Answer:
they are of the same genus but not of the same species and therefore they cannot mate to give rise to fertile off springs only organisms from the same species are able to give rise to fertile offsprings
<span>In their book "Interaction between temperament and environment" behavior geneticists Robert Plomin and Denise Daniels state, "Two children in the same family are [apart from their shared genes] as different from one another as are pairs of children selected randomly from the population." There may be many reasons children in the same family are so different from one another but their finding boils down to the environment. To a large extent the environment influences personality, psychopathology, and cognitive abilities. Environmental differences between children in the same family represent the major source of character and environmental variance.</span>
Answer:
Codominance
Explanation:
Codominance is when two dominant traits are equally dominant, and therefore they both are expressed in the offspring's phenotype. For example, if in a flower, blue (BB) and red (RR) are codominant their offspring would be both red and blue. One of the common examples of codominance in humans is blood type, which is seen in AB blood since A and B are equally dominant.
Answer:
Explanation:
I think answer should be the first one
Answer:
Sistemas orgánicos
Explanation:
Aunque cada órgano del cuerpo realiza sus funciones específicas, los órganos también funcionan juntos por grupos, a los que se denomina sistemas orgánicos (ver Principales sistemas orgánicos). Los médicos clasifican las enfermedades y sus propias especialidades médicas de acuerdo a los diferentes sistemas orgánicos.