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principle of dominance??
if 2 speckled chicks are mated, according to the principle of dominance 25percent of the offspring are expected to be speckled.
is the 25percent right?? i think its not...plz explain ty
3 Answers
- 1 decade agoFavorite Answer
It depends if speckled is a dominant or reccessive trait.
Given A=brown dominant and a=white recessive and Aa=speckled then here is an example of the principle:
Aa(mother)+Aa(father)=25% chance of each below
AA =brown
Aa =speckled
Aa =speckled
aa =white
So 25%=AA, 25%=aa, and Aa+Aa=50%
So in that case it would be 50% chance of speckled
hope that helps
Source(s): self - 1 decade ago
This question cannot really be answered without the relevent genotypes of the animals. However it depends on the dominance of the alleles:
In order for chicks to be speckled, I believe it must be a result of co-dominance (black and white are both dominant so when combined they produce speckled).
Therfore, each chick should have the genotype BW.
BW x BW produces BB, WW, BW, BW.
Therefore there is a 50% chance of chicks being speckled, 25% chance them being white and 25% them being black.
By the way, the answer from the person above does not work because Aa would not be speckled as the A is dominant over the a so the offspring would be brown in his example - sorry.
Hope this helps!
Source(s): Biology Graduate - 5 years ago
1 C We can eliminate all other choices because we know for a fact they're not true. For any trait, there are a recessive, represented by a lower case, and a dominant, represented by capitals. #2 B I'm pretty sure this is the answer, but not completely. It's very reasonable because in order for a trait to appear, it has to be dominant, or homozygous recessive. The other choices don't suggest a homozygous recessive and are irreverent. Hope this helps, good luck!