No. If both parents are type O, the child will also be type O.
if both parents have positive o blood their child must have positive o blood
Yes, if both parents have the genotype AO, then the child can have the O from both parents, phenotype O
If they both have type A blood, they cannot have a child type B.
Yes, if both parents are AO genotype there is a 25% chance of the parents producing a type O child. Since both parents are Rh positive the probability of an Rh positive child in at least 75%.
yes
If both parents are B- they can only have children who are B- and O-. One would have to be positive in order to have a child with positive blood.
yes
Yes
yes it is possoble, each child is different and the parents blood type determains the child's. but both children will have a positive no matter what because both parents have positive.
In that given scenario, the possible blood types of the child are: A-, A+, O+ and O-.So Yes, it is possible to have a child with A positive with 25%.
No. If two parents both have A blood then they are either AA or Ai. This means they can have a child with AA, Ai, or ii (O blood). To get AB there must be a B somewhere.
Yes! Parents have two genes for pos/neg blood type, and only one of them needs to be positive for the parent to have positive blood type. Most positive-blooded people have one positive gene and one negative gene. If both positive parents pass on their negative gene, they can have a child with a negative blood type.