The child can be A, B or AB. The only group the child shouldn't be is O.
You receive one allele from each parent. Each group actually has two places. Therefore the B is actually BO or BB.
If child is A, this means the mother's group is BO.
Now mix and match.
Mother gives B Father gives B Child is B
Mother O Father B Child B
Mother O Father A Child A
Mother B Father A Child AB
Mother B Father B Child B
The Rh factor is similar but not so easily determined. While it also has two places, the + can hold a - for it's second placement +-
For instance, my mother is AB Neg but all of her children are Pos. This means her Rh factor must be -+.
Hope this helps.
It will depend on whether the father is heterozygous, BO, or homozygous BB. If he is heterozygous the child could have blood type B or O. If he is homozygous then the child will have blood type B.
If both parents are heterozygous Rh+Rh-, then there is a 75% chance the child will be positive, and a 25% chance it will be negative. If either parent is homozygous, Rh+Rh+, then the child must be positive.
There will be a 50% chance that the baby will have type B blood, and a 50% chance that the baby will have type O blood.
If one parent is B Negative and one is A Positive, the baby can be A Positive, A Negative, B Positive, B Negative, AB Positive, AB Negative, or possibly O Positive or O Negative.
if father blood group is homozygous (BB)
then all kids will have B blood type
if father blood group is heterozygous (Bi)
then 50% will be O and the other 50% are B
A child of parents with A+ and B+ blood can have A, B, AB, or O with Rh+ or Rh-.
So the child has a chance to have any blood type with that combination.
The child will have bloodgroup B or O
A or AB
Absolutely. A child will either have its mother's blood type or its father's blood type. If the mother's blood type is NOT O, then someone else is the father.
can a mother of o blood group have a healthy child with a father type o
O
ab
95% not.
No
The mother and father both have heterozygous alleles for the blood group A. The blood group A can have the alleles AA or AO, when both parents are AO, there is a one in four chance that the child will have blood group O as this blood group is recessive.
Probably more than likely A+. Because the +Rh gene is usually dominate. Take for instance- Mother is A+, Child is A=. Father is A=, In this instance the father has the dominate gene for the absence of the Rh antigen on the redcell. The mother is recessive.
The mother can be type A or AB. She cannot be type O or B.
yeah its possible.
The child could either be blood type A or blood type B.