Does mitosis buddy. and yes
yes
Yes - the daughter cells produced in meiosis (gametes) have half the number of chromosomes as those in the original cell. This is why meiosis is referred to as 'reduction division'. However, as meiosis produces cells which are involved in sexual reproduction - the chromosome number in the species remains constant. This is because when the two gametes combine, the resulting organism has the correct number of chromosomes (half from each gamete).
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. :)
WOW!! That guy is amazing. A chicken? Histerical, Neurofibromatosis affects only chromosome number 23. It also will affect the brain and is an autosomal dominant genetic disorder.It is when your chromosome has a chicken.
The y chromosome, which only contains a few hundred genes.
It depends on the type of cell. In ordinary somatic (body) cells it is the same as the parent cell. In sex cells it is half the number. Many animals and plants have numbers of chromosomes that are different from human cells numbers.
mitosis is a division of nuucleus while cleavageis the division of cytoplasm and cleavage increases the number of cellswithout increasing mass and mitosis increasing mass as well as numbers.
In mitosis, the daughter cells each have the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
one of the sister chromatids in one of the two cells that was produced during the first division of meiosis did not separate during the second division resulting in one cell with an extra chromosome and one with a missing chromosome. This process is known as nondisjunction
It divides into two cells. Here you have a sequence in cells. 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256... = 2s when s = sequenced numbers
Yes - the daughter cells produced in meiosis (gametes) have half the number of chromosomes as those in the original cell. This is why meiosis is referred to as 'reduction division'. However, as meiosis produces cells which are involved in sexual reproduction - the chromosome number in the species remains constant. This is because when the two gametes combine, the resulting organism has the correct number of chromosomes (half from each gamete).
A karyotype can be valuable in pinpointing cases of unusual chromosome numbers in a cell.
Any chromosome can be affected by aneuploidy. However, generally, the larger the chromosome, the larger the likelihood that the change in chromosome number will be fatal.
the chromosome number would vary in daughter cells because disjunction involves the separation of the duplicated chromosomes. disjunction is the whole process occurring in anaphase, so it would be as if anaphase didn't exist. cells would go straight from duplicating chromosomes to splitting. chromosome numbers in daughter cells would therefore be uneven and random because of the cell just splitting in half and whatever chromosomes being in the daughter cell being there
The numbers in a division problem are called dividend, divisor, and quotient.
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. :)
Same way you do division with positive numbers. Then, if both numbers are negative, the result is positive, otherwise it is negative.
Chromosomes line up in the middle of the cell during the metaphase stage of cell division. The plane in which the chromosomes are lined up is called the metaphasic plane.During anaphase, the chromosomes move into the two daughter cells toward the centrioles located at the poles of the daughter cells.sorry that's not one of the answers to me knowledge im thinking it would be asters they move in the opposite directions chromosome numbers are the same afterwards.NucleiAstersChromosomesSpindle fibers