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Yes, if they both carry a recessive (hidden gene) for freckles, then yes their child would have a 25% chance of having freckles.
ff (apex)
Yes it depends on their genes
ff (apex)
PHENOTYPE: 75% with freckles 25% without freckles GENOTYPE: 1FF:2Ff:1ff
We'llsay F is dominant for freckles and f is recessive for non-freckled. The father is ff The mother is Ff The child is ff. Probability of this cross producing a homozygous recessive child is 50%. There isn't a precise term for this cross.
Pale skinned Caucasians often have freckles. Freckles can occur anywhere on the body, especially face, arms, and upper chest. They can get redder with sunlight. There is no way to get rid of freckles.
Rinsing your face with lemon juice can help bleach your freckles and even out your skin tone, but this is not recommended by dermatologists because it is very drying. To help your freckles not get any darker, try to stay out of the sun, and when you must be in direct sunlight, wear sunblock. Freckles are beautiful, though!
A B+ parent can have a child with A+ blood. The other parent must be type A or type AB for this to occur.
Well, you can't. freckles occur when you spend a lot of time outside.
Yes. For this to occur, the parents must be genotypically AO and BO, respectively. Each parent must pass along the recessive"O" gene to the child (OO).
Some people do. It must depend on whether their butts get exposed to sun.