No. The child will be either group A or group B, but not group O. This is because the father can donate only a group A gene or a group B gene, so since group A and group B are dominant over group O, the child could not have group O blood.
The genotype of the father is certainly OO (because blood type O is recessive). The genotype of the mother however can be AO or AA (both give blood type A). The baby will have a combination of the genes from the mother and the father (one of each) and so: - If the genotype of the mother is AA and the genotype of the father is OO, the baby will certainly have AO as genotype and has therefore blood type A. -If the genotype of the mother is AO and the genotype of the father is OO, the baby can have AO or OO as genotype. AO results in blood type A and OO in blood type O (50% chance).
No. The Mother is IAIB and the father is ii. So, in gamete formation, the mother will produce IA and IB, while the father only produces i. When the gametes fuse, there will be two possible genotypes (and phenotypes) for the baby: IAi (A blood type) or IBi (B blood type). The Rh factor (+ or - ) has no relevance in this question, really. The REAL father can be either: IAIB, IAi, or IBi. The child MUST get an IA or IB allele from the father.
ab+ a+ b+
Not necessarily. The blood type of a first born baby can be the same as the mother's, but it can also be different if the baby inherits a different blood type allele from the father. The baby's blood type is determined by a combination of the parents' blood types.
Go Home.
If the mother and father are both type O, the baby cannot be type AB.
then the baby will be O plus, or AB plus , I think .
Yes.
The baby's blood type would either be type A or type O. The father (phenotype A) could have an underlying genotype of either AA or AO. Therefore, the baby could have either type A (AO - with A from the father and O from the mother) or type O (OO - with O from the father and O from the mother) blood.
Yes - and the baby will have a blood type of O.
It is possible. It depends on the blood group of the mother.
A
Yes, it is possible. The geneotype of the mother would be either BB or BO and for the father would be OO. If you cross the father's geneotype and either of the mother's then at least two of the four outcomes will be for B blood type. As for the - and +, positive is dominant over negative. The father could be + - or + + and the mother would be - -. Either combination would result in at least two positives. Therefore, it is possible for the mother to be B-, the father to be O+ and the baby to be B+. I added the link to the website where I got my info from. I want to know if an rh b neg blood type mother and an O positive father can have an A positive baby?
The Baby Would Be Type A Blood
Yes, it is possible. The geneotype of the mother would be either BB or BO and for the father would be OO. If you cross the father's geneotype and either of the mother's then at least two of the four outcomes will be for B blood type. As for the - and +, positive is dominant over negative. The father could be + - or + + and the mother would be - -. Either combination would result in at least two positives. Therefore, it is possible for the mother to be B-, the father to be O+ and the baby to be B+. I added the link to the website where I got my info from. I want to know if an rh b neg blood type mother and an O positive father can have an A positive baby?
No, the child can be either A+ or O+...
A