O plus.
no there is no harm
Yes, "b" and "o" are both blood types that are compatible for reproduction, so a baby's blood type could be a combination of the two parents' blood types. A healthy baby can certainly result from this pairing, as long as both parents do not have any genetic disorders that could affect the baby's health.
It could be possible, but only if both the parents are heterozygous.If the mother is AO and the father is BO - there is a 25% chance the child will be OO (O blood group).However, if either or both of the parents are homozygous (AA or BB) - then they cannot have an O child.
The baby could have blood type A+ or A-. The Rh factor (positive or negative) is determined by the father's blood type, while the ABO blood group (A, B, O, AB) is a combination of both parents' blood types in this case.
Yes. Everyone carries a pair of genes for every trait (eyes, hair, even blood type). One is dominant and one is recessive.One of these parents likely a carried the B-Neg blood type on a recessive gene and it was expressed as a dominant trait in the baby.
It is possible for the baby to be O if both parents were Ao
Yes, a baby can have problems no matter what blood type.
no there is no harm
No but it can have a type: +TJ)T(U34tWEG
Yes, "b" and "o" are both blood types that are compatible for reproduction, so a baby's blood type could be a combination of the two parents' blood types. A healthy baby can certainly result from this pairing, as long as both parents do not have any genetic disorders that could affect the baby's health.
Parents should re-test their blood types to check if there was any error in their past result. there is no way to have A blood type baby if both were O
No...well, unless one of the parents is a chimera, but the chances of that are remote.
It could be possible, but only if both the parents are heterozygous.If the mother is AO and the father is BO - there is a 25% chance the child will be OO (O blood group).However, if either or both of the parents are homozygous (AA or BB) - then they cannot have an O child.
Yes. Both A and B are "dominant" genes, so if the parents have the genotype AO and BO, then there's a 1/4 chance the child will have genotype OO.
Two parents with blood type A+ can have an O+ baby. If they do so, the parents are certainly heterozygous for type A.
No - this is not possible. The baby must inherit the B allele from one of it's parents - but neither of these parents have one. The only possibilities with these parents are blood type A or O, depending on whether the parent with A-type blood is heterozygous, AO, or homozygous, AA.
For a baby with AB blood type : both parents should be AB. or one is AB and the other is B. or one is A and the other is B.