A condition in which a gene does not manifest observable characteristics in the presence of its dominant allele is known as
Answer Details
The condition in which a gene does not manifest observable characteristics in the presence of its dominant allele is known as recessiveness.
In genetics, alleles are different versions of a gene. When an organism has two different alleles for a particular gene, one allele will be dominant and the other will be recessive. The dominant allele masks the expression of the recessive allele, so that the observable characteristics associated with the dominant allele are expressed in the organism.
A recessive gene is only expressed when an organism has two copies of that gene, one from each parent. If an organism has one dominant allele and one recessive allele, the dominant allele will mask the expression of the recessive allele.
So, the answer to the question is recessiveness.
Mutation refers to a change in the DNA sequence of a gene, while dominance refers to the relationship between two alleles, where one allele masks the expression of another. Homozygosity refers to the condition in which an organism has two identical alleles for a particular gene.