nope
Gametophytes of angiosperms have cells with nuclei that typically contain a haploid number of chromosomes, which is half the number found in somatic cells. This means that gametophyte cells usually have one set of chromosomes.
Bananas have 33 chromosomes. Pears have 32.
During mitosis, the number of chromosomes remains the same. The cell duplicates its chromosomes and then separates them evenly into two daughter cells, each with the same number of chromosomes as the original cell.
Same number of chromosomes
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.
yes
the number of chromosomes is double the numbe of chromosomes that were devided. so in other words the chromosomes double.
I have the same queston
The number of chromosomes in the present offspring during cloning is the same as the parent organism, as the offspring inherits an exact genetic copy of the parent's DNA, including the same number of chromosomes.
This is not entirely accurate. All cells in an organism carry the same number of chromosomes, except for gametes (sperm and egg cells) which are haploid and carry half the number of chromosomes as normal body cells (diploid).
Mitosis always yields the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell. In humans, 23.
the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell