yes, every visible organism is essentially a collection of cells, every cell has the exact same genetic makeup as every other cell for each individual organism. so every time a new cell is grown an exact copy is being made. Google mitosis. some organisms like bacteria, viruses, plants, create a clone of themselves naturally, which is the same thing, but the cells are nolonger 'joined'. Google totipotency Animals and most plants, fungi etc must join two sets of genes to form a new life. google meiosis
The body uses mitosis for growth, repair, and maintenance of tissues. Mitosis allows cells to divide and produce exact copies of themselves, ensuring that the body's cells have the correct number of chromosomes.
Asexual reproduction, such as binary fission or budding, leads to offspring with exact copies of their parents' genotypes. This is because there is no genetic recombination involved in asexual reproduction, thus resulting in identical genetic material being passed down to the offspring.
During the process of cell division (binary fission), Escherichia coli bacterium daughter cells inherit exact copies of the parent cell's DNA. E. coli replicates its circular DNA and then segregates the copies into the daughter cells, ensuring genetic continuity.
Reproduction is the biological process by which living organisms produce offspring of the same species. There are two main types of reproduction: sexual reproduction, which involves the combination of genetic material from two parents, and asexual reproduction, which involves a single parent passing on genetic material to create offspring.
Otherwise only one cell would have the necessary genetic material to function, and the other cell would have nothing and would serve no purpose. Either that or each cell would get half of the necessary DNA which would leave two completely useless cells.
Mitosis
If reproduce means producing offspring/copies of itself, then yes. If reproduce means reproducing sexually (not asexually), then no. Bacteria reproduce through asexual reproduction -- making exact copies of themselves.
When bone cells divide they must produce cells exact copies of themselves.
The chromosomes are copied, so that each daughter cell has an exact copy of the genetic material.
If two objects are exact copies of each other, they are said to be congruent.If two objects are exact copies of each other, they are said to be congruent.If two objects are exact copies of each other, they are said to be congruent.If two objects are exact copies of each other, they are said to be congruent.
because that is the way cells reproduce the split up and make exact copies of themselves
When chromosomes make an exact copy of themselves, they are called sister chromatids. Sister chromatids are identical copies of a chromosome that are held together by a structure called the centromere.
Organisms that reproduce asexually make exact copies of themselves. So, they are "clones" of their parents. Of course, some differences may appear because of mutations (changes in the DNA due to errors during replication), though.
yes
Those that are like minded and those that are not
It's impossible to pin point the exact number of published copies of the Madonna
Asexually reproducing organisms pass on hereditary information through exact copies of their genetic material, such as through mitosis or budding. There is no genetic recombination or mixing of genetic material as seen in sexual reproduction.