There is still only 1 cell during prophase.
There is one cell in the prophase.
The number of chromosomes formed is 4!!
There are two cells in prophase II.
1
yes, during prophase
There are 2 cells formed by the end of mitosis and they are called daughter cells. Prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase are the 4 stages of mitosis.
The centriole is the part of the cell that goes to the end of each cell during prophase and forms spindal fibers.A centriol is what divides cells and is only in animal cells
Prophase. The chromosomes become more conspicuous because they gradually condense during prophase. The centrioles separate in animal cells; plant cells lack centrioles.
The centrosomes, which contain the centrioles in animal cells, not plant cells.
yes, during prophase
There are two cells in prophase II.
Prophase- during prophase, chromatids shorten and thicken, nucleoli disappears, spindle fibers form and centrioles in animal cells move to opposite ends.
24 each. If the parent cell has 24 then the daughter cells would have the same number of cells. Unless you meant they are replicated already.
Prophase I of Meiosis I .
During mitosis, chromosomes are in their most condensed form during metaphase
Chromosomes are visible during prophase. Chromosomes are only visible in cells during the cell division because the DNA and protein that the chromosomes are made of are spread throughout the nucleus.
the data of copied cells is distributed to the two daughter cells during prophase
a. chromatids do not separate at the centromere in anaphase I. b. centromeres do not exist in anaphase I. c. crossing-over occurs only in anaphase of miitosis
Chromosomes form during Prophase of Mitosis.
The chromosomes coil up and condense during prophase
Crossing over occurs during Prophase I of meiosis.