That would add up to 50%.
All of their children would have type O blood, as the mother can only pass on an O blood type allele and the father can only pass on A or B blood type alleles. Since the mother is OO and the father is either AA or AB, their children would inherit one O allele from the mother and one A or B allele from the father, resulting in type O blood for all offspring.
YES! If the woman has type AB blood type andthe man has type BO blood tye it is possible for them to have a child with AO blood type which registers as type A. It is rare though. Genetics tell us that they have a 50% chance of a baby with type B blood and a 25% chance of a baby with type AB blood. That means that they have a 25% chance of having a baby with type A blood. Remember this doesnt account for positive or negaive antibodies.
A woman with type AB blood has both alleles that give blood both the A antigens and the B antigens, but the man with type O blood has both of the alleles that lack these antigens. Because the child will receive one allele from the mother and one from the father, none of their children will have AB or O blood.
Absolutely - blood type does not limit the potential spouses for anyone. However, a B- woman chooses to have children with a man with Rh positive blood of any type (AB, A, B or O), she needs to be careful and let her doctor know that she may be carrying an Rh+ baby even though she is Rh-. The doctor can explain the potential complications, as well as what the doctor can do to prevent or minimize the potential for those complications.
If you're a woman, then any kid that you've given birth to is your biological child. If you're a man, then any kid that came from you getting a woman pregnant is your biological child. But adults may also adopt children, born and sired by someone else. These will then be just as much their kids in the eyes of the law, but they won't be their biological children.
Their children can have blood groups A or O.
its zero
0%
0%
Yes, the fact there is children has no baring on giving blood. The only thing that is important is blood type and if your blood type is compatible with your wives. A woman's blood doesn't change because she has given birth.
All of their children would have type O blood, as the mother can only pass on an O blood type allele and the father can only pass on A or B blood type alleles. Since the mother is OO and the father is either AA or AB, their children would inherit one O allele from the mother and one A or B allele from the father, resulting in type O blood for all offspring.
A or B
Because, in the Indian culture, all a woman is good for is to produce children and keep house. Like the cow, women produce milk for their babies to be raised on until they are weaned when they're a few months old, and produce kids.
The blood type of any children would depend on the zygosity in the woman. (Both O and Rh negative are recessive, and will be homozygous in the man). If the woman is homozygous B, then the children will B. If the woman is heterozygous B, either O or B (with 50% chance of each). In the same way, if the woman is homozygous Rh positive, then the children will also be positive. If the woman is heterozygous, then children will be either positive or negative. In short, the possibilities for child blood types are either B or O, with Rh positive or negative.
the child has o negative blood
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.
Do a punnet square.I am really bad at them, otherwise I would be more helpful. Got a C in biology.