Depends.
In males all four cells become sperm.
In females one becomes to oocyte while the other three become polar bodies that can provide some nutrients to the oocyte, or just dissipate depending on species.
In the male, the four haploid cells become viable sperm cells. In the female, only one of the four haploid cells becomes an egg ready for fertilization. The other three become "polar bodies" that are not fertile eggs. The reason for this is that the female egg needs a large amount of cytoplasm in order to nourish the zygote (organism formed after fertilization--the baby). The division of cytoplasm to the haploid cells is uneven, giving most of the cytoplasm to one haploid which becomes the fertile egg.
Yes. A diploid cell will enter Meiosis I and by the end of Meiosis II, it will have become four haploid cells.
Four haploid cells are created from one diploid cell by the process of meiosis.
True
yes
gametes
Yes.
4 haploid cells.
Starts in 1 and ends in 4
Meiosis makes 4 genetically unique haploid cells. Mitosis makes 2 diploid cells.
Meiosis produces 4 haploid cells.
4
Yes, 4 haploid cells are produced as products of meiosis.
4 haploid cells.
4 haploid cells
4 sex cells ( 4 haploid cells)
Starts in 1 and ends in 4
There are exactly 4 haploid cells produced after meiosis.
Meiosis makes 4 genetically unique haploid cells. Mitosis makes 2 diploid cells.
4 haploid cells
no, it produce 4 genetically different haploid cells
Meiosis produces 4 haploid cells.
sister chromatids are seperated.
at the end of meiosis 2 you are lest with 4 haploid cells that are completely differnet