Asked by nk
Which of the following is a difference between phase I and phase II of meiosis? (1 point)
• Genetic variations can only occur during phase Il of meiosis.
• Phase I results in two haploid daughter cells and phase II results in four haploid daughter cells.
• Anaphase, metaphase, and telophase only occurs during phase I of meiosis.
• Phase I results in daughter cells with 23 chromosomes each and phase Il with 46 chromosomes each.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
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"Phase I results in two haploid daughter cells and phase II results in four haploid daughter cells."
Explanation: Meiosis I is the reductional division (homologous chromosomes separate), producing two haploid cells. Meiosis II (an equational division) separates sister chromatids and yields a total of four haploid daughter cells.
Explanation: Meiosis I is the reductional division (homologous chromosomes separate), producing two haploid cells. Meiosis II (an equational division) separates sister chromatids and yields a total of four haploid daughter cells.
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