Telophase is the last stage in the process of mitosis and meiosis. During telophase the DNA has been successfully duplicated or exchanged and the two cells are beginning to separate. This stage is often associated with cytokinesis, the final separation into 2 individual cells.
Two haploid daughter cells. Telophase I and cytokinesis result in two genetically nonidentical, haploid daughter cells.
Telophase
The 4 steps are prophase,metaphase,anaphase, and telophase. The end result for mitosis is telophase, but if you are talking about the cell cycle it would be cytokinesis.
Formation of two haploid cells
Telophase is the last stage in the process of mitosis and meiosis. During telophase the DNA has been successfully duplicated or exchanged and the two cells are beginning to separate. This stage is often associated with cytokinesis, the final separation into 2 individual cells.
During mitosis, it is when the cell is in telophase.
Telophase is the final stage of cell division.
The nuclear membrane reforms around the nucleus during Telophase, the last phase of mitosis.
The last phase of mitosis is called telophase. During telophase, the separated chromosomes reach opposite poles of the cell, the nuclear envelope reforms around each set of chromosomes, and the chromosomes begin to decondense.
The nuclear envelope reforms during telophase, which is the final stage of mitosis. In telophase, the nuclear membrane and nucleolus reappear, and the chromosomes begin to decondense back into chromatin.
Nuclear envelope begins to reappear in the telophase stage of mitosis.
The result of telophase I and cytokinesis is the separation of homologous chromosomes, each containing two sister chromatids, into two separate daughter cells. These daughter cells are haploid, meaning they have half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell.