Hemophilia is a bleeding disorder that primarily affects males. Those with the recessive, sex linked genetic disorder have issues with their blood clotting which can lead to severe issues with even minor injuries. Using what you know about sex-linked and recessive traits, why is it more common for males to have this disorder?(1 point)

Responses

It is carried on the Y chromosome, and females do not have that
It is carried on the Y chromosome, and females do not have that

It is carried on the X chromosome, and since it is recessive, females have two chances to receive a dominant allele and males only have one chance
It is carried on the X chromosome, and since it is recessive, females have two chances to receive a dominant allele and males only have one chance

It is carried on the X chromosome, and since males have two X's they have twice the chance of getting it whereas females only have one X and are half as likely to receive it
It is carried on the X chromosome, and since males have two X's they have twice the chance of getting it whereas females only have one X and are half as likely to receive it

It is carried on the Y chromosome, and since it is recessive, males stand a higher chance of receiving two copies of the recessive gene since they have two Y chromosomes and females only have one

It is carried on the X chromosome, and since males have only one X chromosome while females have two, males are more likely to exhibit the disorder.