Daughter cells in mitosis are diploid, however daughter cells of meiosis are haploid.
Daughter cells are typically diploid after cell division.
When somatic cells reproduce by mitosis, the daughter cells are diploid. This means they have two sets of chromosomes, one from each parent, and the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
Daughter cells in meiosis are haploid.
In Meiosis four diploid daughter cells are produced.
The parent cell is diploid. The daughter cells are haploid.
2 daughter cells
It depends on the process. Daughter cells created by mitosis are identical to the original cell (diploid), whereas daughter cells from meiosis are haploid.
two diploid daughter cells
If you are asking about cellular meiosis, one diploid parent cell will ultimately form four haploid daughter cells. The parent cell replicates all of its DNA, splits into two intermediate daughter cells that are diploid, and each of these intermediate daughter cells splits to form two more daughter cells. The end result is four haploid cells.
Meiosis produces four haploid cells. Mitosis produces two diploid cells.
They are haploid. As meosis produces sex cells (sperm and eggs) they must have half the genetic material, so when fertilisation occurs the gamete formed has one full set of chromosomes, it is diploid.
In mitosis, a diploid parental cell produces two diploid daughter cells. This means that each daughter cell will have the same number of chromosomes as the parental cell.