Biology, asked by suryanarayana932, 3 months ago

29)

What is a major difference between mitosis and meiosis I in a diploid animal?

Group of answer choices

a)Crossing over happens in mitosis during prophase, while independent assortment occurs in prophase I of meiosis

b) DNA replication occurs prior to mitosis, but not meiosis I

c) Meiosis II results in daughter cells that contain identical genetic information

d) Sister chromatids separate in mitosis, while homologous pairs of chromosomes separate in meiosis I

Answers

Answered by fatmaadamkhan025
0

Explanation:

Difference Between Mitosis And Meiosis

From an academic perspective, understanding the difference between mitosis and meiosis is crucial. Read on to explore what is mitosis and meiosis, significant similarities and differences between the two:

Meiosis

Meiosis is a type of cell division that results in the formation of four daughter cells each with half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell.

 

Mitosis

Mitosis is the type of cell division that results in the formation of two daughter cells each with the same number and kind of chromosomes as the parent cell.

Table of Contents

Introduction

Key Differences

Mitosis – Overview

Meiosis – Overview

Similarities

Conclusion

Difference Between Mitosis And Meiosis

Introduction

In single-celled organisms, cell reproduction gives rise to the next generation. In multicellular organisms, cell division occurs not just to produce a whole new organism but for growth and replacement of worn-out cells within the organisms.

Cell division is always highly regulated and follows a highly orchestrated series of steps. The term cytokinesis refers to the division of a cell in half, while mitosis and meiosis refer to two different forms of nuclear division.

Mitosis results in two nuclei that are identical to the original nucleus. Meiosis, on the other hand, results in four nuclei that each has ½ the chromosomes of the original cell. In animals, meiosis only occurs in the cells that give rise to the sex cells (gametes), i.e., the egg and the sperm.

Also read: Cell Cycle

Similar questions