The second phase of Meiosis I
What is Prophase I?
The fourth phase of Meiosis II
Telophase II
The process by which a germ cell undergoes division twice to produce 4 gametes in which the chromosome number is halved.
What is Meiosis?
The longest phase of the cell cycle
What is interphase?
The number of cells at the end of Meiosis.
What is 4?
The first phase of Meiosis I
What is Interphase I?
The third phase of Meiosis II
What is Anaphase II?
The number of cycles that Meiosis goes through
What is two?
Purpose of the cell cycle for somatic cells.
What is prepare for grow, prepare for division, divide into two identical daughter cells.
The purpose of meiosis.
What is: to produce 4 gametes that have half of the number of chromosomes than the parent cell?
The fourth phase of Meiosis I
What is Anaphase I?
The first phase of Meiosis II
What is Prophase II?
The process in Meiosis that ensures more genetic variation (occurs in Prophase I)
What is crossing over?
The three phases of Interphase.
What are G1, S, and G2?
The type of daughter cells made at the end of meiosis. (hint - think of how many chromosomes each one has)
What is Haploid?
The fifth phase of Meiosis I
What is Telophase I & Cytokinesis
The second phase of Meiosis II
What is Metaphase II?
The phase of meiosis where crossing over occurs
What is Prophase?
The name of the phase where DNA is copied
What is the S phase of interphase?
The part of meiosis that is more similar to mitosis? (hint - I or II)
What is Part II?
The third phase of Meiosis I
What is Metaphase I?
The last part of Meiosis II (after PMAT)
What is cytokinesis?
This is placed after the phase to indicate the cycle that it is in
What is a roman numeral?
The phase in interphase where DNA is replicated
What is S phase?
This phenomenon during meiosis ensures that offspring inherit a random combination of maternal and paternal chromosomes, significantly contributing to genetic diversity (One of Mendel's 3 big contributions.)
What is the Law of Independent Assortment?