The infants blood type will be in the O's because o is a recessive jean A and b are dominate jeans meaning you get 1 jean from each parent so say dad was A he cauld have a recessive o ex Ao and mom is Bo dad gives A mom gives b blood type is AB dad gives A mom gives o Blood type is A but o is still in genitic makeup. ex Ao Both parents must contribute o for bloodtype to be o mom must be oo dad must be oo so baby must be oo. As for positives and negitaves IDK. PS I am only 13 but I know a lot so I am 100% sure of the answer.
the infants blood type is probably going to be blood type O
The bloodline always follows the father, so if your baby's father is Type A, your baby will be Type A as well.
Yes, both parents would be heterozygous for their bloodtypes in this case though: BO and BO.
The blood would be A+, the child's is always pretty much what the Father's is.
The father's blood type would have to be A or AB, and most likely negative.
Yes, a child with B+ blood can have a father with A- blood. In order for this to occur, the mother would need to be B+ or AB+ and the father would need to be heterozygous.
No.. I don't know why, but you cant. You would need a fingerprint, or skin, or hair, or even a semen sample to test for that to make sure. Blood Sample can only prove who is not your father.'Hope that helped.
O
Storing cord blood for the baby's own use is generally useless. Only a tiny fraction of 1% of babies will need it. Storing it for transfusion to another baby is very useful (not to mention altruistic). Yes, babies and parents would benefit from umbilical cord blood storage. This is because if anything happens to the babies after birth, you can get blood culture right away to replace the lost blood.
The child has to get his/her blood type from the parents. So therefore if both parents are O type then the kid has to be O type. This makes sense to me.
His parents would be his mother and father.
I believe there is no bird that feeds its babies its blood. The bird and its younglings would starve to death.
The mother AND the father are a child's next of kin. Next of kin is determined by legal adoption, marriage and blood. If a child's parents are deceased their next-of-kin would be their siblings by blood or by legal adoption.
It's almost impossible to know in less their blood is tested because children don't always match their parents.
no, he has at least one - but the other half could be + or - if baby is -- then both parents gave - meaning they both are one of these +- or --
Yes, both parents would be heterozygous for their bloodtypes in this case though: BO and BO.
If you mean blood types, yes. If both parents carry the recessive "O" blood gene there is a 1 in 4 chance each child could be type O. If you can find out the blood types of the parents' parents and even the grand parents you can narrow it down (sometimes). If you can eliminate the possibility that the "father" carries a recessive "O" he would be eliminated as a possible parent.
If one parent has blood type B and the other blood type O, it is possible to have a baby of blood type O or B. It is NOT possible (0% chance) to have a baby with blood type A.
If both parents had heterozygous blood-type genes, then the child could inherit the recessive O type from each parent. Suppose the mother had the genes for A and O, and the father had the genes for B and O. They would then have blood-types A and B respectively. Depending on which parts were passed to the child, any blood type would be possible.