The father's blood type would have to be A. This is because O is a recessive blood type and needs two O's to produce a child with and O blood type. So if the daughter is an A blood type so must her biological father's.
Your husband could be:AA (AA, AB)AO (AA, AB, AO, BO)AB (AA, AB, BB)OO (AO, BO)BO (AB, BB, BO, AO)Any of the above combinations could result in your daughter showing as "A" blood type, all possible combinations are shown with the "A" karyotype in bold).
The blood would be A+, the child's is always pretty much what the Father's is.
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).
Not necessarily. The blood type of a child is determined by the combination of the parents' blood types. It is possible for a daughter to have a different blood type than her father, depending on the specific blood type alleles inherited from both parents.
Yes, it is possible for a mother with blood group O and a father with blood group AB to have a child with blood group O. This would occur if the child inherited the O allele from the mother and the O allele from the father.
A or AB
Yes: if the mother is type A blood
Not if you are the mother. cousin, or basically family blood.
yes, the mother could o negative
yes, do a punnett square.
What is the Rh factor? My Husband is O- and I'm A+ we have an O+ Daughter
This doesn't say much about the father - he can have any blood type, except AB. He can also be either Rh positive or negative.
He mother and father have nothing to do with the child's blood type
Yes, it is possible for an A positive mother and a B positive father to have an O positive daughter. Both A (written as IA) and B (written as IB) alleles (versions of the gene) are dominant over the O (written as i) allele. Therefore the mother could have the alleles IAi, and the father IBi If the daughter receives the i allele from both parents, she will have O type blood. Rhesus positive is dominant, so as long as one of the parents passes on a dominant allele, the daughter will also be positive.
Absolutely. A child will either have its mother's blood type or its father's blood type. If the mother's blood type is NOT O, then someone else is the father.
Yes. A child of theirs can either be B negative or A negative.
Your husband could be:AA (AA, AB)AO (AA, AB, AO, BO)AB (AA, AB, BB)OO (AO, BO)BO (AB, BB, BO, AO)Any of the above combinations could result in your daughter showing as "A" blood type, all possible combinations are shown with the "A" karyotype in bold).