Want this question answered?
This is my guess. The two daughter cells are formed they get the same number of chromosomes, as the parent cells.
daughter cells have half the number of cells that a parent cell has
the daughter cells' chromosomes are a identical to the parent cell. they each have a complete set
The daughter cells have the same # of chromosomes & the same amount of DNA
The daughter cells formed by meiosis are haploid, meaning they have only one set of chromosomes. In humans, the haploid number of chromosomes is 23.
In humans, each parent contributes 23 chromosomes.In general, each parent of any species contributes the haploid number of chromosomes, which is the number of chromosomes in a single set of chromosomes.
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.
haploid chromosomes are a set of chromosomes from one parent , half the total of diploid chromosomes.
if you are asking what one is, a gamete is a sex cell that has half the number the number of chromosomes from one parent. during fertilization, two gamete(one from each parent) combine. they are formed during meiosis.
In mitotic cell division, the daughter cells contain the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell. In meiotic cell division, the daughter cells contain half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
The number of cell results in Meiosis is 4.
46 (2n : 46), is the number r of chromosomes in tr daughter cells if the chromosomes in the original parent cell did not duplicate