polyploidyhaving
Polyploidyhaving is not a standard term in biology. It is sometimes encountered as an informal or erroneous way to refer to organisms that possess polyploidy. The proper concept is polyploidy: a state in which an organism carries more than two complete sets of chromosomes. Polyploidy is especially common in plants and plays a major role in plant evolution, speciation, and breeding, though it also occurs in some animals.
Polyploidy arises mainly through autopolyploidy, where chromosome sets come from a single species, and allopolyploidy, which
The cellular and organismal consequences of polyploidy are diverse. In many polyploids, cells are larger, which
Examples and applications illustrate polyploidy’s significance. Bread wheat (Triticum aestivum) is hexaploid (6x), cotton (Gossypium hirsutum)