Question:

In Drosophila melanogaster, the black body (b*) is recessive

Last updated: 7/4/2022

In Drosophila melanogaster, the black body (b*) is recessive

In Drosophila melanogaster, the black body (b*) is recessive to the gray body (b*), purple eyes (pr) are recessive to red eyes (pr*), and vestigial wings (vg) are recessive to normal wings (vg*). The loci encoding these traits are linked, with the map distances shown in the image. The interference among these genes is 0.5. A fly with a black body, purple eyes, and vestigial wings is crossed with a fly homozygous for a gray body, red eyes, and normal wings. The female progeny are then crossed with males that have a black body, purple eyes, and vestigial wings. If a total of 1000 progeny are examined, determine the expected number of offspring that result from each crossover event. double crossover: single crossover between b and pr: single crossover between vg and pr: