adaptations can be traits
A dark brown horse. Possibly black. Possibly something with patches of the other color. According to a nifty foal color calulator that you can find a link to in the related links, the foal has a 70% chance of being bay, 24% chance of being black and a 7% chance of being chestnut.
skull shape and character traits
what is darry curtis peronality traits
Physical traits is what they look like + Personality traits is what they act like
Dominant traits are the traits that mask the recessive traits. The dominant traits are stronger than recessive!
In genetics, dominant traits are those that are expressed when an individual has one or two copies of the dominant allele, while recessive traits are only expressed when an individual has two copies of the recessive allele and no dominant allele present. Dominant traits often mask recessive traits in heterozygous individuals.
They pass on traits. There are recessive traits and dominant traits. The dominant trait is normally the one that overpowers recessive
Dominant traits are expressed when just one copy of the gene is present, while recessive traits require two copies to be expressed. Dominant traits mask recessive traits when they are both present.
A recessive trait cannot be dominant over a dominant trait. Dominant traits are always expressed over recessive traits in heterozygous individuals because they mask the expression of the recessive trait.
These traits are called dominant traits. They will overcome the recessive gene and the dominant trait will be expressed. A recessive gene needs two alleles present in its genotype to be expressed.
I think it is Dominant and recessive.
The dominant gene will always "cover up" the recessive gene, although there are instances of codominance, in which both phenotypes will be displayed, because one gene is not completely dominant over the other. There is also what is called 'incomplete dominance', when the actual phenotype is somewhere between the two.
Dominant genes are expressed over recessive genes when present in an individual's genotype. This means that the dominant gene's trait will be displayed in the individual's phenotype while the recessive gene's trait will not be expressed. However, recessive genes can still be passed on to offspring and expressed if paired with another recessive gene.
A dominant gene will exhibit its traits even in the presence of a recessive gene. This is because the dominant gene masks the expression of the recessive gene when present in the same individual.
Mendel called the observed trait the dominant trait and the trait that seemed to disappear the recessive trait.
In genetics, dominant traits are those that are expressed in an individual's phenotype when only one copy of the allele is present, while recessive traits require two copies of the allele to be expressed. Dominant alleles are represented by a capital letter (e.g., 'A'), while recessive alleles are represented by a lowercase letter (e.g., 'a'). The expression of dominant or recessive traits follows Mendel's laws of inheritance.