Answer:
In complete dominance, only one allele in the genotype is seen in the phenotype. In codominance, both alleles in the genotype are seen in the phenotype. In incomplete dominance, a mixture of the alleles in the genotype is seen in the phenotype.
Explanation:
The majority takes place in the small intestine
Answer: The parents of the white cat would be a dominant white cat and a recessive colored coat cat. The parents of the autosomal tabby would be a dominant tabby and either a recessive brown cat, striped cat, or a recessive black cat.
Explanation:
The genotypes and phenotypes would be : WW- Dominant white and ww- recessive color coat cat; their offspring would be 100% recessive white kittens
TT- dominant tabby and a recessive brown cat; their children would be 100%- dominant brown tabby
TT- dominant tabby and a recessive striped cat; children would be 100%- brown striped
TT- dominant tabby and a recessive black cat; children would be 100%- tabby kittens
Due to the bad trophic efficiency transfer, there is a loss in the consumption of most energy to cellular respiration at trophic levels. It also loses energy to heat, metabolism and other subsistence for biomass production. There is a higher energy loss when it is at higher trophic levels.