Science, asked by rubyarshaazimpej0c2, 9 months ago

how does an organism ensure that the two daughter cells formed from the parent cell are capable of survival and have all the information from the parent cell​

Answers

Answered by sachinyogi2011
0

Answer:

unicellular organisms, cell division is the means of reproduction; in multicellular organisms, it is the means of tissue growth and maintenance. Survival of the eukaryotes depends upon interactions between many cell types, and it is essential that a balanced distribution of types be maintained. This is achieved by the highly regulated process of cell proliferation. The growth and division of different cell populations are regulated in different ways, but the basic mechanisms are similar throughout multicellular organisms.

Answered by rajeswaribr
1

Answer:

All the daughter cells of multicellular organism have the same number and type of chromosomes as parent cells due to equitable distribution of all chromosomes in mitosis. This helps in ensuring genetic continuity.

Explanation:

Similar questions