no
Some organisms reproduce by sexual reproduction (such as horses, cattle, donkeys etc.) and some others reproduce asexually (such as bacteria) So it depends on what organisms you are talking about.
This could be referred to as "sexual reproduction."
sexual and asexual reproduction. sexual where it takes to organisms to reproduce and asexual where an individual organism can reproduce without a second party
C
Some examples of sexual organisms include humans, dogs, cats, birds, and fish. These organisms reproduce by exchanging genetic material through sexual reproduction.
It only takes one organism to reproduce. Whereas sexual reproduction takes two organisms to reproduce.
False. Multicellular organisms reproduce through sexual or asexual reproduction, not binary fission, which is a method of reproduction used by some single-celled organisms.
Organisms that reproduce asexually pass on an exact replica of their own DNA to their offspring. Organisms that reproduce sexually pass on a combination of DNA from two parent organisms to their offspring.
Some organisms reproduce sexually, some reproduce asexually. Sexual reproduction means that somehow, cells of a father and a mother come together. The details of how this happens vary, depending on the species.
If I am correct, they are simple cell organisms, meaning they have no need of sexual reproduction. Instead, they bud, or asexually reproduce.
Organisms reproduce through sexual or asexual methods. Sexual reproduction involves the fusion of gametes from two parents, resulting in genetic variation. An example is humans. Asexual reproduction involves a single parent producing offspring genetically identical to itself. An example is bacteria.
Sexual reproduction evolved before the evolution of multicellularity. Organisms were able to reproduce sexually as single-celled organisms before multicellular life forms emerged.