Mitosis v. Meiosis Biology is the study of life and the processes that a life form undergoes. Two very important biological processes in the field of biology are mitosis and meiosis. These two biological processes comprise the majority of what is studied in every cell unit within biology class. Many students have a difficult time understanding the similarities and differences between the two. Students also struggle to understand the phases of each cell division and the reason they occur. Mitosis
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|Compare and contrast the processes of mitosis and meiosis. Discuss the roles and significance of mitosis and meiosis in the | |life of flowering plants and mammals‚ illustrating your answer with examples where appropriate. | Many living organisms in the Earth can continue because of the process of producing individuals called reproduction. Both mitosis and meiosis which are nuclear division in mitotic and meiotic cell division respectively play important roles
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Life Science Lab. A. Arnold Tuesdays @ 2:30 September 30th‚ 2011 Lab Report: Nuclear and Cell Division. PART A: Stages of Mitosis in my own words. 1. Interphase: DNA has formed already‚ but it remains in the simple form of chromatin. Chromatins are structures that are loosely coiled in the cell.3 I also observed during my lab that this was the only stage where I could still see a nucleus and nucleolus intact within the cell; this is because it’s the only stage where the nuclear membrane has
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Introduction: This lab helps further our understanding of essential principles behind diffusion and osmosis. Permeability‚ concentration gradients‚ plasmolysis‚ water potential‚ and equilibrium were also concepts that were delved into in this lab. Understanding how diffusion and osmosis works is essential to understanding biology. Each time a cell has something move into or out of it‚ some sort of principle studied in this lab is occurring. Diffusion‚ osmosis‚ and passive and active transport are
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Introduction: Mitosis occurs in all eukaryotic cell tissues and produces genetically identical daughter cells with a complete set of chromosomes. In humans‚ mitosis produces somatic cells that are diploid‚ which means they contain two non-identical copies of each of the twenty-three chromosomes. One copy is derived from the person’s mother and the other from the person’s father. Meiosis‚ on the other hand‚ occurs only in testis and ovary tissues‚ producing sperm and ova (eggs). The gametes that
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: Observing Mitosis – Onion Root Tip and Whitefish Blastula V. Observations: 175 cells 1. What percentage of the cells in the field of view is going through mitosis? 10% Relative Duration of Each Phase of Mitosis – Onion Root Tip Phase of Mitosis Count Percentage Time (min.) Prophase 3 14% 11 Metaphase 2 9% 7 Anaphase 5 23% 19 Telophase 12 54% 43 Total 22 100% 80 Relative Duration of Each Phase of Mitosis – Whitefish Blastula
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Mitosis vs. Meiosis Mitosis and meiosis are very similar processes but they are also quite different. In both of these dna is replicated before the prophase. The sister chromatids are both separated in anaphase of these processes‚ however in meiosis it is in the anaphase 2 stage. Finally both stages have microtubules to separate chromosomes and both begin in the prophase and end in telophase. There are also several key differences. Mitosis occurs during growth of organism or to repair tissue
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Dissolved Oxygen and Aquatic Primary Productivity By: Mayank Makwana AP Biology Mrs. Biondo September 19‚ 2012 Design Diagram Dissolved Oxygen: Title: The effect of the temperature of water on the concentration of dissolved oxygen Hypothesis: If the temperature of the water is increased‚ then the concentration of dissolved oxygen will decrease. |Independent Variable: Temperature of water (Cº)
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Introduction Enzymes are catalytic proteins. The purpose of a catalyst is to speed up metabolic reactions by lowering the free energy of activation or activation energy. Activation energy is known as the amount of energy needed to push the reactants over an energy barrier‚ so that the downhill part of the reaction can begin (Campbell 151). In an enzyme catalyzed reaction‚ the enzyme binds to its substrate‚ which is the reactant an enzyme acts on. In the reactions‚ the enzymes are very specific
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The hypothesis for this lab was that Core B will be the least flexible due to a loss in water. Unfortunately‚ my results led my hypothesis to be incorrect. The results that were received was that Core C was the most flexible‚ Core B was somewhat flexible‚ and Core A was not flexible and stiff. Core A was the most non-adjustable due to it being hypertonic which means that the total concentration of all the dissolved solute particles is greater than the other solution. Core B was isotonic meaning
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