Probably brown.
It's very hard to answer this question as there are no details on what alleles the fathers or mothers DNA contains. The father has to have an allele for red hair for the child to have a chance of having it. Presuming that the father has a brown and red hair allele and the mother has the same it works out like this. Brown + Brown = Brown Brown + Red = Brown (Because it's dominant) Brown + Red (from other parents) = Brown (Because brown is dominant) Red + Red = Red The chances of brown therefore is 3:1 as you cannot be sure on what the child will receive. MORE like 5-1 his here will be blond
Yes, it is possible for a brown eyed father and a green eyed mother to produce a green eyed child. Eye color is determined by multiple genes, so the combination of these genetic factors can result in a child having a different eye color than either parent.
Both, I'm not exactly sure which eye color makes which, but it is something along the lines of...I don't know... Mom Dad Brown+Green=Blue See how it depends on both? (by the way, that isn't true, just an example)
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.
if the child is a boy, 0%. if it's a girl, either 100% if the trait is dominant in the father or 50% if it is recessive. there is also the possibilty of the daughter having it but just being a carrier (has the disease but no signs of it)
brown eyes because brown is the dominant color :)
i m pretty sure that child will have purple eyes
It's very hard to answer this question as there are no details on what alleles the fathers or mothers DNA contains. The father has to have an allele for red hair for the child to have a chance of having it. Presuming that the father has a brown and red hair allele and the mother has the same it works out like this. Brown + Brown = Brown Brown + Red = Brown (Because it's dominant) Brown + Red (from other parents) = Brown (Because brown is dominant) Red + Red = Red The chances of brown therefore is 3:1 as you cannot be sure on what the child will receive. MORE like 5-1 his here will be blond
Yes, it is possible for a brown eyed father and a green eyed mother to produce a green eyed child. Eye color is determined by multiple genes, so the combination of these genetic factors can result in a child having a different eye color than either parent.
It depends on the genes but most likely brown because the allele for brown eyes is dominant over all other alleles
It depends on the genes but most likely brown because the allele for brown eyes is dominant over all other alleles
if mother has black and the father has red it will probally be brown
Brown color of eye is dominant over blue color. If the mother is homozygous for brown color of eye, than the all the children will have brown color eyes. If mother is heterozygous for brown eyes, than 50% of children will have brown eyes and 50% will have blue eyes.
blue
The eye color of the twins can vary. They may have brown eyes if they inherit the dominant brown eye color gene from the mother. Or they may have green eyes if they inherit the recessive green eye color gene from the father. It is also possible for the twins to have a mix of both brown and green eye colors.
Both, I'm not exactly sure which eye color makes which, but it is something along the lines of...I don't know... Mom Dad Brown+Green=Blue See how it depends on both? (by the way, that isn't true, just an example)
The genetics of eye color are more complex than previously thought. Almost any parent-child combination of eye colors can occur.