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19 May, 03:42

Tongue-curling in humans is a dominant genetic trait.

a) suppose a man who is Tt for tongue-curling marries a woman who is also Tt for this trait. What are the possible genotypes and phenotypes of the offspring? What is percentage chance of each type?

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  1. 19 May, 03:54
    0
    T t

    T TT Tt

    t Tt tt

    Roughly 1/4 of their offspring will not have the tongue-curling gene. The possible genotypes are TT (Has), Tt (Has), tt (Doesn't have)
  2. 19 May, 03:58
    0
    -Genotypes: 25% TT, 50% Tt, 25% tt.

    -Phenotypes: 75% have the trait for tongue curling, the other 25% do not have the trait for tongue curling.

    -Percentage change of each type: 25% TT (homozygous dominant), 50% Tt (heterozygous), and 25% tt (homozygous recessive).

    Explanation:

    So to calculate the probably of off spring, we usually make a Punnett square.

    Since a Tt man marries a Tt woman, they produce "offspring" (babies) that look like this in a Punnett square:

    TT Tt

    Tt tt

    Looking from this Punnett square, we have one that is TT, two that are Tt, and one that is tt, a total of four. Your genotypes are the genetical traits, so out of the four, you take a percentage and calculate the genes: 25% TT, 50% Tt, and 25% tt. Your phenotypes are your physical traits, so 75% will have the "tongue-curling" trait as the trait T is dominant in three of them (TT, Tt, and Tt), and the other 25% will NOT have the trait.
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