Yes.
If the father has blood group AB, he has one copy of the group A gene (symbol IA), and one of the B gene (IB).
Mother, being group A, must have at least one copy of the IA gene. She must have the genotype IAi, where i is a recessive gene. [Someone with two copies (ii) has blood group O.]
So the child received an IB gene from Dad, and an i gene from Mum. The child must have the genotype IBi, which produces blood group B.
NO
Yes, the father with blood type B+ could be the biological father of a child with blood type A+. A child can inherit a different blood type from their parents due to genetic inheritance involving multiple alleles for the ABO blood group system.
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.
If the child is Rh positive, and it is the mother's second child, the mother's antibodies will attack the child's red blood cells when the blood becomes mixed during labor. An injection called RhoGAM will be administered to the mother right before delivery to prevent any attack of fetal red blood cells.
Yes, a man with blood type B and a woman with blood type AB can have a child with blood type B. The child would inherit one allele for blood type B from the father and either an A or B allele from the mother. The child's blood type could be either B 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.
NO
Yes! You could produce a child with either A or B blood.
Yes, as long as the mother has a strong A blood type
Yes, the father with blood type B+ could be the biological father of a child with blood type A+. A child can inherit a different blood type from their parents due to genetic inheritance involving multiple alleles for the ABO blood group system.
The child could be A+ or O+.
Could be B or could be O.
They could be anything depending on the parental genotype.
no
To determine whether or not the alleged father could be the true father, the blood types of the child, mother, and alleged father are compared.
Must be AA, or AO because the mother having O blood, which is homozygous recessive, must be OO. The signs mean little here except the father must carry them and the child inherited them from the father.
The child's blood type could be B positive or O positive.