Probably brown. It depends on what the parents carry as a recessive gene.
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.
No that would create a moose.
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
I don't know what your scientific terms mean, but I can tell you that I am a blue eyed female (my father was brown eyed/my mother had hazel eyes). The father of my two children is brown eyed. Both of my children have blue eyes.
Your baby would have brown eyes.
A baby cannot have red eyes, as red eyes are not a natural eye color in humans. If a mother has blue eyes and the father has a red-eye color, the baby will most likely have blue or green eyes, as blue is a recessive trait and would be dominant over a hypothetical red trait.
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.
The brown-eyed person likely has the genotype Bb for eye color, where B represents the brown allele and b represents the blue allele. Since the mother is colorblind (XbXb), she contributes an X chromosome with the colorblind allele. The father with blue eyes (bb) does not affect the X-linked colorblind trait. The engaged partner, being colorblind with a normal-vision father (XbY), would also have the genotype XbXb.
that is not a cute color
Eye color is actually not controlled by straight Mendellian genetics. However, based on your question, the probability of a brown eyed child would be 50% and the probability of a blue eyed child would be 50%.
The mother's genotype is rr. The daughter would inherit one recessive allele from her mother because her mother has only recessive alleles. Because the daughter is green eyed, she would inherit a dominant allele from her father. The brown-eyed daughter's genotype would be Rr.
The genetics of eye color are more complex than previously understood. Almost any parent-child combination of eye colors can occur.