Originally posted by: Mwilding
Do you mean how do you know if a gene is dominant or recessive? Or do you mean what is the molecular action that makes one trait show up over another when both genes are present?
Originally posted by: KingNothing
Blue eyes aren't recessive for some races, like the Swedes. It just depends who your extended family has been breeding with.
Originally posted by: KingNothing
Blue eyes aren't recessive for some races, like the Swedes. It just depends who your extended family has been breeding with.
Originally posted by: Stefan
Originally posted by: KingNothing
Blue eyes aren't recessive for some races, like the Swedes. It just depends who your extended family has been breeding with.
Blue eyes are always recessive. We talked about this in my biology class, the difference is that you are more likely to meet a person with 2 coppies of the blue allele. That's not the only reason, but it's basically just because the population with blue eyes is so large.
Mendel just rolled over in his grave...Originally posted by: KingNothing
Blue eyes aren't recessive for some races, like the Swedes. It just depends who your extended family has been breeding with.
Originally posted by: Ynog
Originally posted by: Stefan
Originally posted by: KingNothing
Blue eyes aren't recessive for some races, like the Swedes. It just depends who your extended family has been breeding with.
Blue eyes are always recessive. We talked about this in my biology class, the difference is that you are more likely to meet a person with 2 coppies of the blue allele. That's not the only reason, but it's basically just because the population with blue eyes is so large.
Eye color is much more complicated than people originally thought.
At the present time there are 3 pairs of gene that control our eye color, that scientists know of.
And through research they known that there must be more. Because the current model cannot
account for certain combinations and eye colors such as grey, hazel. Or how 2 blue eyed parents
can have a child with brown eyes.
Originally posted by: Stefan
I just found this...
http://www.seps.org/cvoracle/faq/eyecolor.html
It's pretty interesting. Unfortunately for me (as I have blue eyes), blue is always recessive : I'm not even guarenteed a blue eyed kid even if my GF gives sends across her gene for blue eyes. (she's Brown eyed, but has an allele for blue).
