Answer:
Heterozygous tall (Tt) and homozygous short (tt) parents
Explanation:
This question involves a single gene coding for height in a certain plant. The allele for tallness (T) is dominant over the allele for shortness (t). This means that allele 'T' will always mask the phenotypic expression of allele 't' in a heterozygous state.
According to the question, the genotypes of the parent plants that were crossed were not recorded but tall and short offsprings in a ratio 1:1 were observed. Based on this phenotypic ratio, one of the parents has to be heterozygous for the trait and the other homozygous for the recessive trait in order to produce offsprings with equal ratio of tall and short traits.
This means that the heterozygous tall parent will have a genotype: Tt, and be phenotypically tall since Tallness is dominant to shortness. The other parent which is homozygous recessive will have a genotype: tt.
In a nutshell, a cross between parents with genotypes; Tt and tt will produce four possible offsprings with two distinct genotypes i.e. Tt and tt.
Tt offsprings (2) will be phenotypically tall
tt offsprings (2) will be phenotypically short
Hence, the phenotypic ratio will be 2:2 equivalent to 1:1