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After meiosis, the resulting cells each have half the number of chromosomes as the original parent cell. In humans, for example, gametes (sperm and egg cells) have 23 chromosomes each, as opposed to the normal 46 found in somatic cells.
Meiosis produces gametes with half the number of chromosomes as the original cell. In humans, the original cell has 46 chromosomes, and meiosis produces gametes with 23 chromosomes each.
After meiosis is complete, each resulting cell typically contains half the number of chromosomes as the original cell. This means that in humans, each cell after meiosis would have 23 chromosomes, as opposed to the usual 46 chromosomes in a somatic cell.
A daughter cell produced after meiosis II has half the number of chromosomes as the original parent cell. This means that in humans, which have cells with 46 chromosomes, each daughter cell produced at the end of meiosis II would have 23 chromosomes.
A mosquito cell has 6 chromosomes in total. During meiosis, the cell goes through two rounds of division. In meiosis I, the cell reduces its chromosome number to half (3 chromosomes) and in meiosis II, it divides again to produce four daughter cells, each with 3 chromosomes.
The first thing produced in meiosis is a cell with half the number of chromosomes as the original cell, known as a haploid cell. This cell is formed during meiosis I, which involves the separation of homologous chromosomes.