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A chicken breeder has chickens that are white, black or speckled. Speckled chickens have both black and white feathers. This is a co-dominant trait. The allele for white feathers is A and the allele FB for black feathers is F Determine the genotypes for the rooster and hen that the breeder should cross to produce the greatest percentage of speckled chickens. A. Place the alleles for the rooster and the hen that the breeder should cross in the blank boxes outside the Punnett square. B. Place the number that shows the percentage of speckled offspring that will result from this cross in the blank box. . You may use the allele labels more than once. • There may be more than one correct answer. • Place only one label in each blank box F F 25 50 75 100 2/5- Hen Rooster =% speckled​

1 Answer

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Since speckled chickens have both b and w feathers, they must inherit one allele for w feathers and one allele for b feathers. Therefore, to produce the greatest percentage of speckled chickens, the breeder should cross a w chicken with a b chicken.

The Punnett square for this cross would be:

| F F

A | A F A F

A | A F A F

This shows that all offspring (100%) will be heterozygous for both white and b feathers (genotype: AFAF), which is the genotype for speckled feathers. Therefore, the percentage of speckled offspring that will result from this cross is 100%.

Putting the alleles for the hen and rooster in the blank boxes outside the Punnett square would look like this:

| F F

A | A F A F

A | A F A F

Hen Rooster

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