a few offspring. In general, organisms with shorter lifespans tend to produce more offspring compared to those with longer lifespans.
A flower can produce varying numbers of offspring through pollination and fertilization. Some flowers may produce many seeds, while others may produce only a few or even just one. Ultimately, the number of offspring will depend on the specific plant species and its reproductive strategy.
Asexual reproduction does not produce genetic variation among offspring, as the new organisms are exact copies of the parent organism. This process involves only one parent and typically occurs through methods such as budding, regeneration, or binary fission.
Essentially oxygen does not produce light ... light itself is an energy, and cannot be created only changed
This might be thought of as a species if the group indicated was large enough to include all of the potential members that can breed and produce viable fertile offspring. This would mean that animals which can breed and produce infertile offspring such as horses and donkeys which can mate and produce offspring are not of the same species. This situation would be within the bounds of the question. When a group which is of one species but is of limited such a limited population that the only can breed with a small number of individuals and produce a fertile offspring it would be described as a bottlenecked population. This can lead to severe genetic drift in that population.
Not all vertabrates do, only mammals produce milk for offspring.
The cross that will produce only horned Roan offspring in cattle is the red bull with the white cow. However, these offspring would be able to create either red, white, or Roan.
A cross between two individuals that are homozygous for different alleles will only produce heterozygous offspring. This is because each parent can only donate one type of allele, resulting in all offspring being heterozygous for that particular gene.
No, only organism in the same species can produce fertile offspring. Organisms from the same class sometimes can reproduce, but they cannot produce fertile offspring.
The maximum number of offspring that parent organisms can produce varies depending on the species. Some organisms can produce thousands of offspring in a single reproductive event, while others may only produce a few offspring. In general, organisms with shorter lifespans tend to produce more offspring compared to those with longer lifespans.
Tigers can only usually have 3-4 cubs.
Because the moon is not a star and only stars can produce light by itself.
Only organisms reproducing by the assexual process of cloning.
Because only one parent contributes to produce an offspring so its identical
There are two choices that produce the least phenotypic variation. AA times aa produces only Aa offspring. AA times Aa produces and AA and Aa offspring.
The algae growing in the fur of sloths do, but the sloth itself doesn't.
Only a homozygous recessive individual will have the phenotype created by two recessive alleles.Since the term produce might indicate the production of offspring parents that can only produce offspring with a recessive phenotype must both have homozygous recessive genotypes.