i have no idea what you are talking about!
No, a parent with AS and AA genotype cannot give birth to a child with AC genotype. The parent can only pass on either the A allele or the S allele to their child, resulting in genotypes of either AA or AS.
The parents must be heterozygous for the fainting gene, meaning one parent has the dominant allele (N) and the other has the recessive allele (n). This would result in a 50% chance of the offspring inheriting the recessive allele from both parents and fainting.
The last name at your parent's birth refers to the family name inherited from their parents.
A birth father is a genetic father of a child, as opposed to an adoptive father or stepfather.
Adoptive parent. Once a child has been adopted, his adoptive parents are his parents, period. It is as though he had been born to them. He no longer has ANY legal relationship to his birth parents; he has no claim on them nor they on him.
Legally, a parent can only change wrong information on a birth record, and even then, it's difficult to do. Parents who dislike or hate each other cannot remove the other parent's name from a birth certificate.
that don't make sense...how many PARENTS actually have kids?um,all of them duh? Answer: This is a matter of semantics. A parent a is a person who is in charge of the raising of a child. A parent is also the (female) person who physically grows the child in her body - generally called the birth parent. A parent is also the other partner who contributes the genetic material to the child (egg or sperm) either through direct action or donation (genetic parent). Therefore: * All parents (child raisers) have children * Many parents are both birth parents and child raisers and have children * Some parents are birth parents (have children) but not child raisers (children given to adoption) and have no children (to raise)* Some parents are birth parents but have no genetic tie to the children and do not participate on raising the children (surrogate mothers) * Some parents are genetic material donors (egg and sperm donors) but never participate in the child raising
If both parents are carriers of the sickle cell trait (genotype AS), there is a 25% chance that their child will inherit the sickle cell disease (genotype SS). Each parent has one normal hemoglobin allele (A) and one sickle cell allele (S), which means the possible combinations for their child are AA, AS, and SS. Therefore, the probability of the child being affected by sickle cell disease is 25%. If both parents have sickle cell disease (genotype SS), then all children will also be affected (100%).
Legally, a parent can only change wrong information on a birth record, and even then, it's difficult to do. Parents who dislike or hate each other cannot remove the other parent's name from a birth certificate.
In most cases, a non-biological parent cannot adopt a child without the birth parent's consent. The birth parent's signature is typically required for the adoption to proceed unless their rights have been terminated by the court due to specific reasons, such as abandonment or unfitness.
The place of birth on the passport for both parents is typically listed under the section for personal information or bio data. It indicates the city or country where each parent was born.
Yes because there is the after birth from the guinea pig