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29 October, 03:09

How is cytokinesis different in animals and plants?

Group of answer choices

a. Animal cells get pinched into two daughter cells by the cell membrane; the plant cell has to form a cell plate before it can create daughter cells.

b. Animal cells give daughter cells a full set of chromosomes at the time of division; plant cells give daughter cells a half set of chromosomes.

c. Animal cells require an extra growth phase before cytokinesis; plant cells move straight to cytokinesis.

d. Animal cells begin cytokinesis during anaphase; plant cells begin around the same time as telophase.

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Answers (1)
  1. 29 October, 03:30
    0
    Cytokinesis in animal cells is more complex than in plant cells. A contractile ring, underneath the original cell's membrane, begins to form and contracts, which creates the cleavage furrow. The furrow grows deeper between the two cells until they pinch off and separate from one another, resulting in two separate daughter cells

    The answer is A
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