A chromatid is one half of a chromosome at a stage of the cell cycle when the chromosome contains two molecules of DNA.
A chromatid is like a twin; you can only use the term when there are two of them!
Before DNA replicates, each chromosome has only one molecule of DNA. After replication of the DNA, there are two DNA molecules in each chromosome. These become visible under a light microscope when the chromosomes condense during prophase of the next division.
Each chromosome then looks like an X. The left side of the X contains one DNA molecule (together with proteins) and the right side contains the other. Each half of the chromosome is a chromatid. At anaphase of the division, the two chromatids are pulled apart. From then on they are no longer referred to as chromatids, but as daughter-chromosomes.
A chromatid is two identical pieces of DNA. A Chromosome is a thread like piece of DNA.
A duplicated chromosome is called a chromatic which is usually identical.
no chromatids single strands chromosomes
chromatid
Sister chromatid separation occur in the Anaphase stage
A recombinant chromatid is a copy of another chromosome that differ just slightly. It is called recombinant since it is a form of artificial creation.
2. A chromatid is basically a chromosome - its just connected to another chromatid via a centromere.
Chromatid!!!!!
chromatid is a individal strand in a chromosome.....
The two chromatid arms on a chromosome are identical copies.
no chromatids single strands chromosomes
I think it's a chromatid.
chromatid
mutagenesis occurs
mutagenesis occurs
Recombinant chromosomes.
Chromosome need 2 chromatids but a chromatid is only half of a chromosome
DNA
Sister chromatid separation occur in the Anaphase stage