They will separate in other to grow.
spores
Spores
sporesFern prothalli after developing from the spores produced in sporangia of Sori produce archegonia and anthridia as female and male sex organs to reproduce sexually.
They reproduce with a form of asexual reproduction called binary fission.
Daffodils generate seed that are later fertilized by pollen to create new daffodils. This is a form of sexual reproduction. Another way daffodils reproduce is by producing bulbs called bulbils which can be planted by gardeners. This is an asexual form. So yes, daffodils can reproduce both asexually and sexually.
reproduce asexually
on the under side of the leaves, there are brown circles, those are the pollen/seeds.
Ferns primarily reproduce through spores, which are produced in structures called sporangia on the undersides of their fronds. They have a life cycle that includes both a diploid sporophyte and a haploid gametophyte stage. Mushrooms, on the other hand, reproduce through spores as well, but they typically form these spores in specialized structures called fruiting bodies. Both ferns and mushrooms utilize asexual reproduction methods, such as fragmentation or budding, in addition to their sexual reproduction through spores.
Animals reproduce sexually, where genetic material from two parents combine to produce offspring. This involves the fusion of gametes (sperm and egg) from two individuals to form a genetically unique offspring.
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.
YES! Archaea reproduce asexually by binary or multiple fission, fragmentation, or budding; meosis does not occur, so if a species of archaea exists in more than one form, these will all have the same genetic material.
Yes; some hydrozoan jellyfishes can reproduce asexually by gemmation (with buds) and by direct scission.