Asked by bob

Horses have three basic coat colors: red (or chestnut), bay, and black. All the colors are controlled by the interaction of two genes, called Extension (E) and Agouti (A). The following combinations produce the bay color: EE/Aa, EeAa, EE/AA, and Ee/AA. Only two produce black color: EE/aa and Ea/aa. Other combinations of the alleles of these genes plus mutations of other genes result in many possible coat colors and patterns in horses.

What type of inheritance does coat color in horses represent?

(1 point)
Responses

dominant inheritance
dominant inheritance

polygenic inheritance
polygenic inheritance

mendelian inheritance
mendelian inheritance

recessive inheritance
recessive inheritance
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All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
mendelian inheritance

Reason: coat color in horses is determined by the interaction of two genes (Extension and Agouti) with dominant/recessive alleles — a Mendelian inheritance pattern (with epistasis between the two genes).