It's possible.
A parent with an A+ blood type could have the genes AO instead of AA, similiarly a parent with B+ could have the genes BO instead of BB.
If the parents have AO and BO, it's possible for the child to have an O blood type - though it is also possible for the child to be both A, B or AB.
2007-03-26 22:38:05
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answer #1
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answered by renovak 2
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If the lady has a variety blood, she could have alleles AO or AA. If her new child has variety B blood (BO or BB), she ought to have alleles AO (and the new child's father ought to have BO or AB alleles). because of the fact her father replaced into shade blind and he or she isn't, she is an obligate provider of shade blindness. on the grounds that her daughter is shade blind, her daughter's father additionally should be shade blind. on the grounds that her daughter has O blood, her daughter's father ought to have an O allele. If her little ones have an identical father, he has BO alleles for blood variety. because of the fact of this the lady's genotype is AO for blood variety, and XnormXcolorblind for colorblindness. Her new child's father's genotype is BO for blood variety, and XcolorblindY for colorblindness. the percentages that their new child could be a colorblind son is 25% (colorblind daughter 25%, provider daughter 25%, and general shade resourceful and prescient son 25%). the percentages that their new child might have AB blood is 25% (25% O, 25% A, 25percentB). a million in 4 cases a million in 4 is a million in sixteen. the percentages of being a colorblind son are a million in sixteen consistent with new child of theirs.
2016-10-20 00:54:33
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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I went to a blood type calculator and it says the baby will be one of these; Possible Type of Child
A, AB, B, O
2007-03-27 01:57:42
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answer #3
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answered by katobow 4
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They could, IF the parents possessed O+ within their subgenes.
But it's not the most likely outcome. More than likely the child would be either A, B or AB. (+)
2007-03-27 01:59:31
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answer #4
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answered by Aussie mum 4
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http://www.biology.arizona.edu/human_bio/problem_sets/blood_types/inherited.html
Good Luck!
2007-03-27 01:32:03
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answer #5
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answered by Lisa ♥'s Tim 6
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possibly. u'd have to do a punnet square to se the prob. of diff blood tyoes, and in order to do that, u'd need to know both parent's dominant and recessive gene traits
2007-03-26 22:37:50
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answer #6
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answered by Jake 2
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No the baby will have either A or B or AB.
2007-03-26 22:33:31
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answer #7
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answered by Amanda 7
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