Eye color is actually not controlled by straight Mendellian genetics.
However, based on your question, the probability of a brown eyed child would be
50% and the probability of a blue eyed child would be 50%.
Probably brown. It depends on what the parents carry as a recessive gene.
Possibly. It depends if you are you are carrying the allel for brown eyes. And it depends if that is recessive or dominant.
possibly....its a recessive gene but if its your first child its probably gonna have the dads eyes.
I assume you mean the mother has a dominant allele for some other color. Father is homozygous recessive for blue. Dominant allele + recessive blue X recessive blue + recessive blue The baby has a 50% chance of blue eyes and a 50% chance of getting the dominant colored eyes.
Most likely brown, however if the baby picks up a recessive gene then it could have a different eye color.
yes
You can't go by that all the time. Recessive genes may be present and the baby may take on other relative's characteristics.
Yes, they can have a baby with blond hair if the mother has the gene that produces blonde hair (recessive) and also if the father has the same gene. It would be best if they both had blonde hair, but two people with brown hair can still have a blonde haired baby. It all depends on the genes that the parents received from their parents.
if mother has black and the father has red it will probally be brown
Yes.
It means the parents carried the gene for green eyes as a recessive gene.
Not necessarily. I once saw a baby rabbit with the fur color of brown but its mother was ginger and the father was brown with ginger spots. The genetics of a rabbit are complex, there are dominant and recessive genes and many variations. Wild rabbit Agouti Brown is the most dominant color gene.