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Meiosis results in the formation of four haploid cells from a single diploid cell. This process consists of two divisions - meiosis I and meiosis II - each reducing the chromosome number by half. Therefore, the result is four cells with half the number of chromosomes as the original cell.
Meiosis produces four nonidentical daughter cells.
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A total of four daughter cells are created during meiosis. There are two phases of meiosis, meiosis 1 and meiosis 2. During meiosis 1 two daughter cells are created while during meiosis 2 four daughter cells are created.
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4 haploid cells.
4 Cells are produced by a reproductive cell during meiosis
DNA replicates once during meiosis. This is why the end result is four haploid cells.
One somatic (unspecialised) cell creates 4 'daughter' cells, each with the haploid number of chromosomes. These then specialise into the gamete required, depending on the gender of the organism making them.
Two cells are made from one cell in meiosis. They both contain half the normal number of chromosomes (the haploid number.)
Four daughter cells are produced in meiosis.
Four cells result from one original cell after meiosis. During meiosis, a cell undergoes two rounds of division, resulting in four daughter cells, each with half the number of chromosomes as the original cell.