In humans, 46 chromosomes are present when meiosis begins. The four daughter cells that result from meiosis have 23 chromosomes.
A mosquito cell has 6 chromosomes in total. During meiosis, the cell goes through two rounds of division. In meiosis I, the cell reduces its chromosome number to half (3 chromosomes) and in meiosis II, it divides again to produce four daughter cells, each with 3 chromosomes.
In anaphase of meiosis, the chromosomes are separated into two sets. If the original cell had 14 chromosomes (7 pairs), during meiosis I, the homologous chromosomes are separated, resulting in two cells, each with 7 chromosomes. During meiosis II, which is similar to mitosis, the sister chromatids are separated, leading to a total of four daughter cells, each with 7 chromosomes. Therefore, in anaphase II, each cell will still have 7 chromosomes.
After meiosis I, each daughter cell contains half the number of chromosomes as the original cell, but each chromosome consists of two sister chromatids. In humans, for example, the original diploid cell has 46 chromosomes, so after meiosis I, each of the two resulting haploid cells will have 23 chromosomes, each still in the form of a duplicated structure.
A gamete has half the number of chromosomes of the somatic (diploid) cell. Therefore a zebra gamete would have 25 chromosomes if 50 is the diploid number.
In humans meiosis produces 23 chromosomes. The human body cell has 46 chromosomes When meiosis occurs 1/2 of the body cells go into the haploid cell produced
In humans, 46 chromosomes are present when meiosis begins. The four daughter cells that result from meiosis have 23 chromosomes.
After meiosis II, each cell will have a haploid number of chromosomes, which means they will have half the number of chromosomes compared to the original cell before meiosis.
250 would be the 1N number after meiosis.
Meiosis is known as a reduction division. The total number of chromosomes present prior to meiosis is reduced in half at the end of meiosis. In this case 12 pairs of chromosomes before meiosis (a total of 24 chromosomes) becomes 12 chromosomes (one of each pair) at the end of meiosis.
A mosquito cell has 6 chromosomes in total. During meiosis, the cell goes through two rounds of division. In meiosis I, the cell reduces its chromosome number to half (3 chromosomes) and in meiosis II, it divides again to produce four daughter cells, each with 3 chromosomes.
At the stage of mitosis or meiosis, coleus cells with 24 chromosomes would have 24 chromosomes present in each cell. In mitosis, the cell divides into two daughter cells, each with the same number of chromosomes. In meiosis, a specialized cell division process, two rounds of division result in four daughter cells with half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
19 chromosomes
23
23
Twenty three chromosomes will be in each cell after meiosis is completed.
23 chromosomes
half chromosomes mather