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Each daughter cell will have 52 chromosomes. This is because mitosis produces daughter cells which are genetically identical to the parent cell. Therefore they will have the same number of chromosomes.
The male and female chromosome combined during reproduction in fallopian tube of female after the fusion of male and female germ cell, when this germ cell strat dividing then at the miotic prophase the chromosome undergo crossing over and the two chromosome exchange their genetic data and the resulting cell have qualities or genetic material of both the parents. This process is important and essential for continuity of life. The male and female chromosome combined during reproduction in fallopian tube of female after the fusion of male and female germ cell, when this germ cell strat dividing then at the miotic prophase the chromosome undergo crossing over and the two chromosome exchange their genetic data and the resulting cell have qualities or genetic material of both the parents. This process is important and essential for continuity of life.
mitosis is the process in which cells separates longitudinally into two parts, one part of each chromosome being retained in each of two new cells resulting from the original cell.
When a cell divides, each of the daughter cells should contain a copy of the entire genome. This is the reason why a copy of every chromosome has to be made so that one half can go into each daughter cell. If the parent call contained 23 chromosomes for example, during the synthesis phase of the cell cycle (of which prophase is a part), the total number of chromosomes will increase to 46 since each chromosome will be copied. When the cell divides to create two daughter cells, each daughter cell will contain 23 chromosomes.
The second strand of a chromosome is a copy of the genetic information for that cell. There are 2 strands so that when the cell divides, there is one copy of each chromosome for each offspring cell.
Gametes are haploid.EDIT:Meiosis produces four haploid cells after Telophase II and cytokinesis.But he/she is right. Gametes are haploid cells.
Each daughter cell will have 52 chromosomes. This is because mitosis produces daughter cells which are genetically identical to the parent cell. Therefore they will have the same number of chromosomes.
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Sexual reproduction took me a while 2 figure it out 2
A chromatid means one copy, or a daughter cell, of a duplicated chromosome, which is joined to another copy by a single centromere. Each contain the same DNA and chromosome protein as the original cell.
Mitosis results in two identical cells being produced from the original cell. A copy of each chromosome is made before the cell divides and one of each chromosome goes to each new cell.
If you mean haploid, as in half of each chromosome, or containing only one chromatid from each full chromosome, thenthe cell is called haploid.
If you mean haploid, as in half of each chromosome, or containing only one chromatid from each full chromosome, thenthe cell is called haploid.
A cell with two copies of each chromosome is called a diploid cell. A cell with one copy is called a haploid cell.
The male and female chromosome combined during reproduction in fallopian tube of female after the fusion of male and female germ cell, when this germ cell strat dividing then at the miotic prophase the chromosome undergo crossing over and the two chromosome exchange their genetic data and the resulting cell have qualities or genetic material of both the parents. This process is important and essential for continuity of life. The male and female chromosome combined during reproduction in fallopian tube of female after the fusion of male and female germ cell, when this germ cell strat dividing then at the miotic prophase the chromosome undergo crossing over and the two chromosome exchange their genetic data and the resulting cell have qualities or genetic material of both the parents. This process is important and essential for continuity of life.
mitosis is the process in which cells separates longitudinally into two parts, one part of each chromosome being retained in each of two new cells resulting from the original cell.
Daughter cells resulting from mitotic division have the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell.