Two organisms have the same phenotype but different genotypes when One organism is purebred dominant, and the other organism is heterozygous. So, the correct option is B.
<h3>What do you mean by Genotype?</h3>
Genotype may be defined as the ultimate combination of those alleles which are selected for specific studies.
When an allele is dominant over others, its purebred dominant and heterozygous (hybrid) may have different genotypes but the same phenotype.
Therefore, the correct option for this question is B.
To learn more about Genotypes and phenotypes, refer to the link:
brainly.com/question/22117
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I'm pretty sure it's Latin, acer means tree and I think rubrum is red
Answer:
C
Explanation:
This phase occurs before mitosis, it is here that the cell's DNA is copied in preparation for mitosis. This phase is also known as the metabolic phase (previously called the 'resting phase'), because it is during this phase that the cell gets it nutrients, breaks them down, and grows. It is therefore best to arrest the cell in this phase before any modifications happen to the cell during mitosis, and it is during this phase that the cell's metabolism is at its high functionality.
Scientists use several methods to determine the proximity between species. Two of those methods may be an anatomical comparison, by examining the skeleton structure of two species, and DNA composition comparison, by comparison of genes, or specific parts of the DNA, that allow establishing the relative distance between species.