Yes, paternal twins can have different blood types. This occurs when the twins inherit different combinations of alleles from their parents, as blood type is determined by multiple alleles (A, B, AB, and O). Since each twin can receive different alleles from each parent, they may end up with distinct blood types despite being twins.
Blood types are not related to body types. Blood is determined by your parents. There are 4 maternal and 4 paternal blood type possibilites. That then gives you 16 different possibilites.
Identical twins do have the same blood group, because they have the same DNA. One egg and one sperm create two people. Fraternal twins may not have the same, though they could, because they have different sets of DNA. Two different eggs, two different sperm, two different people.
Blood types have different cells in them as well as different antigens.
There are two types of twins -- monozygotic ("identical") from a single egg, and dizygotic (fraternal) from two eggs. Only dizygotic twins can have a different sex.
yes. dogs have different blood types?
Not quite. Different blood types result from different antigens present on the membranes of red blood cells.
Yes, they have a relationship together. Different blood types have different characteristics in diet. There are well-suited recipes for AB blood types as well.
3 different types of blood vessels are the arteries veins and capillaries
How hot your blood gets.
Yes, it is possible to chart the different blood types of blood. If you do a search on the web, you can find different charts and lists of blood types. These tables and lists are for informational and scientific purposes and may or may not be rateable depending on the site you go to.
There are many good books on blood types. The book "Blood Types" is a simple one to start with. It lists all blood types and what the different types mean.
No, there is no limitation on people of different blood types reproducing.