By the end of Telophase I, each pole now has haploid set of
chromosomes
chromosomes
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Okay. Picture a circle (as a cell).
At the top and bottom of the cells, those are the poles.
Haploid means half of the number an original chromosome would have. Lets say for example an organism has four chromosomes in each of its mitosis-going cells. That means that if it was Haploid, it would have two.
What this is saying (in the case of this example organism) : "At the end of Telophase 1 (the stage) a cell has two chromosomes at the top and two chromosomes at the bottom of the cell."
At the top and bottom of the cells, those are the poles.
Haploid means half of the number an original chromosome would have. Lets say for example an organism has four chromosomes in each of its mitosis-going cells. That means that if it was Haploid, it would have two.
What this is saying (in the case of this example organism) : "At the end of Telophase 1 (the stage) a cell has two chromosomes at the top and two chromosomes at the bottom of the cell."
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During ananphase 1 half chromosme move to one pole and half chromosome move toward the other pole side.
In telophase 1 they reached to pole side and nuclear membrane apear around that half chromosome and two haploid nuclei are formed at each pole side. Haploid mean half number of chromosome.
In telophase 1 they reached to pole side and nuclear membrane apear around that half chromosome and two haploid nuclei are formed at each pole side. Haploid mean half number of chromosome.