Monozygotic twins are formed when one zygote, created with one egg and one sperm, splits into two. Instead of having just one embryo—which is usually what you get from one egg and one sperm—the result is two embryos. Each of those embryos develops as a separate fetus.
Identical twins (also called monozygotic twins) result from the fertilization of a single egg by a single sperm, with the fertilized egg then splitting into two. Identical twins share the same genomes and are always of the same sex.
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Monozygotic twins are formed when one zygote, created with one egg and one sperm, splits into two. Instead of having just one embryo—which is usually what you get from one egg and one sperm—the result is two embryos. Each of those embryos develops as a separate fetus.
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Identical Twins
Identical twins (also called monozygotic twins) result from the fertilization of a single egg by a single sperm, with the fertilized egg then splitting into two. Identical twins share the same genomes and are always of the same sex.
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