No. Because each daughter cells gets a different pair of chromosomes.
the number of chromosomes is double the numbe of chromosomes that were devided. so in other words the chromosomes double.
In Meiosis I: Separates homologous chromosomes In Meiosis II: Separates sister chromatids
Does not form a cell wall
wew im djannela preston MY answer is meiosis for sexual and for mitoses asexual rerpoduction
Mitoses does take place in sexually reproducing organisms. There are two types of cells in your body, somatic cells (heart, skin, bones, etc.) and sex cells (eggs and sperm). Somatic cells all use mitosis to make more of themselves. Sex cells use meiosis to make more of themselves. If sex cells used mitosis instead of meiosis they would have too many chromosomes and the baby would have problems (if it survived at all).
you take a daughter cell and mitoses happens again but it called meiosis
they are both cell divisions, creating daughter cells. They both must occur in all animals (not plants). They both duplicate the chromosome number, and the DNA.
during mitoses
the number of chromosomes is double the numbe of chromosomes that were devided. so in other words the chromosomes double.
world war 1
In Meiosis I: Separates homologous chromosomes In Meiosis II: Separates sister chromatids
Does not form a cell wall
wew im djannela preston MY answer is meiosis for sexual and for mitoses asexual rerpoduction
Chromosomes doubles during the S phase of inter-phase, which occurs before Mitosis. During the process of mitoses cell divides into 2 daughter cells from a single parent hence, before mitoses cells must duplicate so that each new cell has a sufficient set of genetic material.
cell equator or equatorial plane
Both autosomes and sex chromosomes separate during mitosis./ Somatic chromosomes separate during mitosis with same number as in the parent cell.
Mitosis occurs to reproduce new cells in the body, replacing those that are dead or injured. Mitosis also plays a role in other situations, though new cell production is the primary.