9
933127
Greycel
★
- Joined
- Apr 24, 2025
- Posts
- 3
Ideal male is supposed to be tall, medium to large frame with good muscle mass with defined and rugged facial features.
Ideal female is supposed to be gracefully slender or slim, with sharp angular defined facial features. Female should be shorter than her male partner.
Male and female offspring that inherit ideal phenotypic traits are genetic winners with high SMV. Unfortunately these traits are not gender specific or directly linked to gender. Your genes are a combination from both parents. Due to genetic recombination, the traits that are expressed are a crapshoot.
Which means you can have daughters that have a large frame, large jaw, with strong rugged masculine features like the father. Example: Rumer Willis, daughter of Bruce Willis and Demi Moore.
View: https://www.flickr.com/photos/125766391@N02/54498774257/in/photostream/
Likewise you can have sons with small/skinny frame, soft features inherited from their mother. If there is a huge height discrepancy between father and mother it could negatively impact the son’s potential adult height
View: https://www.flickr.com/photos/125766391@N02/54499638846/in/dateposted/
So if the male and female offspring do not have the ideal phenotypic traits, are they genetic losers? Please share your opinion on this.
Ideal female is supposed to be gracefully slender or slim, with sharp angular defined facial features. Female should be shorter than her male partner.
Male and female offspring that inherit ideal phenotypic traits are genetic winners with high SMV. Unfortunately these traits are not gender specific or directly linked to gender. Your genes are a combination from both parents. Due to genetic recombination, the traits that are expressed are a crapshoot.
Which means you can have daughters that have a large frame, large jaw, with strong rugged masculine features like the father. Example: Rumer Willis, daughter of Bruce Willis and Demi Moore.
View: https://www.flickr.com/photos/125766391@N02/54498774257/in/photostream/
Likewise you can have sons with small/skinny frame, soft features inherited from their mother. If there is a huge height discrepancy between father and mother it could negatively impact the son’s potential adult height
View: https://www.flickr.com/photos/125766391@N02/54499638846/in/dateposted/
So if the male and female offspring do not have the ideal phenotypic traits, are they genetic losers? Please share your opinion on this.