Yes.
There is no relationship between the gender of a baby and the blood group of the parents.
Yes, it is possible. The child could inherit the A blood type from the father and the B or O blood type from the mother, depending on the specific alleles that each parent carries. Blood type inheritance follows specific rules, so it is possible for a child to have a different blood type than either parent.
No, a parent with AS and AA genotype cannot give birth to a child with AC genotype. The parent can only pass on either the A allele or the S allele to their child, resulting in genotypes of either AA or AS.
Yes, the sex of the offspring is determined by the chromosomes contributed by the parents. The female parent always gives an X chromosome, while the male parent can contribute either an X or a Y chromosome, determining whether the offspring will be male (XY) or female (XX).
Yes, it is possible for a father with blood type A and a mother with blood type B to have a baby who is male or female with blood type AB if the baby inherits one A allele from the father and one B allele from the mother. In the ABO blood group system, the A and B alleles are codominant, meaning both can be expressed in the offspring.
We are looking for the possible blood types of a baby.Parental information:Mother type O pos >> is OO with Rh (++) or (+-)Father type A neg >> can be AA or AO with Rh (--)Baby recieves one gene from each parent: Baby is type AO with Rh (+-) or (--)Baby is type OO with Rh (+-) or (--)Therefore, the baby one of these blood types: Type A Rh posType A Rh negType O Rh posType O Rh negYES, an O pos mama and A neg papa can have an Rh neg child.
Yes if both have the same blood group , the child at birth will have trouble.
A male parent is considered to be the father of the child in most cases. A male parent can also be a step-father or even the grandfather of the child.
A male offspring is a son.
The progeny could have any of the 4 blood groups, viz., A, B, AB and O. (positive only) The ABO blood typing system is an example of codominance. In codominance, both the alleles are expressed.
Because sex is determined by the male parent, not the female.
Depends if the parents are heterozygous and homozygous. Homozygous meaning that they have the same alleles, heterozygous meaning that they have different alleles, but one allele is dominant. If they have homozygous the chances are impossible, if they are heterozygous then there is a chance.
father
yes. all of the blood types can marry any other blood type.
Yes, it is possible. The child could inherit the A blood type from the father and the B or O blood type from the mother, depending on the specific alleles that each parent carries. Blood type inheritance follows specific rules, so it is possible for a child to have a different blood type than either parent.
All blood groups are possible for children born from a combination such as this, regardless of which group is the male and which is the female.
In general, child support is a percentage of net income. The law does not distinguish between male and female obligors.
No, a parent with AS and AA genotype cannot give birth to a child with AC genotype. The parent can only pass on either the A allele or the S allele to their child, resulting in genotypes of either AA or AS.