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Elementary,Middle School,High School,College,University,PHD
| Teaching Since: | Jul 2017 |
| Last Sign in: | 364 Weeks Ago, 1 Day Ago |
| Questions Answered: | 1850 |
| Tutorials Posted: | 1850 |
Graduate in Biology and Nutrition, MBA Finance
Florida State University
Aug-2000 - Jul-2007
Ass. Relationship Manager
Penn-Florida
Mar-2009 - Feb-2016
You're an orchid breeder and have noticed that you have a few plants that display a totally novel golden coloring pattern. This gold coloring has basically made you a LEGEND in your horticulture club, and now your best friend wants to use your sweet orchids in their wedding. Obviously, getting a purebreeder line would be ideal for cranking up production... because you pal is going to need A LOT of flowers. But this is proving to be a challenge; every time two golden orchids are crossed, you end up with a fair number of gold flowers, but still a significant number of orchids featuring the standard white coloration. In your most gold orchid selfcross, you ended up with 57 gold and 27 standard orchids. All other such matings gave similar phenotypic offspring ratios. What's going on here? And explain why you think thatÂ
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