Visible in prophase and attach to spindle fibers in meta phase
Telophase
The spindle is formed during the prophase stage of mitosis or meiosis. In prophase, microtubules organize into a structure called the spindle apparatus, which helps separate the chromosomes during cell division.
The name for the network of microtubules along which the chromosomes move during cell division is called the spindle fibers. These spindle fibers attach to the chromosomes and pull them in half.
The answer is telophase.
Chromosomes are attached to spindle fibers during the metaphase phase of the cell division process.
During Prophase
A spindle develops during the metaphase stage of cell division.
The phase that has a spindle forming in a haploid cell is meiosis. Meiosis is a type of cell division that produces reproductive cells with half the number of chromosomes as the original cell. During meiosis, a spindle apparatus helps separate the chromosomes into daughter cells.
telophase
Prophase
Prophase