The color of a baby's eyes is not only determined by the parents' eyes. You'd have to go back to the grandparents, too.
So, let's assume dad and his parents have brown and mom her parents have blue. Now we have to determine what is dominant and recessive.
Brown is a dominant trait, so we will label it with a capital B.
Blue is a recessive trait, so we will label it with a lower case b.
Dad has BB as a result of his parents' genes. Mom has bb as a result of her parents' genes. Now, let's mix their genes and see the possible outcomes.
We have B, B, b, and b. The possible outcomes are:
Because B (brown) dominates over b (blue), and we have four possible outcomes, there is a 75% chance that the baby will have brown eyes and a 25% chance that the baby will have blue eyes.
However, keep in mind that these are just probabilities. It is still possible for all of the children to have either brown or blue.
Hope this helped you.
This info here is true. The one exception is Waardenburg syndrome. Its a dominant genetic disorder where blue eyes are dominant.
They are usually what is called half-cast they aren't usually born white but they aren't very dark skinned they have a light brown skin tone usually it depends on how light or dark the parents skin tone is.
Obviously.. It depends on what the baby actually looks like.
We should drop skin colour as a category. It's about a dumb as categorizing people by the colour of their spleen. There is no reason to put people into "racial" categories outside of a medical context. What's next divide people by hair colour?
Calling a blue eyed, baby nearly straight fair hair "black" is ridiculous and is becoming more prevalent as more black and white people (and their respective genes) mix.
The racist "one drop rule" was ridiculous for obvious reasons, and is especially ridiculous today with the amount of varying genetic combinations (from black and white parents) coming together in the creation of offspring, scores of which do no not match society's archaic definition of "black".
The baby can be (look) black, white, or a mixture of the two. The offspring can later identify with black, white, or consider themselves multicultural, "mixed" or whatever the prevailing term is at the time.
Because race is becoming so ridiculously arbitrary, some governments let people check whatever it is they "identify with" on census forms... which, while still ridiculous, makes more sense than pigeon holing people by the mere colour of the largest organ associated with the human body...
Thats EXACTLY me! My parents have that. I have tanned skin, green/hazel eyes & black hair.
the eyes wont be as dark but there is only a one out of three chance they will be green or blue. the hair is probably going to be a shade of brown
Most are a pleasing tan color, but there is a wide range of pigmentation possible.
boy: black, girl: white. or a little bit of both, so tan.
i would say white , with black ancestors because black genes can still come out like curly hair or plump lips etc , she could have a baby later on that could still come out with colour .
The resulting offspring from a black/white parent-pair can look black, white, or a mixture of varying degrees of both parents.
Somewhere in between, probably.
it will most likely be blond in the beginning , then it will turn brown as he gets older
Possible colors: blond, brown, red, auburn
if mother has black and the father has red it will probally be brown
His mother is mix with white and black. His father is black.
The answer to this question depends on their parents' hair colors. If both have a blond (or red) haired parent, it is possible they could have children with blond (or red) hair. The black is more dominant than brown, so if the black haired parent has two black haired parents it is much more likely they will have black hair or the black has about 65% the brown has 35% so it will be a mix of black and brown probably black with a bit of brown i was learning about DNA
my parent were both black hair and brown eyesd and i have red hair and black otheres
yes it can
brown black blond
variation in which you get some features from your mother and some from father that are different (from others; ex. your sister has brown hair and you have blond hair)
Probably brown hair and eyes; blue and blonde are both genetically "weaker" traits.
People in China's characteristics are: brown and black hair. there hair natural hair colors are: black, brown, brightish brown, white and brownish blond. People in China's characteristics are: brown and black hair. there hair natural hair colors are: black, brown, brightish brown, white and brownish blond.
The baby has a small chance of having blonde hair and blue eyes because they are both recessive genes. The likely eye color of your baby is brown or hazel and the likely hair colors will either be brown or black hair because these genes are all dominant.