About 8 percent of males, but only 0.5 percent of females, are color blind in some way or another, whether it is one color, a color combination, or another mutation. This is due to males only having one X chromosone - But that's another story.
The same for a person who is not colorblind
50 percent
Nobody really knows, people say cats are colorblind when they are not really. So I would say "No." donkeys are not colorblind
2
Yes, anyone can be colorblind regardless of their race. Colorblindness is a genetic condition that affects the ability to distinguish certain colors, and it is not specific to any particular racial group.
People who are colorblind can have a driver's license for driving a motor vehicle. One just needs to be aware where the red and green are on a traffic light.
no color blind people are mainly red-green colorblind or less commonly blue-yellow colorblind
Yes, colorblind people can perceive the color white because white is a combination of all colors and does not rely on the ability to distinguish between specific colors.
If Mary's mother is colorblind, and therefore carries the colorblind gene on one of her X chromosomes, then Mary would inherit that gene as well. If Mary's father is colorblind, he would have to pass on his X chromosome with the colorblind gene to Mary, making her colorblind too. If only Mary's mother is colorblind, Mary's father is likely not colorblind.
There is no such thing as a colorblind object. There are color blind people, and all object reflect they just reflect differently based on how smooth the surface is.
Yes. There are different classifications of colorblindness. Even if fully colorblind, a sliced watermelon is still visible, as shades of grey.
Yes, if you look very hard.