Well, every species is different as different species have different numbers of chromosomes. So it would depend on the organism.
But, if you are asking about humans. Humans have 46 chromosomes. So a human sperm would have 23 chromosomes.
All human gametes (sex cells), which means egg cells and sperm cells, have 23 chromosomes. When the sperm fertilises the egg, the 23 chromosomes from the egg cell and the 23 chromosomes from the sperm cell join to make cells with 46 chromosomes. In summary, all cells in the human body have 46 chromosomes, except sperm cells and egg cells, which have 23.
I assume you mean human egg and sperm cells. There is a haploid number of chromosomes in these cells. 23 chromosomes. n.
the haploid cells or the gammet cells are also known as the reproductive cells in animals, they are also known as the sex cells
Body cells, like liver cells, are diploid. This means they have pairs of chromosomes. In this example the diploid number of chromosomes is 24. In sperm cells (or egg cells) the number of chromosomes is halved. This is described as the haploidnumber. In this example the haploid number would be 24/2 = 12. So the number of chromosomes in the sperm cells would be 12.
There are 23 chromosomes in human egg/sperm. In other human body cells there are 46 chromosomes.
What we call gametes (egg or sperm cells) have half the number of chromosomes.
No, sex cells just have 1/2 the chromosomes of the rest of cells.
All human cells , with the exception of sperm and egg cells, have the same number of chromosomes (46). Sperm and Egg cells have half that number.
Sperm cells are zygotes (specialised cells with only 23 chromosomes).
23 chromosomes in gamaete cells (sex cells)
In the nucleus of the cells
39 chromosomes.