I assume you mean human egg and sperm cells.
There is a haploid number of chromosomes in these cells. 23 chromosomes. n.
Gametes have half the number of chromosomes that most cells in the organism have. Most human cells have 46 chromosomes, but eggs and sperm have 23 chromosomes each.
Both normal human eggs and sperm contain 23 chromosomes, which is half of the total number of chromosomes found in other body cells. When a sperm fertilizes an egg, their combined 46 chromosomes create a new organism with a complete set of 46 chromosomes.
Gametes are cells used for reproduction that contain half the usual number of chromosomes. In humans, gametes are sperm cells in males and egg cells in females. During fertilization, a sperm cell and an egg cell combine to form a zygote with the full complement of chromosomes.
Haploid, or (n). In a somatic cell, the chromosomes are diploid, or (2n).
Meiosis and mitosis are types of cell division that involve the replication and division of chromosomes. Meiosis produces sex cells (eggs and sperm) with half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell, while mitosis produces identical cells with the same number of chromosomes. Sex cells have either X or Y chromosomes, determining the individual's sex.
the haploid cells or the gammet cells are also known as the reproductive cells in animals, they are also known as the sex cells
The only haploid cells found in humans are the gametes, which are the sperm in males and the eggs in females. These cells contain half the usual number of chromosomes (23 in humans) and are produced through meiosis in the reproductive organs.
Dogs have 39 pairs of chromosomes in their somatic cells. Sex cells (sperm and eggs) are haploid, meaning they contain half the number of chromosomes as somatic cells. Therefore, the sex cells of a dog have 39 chromosomes.
Gametes, such as eggs and sperm, are haploid, not diploid. Diploid would be somatic cells, such as skin cells or brain cells.
Sperm is haploid, meaning it contains half the number of chromosomes as a normal body cell. This allows the sperm to combine with an egg during fertilization, resulting in a diploid zygote with a complete set of chromosomes.
The chromosome number 23 is found in human sex cells, such as eggs (in females) and sperm (in males). These cells are known as haploid cells, containing half the normal number of chromosomes found in somatic cells.
In the concept map, "Meiosis" connects to "Eggs" and "Sperm" as it is the process that produces these sex cells, which are haploid (containing one set of chromosomes). "X Chromosomes" and "Y Chromosomes" branch from "Sperm," indicating the male contribution to sex determination, while "Eggs" carry only X chromosomes. "Mitosis" is depicted separately, as it is the process of cell division for somatic cells, maintaining the diploid chromosome number, unlike meiosis, which reduces it for the formation of gametes.