00:01
This genetic question is very straightforward, which, you know, we always like that.
00:03
We always like the nice and easy to understand things.
00:06
And so we want to know based on this rather large genotype, what is this cat's phenotype? what do they look like? so what we're going to do is we're going to take it gene by gene.
00:20
And we're going to get, you know, each bit of information and then we'll go back through at the end and put it all together.
00:25
So we're going to start with this w gene.
00:28
We see that we have two.
00:30
Dominants, two positives.
00:32
And so it only takes one for us to have that dominant phenotype, which tells us that this cat will be pigmented.
00:41
So whatever color, the other genes tell us, that will be the color, and that the cat has no spots because there are two dominants.
00:51
Moving on to the next gene, the bee gene, this one tells us because we have at least one dominant b that the cat will be black in color.
01:03
And then we look at the d gene...