Humans have 23 chromosomes in their sex cells.
Twenty three.
In a human cell there are 46 chromosomes organized in 23 pairs.
Human cells have 46 chromosomes as 23 pairs.
It all depends on the type of organism on many chromosomes are present in each cell. By regular cell division each new cell will have the same number as the original cell. Some organisms have many more chromosomes than humans do and some have many less chromosomes.
It varies from organism to organism. Humans have 23 chromosomes in a haploid (gamate) cell.
It depends on the species--humans, for example, will have 46 chromosomes in each daughter cell after mitosis, while a dog will have 78. In mitosis, the number of chromosomes in each daughter cell is equal to the number of chromosomes in the interphase parent cell.
46
In humans, 46
In humans each cell normally contains 23 pairs of chromosomes.
46 chromosomes in somatic cells and 23 in gamates
46 single chromosomes which is 23 pairs of chromosomes in one human body cell.
In a human cell there are 46 chromosomes organized in 23 pairs.
In humans, the somatic cells of an offspring have 46 chromosomes.
Human cells have 46 chromosomes as 23 pairs.
It all depends on the type of organism on many chromosomes are present in each cell. By regular cell division each new cell will have the same number as the original cell. Some organisms have many more chromosomes than humans do and some have many less chromosomes.
In humans there are 23 pairs of chromosomes in a diploid cell (a normal body cell e.g. a skin cell) However there are just 23 single chromosomes in a haploid cell (a sex cell e.g. a sperm) this is because when fertilisation takes place the embryo has a total of 46 chromosomes, as it takes both haploid cells, making it genetically identical to both it's mother and father, and making it a diploid cell.
Depends what animal. In humans its 23.
In humans, each daughter cell produced by mitotic cell division will have 46 chromosomes.