Meiosis produces haploid, diploid, and gametes cells. The gamete cells are known as sex cells that occur in the reproductive organs, and meiosis has sex cells whereas mitosis does not (Simon, Reece, & Dickey, 2010). The diploid cells split up to form four haploids (form of cell division that most eukaryotic cells undergo), however, only half of the chromosomes are the parent cells and occurs in all organisms that have sex cells (Simon, Reece, & Dickey, 2010). Ex: humans, animals, most fungi, and plants. Mitosis is the form of cell division that most eukaryotic cells undergo. In humans, all somatic (non-sex) cells use mitosis to divide. This does occur in all organisms and can make everything other than sex cells. This involves two cell divisions called meiotic divisions (meiosis I and meiosis II).
In mitosis cells are usually created by normal cell division and where one organism or cell reproduces itself. It is then that normal cell divisions are used by multicellular organisms for reproduction, and in multicellular organisms for growth, maintenance, and repair (Simon, Reece, & Dickey, 2010). (Ex: skin repair, replace damaged cells, asexual reproduction) In mitosis multicellular organisms is used to reproduce asexually (Simon, Reece, & Dickey, 2010). Ex: When one clips a piece of a house plant, one can watch as the plant starts to grow from the cells that have been reproduced. Meiosis process is used when one organism or cells reproduces