<span>My pea plant has an unknown genotype for flowers, whether it has two dominant traits for white flowers (WW) or one dominant and one recessive (Ww) leading to white flowers; therefore I am doing a testcross in order to determine the genotype of my pea plant. The best plant to do this with is one that has a phenotype of purple flowers (ww) - that is, it is homozygous for the recessive trait.
If I use a homozygous recessive plant, I know exactly what its genotype is. I don't have to worry about whether it's got one or two dominant alleles; I know that at least half of my alleles are going to be the recessive w.
This makes identifying the offspring's genotype very simple. If I find that the offspring have at least some purple flowers among them, I know that my original plant had to be Ww; that is it had to have one dominant and one recessive allele for the flower color gene. If, however, all of the offspring are white flowers, I know that my original pea plant had both dominant alleles (WW).</span>
Theses are what the Nurse should include:
•sodium or salt
• meat(some kind of protein)
•grains like bread or corn flakes cereal
•exactly one serving
•dairy low in phosphorus
• fruit and juice from concentrate
Answer:
Acquired immunity is immunity you develop over your lifetime. It can come from: a vaccine. exposure to an infection or disease. another person's antibodies (infection-fighting immune cells
Answer:
Many animals and plants regenerate tissues or even whole organs after injury. Typically, specialized cells at the wound site revert to a 'pluripotent' state–via a process called dedifferentiation—which means they regain the ability to develop into the various cell types required for regeneration.
Explanation:
Hope this helps
1102.31131 Pounds, this seems highly unrealistic for a Grandma, are you sure this is the question?