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why is it that a genotype of an organism can always tell you the phenotype but a phenotype can only sometimes tell you its genotype?​

asked
User Saki
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8.4k points

1 Answer

4 votes

Answer:

Sorry for the long answer... Suppose that T is a gene that produces tall tomato plants and t is a gene that produces short tomato plants. So if we know the genotype (TT, Tt, or tt), we can determine the phenotype

Step-by-step explanation:

TT and Tt are both tall tomato plants, but tt is a short tomato plant. Jus because it's tall, we don't know if it's TT or Tt.

answered
User Tandi
by
8.9k points

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