Somatic cells (body cells) undergo mitosis. An example of this could be a skin cell, as the skin cell replacing the dying skin cell must be an exact clone.
Sex cells (gametes) undergo meiosis.
Because meiosis results in half the number of chromosomes in it's daughter cells, gametes are the only cells that undergo meiosis in the body.
Meiosis is a process in which participating cells divide twice rather than once and the result is four haploid daughter cells. Sex cells can undergo meiosis.
sex cells go through mitosis, all other cells go through meiosis.
Cells which produce gametes (sex cells) undergo meiosis.
Germ cells undergo meiosis to form the gametes.
Germ cells in the gonads (ovaries and testes) undergo meiosis.
No. Only the cells that produce the gametes undergo meiosis.
new cells
Body cells do not undergo meiosis. Reproductive cells undergo meiosis, body cells, mitosis.
Cells which produce gametes (sex cells) undergo meiosis.
cells undergo meiosis to produce gametes which are also called your "sex" cells
Somatic cells undergo mitosis. Sex cells undergo meiosis.
Germ cells undergo meiosis to form the gametes.
The body of cells that undergo meiosis are sex cells. The two sex cells found in most eukaryotic organisms are sperm cell and egg cell.
Germ cells in the gonads (ovaries and testes) undergo meiosis.
No. Only the cells that produce the gametes undergo meiosis.
sex cells
new cells
Only sex cells such as sperm and eggs undergo meiosis. This occurs at puberty.
To create sex cells for reproduction