The answer depends on whose offsprings. And since you cannot be bothered to provide that information, I cannot provide a sensible answer.
No, sporulation produces more offspring.
The color purple is made by blending blue and red.
On the color wheel the opposite of yellow is purple. purple
It depends on the application and requirements.
Purple.
the tall plants will turn purple. it may be cool or look like pooh
This job
75%
All offspring will have the genotype for purple flowers. The offspring will be heterozygous for flower color (Pp).
If two true-breeding pea plants are crossed their offspring will show the dominant trait. The flowers will be purple or light purple.
None if the flowers are daffodils! They can only be yellow or white.
The results suggest that the allele for purple flowers is dominant (P) and the allele for white flowers is recessive (p). The Punnett square for the cross would show a 3:1 ratio of purple to white flowered offspring, as predicted by Mendel's laws of inheritance. This indicates that the purple flower trait is dominant and the white flower trait is recessive.
The principle of dominance.The gene for purple flowers is dominant, while the gene for white flowers is recessive. We know this because both flowers are homozygous, meaning their genes are the same. The genotype of Penelope (the purple flower) is PP, or purple purple. The genotype of Walter (the white flower) is pp, or white white. Because of this, if the gene for white petals was dominant, all the flower offspring would display white petals. If the genes were codominant, the flower offspring would be lavender, an even mix between the white and purple phenotypes.The Punnet square for this example (if you are a visual person) looks like this:......................Walter........................p | p....................___ | ___................P | Pp | Pp |Penelope .....________................P | Pp | Pp |...................|___|___ |You can clearly see that all the offspring are heterozygous, yet because they all share Penelope's phenotype, it is quite obvious that, again, the gene for purple flowers is dominant.
It can happen when both parents are a heterozygous
A homozygous purple flower and a homozygous white flower having offspring that are purple is an example of dominance. Traits that yield to other traits is referred to as recessive. So in this case Purple was the dominant trait and White was the recessive trait.
they are fine; expected ratios might not been seen simply due to chance
3 purple flowers and 1 white flower the ratio is 3:1 ur welcome! hahaha