No, chromosomes vary from species to species.
A species is distinguished by individuals that can mate and have young that are capable of producing offspring. The number of chromosomes two individuals have must be the same for this to be possible.
No, not all species have the same amount of chromosomes.
Examples:
Ant: has 2
African Wild Dog: has 78
Cabbage: has 18
Slime mold: has 12
American Badger: has 32
* for a better list of animals and the number of chromosomes they have visit the site listed below.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_organisms_by_chromosome_count
No, all species have a different amount of chromosomes
^This is incorrect. There are at least 5 million species on Earth, yet the species with the most chromosomes is a fern with 1200, so it follows that there must be different species with the same number of chromosomes.
For example: Raccoons, tigers, pigs and lions all have 38 chromosomes.
Yes they do have the same number.
It is not true to say that all members of each species have the same number of chromosomes. There are some which have the same number of chromosomes, but the majority differ.
The number of chromosomes can vary widely between species. However, in general, individuals of the same species have the same number of chromosomes.
Yes, they have the same number of chromosomes.
no
no
no
Yes they do. Some species have the same number of chromosomes but not all.
All cells within an organism will have the same number of chromosomes, which is the diploid number. The gametes, on the other hand, will have the haploid number of chromosomes.
Every cell has the same number of chromosomes (except for sex cells), based on the specific organism's species. Humans have 46 chromosomes in each nucleus, and their sex cells have 23.
False
A cell undergoing mitosis has twice the usual number of chromosomes for that species. For example, human body cells have 46 chromosomes, but after DNA replication, which must occur before mitosis, a human body cell will have 92 chromosomes.
Yes they do. Some species have the same number of chromosomes but not all.
Yes
No that's y I'm asking
All cells within an organism will have the same number of chromosomes, which is the diploid number. The gametes, on the other hand, will have the haploid number of chromosomes.
this is true. the gamete has half the number of chromosomes..
Since a karyotype is a picture of the entire organism's chromosomes and since all species have a different number of chromosomes it makes it easy to figure out what species you are looking at just by looking at the karyotype.
Every cell has the same number of chromosomes (except for sex cells), based on the specific organism's species. Humans have 46 chromosomes in each nucleus, and their sex cells have 23.
Meiosis causes the gametes (sex cells) to be haploid (containing half the amount of regular chromosomes). Thus, when the two sex cells combine during reproduction, the result is a fully diploid cell that contains the correct, and same, number of chromosomes.
False
Yes. All dogs have 38 pairs of autosomal chromosomes (inheriting one from each of their parents) and two sex chromosomes.
The same number as are all their cells.
Chromosomes are the same no matter what gender you are, or what species, all cells have them. It is the information contained within those chromosomes that is different between cells.