Reduction Division.
The parent cell is diploid. The daughter cells are haploid.
Meiosis.
Meiosis I should not produce haploid cells. They should be diploid because before meiosis I the diploid cell duplicated its DNA. It is only after Meiosis II that the four cells are haploid.
its haploid= 4 cellsBy the end of meiosis all four resulting daughter cells are haploid.
the process of meiosis is completed after 4 haploid cells are made. It starts with (i believe) 1 diploid cell that divides into 2 diploids, then it splits and makes 4 haploid cells. then another diploid cell is required to make more haploids (again, i believe)
Meiosis produces haploid cells from a diploid cell
Haploid
haploid
The parent cell is diploid. The daughter cells are haploid.
Meiosis makes 4 genetically unique haploid cells. Mitosis makes 2 diploid cells.
Meiosis produces 4 haploid cells.
Meiosis.
They are haploid because they are half of the original parent cell.
Meiosis I should not produce haploid cells. They should be diploid because before meiosis I the diploid cell duplicated its DNA. It is only after Meiosis II that the four cells are haploid.
its haploid= 4 cellsBy the end of meiosis all four resulting daughter cells are haploid.
At the end of Meiosis II, which is the complete end of Meiosis, you end up with four haploid daughter cells.
DNA content is halved in both meiosis I and meiosis II. Ploidy level changes from diploid to haploid in meiosis I, and remains haploid in meiosis II.