Daughter and parent cells are alike because the daughter cell comes from the parent cell.
In mitosis (one parent cell), the daughter cells have the same genetic material as the parent (unless there is a mutation). In meiosis (two parent cells), the daughter cell/s will share some genetic material with either parent.
If you are talking about mitosis, yes, the daughter cells are identical to themselves and even their parents. But when it comes to meiosis, the daughter cells are not alike, they show variation
The two daughter cells that result from mitosis are diploid just like the parent cell. The daughter cells have the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell. In meiosis, 4 daughter cells result each with half the number of chromosomes that the parent cell had and are therefore called haploid.
Homologous chromosomes assort independently, so each gamete has a unique combination of alleles
Mitosis and meiosis are alike in that they both are a kind of cell division. They are different in that mitosis produces two cells identical to the original, while meiosis produces cells that only have half the chromosomes of the original. Meiosis ends up with haploid cells, while mitosis end up with diploid cells.
Daughter cells are identical to the parent cell.
Parent cells are diploids, and daughter cells are haploids. Therefore, the daughter cells have half of the the number of chromosomes as the parent cells. (chromosomes are DNA)
daughter cells bro! daughter cells...
2 parent cells and 3 daughter cells
In mitosis (one parent cell), the daughter cells have the same genetic material as the parent (unless there is a mutation). In meiosis (two parent cells), the daughter cell/s will share some genetic material with either parent.
Daughter cells are smaller in volume than the parent cell. This is because they split the cytoplasm of the parent cell during cytokinesis.
If you are talking about mitosis, yes, the daughter cells are identical to themselves and even their parents. But when it comes to meiosis, the daughter cells are not alike, they show variation
no they have half the number of chromosomes than their parent cells
The two daughter cells that result from mitosis are diploid just like the parent cell. The daughter cells have the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell. In meiosis, 4 daughter cells result each with half the number of chromosomes that the parent cell had and are therefore called haploid.
This is my guess. The two daughter cells are formed they get the same number of chromosomes, as the parent cells.
The parent cell has twice the chromosomal material than the four daughter cells. parent= diploid daughter= monoploid
because daughter cell goes to partys and parent doesnt