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Bio & Anthro

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Bio & Anthro
1.) In a plant having two carried alleles for the color of a flower in a gene, with P for purple and p for white, the three possible combinations which might exist in any one plant are PP making a purple plant, pp to make a white plant, or Pp resulting in a ‘hybrid’ plant.

2.) Out of the genotypes PP, Pp, pp, the resultant flower colors are (as described above in exercise 1) are purple (for PP,) purple or purplish-white (for Pp- likely purple as it is dominant, or a mixture of the colors,) or white (for the case of pp.) PP and pp, the purple and white flowers, are referred to as homozygous. In the case of PP this is homozygous dominant, and in the case of pp this is homozygous recessive. The case of Pp must be considered different, and is classified and heterozygous.

3.) For a plant that is Pp, two gametes are produced: P and p. For a plant that is PpTt, four gametes are produced: PT, pT, Pt, and pt. For a plant that is PpTtYy, eight gametes are ultimately produced: PTY, PTy, Pty, pTy, ptY, PtY, pTY, and pty.

4.) To address the first question we will consider the Punnett square to cross the heterozygous purple plant and a white flowered plant. See the Punnett square drawn here and labeled “Figure 1” below.

| |p |p |
|P |Pp |Pp |
|p |pp |pp |

Figure 1: Punnett square crossing heterozygous purple plant and a white flowered plant

To address the second question, we will consider the genotypes produced from this mating. There are shown in the Punnett square, and overall there are two total genotypes (as there are two cases of the Pp genotype so technically there are not four in total.) These genotypes are Pp and pp, similar to the first question however here in relation to the Punnett square breakdown and without a dominant PP. To address the third question, we will consider the phenotype, or the color in this case. The



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