they are germ cells, or haploid, as they have half the chromosomes as normal cells (in humans)
As HUMANS, stem cells as they develop into our own specialised cells, as all animals start off as a fertilised egg, and it is our genetics that transform our stem cells into the many different specialised cells we need as humans.
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The sex cells. That includes the sperm in males, and egg in females. This happens so that if the two joined, they would combine chromosomes to make 48, the necessary amount for humans.
No, each egg cell is a single haploid cell. Once it is fertilised it divides into many different cells, which later on forms the foetus.
they are germ cells, or haploid, as they have half the chromosomes as normal cells (in humans)
Sperm and egg cells are the two cells involved in fertilization of animals and humans.
As HUMANS, stem cells as they develop into our own specialised cells, as all animals start off as a fertilised egg, and it is our genetics that transform our stem cells into the many different specialised cells we need as humans.
All your cells except for red blood cells and your reproductive (egg & sperm) cells.
the egg cell and sperm cell
it produces about 6 egg cells
The first cells a human has are the egg and sperm, which combine and make a zygote. From there, the initial two cells begin dividing.
If you mean sex with humans is they are both cells.
a female is born with hundreds of thousand of egg cells
The sperm and egg sex cells (or gametes) have both recessive and dominant genes in them.
Just one. If you have two egg cells, you may have twins.
A collection of single celled organisms. Or I suppose a newly fertilized egg and sperm would make many identical cells initially. Humans can't be made up uniformly of identical cells.