Sexual reproduction.
Jellyfish reproduce both sexually and asexually.
Jellyfish can reproduce sexually and asexually. There are around 100 spawn per litter when jellyfish reproduce, and the youngest spawn are known as larval planulae.
they do not reproduce
Yes, jellies reproduce.
Yes.
Yes, or they would be extinct.
a jellyfish is a cnidarian. it can reproduce after it finds a male partner. it after it reaches puberty.
A jellyfish can reproduce sexually and asexually.
Jellyfish do not reproduce via binary fission; instead, they primarily reproduce through a process called asexual budding or sexual reproduction. In their life cycle, jellyfish go through a polyp stage, where they can reproduce asexually by budding, and a medusa stage, which is the adult form that can reproduce sexually by releasing eggs and sperm into the water. Binary fission is more commonly found in simpler organisms like bacteria and some protozoa, not in jellyfish.
Jellyfish can reproduce both sexually and asexually. They typically reproduce sexually by releasing sperm and eggs into the water, where fertilization occurs. Some species can also reproduce asexually through a process called budding, where a new individual grows from a part of the parent jellyfish.
No,they do not lay eggs.They reproduce from budding mainly.
No but crystal jellyfish do. Crystals reproduce by alternating between asexual benthic polyps and seasonal planktonic medusae.