Asked by sk

Question
How are the terms purebred and hybrid different?(1 point)
Responses

Purebred is a term used for an organism with dominant alleles, and hybrid is a term used for an organism with recessive alleles.
Purebred is a term used for an organism with dominant alleles, and hybrid is a term used for an organism with recessive alleles.

Purebred is a term used for an organism with recessive alleles, and hybrid is a term used for an organism with dominant alleles.
Purebred is a term used for an organism with recessive alleles, and hybrid is a term used for an organism with dominant alleles.

Purebred is a term used for a homozygous organism, and hybrid is a term used for a heterozygous organism.
Purebred is a term used for a homozygous organism, and hybrid is a term used for a heterozygous organism.

Purebred is a term used for a heterozygous organism, and hybrid is a term used for a homozygous organism.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
Purebred is a term used for a homozygous organism, and hybrid is a term used for a heterozygous organism.

Explanation: a purebred (homozygote) has two identical alleles for a trait (AA or aa), while a hybrid (heterozygote) has two different alleles (Aa).