Dizygotic twins develop from two separate ova fertilized by different sperm at roughly the same time, they are also called fraternal twins. Monozygotic twins develop from one zygote that splits apart producing genetically identical zygotes; also called identical twins.
Monozygotic twins are formed from the splitting of a single fertilized ovum, and are identical. Dizygotic twins are formed from two separate fertilized ova, and are genetically different. They are also called fraternal twins.
Twins conceived from a single fertilized egg.
identical twin: either of two twins developed from the same fertilized ovum (having the same genetic material)
No, dizygotic twins are fraternal twins. Monozygotic twins are identical twins.
Monozygotic twins.
When sperm and egg unite, they create a zygote through fertilization. Over time, the zygote will divide into millions upon millions of cells. Each cell consists of 46 chromosomes; these cells, as a whole, will become the baby. However, the process is not the same for every situation and some things can go differently. Monozygotic twins, also known as identical twins, come from a single zygote. During the process stated above, the zygote for whatever reason splits into two separate entities and eventually they will become the babies. The babies will be identical in nature (same sex and same physical features for the most part). This occurs because they each contain the same set of 46 chromosomes deriving from the single zygote.
The reason why some twins are identical and some are not starts in utero. Identical twins occur when one egg is fertilized and it splits to create two embryos. Nonidentical twins come from different fertilized eggs.
Conjoined twins (or "Siamese twins") are monozygotic twins whose bodies are joined together at birth. This occurs where the single zygote of MZ twins fails to separate completely, and the zygote starts to split after day 13 following fertilization. This condition occurs in about 1 in 50,000 human pregnancies. Most conjoined twins are now evaluated for surgery to attempt to separate them into separate functional bodies. The degree of difficulty rises if a vital organ or structure is shared between twins, such as brain, heart or liver http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twin#Conjoined_twins
Assuming their are no mutations the twins wold both have 46 chromosomes. Twins, have the normal number of chromosomes, the only difference between an set of identical twins and two average individual is that twins have identical DNA.
The frequency of having monozygotic twins (identcal) is about 4 out of every 1000 births. Whereas dizygotic twins (fraternal) is about 12 out of every 1000.
The type of twins created following IVF are Dizygotic. These are twins resulting from the fertilisation of two separate eggs by two separate sperm. Monozygotic twins are the result of a single egg dividing after fertilisation. http://twinstips.com
They are called: fraternal or dizygotic twins. Twins who develop in one amniotic sac are called identical or monozygotic twins.
Dizygotic twins. If they were fertilized in the same egg, they would be called monozygotic twins.
There are two types of twins -- monozygotic ("identical") from a single egg, and dizygotic (fraternal) from two eggs. Only dizygotic twins can have a different sex.
Identical twins are called monozygotic. Fraternal twins are called dizygotic.
Two separate eggs are fertilized. Dizygotic twins are the same as fraternal twins.
Twins can be identical or fraternal (monozygotic or dizygotic). For identical twins, one sperm fertilizes an egg. The zygote divides into two identical embryos. For fraternal twins, two separate eggs are fertilized. They both implant on the uterine wall, forming two zygotes.
monozygotic or maternal twins
Monozygotic Twins
The number of living human twins in the world has been estimated to be approximately 125 million in 2006. Roughly 1.9% of the world population. With just 10 million monozygotic twins (roughly 0.2% of the world population and 8% of all twins). The twin birth rate in the United States in 2004, 2005 and 2006 was slightly above 32 twin live births per 1,000 live birth. Note: Monozygotic = Identical twins Dizygotic = Fraternal Twins
No, monozygotic twins would be the same sex. Monozygotic twins come from one single fertilized egg, or zygote, which then splits to create two separate zygotes which will be genetically identical, or "identical twins", which will always be of the same gender.