46
If each daughter cell has 46 chromosomes, then the total number of chromosomes in 144 daughter cells would be 144 cells × 46 chromosomes per cell = 6,624 chromosomes.
No, daughter cells do not have more chromosomes than parent cells. In mitosis, daughter cells receive an identical set of chromosomes, maintaining the same chromosome number as the parent cell. In meiosis, daughter cells have half the number of chromosomes, which is essential for sexual reproduction. Thus, in both processes, the chromosome number is preserved or reduced, but not increased.
The number of chromosomes in daughter cells in human meiosis is 23. During meiosis, the number of chromosomes in the parent cells (sperm and egg cells) is halved to produce haploid daughter cells, which contain half the number of chromosomes as the parent cells.
This is my guess. The two daughter cells are formed they get the same number of chromosomes, as the parent cells.
Parent cells are diploids, and daughter cells are haploids. Therefore, the daughter cells have half of the the number of chromosomes as the parent cells. (chromosomes are DNA)
Yes, the process of meiosis results in four daughter cells with a haploid number of chromosomes. In contrast, mitosis results in two daughter cells with a diploid number of chromosomes.
46 (2n : 46), is the number r of chromosomes in tr daughter cells if the chromosomes in the original parent cell did not duplicate
The daughter cells of meiosis I contain the haploid number of chromosomes, which is half the number of chromosomes found in the parent cell. In humans, each daughter cell of meiosis I contains 23 chromosomes.
The number of chromosomes in daughter cells formed by the first division is the same as the parent cell, typically 46 chromosomes in humans. This is because during the first division, chromosomes are replicated and then distributed equally between the daughter cells.
the daughter cells have half the chromosomes the parent cell does. so when the sex cell combines with the other there isn't double chromosomes. :) the daughter cells have half the chromosomes the parent cell does. so when the sex cell combines with the other there isn't double chromosomes. :)
The daughter cells formed by meiosis are haploid, meaning they have only one set of chromosomes. In humans, the haploid number of chromosomes is 23.
This is correct if the parent cell underwent mitosis, where the daughter cells receive an identical set of chromosomes as the parent cell. In meiosis, however, the daughter cells end up with half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell.