Ово formerly was изабрана слика на Википедија на енглески језик (Featured pictures) and was considered one of the finest images.
Ако мислиш да ова датотека такође треба да буде изабрана на Викимедијиној остави предложи је.
Ако поседујете слику бољег или сличног квалитета коју сте вољни објавити под одговарајућом лиценцом, свакако је пошаљите, прописно означите и предложите je.
Постоји и векторска верзија ове слике (у SVG формату). Требало би је користити уместо ове битмап слике ако је боља.
Three types of cell reproduction are compared: the relatively simple Binary fission and two more complicated types that either involve mitosis or meiosis.
Binary fission. Organisms such as bacteria typically have a single chromosome (green). At the start of the binary fission process, the DNA molecule of the cell's chromosome is replicated, producing two copies of the chromosome. A key aspect of bacterial cell reproduction is making sure that each daughter cell gets a copy of the chromosome. Cytokinesis is the actual physical separation of the two new daughter cells.
Cell reproduction that involves mitosis. Most eukaryotic organisms like humans have more than one chromosome. In order to make sure that a copy of each chromosome gets segregated into each daughter cell, the spindle apparatus is used (blue threads). The chromosomes are moved along the long thin microtubules like trains moving along train tracks. Humans are diploid; we have two copies of each type of chromosome, one from the father (red) and one from the mother (green).
Cell reproduction that involves meiosis. The human sex cells (gametes) are produced by meiosis. For sperm production there are two cytokinesis steps that produce a total of four cells, each with half the normal number of chromosomes. The situation is different in the ovaries for egg production where one of the four sets of chromosomes that is segregated is placed in a large egg cell, ready to be combined with the DNA from a sperm cell (see meiosis for details).
This image was created for the cell growth article.
Note: a GFDL license for use of this image was automatically granted when I uploaded the image to Wikipedia. Since User:Bevo requested an explicit copyright status statement and since the Wikipedia:Image description page article suggests that "Adding explicit copyright information helps", I am providing one:
The copyright to this image is retained by John Schmidt (JWSchmidt).
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this image under the terms of the Wikipedia GFDL, as indicated in the fine print at the bottom of this page. JWSchmidt 15:11, 11 Apr 2004 (UTC)
Source: English Wikipedia, original upload see file history
Дата је дозвола да се копира, дистрибуира и/или мења овај документ под условима ГНУ-ове лиценце за слободну документацију, верзије 1.2 или било које новије верзије коју објави Задужбина за слободни софтвер; без непроменљивих одељака и без текста на насловној и задњој страни. Текст лиценце можете прочитати овде.http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.htmlGFDLGNU Free Documentation Licensetruetrue
да делите – да умножавате, расподељујете и преносите дело
да прерађујете – да прерадите дело
Под следећим условима:
ауторство – Морате да дате одговарајуће заслуге, обезбедите везу ка лиценци и назначите да ли су измене направљене. Можете то урадити на било који разуман манир, али не на начин који предлаже да лиценцатор одобрава вас или ваше коришћење.
делити под истим условима – Ако измените, преобразите или доградите овај материјал, морате поделити своје доприносе под истом или компатибилном лиценцом као оригинал.
Ова лиценца је додата на ову датотеку као део ажурирања GFDL лиценце.http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/CC BY-SA 3.0Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0truetrue
File history English Wikipedia
(del) (cur) 21:51, 6 July 2004 . . Guanaco (174122 bytes) (transparency, crop, optimize)
(del) (rev) 05:21, 31 March 2004 . . JWSchmidt (176449 bytes)
(del) (rev) 04:21, 31 March 2004 . . JWSchmidt (176121 bytes)
(del) (rev) 03:54, 31 March 2004 . . JWSchmidt (172333 bytes) (Three types of cell growth are compared.)
Three types of cell reproduction are compared: the relatively simple Binary fission and two more complicated types that either involve mitosis or meiosis. '''Binary fission'''. Organisms such as bacteria typically have a s