Asexual Reproduction
African Sleeping Sickness -Ur From NEISD (;
The blood-sucking tsetse (SEET see) fly, when it feeds on an infected human or other mammal. The zooflagellate reproduces in the gut of the fly and then migrates to its salivary glands. When the fly bites the human, the zooflagellate is transferred to the human host.
A zoomastigote is another name for a zooflagellate, a single-celled organism which causes diseases such as African sleeping sickness.
prezygotic or postzygotic
A definite geographical territory. Mechanism for sexual reproduction. Hunting and gathering societies. Agrarian societies. Industrial societies.
Charles Darwin called his mechanism of change "natural selection." This process favors the survival and reproduction of organisms that are best adapted to their environment, leading to the gradual change of species over time.
No - it's a defence mechanism. They drop their tails to escape being captured (or eaten). Skinks do not reproduce asexually.
Not necessarily. It's a mechanism to increase the longevity of the "seed" produced. The method of reproduction (asexual or sexual) on the normal reproductive cycle of the species.
Zooflagellates feed by absorbing the food through their cell membrane. Zooflagellate live in streams and lakes where they are able to absorb decaying organic material.
The mechanism that has been proven to show species change over time is natural selection, as proposed by Charles Darwin. This process involves the differential survival and reproduction of individuals with advantageous traits leading to changes in populations over generations.
A reproductive adaption is considered be a peculiarity of the reproductive mechanism within a species. This results in the species, whether plant or animal, to fit in better within its environment.
Meiosis is the nuclear division mechanism that produces gametes. During meiosis, a single cell divides twice to produce four haploid gametes, each containing half the number of chromosomes as the original cell.