QUESTION IMAGE
Question
purple spots is dominant over green spots. two purple-spotted aliens mate and some of their offspring have green-spots. create a punnett square and explain how this could have happened.
purple spotted hetero x green spotted hetero
genotype | phenotype
aa= 1/4 25% | a=purple spots
aa=2/4 50% | a=green spots
aa=1/4 25%
parents genotype
mom aa dad aa
Step1: Identify parent genotypes
Since purple spots (A) are dominant, and the parents have purple spots but produced green-spotted offspring (aa), both parents must be heterozygous: $Aa \times Aa$.
Step2: Set up Punnett square
Place parent alleles on axes:
Step3: Calculate genotype ratios
Count each genotype:
- $AA$: $\frac{1}{4}$ (25%)
- $Aa$: $\frac{2}{4} = \frac{1}{2}$ (50%)
- $aa$: $\frac{1}{4}$ (25%)
Step4: Link genotypes to phenotypes
- $AA$ and $Aa$: purple spots (dominant trait expressed)
- $aa$: green spots (recessive trait only expressed when homozygous)
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Both purple-spotted parent aliens are heterozygous ($Aa$). When they mate, each can pass on either the dominant $A$ allele or recessive $a$ allele. The Punnett square shows there is a 25% ($\frac{1}{4}$) chance their offspring inherits two recessive $a$ alleles ($aa$), which results in the green-spotted phenotype. The Punnett square for the cross $Aa \times Aa$ is:
Genotype ratios: 25% $AA$, 50% $Aa$, 25% $aa$; Phenotype ratios: 75% purple spots, 25% green spots.