PLato ... Parent cells.
<---- that is not the answer ,
the answer is Spermatogonia
spermatogonia. These are the diploid cells found in the testes that undergo mitosis followed by meiosis to produce haploid sperm cells.
ovum isalways haploid and when a haploid sperm fertilize it the embryo become diploid
A sperm cell is haploid with only 24 chromosomes.
Sperm is haploid, meaning it contains half the number of chromosomes as a normal body cell. This allows the sperm to combine with an egg during fertilization, resulting in a diploid zygote with a complete set of chromosomes.
To achieve a diploid state, the sperm cell must fuse with a haploid egg cell during fertilization. This fusion combines the genetic material from the sperm (haploid) and the egg (haploid) to form a diploid zygote.
Somatic (body) cells are diploid. Sex cells (gametes) are haploid.
The diploid phase of the human life cycle begins with fertilization, where a haploid sperm fuses with a haploid egg to form a diploid zygote. This zygote then undergoes multiple rounds of cell division to eventually form a multicellular organism.
diploid foolall are diploid except sperms and eggs
Sperm cells are diploid. Since humans are diploid organisms, I'm pretty sure the sperm would be as well. - biology honor student
All cells in the human body that are not gametes (sperm or egg cells) are diploid. Gametes are haploid.
Ova cells are haploid, meaning they contain half the number of chromosomes as diploid cells. This allows for the correct number of chromosomes to be restored upon fertilization when they combine with sperm cells, resulting in a diploid zygote.
Haploid. They may be diploid when they are first formed, but by the time they undergo all the stages of mitosis, they are haploid.