I'm guessing haploid reproductive cells or something like tht.
Sister chromatids separate during anaphase II of meiosis.
The sister chromatid separate during anaphase II in meiosis. During anaphase I homologous chromosomes get separated.
According to mendel's law of segregation, what happens to chromosomes during meiosis is that, allele pairs do separate leaving each and every cell with a single allele for each trait.
Reduction Division
They are separated in Anaphase I of Meiosis I.
During meiosis.
An allele is one form of a gene. Alleles separate into separate sex cells during meiosis.
Sister chromatids separate during anaphase II of meiosis.
The sister chromatid separate during anaphase II in meiosis. During anaphase I homologous chromosomes get separated.
According to mendel's law of segregation, what happens to chromosomes during meiosis is that, allele pairs do separate leaving each and every cell with a single allele for each trait.
According to mendel's law of segregation, what happens to chromosomes during meiosis is that, allele pairs do separate leaving each and every cell with a single allele for each trait.
According to mendel's law of segregation, what happens to chromosomes during meiosis is that, allele pairs do separate leaving each and every cell with a single allele for each trait.
During meiosis, the homologous chromosomes separate and go to different gametes.
Spindle fibers form twice during meiosis: once during meiosis I to separate homologous chromosomes and once during meiosis II to separate sister chromatids.
Reduction Division
They are separated in Anaphase I of Meiosis I.
During meiosis, sister chromatids separate in anaphase II of meiosis II, while homologous chromosomes separate in anaphase I of meiosis I. This separation is essential for generating genetically diverse gametes.