Daughter cells are a part of mitosis (asexual cell division). They are formed in Telophase when the cell plate forms and creates two separate cells called daughter cells. In mitosis, each daughter cell is identical to the "mother cell" (original cell).
Daughter cells are a part of mitosis (asexual cell division). They are formed in Telophase when the cell plate forms and creates two separate cells called daughter cells. In mitosis, each daughter cell is identical to the "mother cell" (original cell).
A daughter cell is one of usually two cells that are produced when a cell splits--in either mitosis or meiosis if I recall...
If the daughter cell is a result of mitotic cell division, then yes.
A daughter cell and its parent cell are exact copies of each other.
Each daughter cell contains half of the chromosomes from the parent cell. Because the parent cell undergoes DNA replication before mitosis, the parent cell and the daughter cells will be diploid.
In mitotic cell division, the daughter cells contain the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell. In meiotic cell division, the daughter cells contain half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
a new cell formed after cell division is called a daughter cell
Daughter and parent cells are alike because the daughter cell comes from the parent cell.
Daughter cell
The ratio of DNA in a daughter cell after mitosis is 2:1. Mitosis produces two daughter cells that are identical to the parent cell.
The daughter cells are identical to the original cell.
Two identical daughter cells are produced.
because daughter cell goes to partys and parent doesnt
daughter cells are copies of an original cell.