Biology, asked by Anonymous, 2 months ago

What is law of segregation?​

Answers

Answered by brainly1900
2

Explanation:

The law of segregation states that each individual that is a diploid has a pair of alleles (copy) for a particular trait. Each parent passes an allele at random to their offspring resulting in a diploid organism. The allele that contains the dominant trait determines the phenotype of the offspring.

Answered by prabinkumarbehera
1

Answer:

The law of segregation is commonly known also as Mendel's First Law and this is the idea that every inheritable trait or gene as we now call them is controlled by a pair of factors or alleles and those pairs of alleles, when you make gametes separate from each other so that for example if you have a dominant version of.

Explanation:

Mendel's Law of Segregation states that every organism has two alleles per trait and that these alleles separate during meiosis, so each gamete gets one allele.

Genes come in different versions, or alleles. A dominant allele hides a recessive allele and determines the organism's appearance. When an organism makes gametes, each gamete receives just one gene copy, which is selected randomly. This is known as the law of segregation.

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