NO. See the answer for "Reason for brown hair and blue eyes"
Oh my gosh no! Green eyes are gorgeous. I wish I had them! Honey, if you got 'em, count your blessings. They're rare. Green eyes come from having genes for brown eyes, but also genes for less concentrated pigment. Hazel eyes come from having blue-eye genes, and genes for less concentrated pigment.
No, having truly rainbow-colored eyes is not possible in humans. Eye color is determined by the amount and distribution of melanin in the iris, which can result in variations of brown, blue, green, and hazel.
Yes, it is possible for a blue-eyed male and a brown-eyed female to have a brown-eyed child. Eye color is a polygenic trait, meaning it is influenced by multiple genes. Both parents can carry genes for brown eyes, and if those genes are passed on to the child, they can have brown eyes even if neither parent has brown eyes.
The chances of a schnauzer having blue eyes are very low, as the breed typically has dark brown eyes. Blue eyes are considered a rare trait in schnauzers.
50%
according to genetics your daughter would have a 25% chance of having blue eyes because in humans blue eyes is a reccessive trait and Brown is a dominant. also having blue eyes mean that your eyes are missing something to help prevent pink eye( fun fact)!
The probability of having a blue-eyed child depends on the genetic makeup of the parents. If both parents carry the recessive allele for blue eyes (Bb), where "B" represents the brown eye allele and "b" represents the blue eye allele, there is a 25% chance of having a blue-eyed child (bb). If one or both parents have brown eyes but carry the blue eye allele, the probability may vary. If neither parent has the blue eye allele, the probability of having a blue-eyed child is 0%.
A genotype is having a specific gene pair. A phenotype is a specific appearance. For instance, with eyes, the brown gene is dominant over the blue gene, so a person with the brown-brown, brown-blue or blue-brown genotype will have a brown-eyed phenotype. If they have a blue-blue genotype, they will have a blue-eyed phenotype. (it's actually way more complicated, because there's a number of eye color genes and there's a hierarchy (or possibly even a cyclical network (a la rock paper scissors - brown>blue>green>brown)) of dominance in the genes, but you get the idea.)
Yes, in the Morganville Vampires series, Shane Collins is described as having blue eyes.
The children would likely have a 50% chance of having brown eyes and a 50% chance of having blue eyes. Eye color is a polygenic trait, meaning it is determined by multiple genes, so the actual outcome can vary.
Caucasian babies' eyes are usually, but not always, blue at birth. The eyes of black people are not usually blue at birth, but brown. Typically, a newborn babies eyes are blue or gray-blue and may not attain their true color until 9-months of age.
The chances of a miniature schnauzer having blue eyes are very low, as this breed typically has dark brown eyes. Blue eyes are considered a rare trait in miniature schnauzers.