Cloning or asexual reproduction.
it is called chlorobiastic which means the offspring looks exactly like its parent.
One parent produces offspring that are exact copies of the parent.
Asexual Reproduction - the offspring will be exact genetic copies of the parent.
The process which produces an exact copy of the parent organism is asexual.
In sexual reproduction, each parent contributes half of their genetic material to the offspring. This results in a unique combination of genes in the offspring rather than an exact copy of either parent's genes.
A small exact copy of the adult that grows from the body of the parent is called a "clone." Cloning involves producing genetically identical organisms through asexual reproduction. This process results in offspring that are identical to the parent organism.
The difference between sexual and asexual is that in sexual reproduction, there are two parents, and in asexual, there is only one. In sexual reproduction, the two parents mix up their genes and produce a mix between the two parents. Asexual reproduction produces an exact match of the parent, since there were only the genes from the one parent.
The number of chromosomes in the present offspring during cloning is the same as the parent organism, as the offspring inherits an exact genetic copy of the parent's DNA, including the same number of chromosomes.
Asexual reproduction uses only 1 parent and is usually only done by bacteria. Also the offspring is an exact copy of the parent. Then sexual reproduction requires 2 parents and the offspring is a mix of the 2 parents' genes.
Cross-pollination produces more genetic variation in offspring because it is a different set of DNA that is breeding with the parents DNA to produce the offspring (known as sexual reproduction). In asexual reproduction, the parent plant uses a clone DNA to self pollinate thus creating an exact copy of the parent. Asexual reproduction inhibits genetic variation because the offspring will never develop mutations that could help natural selection.
Asexual reproduction does not produce genetic variation among offspring, as the new organisms are exact copies of the parent organism. This process involves only one parent and typically occurs through methods such as budding, regeneration, or binary fission.
Offspring inherit a combination of genes from both parents, but this doesn't necessarily mean they maintain the exact gene combinations of either parent. Genetic recombination and independent assortment during meiosis result in unique combinations of genes in offspring. These genetic variations contribute to the diversity within a species.