If the cell undergoes meiosis the resulting cells will actually only have 4 chromosomes. Metaphase I will result in two cells with 8 chromosomes and metaphase II will result in 4 cells with 4 chromosomes each.
16. The ovum and the sperm are the only cells that undergo meiosis. The chromosonmes polarize and split in one half so the resulting cells have the correct chromosomes
If you're talking about mitosis, the daughter cell would have 16 chromosomes as well, being an exact copy of the parent cell. If it's mitosis, it would have 8, half as many as the parent cell and the chromosomes would have new combinations of genes due to crossing over.
The gamete or haploid cell of an organism contains half as many chromosomes as a diploid body cell. An organism that has 32 chromosomes would produce a gamete with 16 chromosomes.
Onion (Allium cepa) has 16 chromosomes (2n= 16)
8becausea koala has 8 chromosomes in its sperm cell therefore 8 chromosomes in a koala egg.
8
the chickens sex cell has 16 chormosomes
False. Each daughter cell would have 16 chromosomes just like the parent cell after mitosis.
8 from each parent.
It depends on the process: mitosis or meiosis. If the cell is dividing through mitosis, then the two daughter cells will have 16 chromosomes; in meiosis, the four daughter cells will have 8 chromosomes.
Well, the original parent has 8 chromosomes, and the result of mitosis is 2 diploid daughter cells, so both daughter cells will end up wit the same number of chromosomes as the mother-8. ok woow to much writing in more simple terms that would mean 16 cells during- 8 cells after
i think 23 chromosomes their are 16 from 1 parent and 16 from the other .
The daughter cells will have 14 chromosomes, the same as the parent cell. Not only are the numbers of chromosomes the same, but they are also genetically identical to each other and the parent cell.
If the cell has 8 chromosomes, it should have 8 at the very beginning of mitosis. However during the interphase, specifically the S phase, the chromosomes are duplicated which means that for most of the cell cycle, the cell has 16 chromosomes. However after the cells splits, each daughter cells is left with 8 chromosomes, which is identical to the number of chromosomes in the original parent cell. Hope this helps!
there would be two daughter cells each containing 16 chromosomes
two or four it all depends on sister and daughter chromosomes during the mitosis procedure about half the amount
If your talking about mitosis than it would still have 32. Chromosomes Copied ( 64) Divided into 2 daughter cell ( each have 32 ) ...................................Hope that helped
There are 16 chromosomes in a haploid cell of saccharomyces cerevisiae.
The gamete or haploid cell of an organism contains half as many chromosomes as a diploid body cell. An organism that has 32 chromosomes would produce a gamete with 16 chromosomes.