"Independent assortment" refers to assortment of sister chromosomes at the metaphase plate in meiosis I assortment of sister chromatids at the metaphase plate in meiosis I assortment of sister chromatids at the metaphase plate in meiosis II assortment of homologous chromosomes at the metaphase plate in meiosis II assortment of homologous chromosomes at the metaphase plate in meiosis I assortment of sister chromosomes at the metaphase plate in meiosis II

Human Anatomy & Physiology (11th Edition)
11th Edition
ISBN:9780134580999
Author:Elaine N. Marieb, Katja N. Hoehn
Publisher:Elaine N. Marieb, Katja N. Hoehn
Chapter1: The Human Body: An Orientation
Section: Chapter Questions
Problem 1RQ: The correct sequence of levels forming the structural hierarchy is A. (a) organ, organ system,...
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Question 2
"Independent assortment" refers to
assortment of sister chromosomes at the metaphase plate in meiosis I
assortment of sister chromatids at the metaphase plate in meiosis I
assortment of sister chromatids at the metaphase plate in meiosis II
assortment of homologous chromosomes at the metaphase plate in meiosis II
assortment of homologous chromosomes at the metaphase plate in meiosis I
A
assortment of sister chromosomes at the metaphase plate in meiosis II
Transcribed Image Text:Question 2 "Independent assortment" refers to assortment of sister chromosomes at the metaphase plate in meiosis I assortment of sister chromatids at the metaphase plate in meiosis I assortment of sister chromatids at the metaphase plate in meiosis II assortment of homologous chromosomes at the metaphase plate in meiosis II assortment of homologous chromosomes at the metaphase plate in meiosis I A assortment of sister chromosomes at the metaphase plate in meiosis II
Expert Solution
Step 1: Definition

A chromosome is a long single DNA molecule with genetic information. It is made up of two identical chromatids called sister chromatids. These sister chromatids have same genes.

Chromosomes are different from one copy to another. Chromatids are joined together by a single centromere in the chromosome.

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