Answer:
The correct answer is option C. "Double-stranded genomes have equal amounts of A and T".
Explanation:
According to Chargaff's rules, double-stranded genomes have equal amounts of guanine and cytosine, and equal amounts of adenine and thymine. This rule comes from the specific base pairing among nucleotides, where in normal conditions guanine only establishes a binding with cytosine and adenine only binds with thymine. Therefore, this rule only applies to double-stranded genomes. Since the viral strains have no equal amounts of guanine and cytosine and equal amounts of adenine and thymine, the viral strains could not be double-stranded but single-stranded.