Biology, asked by khanbushra4097, 6 days ago

.5 "The phenotypic ratio in F, generation of a monohybrid cross may not always be 3:1”-explain with the help of an example.​

Answers

Answered by maliksiddhant
1

Answer:

In a monohybrid cross e.g: when a tall plant with the dominant allele T having genotype TT is crossed with a dwarf plant having recessive allele with genotype tt, then the F1 generation will have all tall plants with genotype Tt and a cross between two F1 generation hybrids will result in one homozygous tall plant (TT), two heterozygous tall plants (Tt) and one dwarf plant (tt). So, the genotypic ratio will be 1:2:1. However, since three of the plants are tall and one dwarf, the phenotypic ratio can be said to be 3:1. This can be shown as in the image.

Explanation:

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