srtawberry brown xD
It depends on what genes that the parents have, it needs more information. But, it would most likely have brown eyes and brown hair because I think brown is the dominant gene for hair and eyes.
Gimger hair is becoming more of an unlikely hair colour, and it has been said that in around 50 years, it will be'extinct'. Hair colour is decided by your genes, but rather than looking at just the colour of the hair, you would need to look at the genes that each parent has. As the father is blonde, he will have two blonde hair genes, which are recessive. The mother has ginger hair, and therefore has one ginger hair gene, which is also recessive, along with another gene which could either be blonde, black, or brown. If you think about it as a chart like this, it becomes much more simplistic. . . . The b stands for blonde, the g for ginger, and the O for other. .other is used as we are not aware of the other gene that the mother has. The O, or other, is shown as a dominant gene. b b g bg bg O bO bO From this chart, it shows there is a 25% chance of being ginger, and a 25% chance of being blonde. Then a 50% chance of being other, which could also turn out to be blonde. The child is therefore more likely to have blonde hair. . .
This link should give you an idea about the eye colour: http://museum.thetech.org/ugenetics/eyeCalc/eyecalculator.html In order for the child to have red hair it needs to inherit the 'ginger gene' from both parents. We inherit two hair colour genes, one from our mother the other from our father. But because the ginger gene is recessive, you need two ginger genes to meet in the same person in order to show. If it doesn't have two ginger genes and instead a ginger and a brown gene the hair with show up brown because the brown is dominant over the ginger. The father obviously has both ginger genes, so will definitely pass on one ginger gene, the mother could also have one, but having definitely got a brown hair gene, the brown is dominant so you wouldn't know if she had a recessive ginger gene. The best thing to do is see if there are any red heads in the rest of the family, amongst the grandparents or even great grandparents on the mothers side, although it could have remained present and passed down, it would not show unless it meets with another ginger gene (like in the case of the father, his parent both had one). So basically it could have either brown or red. The general consensus is that the colouring of the child should be no darker than the darkest parent, so it is very unlikely you would get a child with black hair and brown eyes.
Two brown eyed parents can make a green eyed baby. Its all to do with genetics. It depends if both parents have a heterozygous gene for brown eye colour it is possible. Lets use Br for brown and G for green. A Homozygous brown gene would hypothetically look like this Br/Br A heterozygous brown gene would hypothetically look like this Br/G Homozygous basically means that there are 2 of the same genes coupled together (hence Br/Br) Heterozygous means 2 different genes that are coupled together (hence Br/G) If both parents have a homozygous gene for brown eye colour, their baby would have a 100% chance of having a brown eye colour. If both parents have a heterozygous gene for brown eye colour then there is a 25% chance that the baby will have green eyes and a 75% chance that the baby will have brown eyes. If one parent has a heterozygous brown gene and one has a homozygous brown gene then the baby will have a 100% chance of having brown eyes. There is also such as thing as "Designer Babies" where they fertilize an egg outside of the womb and genetically alter the DNA, so that you can change the hair colour eye colour etc.
No, it does not. Your parents pass on 50% of your DNA each through the chromosomes in the sex cells (egg and sperm). Depending on which gene is the more dominant, either the 'Grey Eye Gene' or the 'Brown Eye Gene' will determine the ultimate eye colour of the baby (majority of babies eye colour changes after a couple of weeks). The gender of the baby depends on whether both parents have passed on an 'X' chromosome, or whether one (believed to be the father) has passed on a 'Y' Chromosome. It is not related to the same gene that causes eye colour. My sister and I have Blue Eyes, inherited from my father as his gene was more dominant in that area in the DNA passed to us. My brother, from the same two parents, has Brown Eyes inherited from my mother, who in that instance had the more dominant gene.
yes and is very likely but there is nothing to worry about ginger hair is lovely
Most likely, no, the baby will not be a ginger because the "ginger gene" is recessive and non-dominant which means that it skips generations and then might not even show because say, brown hair, in a dominant gene. I am sorry to say that no, the baby will not be a ginger. (in 150 yrs. they will be extinct you know) Signed, Crazy Ginger Girl :D
Brown/hazel eyes and brown hair are dominant traits, this means that there are many possible gene combinations that could have led to the parents hair/eye colour. Resultantly it is very hard to have any idea what the baby will look like?
The cells will decide that. Two of the cells (different colour) will be in the baby, and there will be one boss. The colour of boss is what baby's eye colour is. But other colour will not disappear.
lime green, or a baby pink
black and white
most likely dark brown
brown with no spots at all. lachlan and Blake are awesome
No, well unless someone is your mother or father's family has red hair.
Most likely the baby will also have brown eyes and brown hair.
It depends, but most probably brown - because it is a more dominant colour. - x S.
Black and white or if muddy maby a few bits of brown