Question
Which of the following is a difference between phase I and phase II of meiosis?(1 point)
Responses
Anaphase, metaphase, and telophase only occurs during phase I of meiosis.
Phase I results in daughter cells with 23 chromosomes each and phase II with 46 chromosomes each.
Phase I results in two haploid daughter cells and phase II results in four haploid daughter cells.
Genetic variations can only occur during phase II of meiosis.
Responses
Anaphase, metaphase, and telophase only occurs during phase I of meiosis.
Phase I results in daughter cells with 23 chromosomes each and phase II with 46 chromosomes each.
Phase I results in two haploid daughter cells and phase II results in four haploid daughter cells.
Genetic variations can only occur during phase II of meiosis.
Answers
GPT-4 Turbo
Phase I results in two haploid daughter cells and phase II results in four haploid daughter cells.
This statement accurately describes a key difference between the two phases of meiosis. Meiosis I includes processes that reduce the number of chromosomes by half, such as homologous chromosome separation, resulting in haploid cells. Meiosis II is similar to a mitotic division where the sister chromatids separate, leading to a further division of the haploid cells from meiosis I into four haploid daughter cells.
This statement accurately describes a key difference between the two phases of meiosis. Meiosis I includes processes that reduce the number of chromosomes by half, such as homologous chromosome separation, resulting in haploid cells. Meiosis II is similar to a mitotic division where the sister chromatids separate, leading to a further division of the haploid cells from meiosis I into four haploid daughter cells.