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Q: Cells produced at the end of telophase II have as many chromosomes as cells that started the process.?
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If an organism's diploid number (2n) is 14 how many chromosomes are found in a gamete?

Technically there will be no sister chromatids remaining at the beginning of telophase, as they will have been pulled apart during anaphase into two separate daughter chromosomes. From prophase to anaphase, however, the cell undergoing mitosis would have had 14 sister chromatids. After anaphase there would be a total of 28 daughter chromosomes in the cell, and they would be organized into two groups of 14 that corresponded to the 14 chromosomes the cell started with (barring any mistakes in the process).


How many chromosomes are present when meiosis is started?

In humans, 46 chromosomes are present when meiosis begins. The four daughter cells that result from meiosis have 23 chromosomes.


How many chromosomes are in a human cell that has resulted from mitosis?

There are the same amount of chromosomes as when you started when cells divide via mitosis because you are forming 2 diploid cells i.e. 46 chromosome's. However in Meiosis you form 4 haploid cells because the process of Mitosis happens twice.


How many chromosomes will the sex cells have if there are 24 chromosomes?

12. Meiosis reduces the total number of chromosomes to half of what one started with. so it is 12 by cv princess


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"Adolescent" refers to a young person who has started puberty but not yet reached adulthood, and is not a hormone. Hormones in general are produced by many different glands within the body, including the thyroid and renal glands.

Related questions

How do cells produced at the end of Telophase II compare to the cells that started the process?

Starting cells have two chromatids in each chromosome while end cells have single chromatids .


If an organism's diploid number (2n) is 14 how many chromosomes are found in a gamete?

Technically there will be no sister chromatids remaining at the beginning of telophase, as they will have been pulled apart during anaphase into two separate daughter chromosomes. From prophase to anaphase, however, the cell undergoing mitosis would have had 14 sister chromatids. After anaphase there would be a total of 28 daughter chromosomes in the cell, and they would be organized into two groups of 14 that corresponded to the 14 chromosomes the cell started with (barring any mistakes in the process).


What is the first haploid stage of spermatogenesis?

In humans, cells are usually diploid or haploid. Diploid cells are two complete sets of chromosomes. At fertilization, we usually receive one complete set of chromosomes from each parent. Most of our body is diploid. Haploid cells have one complete set of chromosomes. Sex cells (sperm and eggs) are usually haploid. When two haploid cells fertilize each other, the resulting diploid cell can grow into a normal diploid embryo and ultimately to a full grown adult. Mitosis produces diploid cells and is called mitotic cell division. Meiosis produces haploid cells and is called meiotic cell division. The stages that describe the process of cell division are the same in both mitosis and meiosis. They are Prophase, Metaphase, Anaphase and Telophase. Mitosis and meiosis are part of a larger process called the cell cycle. The stage interphase is part of the cell cycle, but not part of either mitosis or meiosis. Meiosis consists of two rounds of cell division. The stages are distinguished from each other by using the Roman numerals I and II after the stage name, as in Metaphase I and Metaphase II. One full round of meiosis is Prophase I, Metaphase I, Anaphase I, Telophase I, Prophase II, Metaphase II, Anaphase II and finally Telophase II. Meiosis I the cell division that moves the cells from diploid to haploid. The exact stage of Meiosis I that moves the cell from diploid to haploid can be debated. Prophase I and Metaphase I are not options because the chromosomes have not really started to separate yet. Anaphase I is the first realistic answer because the chromosomes begin to separate. Telophase I shows the chromosome completely separated but the cell has not yet become two cells. The nuclei divide during a process called karyokinesis. The newly formed nuclei are in essence haploid, but the original cell is still intact and still has two full sets of chromosomes - albeit the sets are residing in different areas of the same cell. The cell divides into two cells shortly after Telophase I. Thi is called cytokinesis. At this point the new cells are certainly haploid. So the short answer is most definitely either anaphase I or telophase I. The stage that you choose will depend on the standards you use. Anaphase I will be the earliest by looking only at the nuclei. Telophase I will be the latest by looking only at the nuclei. Cytokinesis after Telophase I will be the latest. I am assuming that this is a question for a biology class. The key is to understand the difference between diploid and haploid and HOW they come about. Answering either Anaphase I or Telophase I should work IF you are able to support your answer by describing the process of Meiosis accurately.


What process of cell division creates diploid cells and what process creates haploid cells?

Mitosis makes diploid cells or stomatic cells which are cells with 2 haploid sets of chromosomes. These are your normal body cells. every cell in you body besides the gametes are diploid and have 46 chromosomes. Meiosis makes haploid cells which only have 23 chromosomes or one set of chromosomes. Haploid cells are your gametes or reproductive cells and meiosis only happens in your gonads or reproductive organ.


How many chromosomes are present when meiosis is started?

In humans, 46 chromosomes are present when meiosis begins. The four daughter cells that result from meiosis have 23 chromosomes.


How many chromosomes are in a human cell that has resulted from mitosis?

There are the same amount of chromosomes as when you started when cells divide via mitosis because you are forming 2 diploid cells i.e. 46 chromosome's. However in Meiosis you form 4 haploid cells because the process of Mitosis happens twice.


How many chromosomes will the resulting cells have in mitosis?

This depends both on the cell undergoing mitosis and the stage in mitosis which is currently underway. Humans have 46 chromosomes per cell, but in some stages of mitosis have 92. Dogs have 78 chromosomes, but at some stages of mitosis have 156.


If a parent cell with 4 chromosomes undergoes mitosis how many chromosomes with each of the two daughter cells have?

Four chromosomes: through a process called meiosis, where the chromosomes are duplicated and then split into two cells each containing the same number of chromosomes that the parent cell started out with.


How many chromosomes will the sex cells have if there are 24 chromosomes?

12. Meiosis reduces the total number of chromosomes to half of what one started with. so it is 12 by cv princess


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Which ever process was started last on your computer.