No. The father must be of type A if the child is and the mother is not.
Yes, they can. If the man's genotype is BB then there is a 50% chance that the baby's blood type will be B.
25% for blood type O, 50% for blodd type AB, and 25% for A.
YES! If the woman has type AB blood type andthe man has type BO blood tye it is possible for them to have a child with AO blood type which registers as type A. It is rare though. Genetics tell us that they have a 50% chance of a baby with type B blood and a 25% chance of a baby with type AB blood. That means that they have a 25% chance of having a baby with type A blood. Remember this doesnt account for positive or negaive antibodies.
It depends on the genotype of the parents: If they are AO and BO the child could be all of the 4 ABO-Bloodtypes: AO (= bloodtype A) BO (= bloodtype B) AB (= bloodtype AB) OO (= bloodtype O) If they are AA and BB the child could only be bloodtype AB If they are AO and BB the Child could be AB, or B (BO) If they are AA and BO the child could be AB or A (AO) In short, when the genotype is not given, the child can have any of the ABO-Bloodtypes
NO. Not at all. Each parent has an A or a B to contribute to the child. Therefore, the only possibilities for the child are: An A from each parent (making it an A) A B from each parent (making it a B) and An A from one, and a B from the other, (making it an AB). This a super-simple answer. For more detail on ABO blood grouping, type in ABO on wiki. NO. Not at all. Each parent has an A or a B to contribute to the child. Therefore, the only possibilities for the child are: An A from each parent (making it an A) A B from each parent (making it a B) and An A from one, and a B from the other, (making it an AB). This a super-simple answer. For more detail on ABO blood grouping, type in ABO on wiki.
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.
no
The child will have either A or B blood type
no
No
No, the child has to have one of the parents blood type.
of course why not
yes
zero...
Yes it is possible. The child can have A, B and O blood group.
Only if they did it for approximentaly three hours straight
Twenty-five percent for any of the four possibilities.
Certainly