Female have two X chromosomes while males have an X and a Y chromosome.
males and females have different sex chromosomes
Human females are XX; males are XY.In humans, females have 22 pairs of chromosomes called autosomes, plus one pair of sex chromosomes, consisting of two copies of chromosome X. The X chromosome is between chromosomes 7 and 8 in size. Males have the same autosomes, but their sex chromosomes consist of one X and one relatively tiny Y, which is the shortest chromosome humans have except for chromosomes 21 and 22.Many other animals determine their sex the same way. But birds, moths, and butterflies are the other way round (males are WW; females WZ), and some animals use a different system altogether, such as whether the egg is fertilized or not: honey bees, for example.
This is because mutations occur in x chromosomes. The male, who has "xy" sex chromosomes, will have the mutation if it is present in the x chromosome. Females, there is a smaller chance because there are two "xx" chromosomes, which reduces the chance that the mutation will be present.
In 1910, Thomas Hunt Morgan discovered the sex linked traits to chromosomes.Sex linked traits are the traits controlled by genes located on the sex chromosomes.Humans have 23 pairs of chromosomes 22 of these pairs of homologous chromosomes are called autosomes. The 23rd pair of chromosomes is called the sex chromosomes and is indicated by the letter x for females and the letter y for males.If you are female then your sex chromosomes are homologous, XX, if you are male your sex chromosomes are XY.
Sex cells have 1/2 the number of chromosomes of a normal cell (23)
XX=females
Females have two X chromosomes (XX).
XX chromosomes.
Females inherit two X chromosomes.
XX
XY Chromosomes = Males XX Chromosomes = Females
Both males and females have 22 pairs of autosomes and one pair of sex chromosomes. In females, the sex chromosomes are two X chromosomes (XX), while in males, the sex chromosomes are one X and one Y chromosome (XY). Therefore, one pair of the sex chromosomes is common to both males and females.
Human females have two X chromosomes (XX) while human males have one X and one Y chromosome (XY). This difference in sex chromosomes determines biological sex and leads to different developmental pathways in males and females.
Fruit flies have three pairs of chromosomes, two autosomes and one pair of sex chromosomes (XX in females and XY in males).
X chromosomes (X,X)
The 23rd pair of chromosomes that differ in males and females is called the sex chromosomes. In females, the 23rd pair consists of two X chromosomes (XX), while in males, it consists of one X and one Y chromosome (XY).
In humans, the somatic cells of both females and males have 23 chromosome pairs.