Genetic variation can be caused by mutation (which can create entirely new alleles in a population), random mating, random fertilization, and recombination between homologous chromosomes during meiosis (which reshuffles alleles within an organism's offspring).
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Organic would be living material, so no....
Pathogens would be bacteria and fungi, so no...
thermal would be heat, so no...
must be macroscopic
Hi!
The answer would be: Dominant
<h3>Explanation</h3>
A cross between a true breeding short plant (homozygous for short, suppose tt), and a cross between a true breeding tall plant (homozygous for tallness, suppose TT) would result in all the offspring being heterozygous for the traits, meaning they would each have an allele of shortness (t) and an allele of tallness (T).
Considering the offspring were all tall, we understand that the allele for tallness must have been dominant over the allele for shortness to present itself over it. Hence, the term describing the gene for tallness would be dominant, and the term describing the gene for shortness would be recessive.
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3.<span>Urethra
4.</span><span>it binds oxygen
5.</span><span>the left ventricle
6.</span>