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You just bought two black guinea pigs from the pet store that are known to be heterozygous (Bb). You also know that black fur (BB) is dominant over white fur (bb), and that a lethal recessive allele is located only one cM away from the recessive b allele. You decide to start raising your own guinea pigs, but after mating these animals several times, you discover they produce only black progeny. a) How would you explain this result? b) If the original black guinea pigs produce an average of 10 offspring per mating, how many matings would you have to make with these same parents before you'd expect to see a white guinea pig? c) Indicate the most likely genotype of the white offspring.

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Answer:

21 Mating

Step-by-step explanation:

Ans A)The recessive lethal allele is tightly linked to, and thus co-segregates with, the recessive B allele, which is lethal in the homozygous state (bb)

Ans B)

1% of the gametes will be recombinant (Bl or bL)

0.5% of the gametes will be bL

0.5% of the gametes will be Bl

white animals will have the following genotype

genotype probability

bL/bL(0.005)(0.005) = 0.000025

bL/bl(0.005)(0.495) = 0.002475

bl/bL(0.495)(0.005) = 0.002475

Probability of white animal =0.004975

1/0.004975 = 201 therefore on average you'd have to look at 201 progeny before seeing a white animal so on average you'd have to do 21 mating

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