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boing boing
wrote...
Posts: 32
Rep: 0 0
12 years ago
The two cells that are products of the first meiotic division have the same number of chromosomes as a somatic cell of the parent. Why then are they not considered dipolid?

Hmmmm....
I don't get why they are not considered dipolid because the two sex cells combined and made a dipolid.
Isn't dipolid 46 chromosomes? Then why isn't this a dipolid?
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Answer accepted by topic starter
bio_manbio_man
wrote...
Educator
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Posts: 33332
12 years ago
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boing Author
wrote...
12 years ago
Thank you.
I thought they were identical, but you were right.
wrote...
Educator
12 years ago
Thank you.
I thought they were identical, but you were right.

You're welcome, I'll mark this as solved.
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