It depends...due to DNA...
Skin color is determined by the combination of genes from both parents. A black mother and white father can have a mixed-race child with a range of skin tones. However, a white mother and white father cannot have a black child because both parents lack the genes for producing darker skin pigmentation.
The child will have black hair because the gene for black hair is dominant over the gene for red hair. Since the child inherits one gene for red hair from the mother (recessive) and one gene for black hair from the father (dominant), the dominant black hair gene will express itself. Therefore, the child's hair color will be black.
Black eye color is a recessive trait meaning that for someone to have it both the mother and father would have to pass off the gene for Black eyes. Since the dominant gene always prevails over the recessive and one of the parents had blue eyes, this means that the parent with black eyes had both recessive genes for black eyes and therefor passed on the recessive gene. The other parent with the Blue eyes must have both genes blue and black, but since blue is considered to be dominant over black the blue, they have blue eyes, but passed on the recessive black eye gene. B - Blue Eye Gene (Dominant) b - Black Eye Gene (recessive) Mother - Bb (Blue Eyes) Father - bb (Black Eyes) Child - bb (Black Eyes)
Genetics is a complex interplay of different factors, but a child of a Black father and a White mother could inherit a range of skin tones depending on the specific genetic combinations. The child could be anywhere on the spectrum between the parents' skin tones or may fall in between. Skin color is determined by multiple genes, so it's not possible to predict with certainty what color the baby will be.
A green eyed mother and a blue eyed father can have a child with blue eyes.
Skin color is determined by the combination of genes from both parents. A black mother and white father can have a mixed-race child with a range of skin tones. However, a white mother and white father cannot have a black child because both parents lack the genes for producing darker skin pigmentation.
yes it can
A child with a mixed mother and a Black father may be identified as biracial or multiracial, reflecting both parental backgrounds. The specific racial identity can vary based on cultural, social, and personal factors, as well as how the child chooses to identify themselves. Ultimately, race is a complex social construct, and the child's identity may encompass aspects of both parents' heritages.
no because the black mom could have had the child before she married the white man
i think they are called half cast
Whoever happens to be completing the form(s) at the time; after the child reaches adulthood, the child decides.
The child will have black hair because the gene for black hair is dominant over the gene for red hair. Since the child inherits one gene for red hair from the mother (recessive) and one gene for black hair from the father (dominant), the dominant black hair gene will express itself. Therefore, the child's hair color will be black.
Mother is a plus child 0 plus what could father be?
The child might have a combination of physical traits from both parents, such as skin color that falls somewhere between white and black. The child's appearance could vary widely depending on which genes are dominant, resulting in a unique blend of characteristics inherited from both parents.
Only in cases of illegitimate births. Well, the mother can take the child but she can't stop the child from seeing the father. the child deserves to see the father in their life. The father can also take the child back and the parents can share time with the child. Or the child can make his/her own decision to live with the mother or father.
Mulatto or bi-racial. They normally affiliate themselves with blacks.
Yes, equal to the mother.