yes, as long as both of the genetic parents have the blue eye trait as a recessive gene
I don't think two brown eyed parents produce a blue eyed child, but a brown eyed parent and a blue eyed parent can produce a child with blue eyes. Brown eyes are not always dominate.Two brown-eyed parents CAN produce a blue-eyed child if BOTH carry the recessive gene for blue eyes. Recessive means it can hide, but is still present and ready to be carried on to a future generation. Brown eyes ARE dominant. If you carry the gene for brown eyes, your eyes are brown. This does not mean you can't also carry the recessive gene for blue/green eyes.
NO. People with blue eyes do NOT have the brown eyed gene, if they did they themselves would have developed brown eyes instead of their blue as it is dominant. So two blue eyed parents can only pass the blue gene to their offspring.
A person with brown eyes can carry the blue eye allele because brown is a dominant trait, so they can have both blue and brown alleles in their genotype. However, a person with blue eyes cannot have a brown eye allele because blue eyes are a recessive trait, meaning they must have two copies of the blue allele in their genotype to express the trait.
It is possible for two brown-eyed parents to have a blue-eyed child if both parents carry a recessive gene for blue eyes. When these recessive genes are passed on to the child, they can combine to produce the trait of blue eyes, even if the parents themselves have brown eyes.
The gene that causes blue pigmentation of the eyes is a recessive gene. The parents both have to have that recessive gene for the child to have blue eyes. of course if the descendants of the baby have blue eyes or the ancestors
Blue eyed people have two recessives for blue. It is expressed as bb. A person with brown eyes is BB. Brown is dominate over blue. However a person with brown eyes can carry the gene for blue and they would be called Bb.
I don't think two brown eyed parents produce a blue eyed child, but a brown eyed parent and a blue eyed parent can produce a child with blue eyes. Brown eyes are not always dominate.Two brown-eyed parents CAN produce a blue-eyed child if BOTH carry the recessive gene for blue eyes. Recessive means it can hide, but is still present and ready to be carried on to a future generation. Brown eyes ARE dominant. If you carry the gene for brown eyes, your eyes are brown. This does not mean you can't also carry the recessive gene for blue/green eyes.
NO. People with blue eyes do NOT have the brown eyed gene, if they did they themselves would have developed brown eyes instead of their blue as it is dominant. So two blue eyed parents can only pass the blue gene to their offspring.
A person with brown eyes can carry the blue eye allele because brown is a dominant trait, so they can have both blue and brown alleles in their genotype. However, a person with blue eyes cannot have a brown eye allele because blue eyes are a recessive trait, meaning they must have two copies of the blue allele in their genotype to express the trait.
There are two colors brown and blue that are most common.
Because the combination of brown hair blue eyes is strange. The person would get two dominant alleles for brown hair and two recessive alleles for blue eyes. It is not supposed to happen.
No they don't. Some are blue, some are part blue and part brown known as partie eyes, some have one brown one blue and some have both brown. I have a registered purebred Siberian and both her parent's had partie eye and our dog has two blue eyes. The blue eyes tend to be very blue when they're pups and fade in color as they get older.
It is possible for two brown-eyed parents to have a blue-eyed child if both parents carry a recessive gene for blue eyes. When these recessive genes are passed on to the child, they can combine to produce the trait of blue eyes, even if the parents themselves have brown eyes.
If what you're asking is how did your mother get blue eyes, then I can answer that. Brown is the most common eye color, meaning that it is obviously the dominant allele. Your mother must have gotten two recessive alleles for blue eyes; it's the only way that the recessive blue wouldn't be masked by the dominant brown.
Technically no. If two people have blue eyes then both copies of their eye colour gene are blue. If either of them had a brown eye gene they would of had brown eyes as its the dominant gene, so when they produce an offspring neither of them have a brown eye gene to pass down. Hence the offspring will also have both genes blue, resulting in blue eyes.
It is impossible for a baby to have brown eyes if both of his parents have blue eyes since the brown eye gene is more dominant.
The gene that causes blue pigmentation of the eyes is a recessive gene. The parents both have to have that recessive gene for the child to have blue eyes. of course if the descendants of the baby have blue eyes or the ancestors