Biology, asked by uraymanojkumar53, 4 months ago

state the law of segretion

Answers

Answered by pronay19
1

Answer:

okay bro

Explanation:

The law of segregation states that the alleles of a given locus segregate into separate gametes. Give an example of the law of dominance. Parents that are pure for contrasting characters are crossed, only one form of the trait will appear the dominant trait appeared in the next generation. This best explains the law of dominance.

Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:

\huge\sf\color{teal}{Answer}

This is the basis of Mendel's First Law, also called The Law of Equal Segregation, which states: during gamete formation, the two alleles at a gene locus segregate from each other; each gamete has an equal probability of containing either allele.

\huge\bf\color{teal}{Know \: More}

What happens during segregation?

Segregation basically means separation. During the gamete formation . alleles get separated from each other and each allele enters a single gamete. Separation of one allele does not affect the other.

Why is the law of segregation important?

The law of segregation lets us predict how a single feature associated with a single gene is inherited. In some cases, though, we might want to predict the inheritance of two characteristics associated with two different genes.

Similar questions