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If, say, my wife was also blonde and blue-eyed, would it somehow lessen the chances of our children being blonde and blue-eyed? Yes, grandparents' genes can affect how their grandchildren look. After all, grandchildren get 25% of their genes from each of their grandparents.
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Read More »Yes, grandparents' genes can affect how their grandchildren look. After all, grandchildren get 25% of their genes from each of their grandparents. And genes have the instructions for how we look (and most everything else about us). So your kids will definitely inherit some of your parents' genes. Which means they will inherit some of their looks too. But obviously not every trait that your parents have will be passed down to your kids. Your kids won't be clones after all! Their looks will come from the combination of genes you and your future wife happen to pass down to them. And these will have come from each of your parents. And so on through the generations.
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Read More »But it is also why two green eyed parents can have a blue eyed child. And how blue eyes can skip generations. We won't go into that here though. Let's instead focus on why your parents’ hazel eyes are so unlikely to appear in your children.
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Read More »Eye color happens to be one of these traits too. Occasionally blue eyed parents will have a hazel or brown eyed child. Unfortunately because we don't understand the genetics yet, we can't easily predict when it will happen. Incomplete penetrance isn't the only way for a dominant trait to skip a generation. Sometimes two people with a recessive trait have a child with a dominant trait because of a new change in the child's genes. Not everyone with the extra toe gene will have 6 toes. Via Wikimedia In this case, the genetic change wasn't passed on from the grandparents though. The child just happened to end up with a DNA change that gave the same eye color. This sounds unlikely but it certainly happens for other traits. For example, a form of dwarfism called achondroplasia is usually the result of a new DNA change. In fact, in something like 7/8 cases of this form of dwarfism, both parents are of average height. As I mentioned, this new genetic change isn't passed on from the grandparents. So technically if this happened, grandparents' DNA wasn't really influencing how this particular trait turned out in their grandkids. They both ended up with the same trait by different paths. I don't want you to come away thinking these kinds of new changes are common. They're not. They have a pretty low chance of happening. The chance that a new variant would result in a trait that matches Grandpa or Grandma's traits is pretty small too. Put these together and it's really unlikely that a trait would appear to skip a generation because of a new genetic change in a child. So most of the time, dominant traits like dark hair and dark eyes don't skip a generation. But genetics is pretty complicated! That means that there's always a small chance that two blonde, blue eyed parents will have dark haired, dark eyed kids.
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