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Haploid is the term used when a cell has only one set of chromosomes.
All strawberries have a base haploid count of 7 chromosomes.
The life cycle has the ability to change from haploid and diploid generations.
Most fungi have both an haploid and diploid stage in their life cycles.
These three types of cycles feature alternating haploid and all germination.
In the present situation we'll probably make our colonists haploid, so that some of them, perhaps many, will have a heredity traceable to you alone.
Like other brown algae, there is an alternation of haploid and diploid generations.
Males, in contrast, have a haploid (n) number of chromosomes and develop from an unfertilized egg.
That unnatural baby fish, called a haploid, is particularly easy to study because its genetic complement is known to be purely maternal.
This reduces the 23 pairs (diploid) to 23 singles (haploid).
Most eukaryotes have either one set (called haploid) or two sets (called diploid).
The term ploidy is a back-formation from haploid and diploid.
The female haploid is called the ovule and is produced by the ovary of the flower.
Doubled haploid (DH) plants have the potential to save much time in the development of inbred lines.
The cell tests were strange in both chemistry and structure, with a mixture of haploid and diploid forms.
In meiosis, only one set of chromosomes ends up in each gamete, a condition called haploid.
Comparative value of androgenetic doubled haploid and conventionally selected spring barley line.
Since the same genetic material would be employed, the haploid and diploid phases would look the same.
Finally, in the sporic life cycle, the living organism alternates between haploid and diploid states.
The single cells are amoeboid (amoeba-like) and haploid (one set of chromosomes, like our gametes).
The haploid (base chromosome number) is 20 for nearly every species sampled, but some species have very small chromosomes, making an accurate count difficult.
Colonies that lose their sole queen sometimes fuse with other colonies or produce (haploid) males before dying out.
S. cerevisiae (yeast) can stably exist as either a diploid or a haploid.
The tube contains a haploid (in) generative nucleus and grows downward toward the ovule at the base of the pistils.