Phenotype is referred to as the expressed trait that is caused by a certain combination of alleles.
<h3>What is phenotype?</h3>
Phenotype is referred to as the expressed trait that is caused by a certain combination of alleles. We will recall that the HbS allele is responsioble for the anemia that results from sickle shaped red blood cells.
This phenotype is both harmfull and benefical in the sense that it leads to the agglutination of the red blood cells in individuals that have this phenotype and eventual crisis. Also, it is beneficaila in that nthose who possess this phenotype do not suffer from malaria in the tropics.
Learn more about HbS allele: brainly.com/question/12347919
1. The action that would control bleeding through the use of pressure points is B. push the main artery against a bone.
2. A. Confusion is a sign of heatstroke.
Answer is: <span>nondisjunction.
</span>Nondisjunction<span> is the failure of </span>homologous chromosomes<span> to separate correctly during </span>cell division, because of tha daughter cells have abnormal chromosome numbers. This example is <span>failure of a pair of </span>homologous chromosomes<span> to separate in </span><span>meiosis I.</span>
We do quite often have mutt birds. (the correct name for such a mutt is a hybrid. <span>They are way more common than most people think, but unless you are a birdwatcher you probably wouldn’t even spot them. People often see an odd looking birds and simply think it’s a type they haven’t seen before, when in fact it is a hybrid of two well-known species.
Having said that, for birds to hybridized they have to be fairly closely related to start with. Robins and blue jays are no more closely related than humans are to baboons. You wouldn’t expect a human and a baboon to be able to mate and produce babies would you? So no, robins and blue jays can’t interbreed.
However there are many different species of animal that CAN interbreed and produce offspring. But the different species need to be fairly closely related, far more closely than human and baboon… or a blue jay and a robin.
For example we can interbreed horses and donkeys to produce baby mules, and we can breed cattle and buffalo, or camels and llamas. And the same is true of birds. While blue jays can’t be bred with robins in the wild we quite frequently find mutt birds.
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Ducks are particularly noted for forming wild mutts and many if not all north American mallards for example are of mixed species ancestry.</span>
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