Question
The presence of alleles A,B represents dominant genes for color and according to the Punnet Square, produces more puppies with this color phenotype.
(1 point)
Responses
Black
Black
Yellow
Yellow
Brown
Brown
White
(1 point)
Responses
Black
Black
Yellow
Yellow
Brown
Brown
White
Answers
GPT-4o mini
The information you've provided suggests that the presence of alleles A and B represents dominant genes for a specific color phenotype in puppies. Typically, when considering dominant and recessive alleles, the dominant phenotype will be expressed when at least one dominant allele is present.
Based on common genetics in dogs:
- **Black** is often associated with dominant alleles.
- **Yellow** and **Brown** can be recessive depending on the specific gene interactions.
- **White** is generally a separate trait and can also depend on other genetic factors.
If alleles A and B represent dominant alleles for a black phenotype, then the puppies produced would likely be black if they inherit at least one of these dominant alleles.
Therefore, the color phenotype that is likely produced would be:
**Black**
Based on common genetics in dogs:
- **Black** is often associated with dominant alleles.
- **Yellow** and **Brown** can be recessive depending on the specific gene interactions.
- **White** is generally a separate trait and can also depend on other genetic factors.
If alleles A and B represent dominant alleles for a black phenotype, then the puppies produced would likely be black if they inherit at least one of these dominant alleles.
Therefore, the color phenotype that is likely produced would be:
**Black**