because they have the same DNA
If the cell division follows mitosis, the number of chromosomes in original cell and new cells remain the same. During meiosis the new cells formed have half the number of chromosomes of original cell.
The two new cells formed after mitosis and cell division are called daughter cell. Their nucleus is genetically identical to the nucleus of the original cell .The two new cells formed after mitosis and cell division. There are no differences between the two cells. They have the same number of chromosomes after division.
The two new cells formed after mitosis and cell division are called daughter cell. Their nucleus is genetically identical to the nucleus of the original cell .The two new cells formed after mitosis and cell division. There are no differences between the two cells. They have the same number of chromosomes after division.
a new cell formed after cell division is called a daughter cell
When body cells (somatic) undergo cell division (mitosis) It creates a duplicate cell. So for every cell undergoing cellular division, one new cell plus will be formed and the original will remain.
Cells are formed through the division of other cells.
The two new cells formed after mitosis and cell division are called daughter cell. Their nucleus is genetically identical to the nucleus of the original cell .The two new cells formed after mitosis and cell division. There are no differences between the two cells. They have the same number of chromosomes after division.
Identical cells formed during cell division are referred to as daughter cells. These daughter cells are produced through the process of mitosis, where a parent cell divides to create two genetically identical offspring cells. This ensures that the genetic material of the parent cell is accurately replicated and passed on to the next generation of cells.
After cell division is complete, two daughter cells are formed. Each daughter cell contains an identical set of genetic material as the original parent cell.
Reproductive cells, also known as gametes, are formed through a specialized cell division process called meiosis. During meiosis, a single cell undergoes two rounds of division to produce four daughter cells, each with half the number of chromosomes as the original cell. This reduction in chromosome number is essential for maintaining the correct number of chromosomes when the gametes fuse during fertilization.
No, meiosis does not produce identical cells during cell division. It results in the formation of genetically unique cells with half the number of chromosomes as the original cell.
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.