There are no differences. They are both identical to the parent.
The offspring receive genetic material from both parents, increasing the chance for diversity.
Cytokinesis is the process by which the cytoplasm of a parent cell is divided into two daughter cells after cell division (mitosis or meiosis). This division is essential for distributing organelles and other cellular components evenly between the two daughter cells.
Mitosis ensure that a new cell is identical to its parents by their copy of the parent's genome in mitosis. Identical genetic information will result in identical cells.
Mitosis produces two cells indentical to the parent cells. Meiosis produces four sex cells each with half as many chromosomes as the parents
First of all, mitosis happens in the body to replicate cells in the skin (for example). Meiosis happens in the sex organs, it makes gametes (sex cells). In mitosis, the one parent cell and the two daughter cells are genetically identical and they have the same number of chromosomes. In meiosis, the one parent cell and the four daughter cells are not genetically identical. The parent cell will have the full number of chromosomes but the daughter cells will only have half the normal number of chromosomes.
daughter cells are similar to parents because they share the same dna
Mitosis requires only a single parent. However, when the mitosis produce they give four daughter cells. Mitosis has two cell divisions.
mitosis ends with 2 identical daughter cells and meiosis ends with 4 non-identical sister chromatids.
Because mitosis is the process of duplicating a cell. Creating 2 daughter cells out of 1 parents cell. And the duplication of the DNA is just the first step.
The offspring receive genetic material from both parents, increasing the chance for diversity.
This statement is true when referring to cell division processes such as mitosis, where the daughter cells are exact copies of the parent cell. This ensures that each daughter cell receives the same genetic information as the parent cell.
Mitosis ensure that a new cell is identical to its parents by their copy of the parent's genome in mitosis. Identical genetic information will result in identical cells.
Yes, daughter cells resulting from mitosis have the same number of chromosomes as the original cell. Each daughter cell receives an identical set of chromosomes from the parent cell during cell division.
Yes, cells produced from mitosis are genetically identical to their parent cell because they undergo a process of cell division where the genetic material is replicated and equally distributed between the two daughter cells. This ensures that the genetic information remains the same in both the parent and daughter cells.
There is only one parent need in mitosis. :)
In mitosis, daughter cells are exactly like the parent cell (identical copies). In meiosis, daughter cells are different but similar in the fact that the chromosomes have undergone crossing over, giving genetic variability. Thus producing a "recombined" daughter cell and essentially not identical to the parent cell.
If you are talking about mitosis, yes, the daughter cells are identical to themselves and even their parents. But when it comes to meiosis, the daughter cells are not alike, they show variation