Like the mother cell, the daughter cells are diploid. The two sets of chromosomes in each daughter cell are twin sister chromatids, with the exception of areas that were switched during crossing-over, whereas the parent cell had two sets of homologous chromosomes.
In telophase I, the cytoplasm organizes and separates into two as the new chromosomes approach the spindle.
Now there are two cells, and each one has half as many chromosomes as its parent cell. The recombination that took place during prophase I also caused the two daughter cells to not be genetically identical to one another.
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