No.
There would be four possible phenotypes: round yellow peas, round green peas, wrinkled yellow peas, and wrinkled green peas. This is due to the different combinations of alleles for seed shape (R for round, r for wrinkled) and seed color (Y for yellow, y for green) that can result from the cross.
Both round and yellow. This is because roundness (R) and yellowness (Y) are dominant traits and would mask the recessive traits for wrinkledness and greenness. The genotype RrYy results in a 9:3:3:1 phenotypic ratio of round yellow, round green, wrinkled yellow, and wrinkled green peas.
It had a perfectly round door like a porthole, painted green, with a shiny yellow brass knob in the exact middle.
The genotype for round green peas is typically represented as "RRyy," where "R" stands for the dominant allele for round shape and "y" represents the recessive allele for yellow color. In this case, the round shape is dominant over the wrinkled shape, while green color is recessive to yellow. Thus, the round green peas are homozygous for the round shape and homozygous recessive for the color trait.
False. When Mendel allowed heterozygous F1 plants with round yellow seeds to self-pollinate, he found that the F2 generation followed the expected 9:3:3:1 phenotypic ratio. This means that all possible combinations of seed shape (round or wrinkled) and seed color (yellow or green) were observed in the F2 generation in the ratio of 9 round yellow: 3 round green: 3 wrinkled yellow: 1 wrinkled green.
In a trihybrid cross, the offspring would inherit one allele from each parent for each of the three traits (Tall, green, and round). Since the parents are homozygous for all traits (ttggrr x ttggrr), all the offspring would be tall, green, and round, resulting in 100% of the offspring being tall, green, and round.
its got a yellow backround with a red lion in the middle and little thisler round it
Round, white background, red border with the inscription: "República del Paraguay", to the left a green palm branch and to the right a green olive branch, and both are tied together. In the middle there is a five-point yellow star.
It is a dihybrid cross.An example: if you cross garden peas having round yellow seeds with others having wrinkled green seeds, that is a dihybrid cross, because you are tracking both seed shape and seed color.
Parental Phenotypes are when the offspring of two parents look like one of the two parents. for example, if a green wrinkled pea is crossed with a heterozygous yellow round pea the offspring are 1/4 yellow round, 1/4 green wrinkled, 1/4 yellow wrinkled, and 1/4 green round. the yellow round and green wrinkled look like the parents so they have parental phenotypes, whereas the yellow wrinkled and the green round have combinations of the parental phenotypes thus they have recombinant phenotypes.
In pea plants, round seeds are dominant (R) over wrinkled seeds (r), and yellow seeds are also dominant (Y) over green seeds (y). A hybrid round pure yellow pea would have the genotype RrYY, where "Rr" indicates it is heterozygous for the round seed trait and "YY" indicates it is homozygous for the yellow seed trait.
100%