that would be reduction division, i think :}
The name for female meiosis is oogenesis. It is the process by which female germ cells differentiate into mature eggs.
gametes, sex cells, haploid cells. the process is meiosis.
Before the Meiosis takes place, there is another process Mitosis which takes place, the process of mitosis produces 2 daughter cell and than meiosis doubles the cells, therefore the process of meiosis combinely produces 4 daughter cells from 1 parent cell.
It is called spermatogenesis and for females it is called oogenesis.
The name of the process where the division of cells forms haploid cells is called meiosis. During meiosis, a single diploid cell undergoes two rounds of division to produce four haploid cells, each with half the number of chromosomes as the original cell.
Meiosis
Another name for meiosis, which results in the reduction of chromosome number from diploid to haploid, is reduction division.
The name for female meiosis is oogenesis. It is the process by which female germ cells differentiate into mature eggs.
Traits are another name for genes. These are located on various areas of chromosomes. During meiosis, the chromosomes which are duplicated, are formed into gametes (ova or sperm). Those two combine into a new individual with entirely different mixture of traits.
Another way to increase genetic diversity is the process referred to as anaphase one. The is the third stage of meiosis, which is where chromosomes are loosened.
amitosis
I'm unable to see images, but I can help you identify stages of meiosis based on descriptions. If you provide details about the characteristics of the stage or the arrangement of chromosomes, I can help you determine whether it is prophase, metaphase, anaphase, or telophase of meiosis I or meiosis II.
Secondary spermatocyte
Meiosis
Meiosis I and meiosis II
Remember that meiosis ONLY occurs in the sex organs (gonads). In segmented worms, meiosis occurs in the cocoon they excrete after intercourse with another hermaphroditic worm. However, ALL the other cells in the annelid undergo mitosis.
If you mean meiosis I and meiosis II, then no they are not identical, but meiosis II does follow meiosis I.