Blood type does not prevent people from having children.
There were no women Survivors and Only One Child Survivor, The Rest Were Men.
because some women want more than one child. Some religions/cultures see it as wrong if a woman has more than one child.
No. If both parents are A negative the child can only be A negative or O negative. If the child is AB positive at least one parent must have type B or AB blood and at least one must be RH positive.
Probably, because it only takes one positive gene to have positive type blood. But if the positive parents each have one positive and one negative gene, there is a 25% chance their child will be negative.
Yes, a child can be B negative if one parent is A negative and the other parent is AB negative. The child would inherit one negative Rh factor from each parent, resulting in a B negative blood type.
yes
No. If both parents have a negative blood type, the child will either have the mother's blood type,or father's blood type, or if one parent is A- and the other B- only then can a child be born AB-. However, if two people with negative blood types try to have a baby, that may be very difficult. Sterility usually runs on the negative blood types, but conceiving a child is not impossible for them.
Yes, it is possible for parents who are AB positive and B positive to have a child who is A negative. This is because a child can inherit one A and one Rh negative gene from the parents, resulting in blood type A negative.
Yes! Parents have two genes for pos/neg blood type, and only one of them needs to be positive for the parent to have positive blood type. Most positive-blooded people have one positive gene and one negative gene. If both positive parents pass on their negative gene, they can have a child with a negative blood type.
No, the child's blood group would be the same as one of it's parents.
No, it can't happen. if one of the parents or both are +, the child will be Positive. I don't know if 2 negatives can have a positive. But i do know that if one of the parents is positive and the other is negative, you can have a either a positive or negative child. (I have twins, one is negative and the other is positive.)
It is possible as the Rhesus factor is a dominant trait. So, even if the parents have only one allele for the factor, there is a 1/4th chance that the child could get neither allele from the parents and end up as O negative.