Science, asked by alcantaralexter3150, 4 months ago

A. Multiple alleles
D. Polygenic inheritance
B. Incomplete Dominance
C. Codominance
E. Sex-related traits
1. The alleles produce an intermediate phenotype between the two
contrasting traits.
2. Occurs when both traits appear togсther in an individual.
3. An example is a cross between a carnation plant producing red
flowers and another carnation plant producing white flowers.
The Fl offspring grew and soon produced pink flowers.
4. Milk production in both humans and other animals are only for
females.
5. The allele is not fully expressed in the heterozygote.
6. The offspring displays the phenotypic traits of both parents
simultaneously.
7. These are traits affects a structure or function of the body of
males or females only.
8. An example is blood type AB where both alleles IA and IB are fully
expressed
9. Skin color ,height and intelligence are common examples of this
pattern of inheritance.
10. Red-green color blindness is an example of​

Answers

Answered by breonaaduffus0722
0

Answer:

5. mmmm

j kool Lori has to go to the hi Doug hilltop j

Answered by satyanarayanadakua7
0

Answer:

A.

.Multiple alleles exist in a population when there are many variations of a gene present. In organisms with two copies of every gene, also known as diploid organisms, each organism has the ability to express two alleles at the same time.

B.

Polygenic inheritance occurs when one characteristic is controlled by two or more genes. Often the genes are large in quantity but small in effect. Examples of human polygenic inheritance are height, skin color, eye color and weight. Polygenes exist in other organisms, as well.

C.

Incomplete dominance is when a dominant allele, or form of a gene, does not completely mask the effects of a recessive allele, and the organism's resulting physical appearance shows a blending of both alleles. It is also called semi-dominance or partial dominance. One example is shown in roses

D.

Codominance is a form of inheritance wherein the alleles of a gene pair in a heterozygote are fully expressed. As a result, the phenotype of the offspring is a combination of the phenotype of the parents. Thus, the trait is neither dominant nor recessive.

E.

These are traits that are found on either one of the chromosomes that determine sex, or the sex chromosomes. ... And so some of the more familiar sex-linked traits are hemophilia, red-green color blindness, congenital night blindness, some high blood pressure genes, Duchenne muscular dystrophy, and also Fragile X syndrom

Similar questions