Usually about 40-50 chloroplasts per cell. It depends on where the cell is situated, for example if the cell is closer to the top of the leaf, it will have more chloroplasts because it is capable of absorbing more light.
Just one per cell.
there is one per cell
A sperm is a single cell, so there is one cell per sperm.
Moss have only one chlorplast per cell.
Usually about 40-50 chloroplasts per cell. It depends on where the cell is situated, for example if the cell is closer to the top of the leaf, it will have more chloroplasts because it is capable of absorbing more light.
Normally in a cell, there are 92 chromatids, 2 per chromosome. However, when the chromosomes have duplicated before mitosis, there are twice as many, or 184.
Only one
Just one per cell.
there is one per cell
One.
8
A sperm is a single cell, so there is one cell per sperm.
Moss have only one chlorplast per cell.
It depends on the species.
A lot...?
The number of genes varies from chromosome to chromosome and the number of chromosomes varies from species to species (from as few as 1 single chromosome per cell to as many 30,000 chromosome pairs per cell). Human cells have 23 chromosome pairs per cell.