Question
Asked by:
star123
star123
Rating : No Rating
Questions Asked: 6
Tutorials Posted: 0
 

$1.20 Meiosis

Q:

How is it that, in meiosis, you can end up with four “daughter cells” that are all genetically

different from one another?

 


   
   
   
   
 
Available Tutorials to this Question
Posted by:
janson12
janson12
Rating (10): D
Questions Asked: 0
Tutorials Posted: 77, earned $84.43
 

$1.20 Answers

  • This tutorial hasn't been purchased yet.
  • Posted on Oct. 08, 2009 at 01:19:46AM
A:
Preview: ... somes line up along equator 3) Anaphase *centromeres divide *chromatides (now called chromosomes) move toward opposite poles 4) Telophase *nuclear envelope forms at each pole *ch ...

The full tutorial is about 126 words long .
Posted by:
bibhupada
bibhupada
Rating (180): A
Questions Asked: 0
Tutorials Posted: 1952, earned $820.52
 

$1.20 exact answer

  • This tutorial was purchased 1 time and rated A+ by students like you.
  • Posted on Oct. 08, 2009 at 10:42:55AM
A:
Preview: ... ather. These pairings are bivalents. A chromatid of one chromosome in the bivalent may join together with a chromatid from the other chromosome, at points along their length called chiasmata. They may also ex ...

The full tutorial is about 156 words long .
Posted by:
Aprilmehta
Aprilmehta
Rating : No Rating
Questions Asked: 0
Tutorials Posted: 10, earned $20.64
 

$10.00 How duaghter cells are genetically different from one another?

  • This tutorial hasn't been purchased yet.
  • Posted on Oct. 09, 2009 at 03:38:07AM
A:
Preview: ... back in metaphase I, you have enough random exchange of information between ho ...

The full tutorial is about 1892 words long .
   
Join Now or Log In
Get Tutoring
Get Paid
Academic Honesty