either, both, it doesn't depend on the gender. . .
Not necessarily. The allele for colorblindness is recessive. For a female, in order to be colorblind she must have to recessive alleles for colorblindness. Example: XcXc would be colorblind. XCXc would be a carrier for colorblindness, but not colorblind. For a male, because colorblindness is a sex-linked gene, he only needs one allele to be colorblind. Example: XcY is colorblind. XCY is not colorblind.
Why is colorblindness a sex-linked trait? Descendants of colorblind hemophiliac man both disease are sex- linked? why do non of the children have either hemophila or colorblind
Color blindness is sex linked.
Sex linked
Human being is the best example for this type of inheritance because the gene responsible for colorblindness is present on the X chromosome. Thus a heterozygous female is the carrier of colorblindness and some of the sons from this mother receiving the X chromosome with a gene for colorblindness will be colorblind because in males the other sex chromosome is Y, which remains neutral for such genes.
true and false it depends
For example, if a mother is a carrier for colorblindness (X+Xc), and a father has normal vision X+Y, then their sons have a 50% chance of colorblindness because they inherit their X chromosome from their mother and their Y chromosome from their father.
Usually female.
Not necessarily. The allele for colorblindness is recessive. For a female, in order to be colorblind she must have to recessive alleles for colorblindness. Example: XcXc would be colorblind. XCXc would be a carrier for colorblindness, but not colorblind. For a male, because colorblindness is a sex-linked gene, he only needs one allele to be colorblind. Example: XcY is colorblind. XCY is not colorblind.
With sex linked traits (the allele is found on the X chromosome) males are either affected or not (they have the defective allele or they don't). Women have two copies of the allele and can be a carrier.
yes because it can be that your parents have it so you may get it to
Yes. It is a sex-linked recessive trait found on the X chromosome.