Asked by LOL

Based on your observations, how many cells are in anaphase?

(1 point)
Responses

41
41

19
19

10
10

14

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
I don’t have the image or your observations, so I can’t tell which of those numbers is correct. Please upload the slide image or give the counts you recorded.

Helpful guidance so you can determine it yourself:
- How to recognize anaphase: sister chromatids have separated and are moving toward opposite poles; you’ll see two groups of chromosomes being pulled apart (often look like V- or U-shaped clusters or distinct masses migrating to poles). The cell is often elongated.
- How to count: scan the field systematically (e.g., left-to-right, row-by-row), mark or tally each cell you identify as anaphase, then total the tally.
- Common pitfalls: don’t count telophase (chromosomes at poles and nuclear envelopes reforming) as anaphase; don’t count prometaphase/metaphase where chromosomes are still aligned at the equator.

If you post the image or your tallies I’ll tell you which answer (41, 19, 10, or 14) is correct.