3. genotype is round seed
phenotype is Rr
4. genotype is grey fur
phenotype are WW and Ww
5. genotype is short
phenotype is tt
1. genotype is high metabolism
phenotype are HH and Hh
Explanation:
The dominant trait is the capital letter and the reccessive is the lowercase letter.
To do a punnet square you bring down each letter say like problem 1, you bring down capital D down and little d down to each of the 2 squares below them, then you drag the sides to the right of the two squares and you get DD for the first square, then Dd, then below Dd, then next to it DD.
Phenotype is a organism's actual appearence.
Genotype is a gene combination. The gene combination that determines the phenotype
Answer:
Plants exchange oxygen and carbon dioxide. The oxygen is used for respiration and is also a waste product of photsynthesis. The carbon dioxide is used for photsynthesis.
During the day time, the stomata of the plant will open to let the carbon dioxide in for photsynthesis. Cabron dioxide diffuses into the leaf down a concetration gradient. oxygen will leave the leaf down the concentration gradient.
This process is the gas exchnage of plants.
How stomata open: Stomata open during the dayby absorbing water vapor, become turgid and and open. During the night, the stomata becomes flaccid and floppy. this causes it to close.
Explanation:
<span>Animalia -</span><span> Mammals, amphibians, reptiles, birds, fish, mollusks, and insects
are all included in this kingdom.</span>
The answer is class and family.
<span>Taxonomic groups are used for biological classification. There are eight main taxonomic groups: domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus and species, with the domain as the most inclusive and species as the least inclusive. If we take a look on Mammalia and Hominidae classification, we can assume that Mammalia represents class, and Hominidae represents family:</span>
<span>1. Domain: Eukarya</span>
<span>2. Kingdom: Animalia</span>
<span>3. Phylum: Chordata</span>
<span><u>4. Class: Mammalia</u></span>
<span>5. Order: Primates</span>
<span><u>6. Family: Hominidae</u></span>
<span>7. Genus: Homo</span>
<span>8. Species: Homo sapiens</span>