Gametes Have 23 Single Chromosomes, this means at fertilisation the pairs join together to make 23 pairs of Chromosomes. This is because Gametes are unspecialised cells so don't need all the Chromosomes that specialised cells have.
There are 23 chromosomes in each the sperm and the egg. When they fuse, the resulting embryo will have 46 chromosomes.
Twenty-three chromosomes are in a cell that is formed from a sperm and egg cell.
There are 23 chromosomes from the egg and 23 chromosomes from the sperm making it 46 in total when they both fuse together.
The human egg or sperm cell is haploid and contains 23 chromosomes. After fertilization (egg and sperm fusion), the zygote will have 46 chromosomes (23 pairs).
there are approximately 69 in a sperm cell and approximately chickens in an egg
23. There are 46 chromosomes in a human, half from the egg and half from the sperm.
all cells of body except egg and sperm have 23 pairs of chromosomes i.e. 46...but egg and sperm have 23 chromosomes
All human gametes (sex cells), which means egg cells and sperm cells, have 23 chromosomes. When the sperm fertilises the egg, the 23 chromosomes from the egg cell and the 23 chromosomes from the sperm cell join to make cells with 46 chromosomes. In summary, all cells in the human body have 46 chromosomes, except sperm cells and egg cells, which have 23.
46
A sperm cell from the same species would also contain 50 chromosomes. When an egg and sperm fuse during fertilization, the total number of chromosomes in the resulting zygote will be the sum of the chromosomes from the egg and sperm, which would be 100 in this case.
23
50