Question
What phase of meiosis is shown here?
(1 point)
Responses
Anaphase I
Anaphase I
Anaphase II
Anaphase II
Telophase II
Telophase II
Metaphase I
Metaphase I
(1 point)
Responses
Anaphase I
Anaphase I
Anaphase II
Anaphase II
Telophase II
Telophase II
Metaphase I
Metaphase I
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
To determine the phase of meiosis, we typically look for specific characteristics of the chromosomes during cell division.
- **Anaphase I**: Homologous chromosome pairs are pulled apart to opposite poles of the cell.
- **Anaphase II**: Sister chromatids are pulled apart to opposite poles.
- **Telophase II**: Chromosomes reach the poles and the nuclear envelope begins to reform, followed by cytokinesis.
- **Metaphase I**: Homologous chromosomes are aligned at the metaphase plate.
If you provide a description or image of what you're looking at, I can help you identify the specific phase more accurately. Without that context, based on the typical definitions of each phase, you would follow the characteristics described to figure out which phase is being shown.
- **Anaphase I**: Homologous chromosome pairs are pulled apart to opposite poles of the cell.
- **Anaphase II**: Sister chromatids are pulled apart to opposite poles.
- **Telophase II**: Chromosomes reach the poles and the nuclear envelope begins to reform, followed by cytokinesis.
- **Metaphase I**: Homologous chromosomes are aligned at the metaphase plate.
If you provide a description or image of what you're looking at, I can help you identify the specific phase more accurately. Without that context, based on the typical definitions of each phase, you would follow the characteristics described to figure out which phase is being shown.
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