Yes. For this to occur, the parents must be genotypically AO and BO, respectively. Each parent must pass along the recessive"O" gene to the child (OO).
The child's blood type is determined by his or her parents' blood types. If both parents have type A, the child can have either type A or O. If both parents have type B, the child can have either type B or O. If one parent has type A and the other parent has type B, the child can have type A, B, AB, or O, but he/she is most likely to have type AB. If both parents have type O, the child will have type O.
b and o
For a transfusion - blood type O can donate to blood type B. However, blood type O cannot except B-type blood. For offspring, with one O parent and one B parent - the child could be blood type O or B depending on the genotype of the parent with B-type blood.
No. A and B are dominant blood types and O is recessive. A parent with blood type AB can only donate a dominant A or dominant B. A child with blood type O would need to come from parents with one of the following combinations: A-A, A-B, A-O, B-O, O-O
Yes, if the AB parent contributes a B allele, and the O parent contributes an O allele, then the child will be BO, and will have type B blood.
No, the expected blood types are only B and O. Yes they can because my mom has a- and my dad has a+ so yes you can have a difference in child and parents blood type but is it likely? No.
No. The child will be type B or O, it cannot be type A.
Yes, parents with O+ and B- can have a B+ child. They may have children with type O or type B, and may have children with negative or positive Rh factor.
Yes, parents with O+ and B- can have a child with B- blood. Their children may be type O or type B, and may have Rh negative or positive blood types.
Yes - blood type O or B are the only possibilities. Each parent donates one allele to the child. The parent with blood type O must donate an O. The parent with blood type be will donate either a B or an O - they can only donate an O if they are heterozygous, BO.
no
no it can not