We are looking for the possible blood types of a baby.
Parental information:
In order for the baby to be type O, the father would have to be AO and not AA.
Yes, a parent with O positive blood and a parent with A positive blood can have children together. The child could inherit either parent's blood type, resulting in the child having either O positive or A positive blood type.
No. In order for someone to have AB blood, they must inherit the A from one parent and the B from the other. Therefore a parent with O blood could only have A, B or O children (depending on the blood type of the other parent).
Their children's phenotype could be either A or B.
The maximum number of different blood types the children could have is four: A, B, AB, and O. Each parent can pass on a different allele to their offspring, resulting in a combination of blood types depending on the inheritance pattern.
it doesn't matter what type of blood you have to have children.
No.
You don't get just one or the other. For example: If your blood type is AB, either of your parents could have A, B, or AB. Another example: I have O and my husband has O. All of our children will have O, because O doesn't combine with A or B.
No possible way to tell. The A and O are phenotypes, meaning that their personal blood type has the respective characteristics. There is also their genotypes, which they get from their parents and can be two different types, although one of the two will be their genotype. So it is possible that A type blood came from an A parent and a B parent. The O blood could have come from an O parent and an AB parent. It is conceivable that those two could have four children, all with different blood types. The rhesus factor ( positive or negative ) is another complication.
The children could have either blood type A positive or O positive. Each parent passes on one blood type allele to their child, so the child could inherit the allele for either A or O from the father, and the O allele from the mother, resulting in blood types A or O. The positive Rh factor is dominant, so the child would also have a positive blood type.
If one parent is a type O and the other is type AB, they could have children that are either type A or type B. They could not have children of type O or type AB.
yes, the other parent could be: A+, A-, AB+, or AB-
Another name for custodial interference could be parental alienation. If the parent is not allowing the child(ren) to see the other parent or has interfered in a way that the children are so angry that they now don't want to see that parent, it is alienation.This is a difficult thing to prove in court and deal with, but any type of custodial interference, where one parent is preventing the other from his or her visitation needs to be taken to the courthouse so a judge can put a stop to it. Children need both parents in their lives, unless there is a proven reason that it is not in the children's best interest to be with that other parent.