If both parents are heterozygous for blue eyes, that is they have one blue eye gene and one brown eye gene then their offspring have a 1 in 4 chance of having brown eyes as each parent only passes on one of their genes to the child.
I would have thought it was possible too, my granddaughter has two brown eyed parents and has blue eyes so it should be possible the other way round too
aka pixi is wrong. It won't work the other way round becuase bwon is a stronger gene than blue so if you have a brown gene your eyes will be brown no matter what colour the other gene is.
No. In my human biology class (some time ago now) It was explained to me that brown eyed parents can have a recessive gene which enables brown eyed (or mixed blue/brown) parents to produce both blue and brown eyed children. But as blue eyes are made up of recessive genes blue-eyed parents can only have blue eyed children. If it was possible to produce a diagram to make it easier to understand I would.
hmmmm I always get confused which allele is dominant and which is recessive with eye colour. But then you always have the involvement of mutations. Mine are green, product of a genetic mutation.