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No, meiosis involves two rounds of cell division but differs from mitosis in several key ways. Meiosis results in the formation of gametes with half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell, while mitosis produces two identical daughter cells with the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
Interphase then Mitosis then Cytokinesis then Mitosis the Cytokinesis That's what I remember. Mitosis will occur twice; the reason why there 4 daughter cells (gametes) and they are haploid.
Differences: # Cells undergoing mitosis divide once, cells undergoing meiosis divide twice. # Mitosis is for cell replication, meiosis is for genetic recombination and to produce reproductive cells # Meiosis does not produce exact copies, mitosis does # Crossing over occurs in meiosis # Mitosis produces diploid cells, meiosis produces haploid Similarities: # Both duplicate the organism's genome once, before any duplication occurs # Metaphase plates occur in both # Centrioles exist in both # They share the same basic steps for division # Both occur in eukaryotic cells
The daughter cells produced are genetcally identical. A mitosis divides cells, which still contains the same number on chromosomes. In mitosis DNA is replicated once, and the nucleus divides once. In meiosis DNA is replicated once, but the nucleus is divided twice.
mitosis: doubles then slits. meiosis: doubles twice then splits into 23s
a parent cell goes thru the 5 steps of mitosis twice and the end result is 4 daughter cells
The phase that happens only once in meiosis is prophase I, which is characterized by the pairing of homologous chromosomes and the exchange of genetic material through crossing over. This phase is unique to meiosis and does not occur in mitosis.
Cell division occurs once in mitosis, resulting in two genetically identical daughter cells. In contrast, cell division occurs twice in meiosis, resulting in four genetically different daughter cells with half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
Mitosis reproduces somatic cells, meiosis reproduces sex cells. Mitosis- Cell division involving body cells. Divides once. Meiosis- Cell division involving sex cells. Divides twice.
No, meiosis involves two rounds of cell division but differs from mitosis in several key ways. Meiosis results in the formation of gametes with half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell, while mitosis produces two identical daughter cells with the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
Once, and Meiosis divides twice. :) ur so smart.
Interphase then Mitosis then Cytokinesis then Mitosis the Cytokinesis That's what I remember. Mitosis will occur twice; the reason why there 4 daughter cells (gametes) and they are haploid.
Differences: # Cells undergoing mitosis divide once, cells undergoing meiosis divide twice. # Mitosis is for cell replication, meiosis is for genetic recombination and to produce reproductive cells # Meiosis does not produce exact copies, mitosis does # Crossing over occurs in meiosis # Mitosis produces diploid cells, meiosis produces haploid Similarities: # Both duplicate the organism's genome once, before any duplication occurs # Metaphase plates occur in both # Centrioles exist in both # They share the same basic steps for division # Both occur in eukaryotic cells
Meiosis is Sexual Reproduction, unlike Mitosis, that is responsible for cell growth and other functions. Meiosis has the same phases as Mitosis except that it undergoes those phase twice (Meiosis l and ll). This results in 4 daughter cells, unlike Mitosis which results in only 2 daughter cells. Also, in Mitosis the daughter cells are identical to the original cell, while in Meiosis, it increases genetic variation, because it has characteristics of both parent cells.
The daughter cells produced are genetcally identical. A mitosis divides cells, which still contains the same number on chromosomes. In mitosis DNA is replicated once, and the nucleus divides once. In meiosis DNA is replicated once, but the nucleus is divided twice.
Cells divide once in mitosis, resulting in two daughter cells that are genetically identical to the original cell. In meiosis, cells divide twice, resulting in four daughter cells that are genetically diverse due to genetic recombination.
In mitosis, DNA replication occurs once, resulting in two identical daughter cells. In meiosis, DNA replication occurs twice, resulting in four genetically diverse daughter cells.