pee that's right pee
One is Drosophillia melanogaster, a common genetic workhorse and common fruit fly. It has only four chromosomes.
Homologous, but keep in mind that only specific pairs of chromosomes numbered on a karyotype (e.g. 1, 2, 3) can be homologous.
The answer will depend on what is known of the shape. If you know only the number of faces, or only the number of vertices, then you cannot work out the number of edges. If you only know the shapes of the faces you cannot.The answer will depend on what is known of the shape. If you know only the number of faces, or only the number of vertices, then you cannot work out the number of edges. If you only know the shapes of the faces you cannot.The answer will depend on what is known of the shape. If you know only the number of faces, or only the number of vertices, then you cannot work out the number of edges. If you only know the shapes of the faces you cannot.The answer will depend on what is known of the shape. If you know only the number of faces, or only the number of vertices, then you cannot work out the number of edges. If you only know the shapes of the faces you cannot.
A prime number is any number that only has only one and itself as factors. By definition even numbers have a factor of two. Therefore the only even number that is prime is the number 2.
4 is the only number which is divisible by only itself, 1 and 2.
Gametes are haploid and each contain only one chromosome. When a male and female haploid gamete unite , they create a diploid zygote.
A diploid has the full set of 46 chromosomes as opposed to 23 in a haploid. The germ cells (egg or sperm) are haploid and comtain a single set of chromosomes -23 in humans. During fertilisation the fusion of two germ cells each with only there haploid number of chromosomes (referred to as n) fuse, resultng in a diploid zygote with a full set of 46 chromosomes, half from the female and half from the male. Known as 2n. In animals all cells except the sex cells are diploid.
It depends on the organism in question. Take humans for example. A somatic (body) cell has 46 chromosomes (23 pairs). This is called the diploid number of chromosomes. A human gamete has only one copy of each chromosome and so only has 23 chromosomes. During fertilisation, the two haploid gametes fuse and produce a diploid zygote, so the cell produced as a product of fertilisation has the diploid number of chromosomes (double the haploid number).
haploid
human diploid numbers are 46 chromosomes (the total amount of chromosomes) and the haploid number is 23 (half the number of chromosomes) in meiosis the desired number is the haploid number for gametes (sex cells) and it becomes the diploid number after fertilization and for mitosis its the diploid number because it wants to maintain its chromosomes since its not sexual reproduction
Haploid means that a cell has only one set of chromosomes. Here are some sentences.A haploid cell only has half the chromosomes that a normal cell does.Sperm and eggs are haploid cells.Male wasps, bees, and ants are haploid organisms because they develop from unfertilized eggs!
a diploid cell is represented by 2n meaning that the cell has twice the number of chromosomes.
The haploid number is the number of chromosomes within the nucleus of a cell that constitutes one complete chromosomal set. This number is commonly abbreviated as n, where n stands for the number of chromosomes. The haploid number will be different for different organisms. In humans, the haploid number is expressed as n=23.Haploid human cells have 1 set of 23 chromosomes:Autosomal chromosomes (non-sex chromosomes): 22 sets.Sex chromosomes: 1 set.Diploid human cells have 2 sets of 23 chromosomes for a total of 46 chromosomes:Autosomal chromosomes: 22 sets of 2.Sex chromosomes: 1 set of 2.
When full set of chromosomes (46) is passed on to each daughter cell, it is a diploid cell data. When only half the number of chromosomes (23) is passed on to each daughter cell, it is a haploid cell data or haploid number of chromosomes.
"Haploid" refers to the number of chromosomes in a gamete.You may talk of a haploid number, haploid nucleus, haploid cell, or even a haploid organism, which is an animal or plant whose body cells contain the haploid number of chromosomes. Examples of haploid organisms are male honey bees and the leafy parts of mosses.The haploid number is often the number of chromosomes in a single set (n); this is true of us humans, for example. Our gametes contain one set of chromosomes (n = 23), and our somatic (body) cells two sets (2n = 46).However, some organisms have more sets; some wheat is tetraploid (4n) and its gametes are therefore 2n. In these cases the number of chromosomes in a single set (n) may be called monoploid.
Mammals cannot survive as a haploid cell, and meiosis creates four gametes that are haploid, so the two haploid cells need to combine in order to have a diploid zygote that is also genetically different.
The Zygote is the only diploid cell in the haploid cell life cycle.