Saturday, November 19, 2011

A cross between plants with red flowers and plants with white flowers produces plants with pink flowers.?

If two of these pink-flowered plants are crossed, what is the chance that pink-flowered plants will be produced?

A cross between plants with red flowers and plants with white flowers produces plants with pink flowers.?
1/2 or 50%.





This inheritance pattern is incomplete dominance because the heterozygous individual has an intermediate form of the trait.


RR=red


RW=pink


WW= white





RW x RW yields RR, RW, WR, WW


1 red: 2 pink: 1 white
Reply:it depends on whether the colors are co-dominant
Reply:Well, if it is a crossbreed, than its unlikely. Heridty is determined that if two different flower colors are crossed, then there are 3 outcomes. 1: can't be cross-polunated, no offspring.2: either white, red, of both colors offspring color. 3: it changes color(highly unlikely), and can't be reproduced( single generation species). Of course, to cross polunate it, both plants have to be in the same genus, or at least in the same family.


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