Mitosis is the process of cell division in which a single cell divides into identical daughter cells. The primary reason for mitosis is asexual reproduction, growth, and tissue repair. Meiosis is a special type of cell division in a sexually reproducing organism where a single cell divides twice to produce four cells containing half the original amount of genetic information. The primary reason for meiosis is, it allows asexual reproduction of diplomatic organisms, enables gene diversity, and aids repair of gene defects. Both processes begin with diploid parent cells and end with cytokinesis. They both have interphase, prophase, anaphase, and telophase stages.
Mitosis involves one cell division while meiosis involves two cell divisions. Mitosis results in two daughter cells while meiosis results in four daughter cells. Mitosis results in diploid daughter cells while meiosis results in haploid daughter cells. The interphase, prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase stages occur once in mitosis while in meiosis they occur twice.
Linked genes are genes that are inherited together.
The alleles for the genes will segregate together during meiosis
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