asked 95.1k views
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If G=yellow and g=green, and at a separate gene P=purple and p=white, what proportion of your offspring will be green and purple if you cross a ggPp individual with a GgPp individual?

asked
User Wyrmwood
by
8.9k points

1 Answer

4 votes

Answer:

One of each four.

Step-by-step explanation:

When you cross ggPp x GgPp you get the following offspring:

GgPP GgPp ggPp and ggpp and they are all expected in the same proportions. The breeder wants green and purple offspring, or ggP- and you can see that that corresponds to ggPp which is expected in a proportion of one of every four offspring.

answered
User Garreth
by
7.9k points
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