Each parent donates 23 chromosomes to fertilization process however only the male can determin the sex.
A chicken typically has 78 chromosomes in its somatic cells and 39 chromosomes in its sex cells (sperm or egg).
Males have two different sex chromosomes, X and Y. Each sperm only carries half the amount of chromosomes of normal (non-sex) cells. This is so that when sperm and egg combine, the new organism has the correct number of chromosomes, half from each parent. So each sperm will carry 22 autosomes (non-sex chromosomes) and either an X or Y chromosome - because this is half the male's genetic information.
A turkey has 80 chromosomes, so its sex cells will have 40 chromosomes.
An elephant sex cell (sperm or egg) contains 56 chromosomes. This is half the number of chromosomes found in a normal elephant cell, which typically has 112 chromosomes.
Autosomes are non-sex chromosomes found in the nucleus of a cell, while sex cells (sperm and egg cells) are specialized cells involved in sexual reproduction that carry half the number of chromosomes as normal cells. Autosomes are responsible for determining an individual's traits and characteristics, whereas sex cells determine the genetic sex of an individual.
The sperm cell contains 23 chromosomes.
23 in a sex cell
The sex of a baby is determined by the father's sperm. Men carry both X and Y chromosomes, while women carry only X chromosomes. If the sperm fertilizes the egg with an X chromosome, the baby will be female (XX); if it fertilizes with a Y chromosome, the baby will be male (XY). Therefore, it is the father’s sperm that ultimately decides the baby's sex.
A chicken typically has 78 chromosomes in its somatic cells and 39 chromosomes in its sex cells (sperm or egg).
A sex cell contains half the number of chromosomes found in a somatic (normal) cell. Therefore a human sex cell would contain 23 chromosomes.
Because males carry both the X and Y chromosomes in their sperm, they are the deciding factor when it comes to the sex of the baby. Unlike females who only carry the X chromosome.
Males determine the sex of a child in humans because they carry both X and Y chromosomes, while females carry two X chromosomes. During fertilization, the sperm from the male can carry either an X or a Y chromosome, determining the sex of the child.
1 - it determines the sex if it fertilises the ovum
Males have two different sex chromosomes, X and Y. Each sperm only carries half the amount of chromosomes of normal (non-sex) cells. This is so that when sperm and egg combine, the new organism has the correct number of chromosomes, half from each parent. So each sperm will carry 22 autosomes (non-sex chromosomes) and either an X or Y chromosome - because this is half the male's genetic information.
If their are 36 chromosomes, the sex cells would have 18 chromosomes each.
The type of cells that contain 23 single chromosomes are sex cells. The females would carry ova in the ovaries and the males will carry sperm in the testicles.
A turkey has 80 chromosomes, so its sex cells will have 40 chromosomes.