23. The chromosome number is reduced to one half during the first meiotic division. Recall that the number of chromosomes is determined by the number of centromeres, and not the number of chromatids.
The daughter cells in meiosis have half the number of sets of chromosomes compared to the parent cell. This means that in humans, the daughter cells would have 23 pairs of chromosomes instead of the 46 pairs in the parent cell.
During meiosis, the chromosome number decreases by half. For example, if a human cell with 46 chromosomes were to undergo meiosis, the result would be four daughter cells with 23 chromosomes in each.
Haploid cells are necessary for meiosis. When a cell goes through meiosis, it effectively ends with four daughter cells with half the number of chromosomes as the original cell. When two cells join, the resulting zygote will have the number of chromosomes as the original cell. Example. Human sperm and egg cells are produced through meiosis. Egg cells with 46 chromosomes produce 4 daughter cells, each containing 23 chromosomes (if you are familiar with meiosis, you understand how this happens). When joined with a sperm cell (which also contains 23 chromosomes), they produce a zygote which contains 46 chromosomes (which is the number of a regular person). If regular diploid cells, containing 46 chromosomes each, joined then the resulting zygote would have 96 chromosomes (46+46). The offspring of those individuals would have 192 chromosomes (96+96), and so on and so forth...That's why haploid cells are important.
38, as the chromosomes would be duplicated to 76 during the S phase of interphase, then would be divided into two cells during mitosis.
8
The answer is that the daughter cell would have 8 chromosomes.Daughter cells always have half the number of chromosomes the parent cells have. But the normal number of chromosomes is parent have 46 chromosomes and daughter have 23 chromosomes.
The daughter cells in meiosis have half the number of sets of chromosomes compared to the parent cell. This means that in humans, the daughter cells would have 23 pairs of chromosomes instead of the 46 pairs in the parent cell.
During meiosis, the chromosome number decreases by half. For example, if a human cell with 46 chromosomes were to undergo meiosis, the result would be four daughter cells with 23 chromosomes in each.
During meiosis, the chromosome number decreases by half. For example, if a human cell with 46 chromosomes were to undergo meiosis, the result would be four daughter cells with 23 chromosomes in each.
i believe that if meiosis did not cut the number of chromosomes in half, we would have more than 46 chromosomes, essentially killing off future generations because the daughter cells would be different from the parent cells.
After meiosis, each daughter cell has half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell. For example, in humans the parent cell would have 46 chromosomes, but after meiotic cell division, the daughter cells will each have 23 chromosomes.
It depends on the process: mitosis or meiosis. If the cell is dividing through mitosis, then the two daughter cells will have 16 chromosomes; in meiosis, the four daughter cells will have 8 chromosomes.
It depends on the type of cell division. In mitosis, 2 daughter cells with the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell are created. In a human, this would be 46 chromosomes. In meiosis, 4 daughter cell with half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell are created. In a human, this would be 23 chromosomes.
Haploid cells are necessary for meiosis. When a cell goes through meiosis, it effectively ends with four daughter cells with half the number of chromosomes as the original cell. When two cells join, the resulting zygote will have the number of chromosomes as the original cell. Example. Human sperm and egg cells are produced through meiosis. Egg cells with 46 chromosomes produce 4 daughter cells, each containing 23 chromosomes (if you are familiar with meiosis, you understand how this happens). When joined with a sperm cell (which also contains 23 chromosomes), they produce a zygote which contains 46 chromosomes (which is the number of a regular person). If regular diploid cells, containing 46 chromosomes each, joined then the resulting zygote would have 96 chromosomes (46+46). The offspring of those individuals would have 192 chromosomes (96+96), and so on and so forth...That's why haploid cells are important.
After meiosis, four daughter cells are created, with half the chromosomes of a normal cell in the body. Each daughter cell has the same chromosomes, but these chromosomes have different information on them, due to mixing up chromosomes.
38, as the chromosomes would be duplicated to 76 during the S phase of interphase, then would be divided into two cells during mitosis.
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