CERTIFICATION GUIDE
FOR 2025/2026 TESTS|MOST COMMON
QUESTIONS WITH CORRECTLY VERIFIED ANSWERS
(LATEST QUIZZES) |ALREADY A+
GRADED|GUARANTEED PASS
conditions for deviations from simple mendelian patterns of inheritance - - when alleles
are not completely dominant or recessive
- when a gene has more than two alleles
- when a gene produces multiple phenotypes
complete dominance - phenotypes of the heterozygote and the dominant homozygote
are identical
incomplete dominance - the phenotype of F1 hybrids is somewhere between the
phenotypes of the two parental varieties
codominance - two alleles affect the phenotype in separate, distinguishable ways
recessively inherited disorders - - only show up in individuals homozygous for the allele
(completely recessive)
- most people with this are born to carrier parents
carriers - heterozygous but phenotypically normal
example of genes that have more than two alleles - blood types (A, B, O = IA, IB, and i)
pleiotropy - The ability of a single gene to have multiple effects
examples of pleiotropy - cystic fibrosis, sickle cell anemia
epistasis - one gene affects the phenotype of another due to interaction of their gene
products