Biology, asked by lovet29, 1 year ago

Explain the Law of Dominance using a monohybrid cross​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
5

Answer:

Explanation:

Mendel's law of dominance states that a dominant allele expresses itself in a monohybrid cross and suppresses the expression of recessive allele. However, this recessive allele for a character is not lost and remains hidden or masked in the progenies of F1generation and reappears in the next generation.

Answered by MarshmellowGirl
29

✿━━━━@Mg━━━━✿

\boxed{Explained\:Answer}

______________________________

✿━━━━@Mg━━━━✿

\mathfrak{\huge{\red{ANSWER}}}

Mendel's law of dominance states that a dominant allele expresses itself in amonohybrid cross and suppresses the expression of recessive allele.

Hence, in F1 generation, the dominantcharacter (round seeds) appeared and the recessive character (wrinkled seeds) got suppressed, which reappeared in F2 generation.

Similar questions