A polymorphic trait
I guess that's the closest I can get to answering because you didn't add enough details.
<span>Phenotype depends on two alleles: one from mom and one from dad. If a puppy inherited the dominant trait of hair from one or both parents, it will have hair. If it inherited recessive traits from both parents, it will be hairless.</span>
A low birth weight infant is an infant that weighs less than 5.5 pounds at birth
<span>As food dyes are created, they are probably numbered by each batch or specific composition. During the life cycle of creating a releasing a dye, some dyes probably don't make the cut, so some numbers don't get used.
I would expect stain removers to be a basic solution, most household cleaners use bleach in them, and bleach is a base.</span>
Answer: A single gene can influence multiple traits
Explanation: One Gene Can Affect Multiple Traits. How can a mutation in one single gene cause a disease with a wide range of symptoms? This situation is referred to as pleiotropy, and it has been identified in a wide range of species, even humans. ... A pleiotropic gene is a single gene that controls more than one trait.