no
No. Just number of chromosomes cannot indicate whether the organism is a plant or an animal.
Genes and chromosome numbers vary from animal to animal
Every mammal (of any species, including human) have two sex chromosomes, which are either "X" or "Y". (These designations come from a vague approximation of the shape of the chromosome.) These exist in EVERY CELL in the animal. If the animal has two "X" chromosomes, the animal is female; if the animal has one "X" and one "Y" chromosome, the animal is male. In every species, the female only contributes an "X" chromosome to the offspring. It is the male contribution which might be either "X" or "Y", which will determine the gender of the child.
There is only one pair fo chromosome in a sex cell.
Animal cells have structures called centrioles that help in chromosome movement during cell division. These centrioles form the spindle fibers that attach to the chromosomes and help to segregate them into the daughter cells. Additionally, motor proteins like dynein and kinesin also play a role in chromosome movement within the cell.
No. Just number of chromosomes cannot indicate whether the organism is a plant or an animal.
Plant cells have a large vacuole, which the animal cells don't.
4 ..not enough information is given to determine whether the organism is a plant or an animal
A chromosome contains genetic material in both plant and animal cells.
the animal is the organism
The animal is an organism. The intestines are a system.
Genes and chromosome numbers vary from animal to animal
An animal is ONE TYPE of organism - plants are also organisms.
If an organism is multicellular, heterotrophic (cannot make its own energy), and has no cell wall, it is an animal. This is the definition of the kingdom Animalia. There are unicellular animal-like members of the kingdom Protista commonly called protozoa. Fungi are heterotrophic and multicellular, but they have a cell wall made of chitin.
Animal and plant cells.
a seashell is not an organism, there needs to be a living thing in it to make it into an organismThe seashell itself is not an organism, but the animal that lives in it is an organism.The seashell itself is not an organism, but the animal that lives in it is an organism.
The best answer is "No."Both animal and plant cells can have chromosomes, but chromosomes are not cells, and certainly neither plant nor animal cells.Neither, it's part of genetics, as in the cell make up/genes etc. It is part of the cell not a cell.