This means that we all are the descendants of one ancestor !! thus our genes match !!
Glycogen stored mainly in the liver
I hope that's help !
Two traits that we are examining are the color (purple/white) and the smoothness.
In our sample, we have 135 individuals ( 75 +28+24+8= 135).
Since we know that expected ratio of a dihybrid cross, is <span>9:3:3:1 we can calculate what is the expected values of each phenotype is.
So, for the white wrinkled phenotype, we expect that there will be one-sixteenth of the whole sample ( there are 16 parts of the whole sample 9+3+3+1=16).
So, we multiply the whole sample- 135 with one-sixteenth (or </span>0.0625) and get 8,4375.
When you calculate the values for all phenotypes you get results shown in the attached excel table.
When you have your expected and experimental values you compare them with a chi-square test. (The test determines if the difference between the expected and experimental results is statistically significant).
Answer:
75% would have the dominant traits for coat length, 25% would have recessive trait for coat length.
Explanation:
After completing a punnet square, we could find that our genotypes are 25% LL, 50% Ll, and 25% ll.
If these genotypes were to be physically expressed, LL and Ll would both be expressed as showing the dominant trait.
This means that 75% would have the dominant traits for coat length and 25% would have recessive trait for coat length.
I hope this was helpful! Let me know if you need any clarity.
This question is incomplete. However, the answer to this question is Continental Drift. Approximately 300 million years ago, there were not separate continents, only one giant super continent that we call Pangaea. Over time, scientists realised that the Earth's outer shell slides over the inner mantle through plate tectonics. Around 200 million years ago, Pangaea began to break up through the process of continental drift. Gondwana, incorporating present-day <span>Africa, South America, Antarctica, India and Australia, split from Laurasia (Eurasia and North America). Approximately 150 million years ago, Gondwana started to break up into the present day continents</span>