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When the dominant and recessive traits are known, why is it not necessary to use the term homozygous when referring to the genotype of an individual with a recessive phenotype?
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Jun 6, 2019
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When the dominant and recessive traits are known, why is it not necessary to use the term homozygous when referring to the genotype of an individual with a recessive phenotype?
Biology
middle-school
Andrew Rosenfeld
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because it's implied, recessive phenotypes have to be homozygous otherwise the recessive allele does not express as phenotype.
Hemanto
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Jun 11, 2019
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