Technically there will be no sister chromatids remaining at the beginning of telophase, as they will have been pulled apart during anaphase into two separate daughter chromosomes. From prophase to anaphase, however, the cell undergoing mitosis would have had 14 sister chromatids. After anaphase there would be a total of 28 daughter chromosomes in the cell, and they would be organized into two groups of 14 that corresponded to the 14 chromosomes the cell started with (barring any mistakes in the process).
A gamete has half the number of chromosomes of the somatic (diploid) cell. Therefore a zebra gamete would have 25 chromosomes if 50 is the diploid number.
Yes, that is correct. If an organism has 16 chromosomes in its egg cells, its diploid number would be 32. This means that in its somatic cells, which are diploid, it would have 32 chromosomes, with each chromosome having a pair.
A gamete would be haploid, containing half the number of chromosomes compared to a diploid cell. Therefore, a gamete of this organism would be expected to contain 29 chromosomes.
Its haploid number, which will be half the number of chromosomes found in somatic (non-sex) cells - the diploid number.
The haploid number of rice (Oryza sativa) is 12, while the diploid number is 24. This means that rice has a total of 24 chromosomes, organized into 12 pairs in its diploid state. The haploid number represents the number of chromosomes in a gamete, while the diploid number represents the total number of chromosomes in somatic cells.
A gamete has half the number of chromosomes of the somatic (diploid) cell. Therefore a zebra gamete would have 25 chromosomes if 50 is the diploid number.
A gamete of Drosophila has 2n chromosomes, which is the haploid number. Drosophila, like most organisms, has a diploid number of chromosomes in its somatic cells. During meiosis, gametes are produced with half the number of chromosomes to maintain the chromosome number in the species.
Yes, that is correct. If an organism has 16 chromosomes in its egg cells, its diploid number would be 32. This means that in its somatic cells, which are diploid, it would have 32 chromosomes, with each chromosome having a pair.
A Drosophila gamete has 4 chromosomes. Drosophila, also known as fruit flies, have a diploid number of 8 chromosomes in their somatic cells, which means each gamete will have half of that number.
The number of chromosomes in a gamete is represented by "n". This symbol represents the haploid number of chromosomes in a cell, which is half the number of chromosomes found in a diploid cell.
A gamete would be haploid, containing half the number of chromosomes compared to a diploid cell. Therefore, a gamete of this organism would be expected to contain 29 chromosomes.
Its haploid number, which will be half the number of chromosomes found in somatic (non-sex) cells - the diploid number.
A gamete has half the diploid number of chromosomes, so in this case, the gamete would have 15 chromosomes.
An organism's diploid number refers to the total number of chromosomes in a diploid cell, which is a cell containing two sets of chromosomes. In humans, the diploid number is 46, with 23 pairs of chromosomes.
No, a gamete has half the number of chromosomes as compared to the organisms body cells.
If all of the chromosomes fail to separate in meiosis, then nondisjunction can result in a diploid gamete. This is a type of chromosomal mutation. In animals, a zygote produced from the union of a mutated diploid gamete and a normal haploid gamete will have triploidy, which is lethal. In plants, this is not necessarily lethal.
Haploid gametes have half the number of chromosomes as a diploid cell, so in humans, there are 23 chromosomes in a haploid gamete.