4 cells are produced at the end of meiosis.
4 cells are produced at the end of meiosis.
Four, non-identical, haploid cells are produced at the end of meiosis.
Meiosis results in four haploid cells.
In meiosis diploid cells divide to produce four daughter cells each of which is haploid. It is the type of cell division required to produce gametes.
After mitosis you have two cells and after meiosis you have 4 cells.
Starts in 1 and ends in 4
At the end of Meiosis II, which is the complete end of Meiosis, you end up with four haploid daughter cells.
During meiosis I, the cells at the end are not ready to function as gametes because they are still haploid and need to undergo meiosis II to further divide and produce mature gametes with the correct number of chromosomes.
4 haploid cells.
At the end of meosis 1, there are two daughter cells
There's no spindle fibers at the end of meiosis and the beggining of the meiosis is crossing over.
There are four daughter cells present at the end of meiosis. The original cell divides into two daughter cells which further divided into two more cells.