The domestic horse has 64
64 (32 pairs)
The diploid number of chromosomes in a horse's cell is 64, therefore they have 32 pairs of chromosomes in their somatic cells.
The answer is 63. A stallion (male horse) has 64 chromosomes and a jenny (female donkey) has 62. The sterile progeny of these two has only 63 chromosomes (same as a mule, which is the offspring of a mare [female horse] and a jack [male donkey]). The 63 chromosomes cannot divide evenly so neither the hinny nor the mule can reproduce.
Horses have 32 pairs of chromosomes (64 total).
A pig has 38 pairs of chromosomes, for a total of 76 chromosomes.
how many chromosomes are found in the body of a horse
32 pairs (total of 64 chromosomes)
There are 64 chromosomes in a horse's cell.
A horse has 32 pairs, 64 in all.A horse has 32 chromosome pairs and 64 chromosomes. Except for the prezewalski which has 66.
64
A horse has 64 chromosomes arranged as 32 pairs.
a horse has 64 chromosomes That said, if you assume it DOES have 66, there would be 33 tetrads.
The mule has 63 chromosomes. A donkey has 31 pairs and a horse 32 pairs so the mule or hinny inherits 31 from its donkey parent (usually the father) and 32 from its horse parent. The fact that the donkey has fewer chromosomes than the horse is thought to be the reason why hinny-breeding (where the father is the horse) is more difficult, resulting in a high rate of spontaneous abortion. If two species are to be crossed, therefore, the male should be the one with fewer chromosomes.
64 (32 pairs)
64
Horses have a total of 64 chromosomes in their somatic cells, including eye cells. This diploid number is made up of 32 pairs of chromosomes. Therefore, each horse eye cell, like other somatic cells, contains 64 chromosomes.
The diploid number of chromosomes in a horse's cell is 64, therefore they have 32 pairs of chromosomes in their somatic cells.