yes, after meiosis 2 there are in total 4 daughtercels. if they are sperm, they will all be good cells, if they are ovums, it will be 1 good cell, and 3 useless cells
No there are four. All are haploid cells
Two daughter cells are formed.
Both processes product two new identical daughter cells.
The number of daughter cells created by meiosis is four. These cells, unlike in mitosis which produces only two identical daughter cells, are all different from their parent cell.
Meiosis forms two daughter cells. These daughter cells split to form four sex cells each with a complete, but single, set of twenty three chromosomes.
Depends on what you are looking for. In mitosis, two daughter cells are produced after cytokinesis. In meiosis, there are two cell divisions that take place at two different times. One after meiosis I (which produces 2 intermediate cells) and one after meiosis II, which produces a total of four daughter cells.
There are four daughter cells present at the end of meiosis. The original cell divides into two daughter cells which further divided into two more cells.
At the end of Meiosis there are 4 daughter cells.
At the end of meosis 1, there are two daughter cells
Meiosis creates four daughter cells, and mitosis results in two.
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.
Haploid... i think but most likely At the end of Mitosis you are left with two identical diploid cells, but at the end of Meiosis there are four haploid cells.
In meiosis diploid cells divide to produce four daughter cells each of which is haploid. It is the type of cell division required to produce gametes.
Two daughter cells are formed.
4
Both processes product two new identical daughter cells.
Meiosis
Mitosis: Two Meiosis: Four