Yes. For this to occur, the parents must be genotypically AO and BO, respectively. Each parent must pass along the recessive"O" gene to the child (OO).
No. A and B are dominant blood types and O is recessive. A parent with blood type AB can only donate a dominant A or dominant B. A child with blood type O would need to come from parents with one of the following combinations: A-A, A-B, A-O, B-O, O-O
The child's blood type is determined by his or her parents' blood types. If both parents have type A, the child can have either type A or O. If both parents have type B, the child can have either type B or O. If one parent has type A and the other parent has type B, the child can have type A, B, AB, or O, but he/she is most likely to have type AB. If both parents have type O, the child will have type O.
Yes, this is possible with possibility reaches to 50%.
b and o
For a transfusion - blood type O can donate to blood type B. However, blood type O cannot except B-type blood. For offspring, with one O parent and one B parent - the child could be blood type O or B depending on the genotype of the parent with B-type blood.
Yes, it is possible for parents with blood type O positive and B positive to have a child with B positive blood type. The child could inherit one B allele from the parent with blood type B and either an O or B allele from the parent with blood type O, resulting in a B positive blood type.
Yes, if the AB parent contributes a B allele, and the O parent contributes an O allele, then the child will be BO, and will have type B blood.
No, the expected blood types are only B and O. Yes they can because my mom has a- and my dad has a+ so yes you can have a difference in child and parents blood type but is it likely? No.
No. The child will be type B or O, it cannot be type A.
The possible blood types of the child would be B and O. Each parent can pass on a B allele or an O allele, resulting in a 50% chance of the child inheriting a B allele from each parent, making them blood type B. If the child inherits an O allele from one parent and a B allele from the other, they would be blood type B.
Yes, parents with O+ and B- can have a child with B- blood. Their children may be type O or type B, and may have Rh negative or positive blood types.
Yes, parents with O+ and B- can have a B+ child. They may have children with type O or type B, and may have children with negative or positive Rh factor.