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They are separated in Anaphase I of Meiosis I.
be half that of the original cell.
During a process called 'meiosis' at the end of telophase which ends in cytokinesis - the process by which the daughter cells separate.
Nondisjunction is when homologous chromosomes fail to separate in Meiosis I, or sister chromatids fail to separate in Meiosis II or Mitosis. This results in daughter cells with an incorrect number of chromosomes.
Plato users, Meiosis I. i dont know the answer , but this is not the answer !
Meiosis does in fact divide twice, once in meiosis I (cytokinesis) and meiosis II (cytokinesis) basically it divides into four daughter cells at the end of meiosis. Two from meiosis I and four in meiosis II
A total of four daughter cells are created during meiosis. There are two phases of meiosis, meiosis 1 and meiosis 2. During meiosis 1 two daughter cells are created while during meiosis 2 four daughter cells are created.
Twenty three chromosomes will be in each cell after meiosis is completed.
Meiosis reduces the number of chromosome sets from two (diploid), to one (haploid). In mitosis the daughter cells are genetically identical to the parent cell, but meiosis produces cells that differ genetically from the parent cell as well as each other. In the final stage of meiosis II there end up being 4n daughter cells. So remember mitosis is diploid and meiosis is haploid.
Meiosis 1 have 23 daughter cells.
Four daughter cells are produced in meiosis.
Four daughter cells come from meiosis.