Yes. This can only happen if both parents are BO (heterozygous B's), meaning they both have one B allele and one O allele. Blood tests usually won't tell you if your heterozygous (BO) or homozygous (BB), you'd have to trace back the grandparents' blood types and even great-grandparents' blood types.
No. They can only have Type O offspring. See the related link.
No, this can't happen.
in this situation 100% of children will have blood type O.
No. With that mother and father the possible blood types are
A+ and O+
No, if both parents are O pos, they will only have children that are O pos.
If the father has that blood type, yes.
No way
Yes, according to the site at the link below, a child can have A- blood, given parents of O+ and A+.
It could be possible, but only if both the parents are heterozygous.If the mother is AO and the father is BO - there is a 25% chance the child will be OO (O blood group).However, if either or both of the parents are homozygous (AA or BB) - then they cannot have an O child.
If both parents are O ,,,,,,,,,,,, all kids will be O ,, no possibility for A
O plus.
If they both have type A blood, they cannot have a child type B.
A+ and A- A+ and O-
Yes, according to the site at the link below, a child can have A- blood, given parents of O+ and A+.
The blood types of the parents have little or no bearing on whether they can conceive a child.
It could be possible, but only if both the parents are heterozygous.If the mother is AO and the father is BO - there is a 25% chance the child will be OO (O blood group).However, if either or both of the parents are homozygous (AA or BB) - then they cannot have an O child.
yes, as a matter of fact, they can. if both parents are heterozygus for A and B blood, then there is a chance that they can have a type O child
No, it can't happen. none of the parents have the allele to make a kid with A blood type, and they can have Rh- child if both parent rh alleles are heterozygous.
If both parents are O ,,,,,,,,,,,, all kids will be O ,, no possibility for A
The child would have A plus blood type since A blood type is a dominant trait while O blood type is a recessive trait
O plus.
Only if it was adopted...the only options for that child's blood type would be A or O if the biological parents are both Type A.
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.
If both parents are type O blood they will only have type O children