it generally could if someone who was a male or female was color blind too. Like if your a boy.... and the person who was color blind was a girl then you might have gotten it from her.. usually you get stuff from the opposite sex then the same sex in a situation like this... there's nothing to be woried about.. this just means that you are more like the other sex then you are your own...
male
Color blindness is carried on male genes only.
Offspring usually means 'children', or 'answers'. That should help. _____________ I'm guessing that it's a biology question, and it's dealing with genetics. If so the question is asking you to report all the different ways that the genes of the parent organisms can combine to produce different values for a given characteristic. For example, you might list one possibility as "male, with such-and-such eye color, or "male with color blindness", or "female carrier of color blindness", that kind of thing. The idea may be to determine how genotype and phenotype interact, and to determine from that the probabilities of having an offspring with a the various possible phenotypes.
50% probability that the sons produced from this union will be color blind. 50% probability that a son will not have the disease. 50% probability that a daughter will be a carrier of the allele for color blindness. 50% probability that a daughter will not be a carrier. Phenotypically this would be 1male color blind, 1 male not color blind, 1 female carrier and 1 female non-carrier. Assuming that the probability of male and female offspring is identical...this would be 25% of each genotype mentioned above. Based on phenotype, without regard to sex the percentages of normal to colorblind would be 75% to 25% with the 25% displaying the characteristic all being male.
colorblindess is a sex-linked recessive trait. This means the females that are colorblind will give ALL male offspring colorblindness. colorblindness is on the X , so the male gets on X from mom and the Y from dad. So the male will have and affected X that he got from the mother
100% of all male offspring will be colorblind. 0% of all femal offspring will be colorblind.
you can't predict that. it depends on what sex the offspring is. if it is a female, she could be color blind because her father is, but a male could be color blind either way. because color blindness is carried on the Y chromosome and not the X chromosome.
The expected phenotypic ratio for their offspring is 1:1, with a 50% chance of being color blind (male with the X-linked recessive trait) and a 50% chance of having normal color vision. This is because the daughter is a carrier of the recessive allele, which can be passed on to her offspring regardless of the father's color vision status.
Individuals with color blindness often have a normal male karyotype (46,XY) or female karyotype (46,XX). The genetic basis for color blindness typically involves mutations in genes located on the X chromosome, leading to different types of color vision deficiencies.
Color blindness is a defect in the x chromosone. Women always provide an X chromosone in their eggs. Men can either deliver an X or a Y chromosone in their sperm. Both men (XY) and women (XX) carry it. But it is more prevalent in men because they only have one X chromosone, whereas women have two X chromozones and it is very unlikely that both would be defective.
Color blindness happens only to the male gender.
Color blindness is typically linked to the X chromosome. The most common form, red-green color blindness, usually affects males more than females because they have only one X chromosome. If a male inherits a faulty gene for color vision on his X chromosome, he will likely experience color blindness.