Biology, asked by rambaranwal7741, 9 months ago

Cleavage differs from mitosis in that?

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

\huge\mathcal{Answer:}

Cleavage differs from Mitosis because in it, there is no growth of the resultant daughter cells as the Zona Pellucida remains intact during cleavage divisions. In Mitosis, each daughter cell grows in size. During Cleavage divisions, there is increase in the metabolic activity and oxygen consumption.

Answered by shaziarashidmalik13
2

Answer:

Cleavage is the process of division of the cytoplasm (cytokinesis) in animal cells. In mitosis nucleus divides into two identical nuclei. ... In cleavage nucleus: cytoplasmic ratio increases. In mitosis nucleus: cytoplasmic ratio remains same.

Explanation:

Please mark me as a brainliest please please please

Similar questions