The first colorimeter (i'm guessing is standard) is less exact then the actual reading, and has a harder time pin-pointing. (it gives a number near the actual temperature, but it is not correct.)
The second colorimeter is exact, and should be 'trusted more in the future', because it gives an accurate reading of the current temperature.
these are the 2 conclusions i got from the top information given to me.
Answer:
No, the child cannot inherit the disease.
Explanation:
The problem tells you that the man has a recessive allele for an inherited disease, but he has a normal phenotype. This means that the disease is recessive and in order for an individual to have the disease, they must have two recessive copies of the allele. The problem also tells you that the mother has a genotype that does not include this allele. With this information, you can do a punnet cross of BB (mother) x Bb (carrier father), and end up with the following possible genotypes: BB, Bb, BB, Bb. Therefore the child will not have the disease, but there is a 50% chance that the child will be a carrier for the disease.
Answer:
B
Well I have to fill up text now so hi.
-Xax
Yes decaying plants add carbon to the soil