in pea plants, tallness (t) is dominant to shortness (t). what are the predicted percentages of the…

in pea plants, tallness (t) is dominant to shortness (t). what are the predicted percentages of the genotypes of the offspring if a homozygous short plant is crossed with a heterozygous tall plant?\n\n25 percent tt, 75 percent tt\n25 percent tall, 75 percent short\n50 percent tt, 50 percent tt\n50 percent tall, 50 percent short
Answer
Explanation:
Step1: Determine the genotypes of the parents
The homozygous short plant has genotype (tt) (since shortness is recessive). The heterozygous tall plant has genotype (Tt) (tallness is dominant, and heterozygous means one dominant and one recessive allele).
Step2: Set up the Punnett square
The gametes of the (tt) plant are all (t). The gametes of the (Tt) plant are (T) and (t).
| (T) | (t) | |
|---|---|---|
| (t) | (Tt) | (tt) |
| (t) | (Tt) | (tt) |
Step3: Analyze the genotypes of the offspring
From the Punnett square, there are 2 (Tt) (heterozygous tall) and 2 (tt) (homozygous short) out of 4 total offspring. So the proportion of (Tt) is (\frac{2}{4}= 50%) and the proportion of (tt) is (\frac{2}{4}=50%)
Answer:
C. 50 percent (Tt), 50 percent (tt)