No reptiles are sexual reproducers.
There have been a few cases of bazaar and random King Snakes and Rattle Snakes giving birth after no male interactions to 1 or 2 eggs. Very, Very rare though.
Yes, parthenogenesis is sparsely documented in the genus of New Caledonian geckos Rhacodactylus, and somewhat common in the teiid genus Aspidoscelis (formerly Cnemidophorus) mostly of the American Southwest. It is hypothesized that hybridization between species (such as A. tigris and Another species I forget right now to create the asexual A. sonorae) caused all female populations. In what specific ways, I can't remember, so look it up if you're really interested lol. Also, the all-female species typically do a mock-copulation (they les out basically) before becoming gravid.
all are female
sexually
sexual
Some do and some don't. Some living things reproduce asexually eg some sharks, some lizards, some plants
No, dinosaurs reproduced sexually. No vertebrate animals reproduce asexually.
As a mammal, a deer would be reproduced internally.
Asters can be reproduced sexually by seeds and asexually by dividing the plant.
The fruit tree can be asexually reproduced through grafting, budding or sprouting, but the fruit itself would not exist if the tree had not reproduced sexually. The seed within the fruit is the proof of sexual reproduction.
They reproduce sexually
they reproduced asexually
Most definitly. Asexually reproduced plants are clones of each others so have no genetic variation. Sexually reproduced planst combine the dominant genes from both the partent plants
Asexually
Both, though mass asexual reproduction in snails is uncommon. Mainly because of the genetic disadvantages. An example of this is in the asexually reproduced offspring of the species Potamopyrgus antipodarum which have a higher rate of disorders and mutation. thus natural selection removes most of them.
bacteria and penes