Yes, it is possible.
However, this is only possible if BOTH of the parents have a recessive allele for blue eyes, i.e. they're heterozygous.
Let only one gene is controllable of the eye color. Let the brown eye dominant allele be R and blue recessive be r. So, only if both parents have the genotypes of Rr, they can produce a baby with rr due to random selections at meiosis, and the baby phenotype would be blue eyed.
If they're both RR or at least one is, the chance of having a blue-eyed baby is impossible.
The answer will be increase slightly and then decrease. Hope you get it!
Because if you think about it the kingdoms are the houses to these organisims the reason phylum does not belong in fungi because they are two different things Protista is a kingdom only for protist
Answer:
17. A 100% purple
18. D 75% purple 25% white
19. D 100%
20. B If the trait is recessive, then it's B, because she fell into that 25% of recessive trait for blue eyes.
Explanation: