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Prokaryotic organisms such as Bacteria have circular form of chromosomes
Human Mitochondrial DNA has a mere 16,569 base pairs or approximately 37 genes. It has a circular structure not a chromosome.
Bacteria do not have chromosomes. They have a small circular piece of DNA within the cell. The chromosome of a bacterium is the single molecule of circular DNA. It is also called as nucleoid.
Bacteria contain one circular chromosome (and several tiny circular plasmids), some slime molds contain hundreds of thousands of linear chromosomes. Other organisms contain various numbers of chromosomes depending on the species.
Bacteria.
One circular main chromosome and, perhaps, a number ( 1 to 3 ) of circular plasmids.
Yes and no. Where Eukaryotes (like people, plants, fungi and ect) have multiple linear chromosomes Bacteria have one circular chromosome.Yes Bacteria have one chromosomeNo Bacteria don't have chromosomes
Fungi
No.In some cells, mitochondria contain small chromosomes. Mitochondria have circular DNA molecules.Not advanced as chromosomes
Circular. All bacterial chromosomes are circilar.
Well, it depends. What size of wood is it and how many circular farnomic basic romes are there?
A circular chromosome is, essentially, exactly what it sounds like: a chromosome (strand of DNA that carries the genetic information of an organism) that is circular. Circular chromosomes are found in prokaryotes such as bacteria, as well as in mitochondria and chloroplasts. Eukaryotic cells, on the other hand, typically have chromosomes that are linear, meaning they have two ends that do not connect.