Answer:
e. B/b,S/s x b/b;s/s
Step-by-step explanation:
Here, there is a dihybrid cross between two loci: B (for a white belt around the body) and S (for syndactyly). For each locus, genotypes and phenotypes should be:
- B/B or B/b: Belted hog
- b/b: wild type or unbelted.
- S/S or S/s: syndactylous hog.
- s/s: wild type or cloven-hoofed hog.
So, if a belted syndactylous sow was crossed with an unbelted cloven-hoofed boar, there are different possible gentotypes for the first animal:
Belted syndactylous sow: B/b;S/s, B/B;S/S, B/b;S/S or B/B;S/s.
Unbelted hoofed boar: b/b;s/s (because the wild type phenotype is recessive).
Progeny has the following phenotypes frequencies:
25% belted syndactylous
25% belted cloven
25% unbelted syndactylous
25% unbelted cloven
"Unbelted" and "cloven" are recessive conditions, therefore, both parents must have recessive alleles to inherit them to their progeny. For this reason, the most probable answer is "e. B/b;S/s x b/b;s/s". However, in the image, there is the Punnett Square that confirms this answer.