50%
50%
There is no chance that the child will have hemophilia even if the spouse has hemophilia. Any girls the couple has will be carriers if the spouse has hemophilia.
50%
The chances of their son having hemophilia depend on several factors, including the specific type of hemophilia and the genetic status of the parents. Hemophilia A and B are X-linked recessive disorders, which means that if the mother is a carrier, there is a 25% chance with each pregnancy that a son will inherit the disorder. If the father has hemophilia, all daughters will be carriers, and none of the sons will be affected. Therefore, the likelihood varies based on the parents' genetic backgrounds.
There are no hard answers to this, it depends strictly on luck. The statistics are though not very good for their children. Statisically the couple have a chance of having a normal son, a daughter that is a carrier for hemophilia, a daughter with hemophilia and a son with hemophia.
You can get it from your mom if she has the trait but that only apply to men, if your a girl you have to inherited it from your mother and father.
It is very much recessive with only one exception, which is that there is a large portion of women who simply carry the trait but dont actually have it. If you are to procreate with a female carrier than your chances of having a hemophiliac child are still not very high. You can find all the info you need by using a Punnett Square method to figure out the chances of hemophiliac children with 2 parents.
Father
She has 1/2 chance. We can figure out exactly what her parents' genotypes were. Her brother has a Hemophilia allele that he got from his mom. So their mom has at least 1 Hemophilia allele. If she had 2 then she would have Hemophilia. The father cannot have a Hemophilia allele because it would have been expressed. So her chances are 1/2 because her mother has 1 Hemophiliac and 1 normal allele.
Yes, he has a daughter..!
Zoe.