What are the differences between meiosis in human and meiosis in oomycota?
Answers
Answered by
4
hey here is ur answer ⏩⏩
⭕In humans, meiosis is the process by which sperm cells and egg cells are produced. In the male, meiosis takes place after puberty. Diploid cells within the testes undergo meiosis to produce haploid sperm cells with 23 chromosomes. A single diploid cell yields four haploid sperm cells through meiosis
⭕ In meiosis of oomycata Members of the Oomycota (pronounce both o's as you would in the common expression 'oh oh!') are all distinguished by their production of oogonia and oospores. Most lack septa in their hyphae and are therefore referred to as coenocytic.
thanks for the question....
⭕In humans, meiosis is the process by which sperm cells and egg cells are produced. In the male, meiosis takes place after puberty. Diploid cells within the testes undergo meiosis to produce haploid sperm cells with 23 chromosomes. A single diploid cell yields four haploid sperm cells through meiosis
⭕ In meiosis of oomycata Members of the Oomycota (pronounce both o's as you would in the common expression 'oh oh!') are all distinguished by their production of oogonia and oospores. Most lack septa in their hyphae and are therefore referred to as coenocytic.
thanks for the question....
Answered by
2
⭕In humans, meiosis is the process by which sperm cells and egg cells are produced. In the male, meiosis takes place after puberty. Diploid cells within the testes undergo meiosis to produce haploid sperm cells with 23 chromosomes. A single diploid cell yields four haploid sperm cells through meiosis
⭕ In meiosis of oomycata Members of the Oomycota (pronounce both o's as you would in the common expression 'oh oh!') are all distinguished by their production of oogonia and oospores. Most lack septa in their hyphae and are therefore referred to as coenocytic.
Similar questions