44.5k views
0 votes
The pedigree below tracks the presence of dimples through a family's generation. If individual III-3 married a woman who was heterozygous for dimples, what is the percent chance their children will have dimples?

a) 0%
b) 25%
c) 75%
d) 100%

User Kwane
by
7.0k points

1 Answer

1 vote

Final answer:

If individual III-3 married a woman who was heterozygous for dimples, their children will have a 25% chance of having dimples.

Step-by-step explanation:

If individual III-3 married a woman who was heterozygous for dimples, their children will have a 25% chance of having dimples. Dimples are inherited as a dominant trait, meaning that a child can have dimples even if only one parent carries the dominant allele. In this case, individual III-3 is homozygous dominant (DD) for dimples, while the woman is heterozygous (Dd). When they have offspring, there is a 50% chance for each child to inherit the dominant allele and have dimples, and a 50% chance to inherit the recessive allele and not have dimples.

User Artyom Kozhemiakin
by
8.0k points
Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.

9.4m questions

12.2m answers

Categories