sex cells, like sperm or eggs in humans. They are normally haploid.
23
Sperm cells, or gametes normally have 23 chromosomes each.
Gametes normally contain only one set of chromosome – this number is called Haploid.
A human zygote is normally produced from two gametes that are identical in terms of information content or DNA. The sperm and egg each contribute one set of chromosomes to form a complete set in the zygote.
Homologous pairs of chromosomes are not normally found in gametes, which are reproductive cells such as eggs and sperm. This is because gametes are haploid, meaning they only contain one set of chromosomes, while homologous pairs consist of two sets of matching chromosomes.
sex cells, like sperm or eggs in humans. They are normally haploid.
Have to say Nay. Two chromosomes are 'homologous' , to my understanding, only if each is IDENTICAL with the other - this means a pair. Gametes are haploid, meaning that only one copy of each (normally diploid or paired) chromosome (s) is (are) present.
Have to say Nay. Two chromosomes are 'homologous' , to my understanding, only if each is IDENTICAL with the other - this means a pair. Gametes are haploid, meaning that only one copy of each (normally diploid or paired) chromosome (s) is (are) present.
They are the sex cells. They are haploid cells.
An organism with the genotype TtSs can normally make TS, Ts, tS and ts.
The human gametes are Male gametes are sperm and female gametes are eggs. And the gametes chromosome numbers are 42.
In asexual reproduction of a plant, the plant reproduces offspring (normally referred to as daughter cell) in and of itself, without the the use of male and female gametes of the plants. There is no swapping or joining of gametes. Sexual reproduction uses the male and female gametes (both haploid), such as pollen from the male plant's stamen joining the ovule in the female plant's pistil - resulting in a diploid embryo.