Yes, two blue eyed people can produce brown eyed offspring, this usually occurs because there is a brown eyed family member which is directly related, eg. grandparent or great-grandparent, due to the fact that the genes are still in the family even if they lie dormant and skip a generation or two.
It means the parents carried the gene for blue eyes as a recessive gene.
The baby boy is most likely to have brown hair and blue or green eyes. Brown hair is a dominant trait, so it is more likely to be expressed. Blue eyes are recessive, but it is possible for the baby to inherit them if both parents carry the gene. Green eyes are a combination of blue and brown pigments, so the baby may inherit either blue or green eyes from the parents.
Yes. Brown is the domanent color. Look at his parents and her parents eyes. what colors do they have?
No... Brown eyes are an dominating gene. If none off the parents have brown eyes none of them have the brown eye gene to give the child.
It is impossible for a baby to have brown eyes if both of his parents have blue eyes since the brown eye gene is more dominant.
Yes, it is possible for a baby to have blue eyes in this scenario due to the presence of blue eye genes in the grandparents. Eye color is a complex trait that can be influenced by multiple genes, so even if both parents have brown eyes, they can still carry the genes for blue eyes that could be passed on to their child.
Well it depends also what color eye the mother's parents or any of the parents siblings have. Mother's Parents (both brown eyes) 5.1% blue eyes & 8.5% green eyes & 86.3% brown eyes Mother's Parents (green eyes & brown eyes) 7.8% blue eyes & 17.1& green eyes & 75% brown eyes Mother Parents (blue eyes & brown eyes) 14% blue eyes & 10.9% green eyes & 75% brown eyes Throwing siblings into the mix Mother's Parents (both brown eyes) Mother's Siblings (blue & green eyes) 8.0% blue eyes & 8.6% green eyes & 83.3% brown eyes Mother's Parents (both brown eyes) Mother's Siblings (blue eyes) 8.0% blue eyes & 8.6% green eyes & 83.3% brown eyes Mother's Parents (both brown eyes) Mother's Siblings (green eyes) 5.8% blue eyes & 10.8% green eyes & 83.3% brown eyes ...and so on
Of course the baby can have brown eyes!! Only 2 blue eyed people can have a blue eyed baby, any other eye colour is possible when 2 parents have different colour eyes.
Genetics is quite confusing. Both of the parents must have had one blue allele (gene) and one brown one. This means that there is a 1/4 chance that the baby could have brown eyes. Blue eyes are dominant, so if the baby had one blue gene in his eyes he would have had blue eyes. Since the parents had one of each, the baby had a 1/4 chance of having two blue alleles, 2/4 chance of 1 blue and 1 brown alleles (which still means both blue eyes), or 1/4 chance of 2 brown alleles. Sources: School Genetics
Blue eyes are a recessive trait. If at least one of the parents had a blue/hazel eyes with a mixture of blue and brown, then the couple's offspring could have brown eyes. If both parents had solid blue eyes, neither would have the dominant brown gene to pass to the baby, and it would have blue eyes, regardless of the grandmother's eye color.
If the baby gets a brown eye gene from one parent and a blue eye gene from the other parent, the child will likely have brown eyes because brown is dominant over blue. Or if the brown eyed parent has a blue recessive gene and the baby gets it then that child will have 2 blue eye genes and will have blue eyes. Of course there could be other recessive genes of other colors so the child could have hazel or green too. This is my basic understanding of how it works.
Yes, because your genes have both dominant and recessive traits, so you may have 1 blue and 1 brown and your wife may have 1 blue and 1 brown and (and this is gross simplification) when your genes combine if even one of your brown traits gets passed onto the child it will have brown eyes.