Normal male humans have the sex chromosomes XY. The presence of the Y chromosome determines sex in humans - so a person with XXY will be male.
The male karyotype has 46 chromosomes the same as the female karyotype:23 chromosomes are inherited from your father.
A normal male fruit fly has two sets of chromosomes: one set of X and one set of Y chromosomes. This combination determines the male sex of the fruit fly.
There are 23 chromosomes in each sperm produced by a human male.
X and Y are the human sex chromosomes. Normal females have XX, normal males have XY. In humans, it is the presence of a Y chromosome that makes a person male, not the ratio to or number of X chromosomes. (Therefore a person with XXY would be male).
A normal male will have one X and one Y chromosome.
Normal male humans have the sex chromosomes XY. The presence of the Y chromosome determines sex in humans - so a person with XXY will be male.
Maleness is not a genotype but a combination of sex chromosomes. A normal human male has an X as well as a Y chromosome.
In an average somatic (body) cell, two. and in human gametes there is , one all chromosomes in human body is , 46 chromosomes. in normal female somatic cell is (44+XX) . in normal male somatic cell (44+XY) in normal female gametes (22+X) in normal male gametes (22+X) or (22+Y) .
The male karyotype has 46 chromosomes the same as the female karyotype:23 chromosomes are inherited from your father.
Females typically have two X chromosomes (XX), while males typically have one X and one Y chromosome (XY).
In a gamete (sex) cell, there are 23 chromosomes. A gamete is a haploid, or n, whereas a somatic (normal) cell is a diploid, or 2n, and has 46 chromosomes.
A normal male fruit fly has two sets of chromosomes: one set of X and one set of Y chromosomes. This combination determines the male sex of the fruit fly.
There are 23 chromosomes in each sperm produced by a human male.
There are 23 haploid chromosomes in a normal human gamete (sex cell).
Sperm cells produced by a human male contain 23 chromosomes, half of the total number of chromosomes in a human cell. This genetic makeup allows for the joining of the sperm cell with an egg cell during fertilization to create a new organism with the full set of 46 chromosomes.
The pair of sex chromosomes (X and Y) is not homologous in a normal male karyotype. Males have one X and one Y chromosome, while females have two X chromosomes.