Wiki User
∙ 6y agoThe answer is................46.
Wiki User
∙ 15y agoWiki User
∙ 14y ago46 because a daughter is still a human
Wiki User
∙ 13y ago46
Wiki User
∙ 11y ago23
Chromosomes are not reproductive cells. They are structures within cells that carry genetic information in the form of DNA. Reproductive cells, like eggs and sperm, contain half the number of chromosomes as other cells in the body.
Male reproductive cells (sperm) contain 23 chromosomes, while female reproductive cells (eggs) also contain 23 chromosomes. When these two cells combine during fertilization, the resulting zygote will have a total of 46 chromosomes - 23 from each parent.
Haploid cells are denoted n, and diploid cells are denoted 2n."n" refers to the set of chromosomes - therefore haploid cells have one set of chromosomes and diploid cells have two sets (pairs of chromosomes). Haploid cells have half the number of chromosomes as diploid cells.
A human reproductive cell, also known as a gamete, contains 23 chromosomes. This is half the number of chromosomes found in regular body cells, which have 46 chromosomes.
Human cells typically have 23 pairs of chromosomes, for a total of 46 chromosomes. This includes one pair of sex chromosomes (XX for females, XY for males) and 22 pairs of autosomes.
There are 46 chromosomes in most human bodies. They are made up of 23 pairs of chromosomes, one of which contains two reproductive cells.
Chromosomes are not reproductive cells. They are structures within cells that carry genetic information in the form of DNA. Reproductive cells, like eggs and sperm, contain half the number of chromosomes as other cells in the body.
Male reproductive cells (sperm) contain 23 chromosomes, while female reproductive cells (eggs) also contain 23 chromosomes. When these two cells combine during fertilization, the resulting zygote will have a total of 46 chromosomes - 23 from each parent.
Humans have 46 chromosomes in their nerve cells, unless they have a chromosomal disorder. With the exception of the reproductive cells, which only carry half the chromosomal DNA, all human cells have the same amount of chromosomes.
Uterus cells, like all human cells, contain 46 chromosomes. This includes 23 pairs of chromosomes, with one set inherited from each parent.
In the human body there are 23 pairs of chromosomes (46 in total); in reproductive cells there are only one half of the pair (or 23 in total). During fertilization the 23 from the male sperm cell fuse with the 23 from the female ovule and recombine as two pairs of 23 chromosomes (46 again in total). Normal human cells are diploid (2n), while sex cells are haploid (n)
Haploid cells are denoted n, and diploid cells are denoted 2n."n" refers to the set of chromosomes - therefore haploid cells have one set of chromosomes and diploid cells have two sets (pairs of chromosomes). Haploid cells have half the number of chromosomes as diploid cells.
46 A human fetus starts out as two reproductive cells with 23 chromosomes each, making a fertile 46 chromosome cell that grows into a fetus. So, we are basically just a bunch of developed 46-chromosome-enriched cells.
A human reproductive cell, also known as a gamete, contains 23 chromosomes. This is half the number of chromosomes found in regular body cells, which have 46 chromosomes.
Human cells with 46 chromosomes are found in most cells of the body, except for reproductive cells (sperm and eggs), which have 23 chromosomes. These cells are in the nucleus and carry genetic information in the form of DNA.
Human kidney cells are body cells, so they would have 46 chromosomes.
Gametes Have 23 Single Chromosomes, this means at fertilisation the pairs join together to make 23 pairs of Chromosomes. This is because Gametes are unspecialised cells so don't need all the Chromosomes that specialised cells have.