During a process called 'meiosis' at the end of telophase which ends in cytokinesis - the process by which the daughter cells separate.
four daughter haploid cells are formed after anaphase of meiosis ll
anaphase 1
anaphase
haploid
It depends on the process. Daughter cells created by mitosis are identical to the original cell (diploid), whereas daughter cells from meiosis are haploid.
in meiosis, or after the cell has split two times
Anaphase of Meiosis 1 separates the homologous chromosome pairs, but during Anaphase of Meiosis 2, the sister chromatids are separated instead. Also, Meiosis 1 starts with one diploid cell and ends with 2 haploid cells, whereas Meiosis 2 starts with the 2 haploid cells and ends with 4 haploid cells (gametes).
If crossing over didn't happen during meiosis in humans, the haploid daughter cells would all have the same genes. The crossing over creates variation and causes each daughter cell to have slightly different genes.
Well mitosis is the splitting of somatic cells (body cells), and meiosis is the splitting of the sex cells, so if we are talking about the mother's cells splitting in preparation for fertilization, than it would be meiosis.
NovaNet/GradPoint answer: four haploid daughter cellsMeiosis 2 creates a total of 4 haploid daughter cells from an original 2 daughter cells (created during meiosis 1). Each daughter cell has a completely different set of DNA than the 2 daughter cells created in meiosis 1, as well as the original parent cells.
Yes.
NovaNet/GradPoint answer: four haploid daughter cellsMeiosis 2 creates a total of 4 haploid daughter cells from an original 2 daughter cells (created during meiosis 1). Each daughter cell has a completely different set of DNA than the 2 daughter cells created in meiosis 1, as well as the original parent cells.
NovaNet/GradPoint answer: four haploid daughter cellsMeiosis 2 creates a total of 4 haploid daughter cells from an original 2 daughter cells (created during meiosis 1). Each daughter cell has a completely different set of DNA than the 2 daughter cells created in meiosis 1, as well as the original parent 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.
A total of four daughter cells form
Answer this q Two haploid cells are formed. Devon S uestion…
Plato users, Meiosis I. i dont know the answer , but this is not the answer !
Anaphase 2
I think that it is haploid
DNA content is halved in both meiosis I and meiosis II. Ploidy level changes from diploid to haploid in meiosis I, and remains haploid in meiosis II.
in meiosis, or after the cell has split two times