Not as a result of their blood types. The ABO blood groups do not pose any threat when creating offspring - A, B, AB and O can all have children together. The Rh factor (+/-) may have an affect in the second pregnancy if the mother is negative.
No, parents with blood types AB and O can have children with normal blood types. The blood type of the child is determined by the combination of genes inherited from their parents. In this case, the child could inherit either the A or B gene from parent AB and an O gene from parent O, resulting in a normal blood type.
Yes, the child's blood type can be B if the father has o.
Yes. They can have B+, B-, O+, and O-.
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 child can have blood group o+ o- b+ or b_
blood type o
Yes, even though the father is blood type O he could father an O child, A child, or B child.
No, the o parent has to Have O,O alliesand the B parent would only have B,B or B,O allies. The only are B,O and O,O.
No - this is not possible. The child must inherit one allele from each parent. This means that at least one parent must have a B allele in order for the child to have B-type blood. The only possibilities with B- X AB are B, A or AB.
Yes, this is possible the alleles for B-type are (I^B i ) or (I^B I^B ) for a perent to be O which alleles is (ii) the child should be (I^B i ) and in this way the child got the (i) from father, and I^B from mother.
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 could be B positive or O positive.