What is the most dominate eye colour in your family?

I have green eyes..............and I am the only one in my family that does.

 

None of our children ...............or grand children have them.

 

But grey eyes seem to be quite dominate..................2 of our children have grey eyes............and 2 of our grand children do too.

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What is the most dominate eye colour in your family?

**meep**
Community Member

My mother - blue

My father - dark brown

Myself - dark brown

Hubby - blue

Daughter - dark brown

 

 

Dark brown are dominant if I remember my biology lessons....

 

 

 

Message 11 of 22
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What is the most dominate eye colour in your family?

Hmmm..

My Mum had brown eyes, my Dad blue /grey.

 

I have brown eyes, my sister hazel / green.

 

I have 4 children - 2 have brown eyes, one has hazel, one green. Their fathers had hazel eyes.

 

One brown eyed child married a grey eyed woman, they have two hazel eyed and one grey eyed child.

 

The green eyed child married a brown eyed man - they have one brown, one hazel and one blue eyed child!

 

Genetics is obviously far more complicated than most think.

Message 12 of 22
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What is the most dominate eye colour in your family?

giggle..........everyone got a brown eye

Message 13 of 22
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What is the most dominate eye colour in your family?


@*mrgrizz* wrote:

giggle..........everyone got a brown eye


I just got that. Cat LOL

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What is the most dominate eye colour in your family?

imastawka
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Norti mrgrizz

 

I have hazel eyes. Hubby, daughter and all grandkids have blue eyes.

 

I always wanted blue eyes,  sigh

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What is the most dominate eye colour in your family?

The Genetics of Eye Color

 
The genetics of blood type is a relatively simple case of one locus Mendelian genetics—albeit with three alleles segregating instead of the usual two (Genetics of ABO Blood Types).
Eye color is more complicated because there's more than one locus that contributes to the color of your eyes. In this posting I'll describe the basic genetics of eye color based on two different loci. This is a standard explanation of eye color but, as we'll see later on, it doesn't explain the whole story. Let's just think of it as a convenient way to introduce the concept of independent segregation at two loci. Variation in eye color is only significant in people of European descent.
At one locus (site=gene) there are two different alleles segregating: the B allele confers brown eye color and the recessive b allele gives rise to blue eye color. At the other locus (gene) there are also two alleles: G for green or hazel eyes and g for lighter colored eyes.
The B allele will always make brown eyes regardless of what allele is present at the other locus. In other words, B is dominant over G. In order to have true blue eyes your genotype must be bbgg. If you are homozygous for the B alleles, your eyes will be darker than if you are heterozygous and if you are homozygous for the G allele, in the absence of B, then your eyes will be darker (more hazel) that if you have one one G allele.
Here's the Punnett Square matrix for a cross between two parents who are heterozygous at both alleles. This covers all the possibilities. In two-factor crosses we need to distinguish between the alleles at each locus so I've inserted a backslash (/) between the two genes to make the distinction clear. The alleles at each locus are on separate chromosomes so they segregate independently.*
As with the ABO blood groups, the possibilities along the left-hand side and at the top represent the genotypes of sperm and eggs. Each of these gamete cells will carry a single copy of the Bb alleles on one chromosome and a single copy of the Gg alleles on another chromosome.
Since there are four possible genotypes at each locus, there are sixteen possible combinations of alleles at the two loci combined. All possibilities are equally probable. The tricky part is determining the phenotype (eye color) for each of the possibilities.
According to the standard explanation, the BBGG genotype will usually result in very dark brown eyes and the bbgg genotype will usually result in very blue-gray eyes. See the examples in the eye chart at the lower-right and upper-left respectively. The combination bbGG will give rise to very green/hazel eyes.  The exact color can vary so that sometimes bbGG individuals may have brown eyes and sometimes their eyes may look quite blue. (Again, this is according to the simple two-factor model.)
The relationship between genotype and phenotype is called penetrance.  If the genotype always predicts the exact phenotpye then the penetrance is high. In the case of eye color we see incomplete penetrance because eye color can vary considerably for a given genotype. There are two main causes of incomplete penetrance; genetic and environmental. Both of them are playing a role in eye color. There are other genes that influence the phenotype and the final color also depends on the environment. (Eye color can change during your lifetime.)
One of the most puzzling aspects of eye color genetics is accounting for the birth of brown-eyed children to blue-eyed parents. This is a real phenomenon and not just a case of mistaken fatherhood. Based on the simple two-factor model, we can guess that the parents in this case are probably bbGg with a shift toward the lighter side of a light hazel eye color. The child is bbGG where the presence of two G alleles will confer a brown eye color under some circumstances.
*If the two genes were on the same chromosome this assumption might be invalid because the two alleles on the same chromosome (e.g., B + g) would tend to segregate together. Linked genes don't obey Mendel's Laws and this is called linkage disequilibrium.
I know that you believe you understand what you think I said, but I'm not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant.
Message 16 of 22
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What is the most dominate eye colour in your family?

Eyes are complex.

Mostly brown (light to medium) with a few blue in my family over 3 generations.

Then there's me with eyes like a cat. Brown to orange to gold to green depending on the light. 🐾

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Buttercup: You mock my pain! Man in Black: Life is pain, Highness. Anyone who says differently is selling something.
Message 17 of 22
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What is the most dominate eye colour in your family?

My mother had pale blue and my father had brown. None of my siblings have blue eyes, we all have variations of brown or green. Mine are hazel. My children have hazel.

Message 18 of 22
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What is the most dominate eye colour in your family?

GreenCat Happy

Message 19 of 22
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What is the most dominate eye colour in your family?

top left corner of those 9 eyes, or maybe a bit darker, I have dark blue eyes.

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