functionally they are pretty much the same. overall the number of chromosomes is different.
Depending on how much detail you want..... during anaphase the sister centromeres move apart and move to the polar spindals (formed from the old nuclear membrane), with the centromeres clearly devided
During mitosis, each chromosome is made up of two clones, known as chromatids. These chromatids are joined together and look like two halves of an X. Anaphase is the period of mitosis when these chromatids separate at the middle and begin to move apart from each other. By separating the identical DNA halves, two new cells can be formed with the same genetic material as the original.
A human zygote with 45 chromosomes may result from a chromosomal abnormality known as a monosomy, where one copy of a chromosome is missing. This condition is typically associated with severe developmental abnormalities and is often incompatible with life.
lalala
Meiosis
Depending on how much detail you want..... during anaphase the sister centromeres move apart and move to the polar spindals (formed from the old nuclear membrane), with the centromeres clearly devided
2
The meiotic phase encompasses all stages of mitosis. The stages include the telophase, anaphase, metaphase, and prophase. Interphase is a phase where cells replicate.
It is called Interkinesis
Mendel's Law of Segregation is when a sperm and egg unite at fertilization, each contributing its allele, thus restoring the paired condition in the offspring. Mendel also discovered that each pair of alleles segregates itself of the other pairs of alleles during gamete formation. This separation occurs during Anaphase I.
do you mean milotic? and there is no suck thing as a meiotic.
During anaphase, the chromatids separate and move towards the spindle poles by the shortening of the kinetochore microtubules.
STAGES ARE:a) Pre-meiotic interphase.(b) Leptotene.(c) Zygotene.(d) Pachytene.(e) Diplotene/ diakinesis.f) Metaphase I.(g) Anaphase I.(h) Metaphase II.(i) Anaphase II.(j) Telophase II.
the stages of the two meiotic divisions of meiosis?
meiotic cell division occurs in the gonads
Meiotic cell division in animals is directly responsible for the producing sex cells.
By counting the number of daughter cells resulting from mitotic and meiotic division