In humans, mitosis is a diploid cell dividing to create two diploid daughter cells. Meiosis is a diploid cell dividing twice to produce four haploid gametes.
The daughter cells produced in mitosis will have the same number of chromosomes and the original cells and they also will be genetically identical to the original cell.
half as many
2 diploid cells
Meiosis II is identical to Mitosis. Meiosis is split into two stages, Meiosis I and Meiosis II. Meiosis I is similar to mitosis however the cells resulting from it have half as many chromosomes as the parent cell.
Some differences between mitosis and meiosis are..mitosis: produces daughter cellsonly has one cell divisiononly produces 2 cellsnumber of chromosomes is diploidmeiosis: produces sex cellsdoubles the amount of cell divisions compared to mitosisdoubles the amount of cells produced compared to mitosisnumber of chromosomes is haploidAnd there you go. These are some differences between mitosis and meiosis. Please do not just copy these onto your homework paper. Thank you.
greater amount of genetic material per cell
Pretty much the same save possible replication errors and uneven distribution of organelles.
52 chromosomes, beca.use the number of chromomes remain the same in mitosis
Mitosis and cytokinesis produce two daughter cells that are identical to the original cell.
Mitosis results in two cells.
The four daughter cells resulting from meiosis are haploid and genetically distinct. The daughter cells resulting from mitosis are diploid and identical to the parent cell.
2 diploid cells
because it would have the same chromosomes 46
In mitosis, the chromosome number remains constant - each daughter cell receives the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell. However, in meiosis, the chromosome number is halved - the resulting gametes have half the number of chromosomes compared to the original parent cell.
because it would have the same chromosomes 46
No. Sperm cells (spermatozoa) are gametes and are the result of meiosis.
Replication
Meiosis II is identical to Mitosis. Meiosis is split into two stages, Meiosis I and Meiosis II. Meiosis I is similar to mitosis however the cells resulting from it have half as many chromosomes as the parent cell.
There are no differences. They are both identical to the parent.