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Question
hypothesis and rate your confidence below. all purple flowers all white flowers some purple and some white flowers a light-purple color from the mixing of both white and purple rate how confident you are in your hypothesis below. 0 10 (image: f₁ generation flowers, arrow to f₂ generation with ?)
This problem relates to genetics (a subfield of Biology, under Natural Science), specifically Mendelian inheritance. When $F_1$ (first filial) generation purple - flowered plants (assuming they are heterozygous, e.g., $Pp$ where $P$ is dominant for purple and $p$ is recessive for white) self - pollinate or cross, in the $F_2$ (second filial) generation, according to Mendel's laws of segregation, the genotypes will be $PP$, $Pp$, and $pp$ in a ratio of 1:2:1. The phenotypes (flower colors) will be purple (for $PP$ and $Pp$) and white (for $pp$), so we expect some purple and some white flowers. "All Purple flowers" would be the case if the $F_1$ was homozygous dominant, but typically in classic Mendelian experiments with a dominant - recessive trait, the $F_2$ shows a mix. "All White flowers" is incorrect as the dominant allele is present in the $F_1$. "A light - purple color from mixing" is the case for incomplete dominance, but the question seems to be about classic Mendelian dominance (implied by the standard $P_1$, $F_1$, $F_2$ notation), where there is no blending but dominant - recessive expression.
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Some purple and some white flowers