because your genes are rubbish
There are no differences. They are both identical to the parent.
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.
When a single embryo in a mother's womb splits into two separate embryos early on in embryonic development, identical twins are created. Because the two twin embryos originate from the same single embryo, they will have extremely similar, if not identical, physical appearances and emotional actions when they are born. Identical twins are "identical' because they are created from the same original embryo during development inside the womb, not due to who their parents are.
During binary fusion, the parental identities of the two nuclei are lost as they merge to form a single nucleus with a new combination of genetic material. In multiple fusion events, such as in the fusion of gametes during sexual reproduction, the parental identities remain present in the resulting zygote, which inherits genetic material from both parents.
The parental organisms that are crossed are typically of two different generations or lines: the P1 generation, which are the original parents, and the F1 generation, which are the offspring resulting from their cross.
You do not have parental rights to your grandchild. Only his parents do.
Yes they are identical and have the same amount of chromosomes
No, the offspring produced by conjugation are not genetically identical to their parents. Conjugation involves the transfer of genetic material between two bacterial cells, resulting in genetic diversity in the offspring.
Salmonella does not have "parents" in the traditional sense, as it is a bacterium and reproduces asexually through binary fission. This means that a single Salmonella cell can divide to produce two identical daughter cells. Thus, it does not have a parental lineage like multicellular organisms do.
DNA
DNA
mitosis ends with 2 identical daughter cells and meiosis ends with 4 non-identical sister chromatids.
There are no differences. They are both identical to the parent.
the events can ensure that the dna
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
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.
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.