A cell undergoing meiotic division will divide twice, yielding 4 haploid cells.
4
2,4,6...
The nucleus of the cell.
meiosis
A cell divides to produce two daughter cells that are genetically different is true for meiosis I only. Homologous chromosomes move toward opposite poles of a dividing cell during meiosis I.
Chromosones are divided two times. Once during meiosis I and once during meiosis II.
2,4,6...
The nucleus of the cell.
This occurs when a eukaryotic cell divides in mitosis or meiosis. The cell plate forms during telophase and is what divides the cytoplasm for the 2 daughter cells.
It's mitosis. Meiosis is when the cell divides twice.
twice
Yes.
meiosis
A cell divides to produce two daughter cells that are genetically different is true for meiosis I only. Homologous chromosomes move toward opposite poles of a dividing cell during meiosis I.
Chromosones are divided two times. Once during meiosis I and once during meiosis II.
The entire cell is dividing just like mitosis except there will be 23 chromosomes instead of 46
in meiosis, or after the cell has split two times
Meiosis