Not necessarily. It depends on the father's blood type as well.
Yes. A parent either passes their type or the parent doesn't. In your case, your type is B, and you didn't pass this type to your child. The mother doesn't have either the A or the B type. The same goes with the RH.
nope..well first two negatives cannot make a positive because the RH factor (or the D antigen) on the red blood cells that gives you the + or - blood type is genetically inherited. This means that if neither parent has the D antigen they cant pass it onto their children .
No. O is recessive; the child of two type O parents will be of type O as well. (In fact, if either parent is O, the child cannot be AB. Either the kids got switched at the hospital, or somebody's blood test wasn't done properly.)
If the woman is type A and her mother is type O... her genotype is AO. If the man is type B and his father is type O... his genotype is BO. There is a 25% chance the baby will be type O.
no. The ABO system and Rh blood group are already decided the moment sperm meets ovum. It is decided by the gene we have. For ABO classification, to put it simply people with A blood type has two A gene or one A gene plus one O gene. People with B type have two B gene or one B gene plus one O gene. People with AB type has one A gene and one B gene. O type has two O genes. A father passes one of his blood gene to his child and a mother passes one as well that the child now has two, and the combination is what decides the child's blood type. Bombay type is a very rare blood type different from A, B, or O. You can only have it if your family has a very rare gene, or in other words, if one of your family has it.
You need information on the mother's blood type as well in order to answer that question.
probably because the child usually has the same blood type as the mother due to it being in her body.
Well the baby will have an O positive blood type.
A DNA blood test will confirm whether or not you are indeed the father. Some DNA tests can be done with saliva as well, A child can have either the father's blood type, the mother's blood type, or a combination of the two. For instance, a father with type A+, along with a mother with blood type B-, can have A+. A-. B+, or B-.
No possible way to tell. The A and O are phenotypes, meaning that their personal blood type has the respective characteristics. There is also their genotypes, which they get from their parents and can be two different types, although one of the two will be their genotype. So it is possible that A type blood came from an A parent and a B parent. The O blood could have come from an O parent and an AB parent. It is conceivable that those two could have four children, all with different blood types. The rhesus factor ( positive or negative ) is another complication.
It depends. If the mother of the child is A positive as well, the child will be A positive. This is also true if the mother is a type O. It wont be possible if the mother is B positive, since the child will be AB positive (the blood types are codominant).
We are looking for the possible blood type percentage of a baby.Parental information:Mother type AB -- can only have AB = contributes A or B geneFather type O --can only have OO = contributes O geneBaby receives one gene from each parent: Baby is type AO = Type ABaby is type BO = Type BGenerally with a Type O x AB there is 50% of a chance that the resulting children will be Type A and 50% Type B. HOWEVER: There is more to ABO blood typing that just the ABO gene.There is also an inhibitory gene that will change any genotype into the phenotype O.Therefore a person with genetically AB blood can be tested as having Type O.If the Type O parent has the inhibitory gene affecting his Type A, B or AB blood, then the outcome may produce Type AB or O children as well.
well i know from experience iv been diabetic for 10 yrs children get type 1 diabetes it is easily treatable with regular blood sugar readings and insulin injections see a doctor
Not normally. Father can only contribute an O. Mother can contribute a B, or perhaps an O (if she has BO genes). Child would be either O or B (with BO genes). However, rare exceptions do exist.
well the answer and yes and no sometimes they have a and some times they don't
well the answer and yes and no sometimes they have a and some times they don't
Blood type: O