asked 155k views
2 votes
Suppose you cross a true-breeding blue flower with a true- breeding yellow flower and the next generation is all blue flowers what dose this outcome to tell us

asked
User Vpz
by
7.6k points

2 Answers

3 votes
it tells us that this is a pattern starting with a blue flower then a yellow flower then a blue flower and then a yellow flower and so. on...

answered
User SharmaPattar
by
7.7k points
2 votes

The allele for blue flowers is “B” and the one for yellow flowers is “Y”.

A true-breeding specimen must be homozygous, so the blue flowers must have the genotype “BB” and the yellow ones must be “YY”. If you cross a flower with genotype “BB” with one with genotype “YY”, all the offspring will be “BY”. If a “BY” flower appears blue, then the blue allele must be the dominant to the yellow allele.


answered
User Kendotwill
by
8.5k points

No related questions found

Welcome to Qamnty — a place to ask, share, and grow together. Join our community and get real answers from real people.