No.
The two big examples of non-reproduction in humans is red blood cells and neurons.
No, human body cells cannot reproduce asexually. They reproduce through a process called mitosis, where a cell divides into two identical daughter cells. This is a form of asexual reproduction, but it is not considered reproduction in the same sense as in single-celled organisms.
Zooflagellates can reproduce asexually through binary fission where the cell divides into two daughter cells. Some zooflagellates can also reproduce sexually through conjugation, where genetic material is exchanged between two individuals.
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.
Amebas typically reproduce asexually through a process called binary fission, where the cell splits into two daughter cells. However, under certain conditions, some amebas can also reproduce sexually by exchanging genetic material with another ameba.
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.
they reproduce asexually because they are cells and some cells reproduce sexually but these kinds dont
Eukaryotic cells (eukaryotes) use mitosis to reproduce asexually.
yes
Cell Division
by multiplying asexually
prokaryiotic cells do produce asexually and sexually
No. Platypuses are mammals, and all mammals reproduce sexually, not asexually.
They reproduce Asexually
cells don't produce sexually but asexually by dividing.
All monkeys reproduce sexually and none reproduce asexually.
Mostly sexually, but some insects can reproduce asexually, such as the aphid
No.