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In a monohybrid cross between heterozygous individuals, three out of four offspring will display the (blank)

phenotype. In Mendel’s experiments, this monohybrid cross always resulted in a(n) (blank)
ratio of dominant to recessive phenotypes. In a dihybrid cross between individuals that are heterozygous for each trait, the four possible offspring phenotypes will be observed in the ratio of (blank)
.

User Irshad
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1 Answer

6 votes

The answers would be:

First blank: 3:1

Second blank: 9:3:3:1

Let's try and see how a Punnet Square would look like for each scenario:

MONOHYBRID

Rr x Rr R - Dominant r- recessive

R r

R RR Rr Genotype: Phenotype

r Rr rr RR (1) Dominant Trait

Rr (2) Dominant Trait

rr (1) Recessive Trait

As you can see, you have 3 results out of 4 that will come out as domimant phenotypes, and 1 out of 4 as Recessive Phenotype. We can therefore conclude that the ratio of dominant to recessive is 3:1.

DIHYBRID

RrYy x RrYy

RY Ry rY ry

RY RRYY RRYy RrYY RrYy

Ry RRYy RRyy RrYy Rryy

rY RrYY RrYy rrYY rrYy

ry RrYy Rryy rrYy rryy

Breaking it down to genotype and phenotype:

Genotype Phenotype

RRYY (1) Dominant:Dominant

RRYy (2) Dominant:Dominant

RrYY (2) Dominant:Dominant

RrYy (4) Dominant: Dominant

RRyy (1) Dominant:Recessive

Rryy (2) Dominant:Recessive

rrYY (1) Recessive: Dominant

rrYy (2) Recessive: Dominant

rryy (1) Recessive:Recessive

Let's look at the four possible phenotype expressions based on our breakdown and count how many combinations we see:

Dominant:Dominant 9

Dominant:Recessive 3

Recessive:Dominant 3

Recessive:Recessive 1

So the ratio would be:

9 : 3 : 3 : 1

User Borgomeister
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