Brown.
Brown eye gene = B
Blue eye gene = b
Each person has two copies of the eye color gene in their genome, one inherited from each parent. Now if both parents only carry the gene for brown eyes, BB and BB, then their child will receive one B from each parent, ending up as BB. The same works for blue eyes, if that's the only gene both parents carry, bb and bb. Each parents gives on b to the child, who ends up as bb.
If you have one parent who only has the gene for brown eyes, BB, and one parent who only has the gene for blue eyes, bb, then all the children will have brown eyes. Example: One parent gives a B, the other gives a b. Bb = brown eyes. Here's why: When you have two alleles (coding sequences) from genes that are at odds with each other, one version will override the the other. When dealing with eye color, B always dominates b. But these children now carry the b gene in them, and could pass it down to their own children. Some of them, depending on the other parent, could end up with blue eyes.
If one parent is Bb, and the other is bb, then each time they have a child, there is a 50% chance it will have blue eyes. Example: First parent is Bb, second parent is bb, then their children will end up as either Bb, bb, Bb, bb. If both parents carry the genes for brown eyes and blue eyes, then each time they have a child, there is a 25% chance it will have blue eyes. Example: First parent is Bb, second parent is Bb, then their children will end up as either BB, Bb, Bb, bb.
Blond and green genes are recessive so it depends on the brow-eyed, brown-haired parent's genetic lineage. Most probably most of the children will be brown-eyed and brown haired.
This depends on family. If a grandparent has/had red, brown, or blonde, the baby has potential for any of the three. Same as eye color. Possible genetics from grandparents may pass over and effect the hair and eye color of one's child. For example, one parent has blue eyes and one parent has green eyes. If the green-eyed parent has a mother or father with blue eyes, the baby has a higher potenial for blue eyes.
There are many factors that determine eye color, including multiple genes. Based on the given information, there is a possibility that your baby may have brown, hazel, or green eyes. The final eye color cannot be predicted with certainty.
The baby could have green eyes like both parents, and may have red hair like the mother or brown hair like the father. The combination of genes from both parents would determine the baby's specific eye and hair color.
Yes, it is possible for a brown hair, brown eyed parent and a blonde hair, green eyed parent to have a blonde hair, blue eyed baby. Eye and hair color are determined by a combination of genes from both parents, so different combinations can lead to a variety of outcomes in their offspring.
The baby could have either green or brown eyes, as eye color is determined by a combination of genetic factors. If both parents carry a gene for green eyes, there is a chance the baby could inherit that trait. However, if the brown-eyed parent passes on both brown-eyed genes, then the baby will likely have brown eyes.
yes because it depends on the eye color of the you and your husbands parent's eye color because the gene may be recessive
Blond and green genes are recessive so it depends on the brow-eyed, brown-haired parent's genetic lineage. Most probably most of the children will be brown-eyed and brown haired.
The genetics of eye color are more complex than previously thought. Almost any parent-child combination of eye colors can occur.
The genetics of eye color are more complex than previously thought. Almost any parent-child combination of eye colors can occur.
brown
hazel
Yes. The genetics of eye color are more complex than previously thought. Almost any parent-child combination of eye colors can occur.
Yes, possibly. The genetics of eye color are more complex than previously thought. Almost any parent-child combination of eye colors can occur.
This depends on family. If a grandparent has/had red, brown, or blonde, the baby has potential for any of the three. Same as eye color. Possible genetics from grandparents may pass over and effect the hair and eye color of one's child. For example, one parent has blue eyes and one parent has green eyes. If the green-eyed parent has a mother or father with blue eyes, the baby has a higher potenial for blue eyes.
If the baby gets a brown eye gene from one parent and a blue eye gene from the other parent, the child will likely have brown eyes because brown is dominant over blue. Or if the brown eyed parent has a blue recessive gene and the baby gets it then that child will have 2 blue eye genes and will have blue eyes. Of course there could be other recessive genes of other colors so the child could have hazel or green too. This is my basic understanding of how it works.
There are many factors that determine eye color, including multiple genes. Based on the given information, there is a possibility that your baby may have brown, hazel, or green eyes. The final eye color cannot be predicted with certainty.