AB
blood group A & B, because when they inherited together gives rise to AB blood type. AB blood type is co-dominance currently there is no incomplete dominance blood type known to the scientific community
Incomplete dominance can create offspring that display a trait not identical to either parent but intermediate to the two. One example of incomplete dominance is a red flower and a white flower crossbreed to form a pink flower.
yes they can..... positive and negetive blood group depends upon Rh factor and it is nothing to do with incomplete dominance of blood group.
The answer to your question is incomplete dominance sweety. ^u^ Heehee! Hope this helps!
most common blood type is inherited by chilld
most common blood type is inherited by chilld
multiple allels
Codominance and incomplete dominance are the same in that they both apply to a heterozygote (an organism with two different alleles for one trait).The difference is in how the two different alleles are expressed in the phenotype, or appearance, of the organism.In codominance, you can see the effect of both alleles distinctly. A person who has one allele for type A blood and one allele for type B blood will have type AB blood. You can see the effects of both the A and the B allele, but they remain distinct from each other.In incomplete dominance, the effect of the two alleles is more blended, as if neither allele can completely overpower the other. In some flowers, plants with two alleles for white color are white, and plants with two alleles for red color are red, but a heterozygote with one allele for red and one for white is pink. (Not red and white as you'd see with codominance.)
Incomplete Dominance.
polygenic inheritance
incomplete dominance
It can be an example of co-dominance, a seen in people with type AB blood.