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Cattle Boards
Breeding / Calving Issues
How traits pass to the next generation
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<blockquote data-quote="Rmc" data-source="post: 1725370" data-attributes="member: 39072"><p>Their is a huge differance between genes and traits. Many traits arent simply dominant or simply recessive that are the results of a single gene location. Many traits have multiple gene locations. Then you have inhibitor genes that can block certain genes from being expressed in the phenotype even if they are in the genotype. Then you have modifier genes that can change how a certain gene is expressed. Then you have the whole epstasis/enviromental trigger theory.</p><p>How about linked genes/nonindependant assortment?how about prepotentcy?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Rmc, post: 1725370, member: 39072"] Their is a huge differance between genes and traits. Many traits arent simply dominant or simply recessive that are the results of a single gene location. Many traits have multiple gene locations. Then you have inhibitor genes that can block certain genes from being expressed in the phenotype even if they are in the genotype. Then you have modifier genes that can change how a certain gene is expressed. Then you have the whole epstasis/enviromental trigger theory. How about linked genes/nonindependant assortment?how about prepotentcy? [/QUOTE]
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How traits pass to the next generation
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