A Gold-and-Black spotted fish (GB) mates with a solid Gold fish (GG). What is the probability of having a solid Black offspring?
B Y B BB BY Y BY YY
Use this answer key not just to copy answers, but to trace the Punnett squares step-by-step. Once you master the fish, you have mastered non-Mendelian genetics. A Gold-and-Black spotted fish (GB) mates with a
| Feature | Incomplete Dominance | Codominance | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | The heterozygous genotype produces a blended phenotype (middle ground). | The heterozygous genotype produces a phenotype where both alleles are expressed separately. | | Visual | Red + White = Pink (New color) | Red + White = Red & White spots (Both colors present) | | Allele Notation | Use superscript letters: ( R^1, R^2 ) or ( C^R, C^W ) | Use superscript letters: ( F^R, F^W ) or ( C^R, C^W ) | Once you master the fish, you have mastered
Understanding how traits are passed from parents to offspring is a cornerstone of biology. While simple Mendelian genetics covers dominant and recessive traits, nature often works in more complex ways. Two of the most common "non-Mendelian" patterns are and incomplete dominance . | | Visual | Red + White =