the child's blood type will be whatever their mother's is in almost all cases because the mother cannot host the life of a child with a different blood type. this is because the mother gives the child blood so they must be the same type.
no
If one parent is O positive and the other is AB negative, the child could inherit the A allele from the O positive parent and the Rh factor from the AB negative parent, resulting in the child being A positive. Each parent passes on one allele for blood type and one allele for Rh factor, so different combinations are possible.
Yes, it is possible for a child to have O positive blood type if one parent is O positive and the other parent is A positive. The child could inherit the O allele from the O positive parent and the A allele from the A positive parent.
The child could have blood type O positive or A positive. The ABO blood type system is inherited independently from the Rh factor, so the child could inherit the O gene from one parent and the A gene from the other.
Yes, an O positive parent and an M positive parent can have an AB negative child if both parents are carriers of the A and B genes and the child inherits one A and one B gene from each parent. This combination would result in the child having blood type AB.
The question is incomplete. The blood type, (or ABO group), for only one parent is there. Positive refers to the presence of an antigen for the Rh group . The child will therefore be Rh positive since both parents are Rh positive. One parent's blood type is O. The other parent can have O, A, B, or AB as a bloodgroup. Without knowing both parents blood groups, and not just the Rh status, there is no way of knowing the bloodtype of the child.
Yes. Both parents have an A allele and a B allele. Each parent can only pass on one of his/her two alleles. If each parent passes an A allele to the child, then the child will have group A blood. If at least one parent passes on an Rh positive allele to the child, then the child would also be type Rh positive. So these two parents could have an A positive child.
No, it is not possible for a child to have B negative blood type if one parent is O positive and the other is A positive. Blood type inheritance follows specific rules, and in this case, the child would inherit either O or A positive blood type.
The possible blood types for their children are A positive or O positive. The child inherits one blood type allele from each parent, so they can receive either the A allele from the A positive parent or the O allele from the O positive parent.
absolutely. as long as one of the parents is positive, the child can be positive. and if one parent is A the other B, the child can be A, B, AB or O depending on the parents' other alleles. so the child can definitely be A or B positive, but also A negative, B negative, AB negative, AB positive, O positive or O negative.
b posgative
Yes, it is possible for two parents with O positive blood type to have a child with A positive blood type. The child can inherit the A allele from one parent and the positive allele from the other parent. The A allele is dominant over the O allele, so the child would have A positive blood type.