yes...........because meiosis is basis of asexual reproduction.....and in asexual reproduction,offsprings are identical to their parent.
Meiosis will produce 4 cells that are not identical to the parent cell but are identical to each other.
Four non-identical daughter cells are produced in meiosis.
The final product of meiosis is four genetically non-identical haploid daughter cells.
No, meiosis is a type of cell division that produces four non-identical haploid daughter cells. This process is essential for sexual reproduction in eukaryotic organisms.
If you mean meiosis I and meiosis II, then no they are not identical, but meiosis II does follow meiosis I.
Meiosis will produce 4 cells that are not identical to the parent cell but are identical to each other.
Meiosis results in four non-identical daughter cells.
Four non-identical daughter cells are produced in meiosis.
Four, non-identical, haploid cells are produced at the end of meiosis.
The "meiosis" stage in cell reproduction produces two identical sex cells.
Germ cells. Somatic cells perform mitosis to get genetically identical daughter cells, and germ cells perform meiosis to get genetically different cells. In gametophytes, it's known as generative cells.
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.
No two sperm cells are identical because of the process of crossing over that occurs in prophase I of meiosis.
They are identical from the cells they formed from
A prison construction firm. That, or cellular mitosis.
The final product of meiosis is four genetically non-identical haploid daughter cells.
4 cells are produced at the end of meiosis.