The two types of meiosis are meiosis I and meiosis II. Meiosis I involves homologous chromosomes separating, while meiosis II involves sister chromatids separating.
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Meiosis produces four nonidentical daughter cells.
Meiosis I should not produce haploid cells. They should be diploid because before meiosis I the diploid cell duplicated its DNA. It is only after Meiosis II that the four cells are haploid.
Meiosis has two divisions, called meiosis I and meiosis II. Meiosis I involves separating homologous chromosomes, while meiosis II involves separating sister chromatids. Mitosis, on the other hand, only has one division where the goal is to produce two daughter cells with identical genetic information to the parent cell.
The two types of meiosis are meiosis I and meiosis II. Meiosis I involves homologous chromosomes separating, while meiosis II involves sister chromatids separating.
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During meiosis, the homologous chromosomes separate and go to different gametes.
meiosis 1 the result is 2 different cells with diploid (or duplicated haploids) chromosomes and for meiosis 2, the result is 4 different haploid cells
Meiosis produces four nonidentical daughter cells.
meiosis
At metaphase I of meiosis in a male individual, there are 223 (8,388,608) different chromosome alignments possible.
Meiosis is what makes us different from each other. Without meiosis, we would all look the same with the same characteristics and personality.
because there is half as many cells
Meiosis I should not produce haploid cells. They should be diploid because before meiosis I the diploid cell duplicated its DNA. It is only after Meiosis II that the four cells are haploid.
Well the second phase of meiosis (meiosis II) is pretty much the same thing as mitosis except the outcome is 4 different haploid cells.
Mitosis is the splitting of cells to create two different cells. Meiosis is the division of the reproductive cells.