Mostly sexually, but some insects can reproduce asexually, such as the aphid
Birds reproduce sexually.Bird species all reproduce sexually. It takes a male sperm to fertizile the female egg that is laid and will hatch into a chick.
Yes, all living things reproduce. Reproduction is a way to replace the older individuals. Some living things such as bacteria reproduce almost evry 20-25 minutes.
The Joshua tree is actually a variety of yucca plant, and not a real tree at all. It reproduces sexually by flowers and fruit.
Every living thing reproduces. Plants can reproduce sexually or asexually. Sexually by means of pollen and eggs, asexually by cloning.
The small desert salamander reproduces asexually. It is an entire species of females. Each egg is an exact genetic copy of the mother salamander, which basically means that these small reptiles mastered the art of cloning. There are also bacteria, which all reproduce asexually. Some species of female sharks are reported to reproduce asexually too, however mammals have not mastered this skill yet. All known mammals are reported to reproduce sexually.
Teacup pigs reproduce sexually. All animals reproduce sexually. Only plants have the ability to reproduce asexually.
Sexually of course.
No. Platypuses are mammals, and all mammals reproduce sexually, not asexually.
Animals reproduce sexually not asexually. They have to have two animals to procreate, including both a male and a female.
Sexually as all mammals do!
All monkeys reproduce sexually and none reproduce asexually.
All mammals reproduce sexually. Pretty much all vertebrates (fish, birds, mammals, reptiles, amphibians) reproduce sexually. Only some bacteria, some plants, fungi reproduce asexually.
No. Amphibians reproduce sexually, as all vertebrates do.
Harp seals are mammals. All mammals reproduce sexually.
No strawberries can produce sexually and asexually with runners.
Definitely not. All mammals reproduce sexually.
Like all birds, fish and mammals - they produce sexually. They need a male & a female to reproduce the species.