it might be o neg or a,b,o,a neg and posi,b neg and posi
Of course! Depending on the genotypes of the parents, the child could be an A or O blood type. And because both parents are Rh negative, the baby can only be Rh negative. To sum it up, the baby may be either A neg or O neg.
the geno type for O- is ( ii Rh-Rh- ) the geno type for B- is ( IBIB Rh-Rh- ) or ( IBi Rh-Rh-) they can have a child with O type if the genes was (ii Rh-Rh-) and (IBi Rh-Rh-) in a 50%. but they can't have an (O+) because both parents are Rh(negative).
No, This is impossible!
No. Two Rh positive parents can have an Rh negative child. A parent with blood type O lacks the A antigen; a parent with blood type B also lacks the A antigen; therefore they cannot have a child together with blood type A.
Not necessarily. It could result in a O neg baby depending on their genotypes.
We are looking for the possible blood types of a baby.Parental information:Mother type A negative -- can be AA or AO and Rh (--)Genes: A, O, (-)Father type A -- can be AA or AO and Rh (--)Genes: A, O, (-)Baby recieves one gene from each parent: Baby is type AA Rh (--) = Type A negBaby is type AO Rh (--) = Type A negBaby is type OO Rh (--) = Type O negIf both parents are A neg, then they would have an Type A neg or O neg child. The child cannot B because the parents do not carry a B gene, and cannot be Rh positive since neither parent carries the Rh (+) gene.
Yes, the possibilities are A pos or neg and O pos or neg, see the related link.
We are looking for the possible blood types of a MOTHER.Available information:Father type O pos -- can only be OO with Rh (++) or (+-)Genes: O, (+), (-)Baby type O neg -- can only be OO with Rh (--)Baby receives one gene from each parent: Mother must contribute an O and Rh (-)Blood type AO with Rh pos (+-) or neg (--)Blood type BO with Rh pos (+-) or neg (--)Blood type OO with Rh pos (+-) or neg (--)With the father contributing an O and (-) gene, the mother mus contribute the other O and (-); therefore the mother can be Type A pos/neg, Type B pos/neg or Type O pos/neg, with Type O neg being the best case of getting the O neg baby.
No. If both parents are type O, the child will also be type O.
NO. The alleles that lead to "O-type" blood are recessive to the alleles that lead to "A-type" blood and the child would have to inherit this "A" from one of his/her parents. Given that both parents are "O", there is nobody to inherit the "A" from. (This issue also presents with the exclusive RH- in the parents and RH+ in the child, because RH+ is dominant over the recessive RH-.)
We are looking for the possible blood types of a baby.Parental information:Mother type A neg --can be AA or AO with Rh (--) = contributes A, O, (-)Father type O pos --can only be OO with Rh (++), (+-) = contributes O, (+), (-)Baby receives one gene from each parent: Baby is type AO with Rh (+-) or (--) = Type A pos/negBaby is type OO with Rh (+-) or (--) = Type O pos/negYES, these parents could produce a Type A positive child.
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.