QUESTION IMAGE
Question
suppose a plant that is homozygous for red flowers is crossed with a plant that is homozygous for white flowers. the offspring have some red areas and some white areas. this is an example of ________.
- incomplete dominance
- polygenic traits
- codominance
- sex - linked genes
question 10
10 pts
an example of ________ is the color of betta fish. when a red fish (gg) is crossed with a yellow fish (gg), all of the offspring will be a orange color (gg).
- incomplete dominance
- polygenic traits
- codominance
- sex - linked genes
Response
First Question (Flower Cross)
Brief Explanations
- Incomplete dominance shows a blended phenotype (e.g., pink from red and white), but here the offspring has both red and white areas, not a blend.
- Polygenic traits are controlled by multiple genes, not relevant here.
- Sex - linked genes are related to sex chromosomes, not this case.
- Codominance is when both alleles are expressed fully, so the offspring having both red and white areas is codominance.
Brief Explanations
- Incomplete dominance occurs when the heterozygous phenotype is a blend of the two homozygous phenotypes. A red (GG) and yellow (gg) betta fish crossing to produce orange (Gg) offspring is a blend, so it's incomplete dominance.
- Polygenic traits involve multiple genes, not here.
- Codominance would show both traits fully (e.g., red and yellow spots), not a blend.
- Sex - linked genes are related to sex chromosomes, not this case.
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C. codominance