Yes
Well you see black people are useless. Whoever made the black child is obviously an ape of some sort.
The noun coat is a count noun: one coat, two coats.
Coat is a count noun: one coat, two coats, three coats.
The word coat has one syllable.
Without a coat the coat keeps the cold air in, like a thermos flask we learnt this in year 3....
it is possible if they have the rough coat gene in their ancestry but since they are both smooth coat guinea pigs they will most likely make a smooth coat baby guinea pig.
If this wolf produces offspring, which characteristics will be passed to its offspring?
Alleles are crossed from two different parents with the desirable trait. For example, if one female show horse produced a beautiful coat, and another male show horse also produced a beautiful coat, the breeder would breed the two horses to get the good-coat-producing gene in the offspring. The two alleles would produce the desired trait in the offspring.
A rough-coat is recessive for this trait. Thus a rough-coat is heterozygous and a smooth-coat is homozygous.
If you look up genetics in BrainPop, it will show you. The guinea pig must have an ancestor that had rough skin.
The Bird of Paradise is the most famous bird from New Guinea. It is PNG's coat of arms.
The adult size of a rex guinea pigs vaires but they are very cleen and have a wire coat.
If by "English Smooth Coat" , you mean sheltie, then you can end up with a couple of both in the litter. Then a again, you could end up with a mix.
Chances are, white. Colour is usually inherited from the mother of the two parents, however there are exceptions.
Donkey semen is the excretions from a male donkey that provides the necessary genetic information to combine with the female donkey's egg to produce offspring. The male donkey semen helps determine things like the color of the coat, breed, and other physical features of the offspring.
The long haired guinea pigs are called Abyssinian. They are known for their long and short, rough coat.
Actually, there are more than one set of alleles that control the Black and white colours. There are two colour series, black/brown and red/yellow, similar to human hair. Black is B, but b is for a brown, or chocolate colour. E is for black extention. If the guinea pig has E, all hairs should have the black series of colour. If it is ep, or partial extention, there are patches of red and black series colour. If it is e, the guinea pig has no black series hair, and will be a red series colour. C is the coat dilution for the red series. C is full colour, Red. ck/CD is a dark dilution, giving an orange coat. cr is a ruby eye dilution, which results in a white coat with dark eyes with a ruby cast. ch/ca is the Himalayan gene. If they are red series, this results in a white coat with red eyes. If they have the black series, the guinea pig is white with dark points, similar to the Siamese cat. So your black guinea pig would be BBEECC. The white would probably be bbeechch. When these are crossed, you would end up with BbEeCch, and would appear black. There are other sets of alleles that control coat colour. This is a web page I have found to be very helpful. http://www.sigissauhaufen.de/geneticsengl.HTML