Two
they reproduce asexually because they are cells and some cells reproduce sexually but these kinds dont
cells don't produce sexually but asexually by dividing.
bacteria and amoebaBacteria reproduce by fission.Mitosis is involved in single celled eukariyotic organisms
No, plants do not require two parent cells to grow. Many plants can reproduce asexually through methods such as cloning or by producing seeds through self-pollination. However, sexual reproduction involving two parent cells is also common in plants.
Sexually , only cells and unicellular organisms divide asexually, iguanas have half their genes from each parent, and look different as well as have 2 parents.
Sperm and egg
Meiosis is a cell process that occurs only in organisms that reproduce sexually. During meiosis, specialized cells divide to form gametes (sperm and egg cells) with half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell. This process is essential for genetic diversity and the creation of offspring with unique combinations of genes.
One-celled protists typically reproduce asexually through methods such as binary fission, where the cell divides into two identical daughter cells, or through budding, where a smaller cell forms and eventually detaches from the parent cell.
Bacteria reproduce asexually through binary fission, where a single cell divides into two identical daughter cells. Bacteria also reproduce sexually through conjugation, where genetic material is transferred between two bacterial cells to promote genetic diversity.
Binary fission, where a parent cells splits into two identical cells.
prokaryiotic cells do produce asexually and sexually
Fungi can reproduce both sexually and asexually. They primarily reproduce asexually through spores, but they can also reproduce sexually through the fusion of specialized haploid cells to form a diploid zygote.