Yes. Makes sense the only real knowledge i have on genetics is highschool bio... and that i love genetics so i may have researched some genetic stuff on my own over the years.Not entirely. Phenotypically (what you see) it shows pea comb, but geneotypically, with a homozygous cross like that, all of the chicks are always always heterozygous, meaning that they have one allele for the dominant gene, pea comb and one for the recessive single comb. If the pea comb parent is heterozygous P/p so it has a single comb gene, the offspring will be different. But the offspring of the the homozygous cross, meaning the pea comb is P/P and the single comb is p/p all the offspring will be heterozygous, P/p.
So genotypically the offspring of a homozygous cross are
100 percent P/p
Phenotypically they will be
pea combed.
If you cross two of the offspring P/p x P/p (heterozygous cross) you get these genotypes:
25 percent P/P
50 percent P/p
25 percent p/p
Meaning with phenotypes:
75 percent of offspring will be pea.
25 percent will be single.
If you cross two of the single combed offspring of these they will ALWAYS be phenotypically and genotypically single combed. But with the pea combed offspring, there is a good chance you won't. (Was anybody following this?)