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- https://bio.libretexts.org/Courses/Cosumnes_River_College/Contemporary_Biology_(Aptekar)/06%3A_Patterns_of_Inheritance/6.04%3A_PedigreesIf the trait is dominant, one of the parents must have the trait. Two of her three children have the trait (individuals II-3 and II-5) and three of her grandchildren have the trait (individuals III-3,...If the trait is dominant, one of the parents must have the trait. Two of her three children have the trait (individuals II-3 and II-5) and three of her grandchildren have the trait (individuals III-3, III-4, and III-5). In addition, the trait appears to affect males more than females (in this case, exclusively males are affected), suggesting that the trait may be X-linked. The terms dominant and recessive refer to the way that a trait is expressed, not by how often it shows up in a family.
- https://bio.libretexts.org/Courses/Folsom_Lake_College/BIOL_310%3A_General_Biology_(Wada)/06%3A_Genetics/6.02%3A_Pedigrees_reviewIf the trait is dominant, one of the parents must have the trait. Two of her three children have the trait (individuals II-3 and II-5) and three of her grandchildren have the trait (individuals III-3,...If the trait is dominant, one of the parents must have the trait. Two of her three children have the trait (individuals II-3 and II-5) and three of her grandchildren have the trait (individuals III-3, III-4, and III-5). In addition, the trait appears to affect males more than females (in this case, exclusively males are affected), suggesting that the trait may be X-linked. The terms dominant and recessive refer to the way that a trait is expressed, not by how often it shows up in a family.
- https://bio.libretexts.org/Workbench/Bio_11A_-_Introduction_to_Biology_I/29%3A_Pedigrees/29.02%3A_PedigreesIf the trait is dominant, one of the parents must have the trait. Two of her three children have the trait (individuals II-3 and II-5) and three of her grandchildren have the trait (individuals III-3,...If the trait is dominant, one of the parents must have the trait. Two of her three children have the trait (individuals II-3 and II-5) and three of her grandchildren have the trait (individuals III-3, III-4, and III-5). In addition, the trait appears to affect males more than females (in this case, exclusively males are affected), suggesting that the trait may be X-linked. The terms dominant and recessive refer to the way that a trait is expressed, not by how often it shows up in a family.