umm i think it is 2 but it might be 4 i get miosis and meiosis mixed up somtimes but i am pritty sur it is 2
2 daughter cells are the product of meiosis
During mitosis, the replicated chromosomes are divided into two genetically identical daughter nuclei, and then the cytoplasm divides during cytokinesis, forming two genetically identical daughter cells.
when the original cells divides in half and splits, forming two new and identical cells, in a process called mitosis
After mitosis each daughter cell contains 46 chromosomes as the DNA replicates itself before the cell divides
daughter cells
It is true ONLY for meiosis II. Mitosis and Meiosis I produce identical daughter cells.
daughter cells
During mitosis, the replicated chromosomes are divided into two genetically identical daughter nuclei, and then the cytoplasm divides during cytokinesis, forming two genetically identical daughter cells.
During mitosis, the replicated chromosomes are divided into two genetically identical daughter nuclei, and then the cytoplasm divides during cytokinesis, forming two genetically identical daughter cells.
mitosis
mitosis
In mitosis the cell divides once. The two cells, in some cases, may then divide again, but mitosis is just one cell dividing into two cells.
in mitosis a parent cell divides into two daughter cells in which the chromosomes are replicated and distributed equally into daughter cells. while in meiosis a parent cell divides into four unequall daughter cells.
This occurs when a eukaryotic cell divides in mitosis or meiosis. The cell plate forms during telophase and is what divides the cytoplasm for the 2 daughter cells.
Yes They do.Mitosis divides the cell into two identical daughter cells.
The process is known as mitosis. During mitosis, the nucleus of the eukaryotic cell divides the chromosomes evenly. After the mitosis, the cell undergoes cytokinesis, which divides the cell in two to create two independent identical (daughter) cells.
Mitosis.
when the original cells divides in half and splits, forming two new and identical cells, in a process called mitosis