That's false. The parent continues on with a small part of itself pinched off and developing independently as the "offspring". The "parent" amoeba can reproduce repeatedly just like most organisms.
The earth doesn't spin because of gravity, and gravity has not ceased to exist.
They are both made of cells. The whale has many cells but the amoeba has only one cell.
No, the parent cell is divided into two separate daughter cells.
Amoeba keep moist from the water or dampness in their immediate environment. When water or moisture is scarce, some amoebas roll into a ball and secrete a protective covering called a cyst membrane that covers their body. They can exist in cyst form for a long time, often until conditions are more favorable.
not in the way we know it, as although the world would exist, there would only be few simple organisms, which even then, wouldn't thrive all that much. In other words, the world would be covered in carbon dioxide, and the only life would be amoeba.
Yes and no. You get two daughter cells which are genetically identical to the original - are they both new or both old? It all depends on your viewpoint.
In freshwater ponds.
There is no net movement.
Without fertility humankind ceases to exist.
Without fertility humankind ceases to exist.
Most of it is converted into heat energy, that is ... it ceases to exist.
The symbol ceases to exist after the acquisition is completed.
The earth doesn't spin because of gravity, and gravity has not ceased to exist.
Ragnorak. When fanboyism ceases to exist, so never ^____^
No one can foresee this, but everything eventually ceases to exist.
Well, since things do exist, that can't be answered at this time. When all existence ceases, ask your question again.
The firm legally ceases to exist when the owner dies, quits, or sells the business.