The answer would be an amoeba, for reproducting asexually means to pretty much split yourself in half and make two versions of yourself.
They reproduce asexually by binary fission.
No, an amoeba doesn't need fertilization to reproduce. An amoeba reproduces asexually.
An amoeba is a unicellular, genderless organism that belongs to the Protista kingdom & can reproduce through asexual reproduction. Amoeba are the unicellular, microscopic organism which moves by the help of pseudopodia (false foot)
An amoeba.
Amoeba It's a Protist. It reproduces asexually.
Amoeba reproduce asexually, along with every other type of bacteria.
They reproduce asexually by binary fission.
No, an amoeba doesn't need fertilization to reproduce. An amoeba reproduces asexually.
Worms, sponges, Amoeba and Fungi.
Since all amoebas asexually reproduce, they are all the same age, and thus they are all as old as the first amoeba to ever exist on Earth.
An amoeba is a unicellular, genderless organism that belongs to the Protista kingdom & can reproduce through asexual reproduction. Amoeba are the unicellular, microscopic organism which moves by the help of pseudopodia (false foot)
An amoeba.
If I am correct, they are simple cell organisms, meaning they have no need of sexual reproduction. Instead, they bud, or asexually reproduce.
Amoeba It's a Protist. It reproduces asexually.
Three creatures that reproduce asexually are the paramecium, amoeba, and diatoms. These are microscopic organisms that live mainly in freshwater. In case you haven't heard of diatoms, they're a group of single celled alga that come in many shapes and colors.
An unicellular organism is single celled organism. For example- bacteria, archaea, amoeba
Four Ways that organisms reproduce asexually are as follows:-Binary Fission:- e.g. Paramecium, Euglena, AmoebaMultiple fission:- e.g. Amoeba during spore conditions, Euglena.Budding:- Sponges, Coelentrates (Hydra, Obelia)etc.Fragmentation:- Planarians (A type of aquatic worma like Annelids and Flat worms).