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A heterozygous parent is equally likely to contribute the dominant or the recessive allele to an offspring.Group of answer choicesFalseTrueNext

Question

A heterozygous parent is equally likely to contribute the dominant or the recessive allele to an offspring.

Group of answer choices

  • False
  • True

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Solution

Answer to the Question

When considering a heterozygous parent, it possesses two different alleles for a particular gene—one dominant (let's denote it as "A") and one recessive (denote it as "a").

  1. Equal Contribution of Alleles: A heterozygous parent (Aa) can contribute either the dominant allele (A) or the recessive allele (a) to the offspring.
  2. Probability: The probability of passing on either allele is equal; thus, there's a 50% chance of passing on the dominant allele and a 50% chance of passing on the recessive allele.

Given this understanding, we can conclude that a heterozygous parent is indeed equally likely to contribute either the dominant or the recessive allele to an offspring.

Final Answer

True

This problem has been solved

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