A gamete is a reproductive cell of an animal or plant. In animals, female gametes are called ova or egg cells, and male gametes are called sperm. Ova and sperm are haploid cells, with each cell carrying only one copy of each chromosome. During fertilization, a sperm and ovum unite to form a new diploid organism.
Chromosomes are threadlike structures made of protein and a single molecule of DNA that serve to carry the genomic information from cell to cell
Sperm and ovum are the gametes produced by vertebrates. More specifically, sperm is the male gamete while the ovum is the female gamete. These two cells also have contrasting size – for instance, the sperm is the smallest cell in the human body while the ovum is the largest.
Fertilization is a complex multi-step process that is complete in 24 hours. The sperm from a male meets an ovum from a female and forms a zygote; this is the point in which pregnancy begins and leads to a 280-day journey for a female. There are two ways to track this process, and they differ by the day counting begins.
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Edited: Sep 06, 2024
Gametes 5.1
Gametes 5.1
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1. What are gametes and how these formed?
2. What happens during fertilization?
3. How many gametes do females have?
4. What is a chromosome and explain its main function?
5. What is an acrosome and its function?
6. What is the difference between an egg and a sperm cell?
How do gametes contribute to genetic variation in sexually reproducing organisms, and what role does meiosis play in this process?