Shells consisting of one valve only; also mollusks whose shells are composed of a single piece, as the snails and conchs.
They reproduce asexually by spores and budding
where does the plant reproduce
if your asking how cells reproduce they can usually reproduce asexually[all by themselves].
the way prokaryotes reproduce
Univalves, otherwise known as gastropods, live in most all oceans. A sea mollusk is a good example of a univalve.
Univalves
The edible univalves belong to the class Gastropoda. This class includes snails, slugs, and whelks, which are all mollusks with a single shell.
Bivalves, univalves, and cephalopods are all types of mollusks. So are gastropods.
Gastropods: snails. Gastro means something like 'stomach' or 'belly' and 'pod' means 'foot'. Cephalopods: octopusi. Cephalo means something like 'head'. Bivalves are molluscs with two clasping shells like a clam and univalves have only one.
Valve refers to a shell, so a bivalve possesses two shells, which are usually hinged together and more or less cover the animal (Class Bivalvia), while univalves have only one shell, and typically leave the muscular foot exposed, unless the animal is capable of withdrawing into its shell (Class Gastropoda).
Shells consisting of one valve only; also mollusks whose shells are composed of a single piece, as the snails and conchs.
There is no such animal as a "univalve", however "bivalves" are filter feeders and filter seawater through their gills to pick up trace amounts of food.
Some examples of univalves are snails and slugs.
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The class Gastropoda or gastropods (also previously known as univalves and sometimes also spelled Gasteropoda) are members of the phylum Mollusca and are more commonly known as "snails and slugs".
they do not reproduce asexually.they mostly reproduce sexually.