It is theorized.. that the different sex's, dominate or at least co-dominate, in different characteristics, but I don't think that is has been proven.
In addition, "I" would belive that it would also be dependant on the strength of he dominate traits AND recssive traits. in each. That is, a big stout, robust, male, that wreaks of skunk, might well carry forward that particular trait, to "all" of it's offspring. If it were strong/dominate enough. O n the other hand, maybe the female/females he was mated with, carried that same trait in a recessive gene, makeing it easy to isolate and breed into the next fillia. Or the females might possibly be, "very" dominate sweet cherry odor, which might completely dominate a lesser male, and all offspring might have the cherry odor. Or a combination of the above, 50% skunk and 50% cherry, or some may smell like a skunk in a cherry tree.
I used to have a mathematical formula, that showed how fast and vast, the number of different phenotype possibilities can become, when crossing two unrelated P1's.