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fiasKO [112]
3 years ago
11

What is the product of cross pollination

Biology
2 answers:
elena-14-01-66 [18.8K]3 years ago
6 0
The transfer of pollen from the male reproductive organ (an anther or a male cone) of one plant to the female reproductive organ (a stigma or a female cone) of another plant. Insects and wind are the main agents of cross-pollination<span>.

</span>
Leto [7]3 years ago
5 0
<span>Cross pollination is when one plant pollinates a plant of another variety. The two plants’ genetic material combines and the resulting seeds from that pollination will have characteristics of both varieties and is a new variety. The product is pollen, in this case, gets transferred from flower to flower through cross pollination.</span>
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A geneticist crossed fruit flies to determine the phenotypic ratio. The geneticist crossed a fly with blistery wings and spinele
kondor19780726 [428]

Complete question:

A geneticist crossed fruit flies to determine the phenotypic ratio. The geneticist crossed a fly with blistery wings and spineless bristles (bbss) with a heterozygous fly that had normal wings and normal bristles (BbSs). Which proportion of offspring that are dominant for both traits in would you not expect based on Mendel's law of independent assortment? 1/2 , 4/16, 25% , or 1/4

Answer:

1/2 is the proportion of the offspring that is NOT expected among individuals that are dominant for both traits.

4/16 = 1/4 = 25% of the progeny and the correct expected proportion of individuals that are dominant for both traits.

Explanation:

<u>Available data</u>:

  • Cross:  a fly with blistery wings and spineless bristles with a heterozygous fly that had normal wings and normal bristles
  • Recessive trait: blistery wings and spineless bristles
  • Dominant trait: normal wings and normal bristles

Let us say that:

  • B is the dominant allele for normal wings
  • b is the recessive allele for blistery wings
  • S is the dominant allele for normal bristles
  • s is the recessive allele for spineless bristles

Parentals)        bbss       x        BbSs

Gametes)  bs, bs, bs, bs     BS, Bs, bS, bs

Punnett square)    BS        Bs         bS        bs

                     bs    BbSs    Bbss     bbSs    bbss

                     bs    BbSs    Bbss     bbSs    bbss

                     bs    BbSs    Bbss     bbSs    bbss

                     bs    BbSs    Bbss     bbSs    bbss

F1)  4/16 = 1/4 = 25%  of the progeny is expected to be BbSs, dyhibrid individuals, expressing normal wings and normal bristles

     4/16 = 1/4 = 25% of the progeny is expected to be Bbss, expressing normal wings and spineless bristles

     4/16 = 1/4 = 25% of the progeny is expected to be bbSs, expressing  blistery wings and normal bristles

     4/16 = 1/4 = 25% of the progeny is expected to be bbss, expressing  blistery wings and spineless bristles    

5 0
3 years ago
What is the main difference between negative feedback and positive feedback?
uysha [10]
The answer is the first choice:
Negative feedback reverses a change in a variable that has moved outside of its normal range, whereas positive feedback strengthens it.

Feedback loops do not only apply to blood pressure. There are many examples from body temperature regulation to child birth to your AC unit at home.
5 0
2 years ago
How does water rise from the roots of a tree to the very top?
Nataly_w [17]
There are small tubes that connect all parts of a plant or a tree with the root. The root then applies root pressure to the nutrients and the nutrients and the water are pumped towards the upper parts through these small tubes.
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3 years ago
What are the names of four polysaccharides and what is required for their formation?
dem82 [27]
The four polysaccharides are glycogen, starch, cellulose, and chitlin.  You consume them. They are sometimes artificially made or produced by your body.
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Need help ASAP PLZ!
tresset_1 [31]

Answer:

3 because the muscle cells is produced

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