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
The original cell that undergoes meiosis, known as a diploid cell, contains two sets of chromosomes, one from each parent. In humans, this means it has a total of 46 chromosomes, or 23 pairs. During meiosis, this diploid cell undergoes two rounds of division to produce four haploid cells, each containing 23 chromosomes.
Meiosis produces new cells with half as many chromosomes as the original cell. During meiosis, a diploid cell undergoes two rounds of division to produce four haploid daughter cells, each with half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
Meiosis.
After meiosis I, the cell will have half the number of chromosomes as the original cell. This is because the chromosome number is halved during meiosis I, going from diploid to haploid.
It produces four genetically different cells with 23 chromosomes each. They are haploid.
Half the original cell.
The original cell that undergoes meiosis, known as a diploid cell, contains two sets of chromosomes, one from each parent. In humans, this means it has a total of 46 chromosomes, or 23 pairs. During meiosis, this diploid cell undergoes two rounds of division to produce four haploid cells, each containing 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.
Meiosis produces new cells with half as many chromosomes as the original cell. During meiosis, a diploid cell undergoes two rounds of division to produce four haploid daughter cells, each with half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
Meiosis.
It produces four genetically different cells with 23 chromosomes each. They are haploid.
After meiosis I, the cell will have half the number of chromosomes as the original cell. This is because the chromosome number is halved during meiosis I, going from diploid to haploid.
A daughter cell produced after meiosis II has half the number of chromosomes as the original parent cell. This means that in humans, which have cells with 46 chromosomes, each daughter cell produced at the end of meiosis II would have 23 chromosomes.
The new cell will have the same number of chromosomes as the original cell.
Meiosis forms sex cells. So, there are 23 chromosomes at the end of meiosis.
Each daughter cell produced by meiosis will have half the number of chromosomes as the original diploid cell. So, if a diploid cell contains 28 chromosomes, each daughter cell will have 14 chromosomes 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.