WWII, while the mouse is away, the cats play. Especially if their husbands are hiding up in the mountains.
Yes. The woman can be heterogeneous non-blue. That means she carries a blue eyed gene and a non-blue eyed gene. The blue eyed is normally recessive so he carries both blue eye genes and doesn't carry a non-blue gene.If two blue eyed parents have a child then the child will be blue eyed.
I believe so, if both the parents have recessive alleles for blue eyes.
yes both my parents have blue eyes and so do my 3 brothers and 1 sister but i have green, it does not matter.
It should be possible because my mom has blue eyes, my dad has brown and i got green eyes so i would say yes.
In Germany, NO! About 80% has that combination. I am blond haired and blue eyed, and just finished doing some research on this. Blond hair and blue eyes are a rare combination in the USA, so I feel special... :)
Yes, it is possible for two hybrid blue-eyed parents to have a brown-eyed child if both parents carry a recessive brown-eyed gene. Eye color is determined by multiple genes, so the outcome can vary.
A dominant trait, when present, is always expressed. So if the offspring of a red eyed and blue eyed mating are all red, then red must be dominant because it is the trait expressed.
Most of my grandfather's generation had blue eyes that had a dark center, then brown, then a bright blue circle (called central heterochromia). Two of my mother's generation had them and none in our generation.
Yes, it is possible for two blue-eyed parents to have children with brown eyes if both parents are carriers of the brown eye gene. Eye color is determined by multiple genes, so variations can occur in offspring even if both parents have the same eye color.
Zero. Blue eyes come from a recessive gene (brown eyes come from a dominant gene). So two blue-eyed parents have only blue-eye genes in them. Therefore, they can pass only blue-eye genes to their baby.
blue eye genes are recessive so a person must receive blue eye genes from both parents, meaning they don't have any other eye color gene to give their child except blue. Blue is recessive not only to brown, but also to green eyes so if there was one gene from either side then the person's eyes would not be blue.
A dominant trait, when present, is always expressed. So if the offspring of a red eyed and blue eyed mating are all red, then red must be dominant because it is the trait expressed.