A woman with type AB blood has both alleles that give blood both the A antigens and the B antigens, but the man with type O blood has both of the alleles that lack these antigens. Because the child will receive one allele from the mother and one from the father, none of their children will have AB or O blood.
A woman with type AB and a man with type O will definitely have no children (0%) with type AB blood. Since one of the blood types must come from the mother, and she can only give an "O", the children can't get an A or B from her.
Fifty percent of the children would be type A and fifty percent would be B. No other blood types are possible.
50% a.
50% b.
50%
Each human has 46 chromosomes. You get 23 from your mother and 23 from your father. Therefore, you have half (50 percent) from your mother and half (50 percent) from your father.
Let T=trait (dominant) Let t= trait (recessive) Father has Tt and mother also has Tt The possible combinations for offspring are: TT Tt Tt and tt Therefore There is a 3/4 change of the offspring having the dominant trait and a 1/4 Chance of the offspring having the recessive trait It should also be noted that there is a 1/4 chance of the offspring carrying two dominant genes meaning that any of their children will also share the dominant trait
Before you make rash decisions, make sure all tests are confirmed. First, The AB negative mother should be able to give birth to A-.A+,B-,B+,AB-,AB+ child. The mother is the one that can not, if all the tests are correct, have an O child. The father, if he is A -, can only have A-,A+,B-,B+,AB-,AB+.O-,O+.Now let me explain. There are two slots for A,B or empty(O). The father can be AO, or AA in this case. The mother is AB. She has to contribute either the A or the B, usually. Please notice the usually.Final answer, no because of the mother's contribution unless there is a mutation.
The X chromosome information is expressed than the y chromosome so what ever X chromosome is passed to the male offspring it will be expressed in the male. Rarely it is ever expressed in female offspring because that chromosome with sex-trait is less dominant than the other X-chromosome she has.
Take the phenotypes of the two parents and have them above and next to a box: (say that the mother is AA and the father is aa) ....A A a Aa Aa a Aa Aa All of the children should have one dominant and one recessive allele.
Each human has 46 chromosomes. You get 23 from your mother and 23 from your father. Therefore, you have half (50 percent) from your mother and half (50 percent) from your father.
Yes you can it is called Line breeding and only experienced people should do it. But you cant do mother/son combo's and AKC dose have the answers for that.
Never.It is because the offspring will have hereditary diseases.
At the first letter :]
Blood types are received from the mother and father, so the child can be the same type as the mother if the father's type allows it.
The mother should notify family services.
No, only the mother can. On the reverse, should the father be able to sue the stepfather for aiding the mother in alienation the child from the father?
Some of the Olympian gods' offspring were more god and goddesses, but some were demigods. They were only demi-gods when the child had an Olympian god for a mother or father and a regular mortal for a mother or father. An example of a famous demigod is Perseus- who defeated The Kracken (monster that was sent by hades to destroy humans for their lack of belief in the gods, the whole story is too much to tell so you should google it) and saved Princess Andromeda and the entire human race.
They created you, cared for you, and paid for you
If your father owns the house, and owns the property in question, then he likely has the right to keep said property. However, if the offspring is able to prove that they own the property in question, then the property should be relinquished to the offspring.
Of course it matters. The attack should have been reported to the police and the father should be prosecuted.
Yes, the sentence is punctuated properly. The possessive form for both "mother" and "father" is indicated by the placement of the apostrophe before the s, making it clear that it refers to the marriage belonging to both parents.