The answer: budding
The daughter cells.
Hydras most commonly reproduce by budding in which as small juvenile, "polyp", grows on the stalk of it's body. When the polyp has matured, (or when the parent hydra dies), it will break off as a free swimming juvenile. In rare occasions, hydra reproduce sexually.
Yes, an adult can have a small trachea.
A flower that grows on the mountains. It is small and tiny.
Snow-in-summer
The small intestines to be exact. :)
budding
Small and Big are quite relative. Small horses can produce a foal that grows to be larger than either of the parents and crossing a larger horse with a small horse will tend to result offspring larger than the smaller parent animal but usually not larger than the largest parent.
Hydras most commonly reproduce by budding in which as small juvenile, "polyp", grows on the stalk of it's body. When the polyp has matured, (or when the parent hydra dies), it will break off as a free swimming juvenile. In rare occasions, hydra reproduce sexually.
A frog starts out an egg and hatches into a tadpole with no legs and a tail. The tadpole soon grows legs and the tail grows shorter. A young adult frog logs nearly identical to an adult frog but still is smaller and has a small stubby tail.
Yes, an adult can have a small trachea.
The difference in size of a teacup and "normal" Pomeranian adult dog is hardly noticeable. The Pomeranian grows to be between three and seven pounds. Anyone who sells their Poms as teacups simply has small dogs.
puppies look different from more mature labs by not much muscular development. as a Labrador grows, its face will broaden and it will get a small crease on its head.
An adult small intestine is close to 22 feet long.
it grows quiker
Follicle
Bud
It depends on the size of the snake. Newly-hatched specimens will take small to medium-sized mice. As the snake grows - so does it's appetite... Adult (growing to around 3 metres) will feed on large rats.