Cytokinesis terminates during telophase. Cytokinesis is the formation of a cell plate in the cytoplasm. It is what causes cell division in plants.
Mitosis and cytokinesis occur during the M phase (mitotic phase) of the cell cycle. This phase is characterized by cell division, where the cell replicates its DNA and divides into two daughter cells.
Mitosis occurs during the last phase- Telophase.
The completion of cytokinesis occurs during the final phase of mitosis, known as telophase. During telophase, the nuclear membrane reforms around the separated sets of chromosomes, and two distinct daughter nuclei are created. Cytokinesis, the division of the cytoplasm, then follows, resulting in the separation of the two daughter cells.
The G0 phase is the last stage of mitosis in which the physical division of the parent cell is completed.
Telophase
The final phase of mitosis during cytokinesis is telophase. During telophase, the nuclear envelope reforms around the separated chromosomes, the nucleoli reappear, and the chromosomes begin to decondense. Cytokinesis, the physical separation of the two daughter cells, usually follows telophase.
No, cytoplasmic division begins in the last phase of Mitosis, telophase, and completes during cytokinesis.
Cytokinesis is completed shortly after the chromatid separation. This process occurs during the anaphase stage of mitosis in a cell's life cycle.
cytokinesis
Telophase
Mitosis begins during the M phase of the cell cycle, which is also known as the mitotic phase. This phase includes mitosis, where the nucleus divides, and cytokinesis, where the cytoplasm divides, resulting in two daughter cells.
The shortest phase of mitosis is metaphase. In this phase, the duplicated chromosomes align along the equator of the cell before they are separated into two daughter cells during anaphase.