Parent? or breed? An O + mother and an O+ father who breed and produce offspring will produce an O+ offspring, not a - offspring. Of course, through adoption, they can parent whatever blood type they like. :} Positive (+) means you possess certain antibodies in your blood. So if both of you have the antibodies of course your child will too. I am not a doctor...but this was my understanding when researching this question when I was pregnant. I am O+ as well.
for sure
If the mother has type negative blood, and the father and child have type positive blood, the mother's blood may begin to attack the child's.
Sure, if the mother is Rhesus (D) positive
Yes.
No, an O-group parent cannot have an AB-group child at all.
No. The baby must inherit one allele from each parent - therefore they must get either an A or B from the mother.
No, an O-group parent cannot have an AB-group child at all.
Of course, you got your blood group from one of your parents or one of your grandparents.
A father with the blood type can be b negative can have a child even a son that is A positive. The blood of a child comes from one or the other parent. If the mother is A positive the child can be as well.
Yes, a B+ father can have a B- child, regardless of the blood type of the mother. See the link below:
Yes -- There is not one gene that determines blood type. The father can be heterozygous for the A blood type. This just means that the father has one A gene and one O gene. Since the A gene is dominant, the blood from the father tests as A. A separate gene determines the positive and negative part of the blood grouping. This is the RH factor. Again the father can have one gene that is positive and one that is negative, positive is dominant. Same analysis for the mother, mixed B and O genes with B as dominant, positive and negative for RH factor, positive dominant. The egg from the mother could contain the B and RH negative (50% chance of each). The sperm from the father could contain the A and RH negative. Thus the baby would be AB negative (no positive from either parent).
Yes, as long as the mother's blood group is Rh positive, the baby can be Rh positive. Only one parent need be Rh positive for this to occur.