Skunks have a total of 38 chromosomes in their body cells. This includes 18 pairs of autosomes and one pair of sex chromosomes. As with most mammals, these chromosomes contain the genetic information necessary for their development and functioning.
A grasshopper has 24 chromosomes in each body cell.
We have 46 chromosomes in our body. In each cell, there's 23 pairs of chromosomes.
64
Rats typically have 42 chromosomes in their body cells.
A body cell of a lily typically contains 24 chromosomes.
A eucalyptus tree typically has 2n = 22 chromosomes in each body cell.
dfdef
don't know
Spinach has a diploid chromosome number of 12, meaning that there are 12 chromosomes in each body cell.
A tribble's body cell typically contains 40 chromosomes.
In a normal Human body cell (not a gamete) there are 46 chromosomes. This is not the same number of chromosomes in our bodies, only in one cell, and there are trillions of cells in the human body. In a gamete (a sperm cell or egg cell) there are 23 chromosomes. When the sperm and egg cell nuclei fuse in fertilisation, a diploid cell of 46 chromosomes is produced.
Skunks, like many mammals, have a diploid chromosome number of 38. This means that each skunk's sex cells (sperm and eggs) will have half that number, resulting in 19 chromosomes in each sex cell.