no
Yes. The father's phenotype is AO+*; the mother's is OO--.
Yes, this is possible. only if the mother's alleles are Heterozygous (Rh+Rh-).
No, if both parents are O negative (meaning they do not have the Rh antigen), they cannot have a Rh positive baby. RH positive blood type requires the presence of the Rh antigen when processing blood types.
The negative in "O Negative" means that it's Rh negative, meaning that anyone, either positive or negative can receive that Rh type. O negative blood can be given to anyone. It's the Universal Donor.
You would give them A Rh Negative blood or you could also give them O Rh Negative as well. Group O is the universal donor so it can be given to anyone. If the patient is Rh Negative, they can only receive Rh Negative blood. If the patient was Rh positive, they can receive Rh positive or Rh negative.
Yes. For the child to be O negative, he must have inherited an O from each of his parents and an Rh negative from each parent. This is possible with an O positive parent and an A positive parent. Blood type O can only be in the form OO (an O from each parent). Blood type A can be either AA (an A from each parent) or AO (an A from one parent and an O from the other) since A is dominant over O. So, if one parent is the AO variety of A, an O can be given. Thus, two Os can be given if one parent is blood type O and the other is blood type A, causing blood type O in the child. Rh positive can be either two Rh positives (a positive from each parent) or one Rh positive and one Rh negative since Rh positive is dominant over RH negative. Rh negative can only be two Rh negatives. If each Rh positive parent is the combination of one Rh positive and one Rh negative, they can each give an Rh negative to the child.
No, O blood type is always Rh positive.
No - blood group O is recessive, two O parents can only produce an O child. A Rh+ mother and Rh- father can produce either a Rh+ or Rh- child - Rh+ is the dominant factor. No - blood group O is recessive, two O parents can only produce an O child. A Rh+ mother and Rh- father can produce either a Rh+ or Rh- child - Rh+ is the dominant factor.
get a bandana get beat up get money wear red. from saahir larosa = Answer = I'm going to say this in a sense that you have some clue about what I'm about to say. The child CAN indeed have a blood type of A negative, because the mother's Rh is Rr which is still considered Rh+ because the "R" is dominant over "r". If the father has the same Rh, the child has 25% of being Rh-(without doing dihybrid cross).
Yes. O and Rh negative are both recessive.
No. If both parents are Rh+, they can only pass on Rh+.
Rhesus negative is one of the major two variants in blood typing (the other obviously being Rh positive). For example, people refer to themselves as "A+", "O-" or "AB-". There is nothing wrong with having it.