Pregunta
Making Conclusions
22. If child has an autosomal dominant trait, what can you say about the parents?
23. If two parents have an autosomal dominant tralt, what can you say about their children?
24. If two parents have an autosomal recessive trait, what can you say about their children?
25. If two parents do not have an autosomal recessive trail, what can you say about their children?
26. Can autosomal recessive traits skip generations?
22. If child has an autosomal dominant trait, what can you say about the parents?
23. If two parents have an autosomal dominant tralt, what can you say about their children?
24. If two parents have an autosomal recessive trait, what can you say about their children?
25. If two parents do not have an autosomal recessive trail, what can you say about their children?
26. Can autosomal recessive traits skip generations?
Ask by Fitzgerald Medina. in the United States
Mar 25,2025
Solución de inteligencia artificial de Upstudy
Respuesta verificada por el tutor
Responder
- 22. If a child has an autosomal dominant trait, at least one parent must also have the trait.
- 23. If both parents have the trait, there’s a 75% chance their children will inherit and express it.
- 24. If both parents have the trait, all their children will inherit and express the recessive trait.
- 25. If both parents do not have the trait, their children may or may not inherit it, depending on their genotypes.
- 26. Yes, autosomal recessive traits can skip generations if both parents are carriers but do not express the trait themselves.
Solución

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Como
Beyond the Answer
With autosomal dominant traits, at least one of the parents must possess the trait themselves. This means that children have a 50% chance of inheriting the trait regardless of the other parent’s genetic makeup. So, if you see that a child has this trait, you can bet there’s a parent sneaking in that dominant allele!
For the scenario with two parents who both have an autosomal dominant trait, their children can have varying outcomes. Each child has a 75% chance of expressing the dominant trait (since they can receive either a dominant from both parents, a dominant from one, or two recessive alleles) and a 25% chance of being entirely recessive. Genetic family reunions could get quite interesting!

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