A cross is performed between a bird that is homozygous for red feathers and a bird that is homozygous for blue feathers. Purple offspring result due to incomplete dominance. Then, two of the purple offspring are crossed. What proportion of the offspring from the second cross will be purple?

A. 1 in 4
B. 2 in 4
C. 3 in 4
D. 4 in 4



Answer :

Alright, let's go through the problem step-by-step to determine the proportion of purple offspring when two purple birds, resulting from a cross of a homozygous red-feathered bird and a homozygous blue-feathered bird, are crossed.

### Initial Cross:
1. Parents:
- Homozygous red (genotype RR)
- Homozygous blue (genotype BB)

Since this scenario involves incomplete dominance, the result of crossing a homozygous red bird (RR) with a homozygous blue bird (BB) will produce heterozygous offspring (RB), which appears purple.

### Second Cross (F1 Generation Cross):
2. F1 Generation:
- Each F1 bird has genotype RB (purple).

When two F1 heterozygous purple birds (RB) are crossed, the possible genotypic combinations in their offspring follow Mendelian genetics for incomplete dominance.

### Punnett Square for RB x RB:

```
| R | B |
R | RR | RB |
B | RB | BB |
```

### Offspring Genotypes and Proportions:
- RR: Homozygous red (1 part)
- RB: Heterozygous purple (2 parts)
- BB: Homozygous blue (1 part)

3. Proportion Calculation:
- Total parts = 1 (RR) + 2 (RB) + 1 (BB) = 4 parts
- The proportion of heterozygous purple (RB) offspring = 2 parts out of 4 parts

4. Result:
- The proportion of purple offspring from the second cross is [tex]\( \frac{2}{4} \)[/tex].

Given the options:
1 in 4
2 in 4
3 in 4
4 in 4

The correct answer is: 2 in 4.