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A cell under a microscope shows Two daughter cells were formed and they are haploid. Which stage of meiosis is the cell showing? Meiosis I Meiosis II Interphase

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User Ramusus
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2 Answers

4 votes

Answer:

A

Step-by-step explanation:

4 votes
As explained above, a cell which has yet to commit to meiosis is diploid. That is, it has 2n chromosomes. When it commits to meiosis, it doubles its DNA, becoming 4n. Then it goes through two rounds of cell division: during meiosis I, it divides into two cells and each of these cells is 2n. Then, during meiosis II, each of the two daughter cells divide again, producing a total of 4 haploid (that is, 1n) gametes So it would be A. Meiosis 1 hope i helped
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User Skeptic
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