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No, their appearance remain changing during cell's life.

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Q: Do chromosomes have same appearance during a cell's life?
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Are stomatic cells haploid or diploid?

Somatic cells (of the body) are diploid (having 46 chromosomes). Only gametes (eggs and sperm) are haploid (having 23 chromosomes). So that during fertilization the egg and sperm combine their chromosomes resulting in a new life with 46 unique chromosomes (in humans, of course. Others species has differing numbers of chromosomes). The haploid combination ensures genetic diversity.


How many chromosomes are they in a human body cell?

like ever other cell in the body it has 46 Chromosomes or 2 sets of 23 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ A mature RBC has no nucleus. Therefore, it has no chromosome. The average life span of a RBC is 120 days.


What might happen to a new cell if it didn't have the same amount of chromosomes as the original cell?

Then it's a prokaryote cell (such as bacteria). If not a prokaryote then it just wouldn't be a cell because with eukaryote cells, if there are no chromosomes, there is no cell or life with that cell.


If a cell had a full set of chromosomes the cell will be in a what condition?

If you are referring to the stages of life cycle for cells it would be in Interphase which is the stage in which most cells spend the majority of their time.


Describe some of the pieces of information that scientists discovered that contributed to the chromosome theory of inheritance?

At around 1900, biologists began to see parallels between the behavior of chromosomes and the behavior of Mendel's "factors" during sexual life cycles. They knew that chromosomes and genes are both present in pairs in diploid cells (Cells with 2n chromosomes, in humans n is 23), homologous chromosomes separate and alleles segregate during meiosis, and fertilization restores the paired condition for both chromosomes and genes. Hence the Chromosome Theory of Inheritance. Source: AP Biology Textbook by Campbell Reece

Related questions

T is not easy to observe individual chromosomes during the interphase because?

Only during the division stages of a cells life will chromosomes form. During Interphase the cells DNA is in the unorganized form of chromatin.


When do chromosomes duplicate in a cells life?

When there joined with a male chromosomes and a female chromosomes


Do chromosomes make copies of themselves?

Chromosomes duplicate themselves during interphase of a cell's life cycle.


In a cells life cycle when to chromosomes duplicate?

Interphase


Which stage of a cells cycle do the chromosomes replicated?

Interphase. Cells spend the majority of the time in interphase, where they grow and perform their life functions.


Do animal cells have a chromosomes?

Yes, as a matter of fact, all living that reproduce via mitosis or meiosis will form chromosomes. Chromosomes are only formed during these ways of reproducing. At all other parts of a cell's life, chromosomes are stringy matter called chromatin.


Are stomatic cells haploid or diploid?

Somatic cells (of the body) are diploid (having 46 chromosomes). Only gametes (eggs and sperm) are haploid (having 23 chromosomes). So that during fertilization the egg and sperm combine their chromosomes resulting in a new life with 46 unique chromosomes (in humans, of course. Others species has differing numbers of chromosomes). The haploid combination ensures genetic diversity.


What is the number of chromosomes in a somatic cell?

Somatic cells (of the body) are diploid (having 46 chromosomes). Only gametes (eggs and sperm) are haploid (having 23 chromosomes). So that during fertilization the egg and sperm combine their chromosomes resulting in a new life with 46 unique chromosomes (in humans, of course. Others species has differing numbers of chromosomes). The haploid combination ensures genetic diversity.


How many chromosomes are they in a human body cell?

like ever other cell in the body it has 46 Chromosomes or 2 sets of 23 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ A mature RBC has no nucleus. Therefore, it has no chromosome. The average life span of a RBC is 120 days.


What are haploid cells?

it is sperm. NEW ANSWER Ploidy refers to how many complete sets of chromosomes a cell has. A diploid cell will have two sets of chromosomes, one set from each parent. A haploid cell is a cell with only one set of chromosomes. For example, humans are diploid organisms - our cells each have two copies of 23 different chromosomes for a total of 46. Humans do produce haploid sperm and egg cells (with only one set of chromosomes for a total of 23 chromosomes per cell) during meiosis for reproduction as these two haploid cells can then fuse to produce a diploid fertilized embryo. However, not all haploid cells are sex cells for multicellular organisms. All prokaryotes (i.e. bacteria) are considered haploid because they have a single circular chromosome. Many organisms - plants, funghi, yeast - go through haploid and diploid stages of their life cycles. Some insects are haploid.


During cell life when do chromosomes duplicate?

in the interphase


What might happen to a new cell if it didn't have the same amount of chromosomes as the original cell?

Then it's a prokaryote cell (such as bacteria). If not a prokaryote then it just wouldn't be a cell because with eukaryote cells, if there are no chromosomes, there is no cell or life with that cell.