There is no such thing as a "cow egg." Cows don't lay eggs, they give birth to live calves, since they are mammals, not birds.
Thus, a baby calf would have the same number of chromosomes as its mother.
Each daughter cell produced by mitosis will have the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell. Therefore, each daughter cell will also have 60 chromosomes.
A cow has 60 chromosomes. At half the number of chromosomes, the haploid number for a cow would be 30.
There is no such thing as a "cow egg." Cows don't lay eggs, they give birth to live calves, since they are mammals, not birds. Thus, a baby calf would have the same number of chromosomes as its mother.
The calf recieves half the chromosome count from his dam and the other half from his sire.
No, they cannot because their chromosomes are different.
An Angus bull typically has 60 chromosomes – 30 from the cow and 30 from the bull. Each parental contribution includes 29 autosomes and one sex chromosome (X or Y).
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There is essentially one genome for Bos primigenius(cattle), but many variations of that genome (one for each specimen). Some variations are peculiar to specific varieties. Cows have 60 chromosomes, close to double the human complement of 46.
32 chromosomes
This have 44 chromosomes
46 chromosomes
69 chromosomes