Biology, asked by hedwichuremena, 10 months ago

Consider an animal with six pairs of chromosomes; one set of six chromosomes is from this animal’s male parent, and the homologous set of six chromosomes is from this animal’s female parent. How many combinations of chromosomes are possible in the gametes of individuals of this species if we look only at independent assortment of chromosomes, disregarding the effect of crossing over?

Answers

Answered by parwarsehfawat
0

Answer:

In this case six chromosomes combinations are possible. because these are haploid chromosomes and two haploids make a diploid chromosome. so 6+6=12 ,12/2 = six .

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