Depending on their actual genotypes and which of those genes the offspring receive, their offspring might have AB, A, B, or O blood type.
For the man to have a phenotype blood type A he might have either genotype AA or Ao.
For the woman to have a phenotype blood type B she might have either genotype BB or Bo.
my wife ;)
woolly monkeys might have 4-5 offsprings in a month.
cardio
the heart pumps the blood around the body
It might lead to certain variations in the offsprings......
Yes, it is possible for a type O individual and a type AB individual to have a child with blood type A. This would occur if the type AB parent passed on the A allele and the type O parent passed on the O allele, resulting in the child having blood type A.
I dont think so.. never heard of that but i might be wrong
This might be thought of as a species if the group indicated was large enough to include all of the potential members that can breed and produce viable fertile offspring. This would mean that animals which can breed and produce infertile offspring such as horses and donkeys which can mate and produce offspring are not of the same species. This situation would be within the bounds of the question. When a group which is of one species but is of limited such a limited population that the only can breed with a small number of individuals and produce a fertile offspring it would be described as a bottlenecked population. This can lead to severe genetic drift in that population.
Only a homozygous recessive individual will have the phenotype created by two recessive alleles.Since the term produce might indicate the production of offspring parents that can only produce offspring with a recessive phenotype must both have homozygous recessive genotypes.
C) The maximum level of blood glucose would be higher.
Parents must be blood type A or O. Any other blood type will not result in a sole A type child. It might result in several other combinations though, which are not relevant to this question.
Two features of the cirulatory sytem that might produce high blood pressure are heart rate and artery size. If your hert is beating fast, it will push blood rapidly through the arteries, building up blood pressure. If your artery size are small, then the narrow or partly clogged arteries produce high blood pressure. A third option would be artery elasticity. If you artery looses their elasticity and becomes hard, it may also produce high blood pressure as well. Hope that answers your question!! ;)