In pea plants, the allele for yellow seeds is dominant to the allele for green seeds. If a plant that has heterozygous yellow seed is crossed with one that has only homozygous green seeds, what percent of their first generation offspring would you expect to have green seeds?. optional Answer . 0% . 25% . 100% . 50% .

Respuesta :

"50%" would be percent of their first generation offspring among the following choices given in the question that you would expect to have green seeds. the correct option among all the options that are given in the question is the last option or the fourth option. I hope that this is the answer that has actually come to your help.

Answer:

50% green-seeded plants

Explanation:

This is a typical monohybrid cross involving a single gene coding for seed color in pea plants. The allele for yellow seeds (Y) is dominant over the allele for green seeds (y) i.e. the allele Y will mask the expression of allele y in a heterozygous state.

A plant with heterozygous yellow seed i.e. have different alleles for the gene, will have the genotype Yy but phenotypically yellow-seeded since Y is dominant over y.

A plant with homozygous green seeds i.e. same alleles for the gene, will have a genotype (yy) since the green phenotype can only be expressed in a homozygous state.

Hence,in a cross between Yy and yy, each allele will separate into gametes according to Mendel's law of segregation. (See attached image).

The F1 offsprings as depicted in the image will have Yy, Yy, yy and yy genotypes.

Where 2 Yy: phenotypically yellow-seeded

2 yy: phenotypically green-seeded

Therefore, the percentage of F1 offsprings expected to have green seeds are: 2/4 × 100= 50%.

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