No. The offspring receive a combination of both parents DNA (roughly half from each parent although the mom contributes more due to mitochondrial DNA). During recombination the DNA of both parents is combined form a unique individual with traits from both the mother and father.
asexual offsprings are exactly alike with their parent.they show little variation so little chance for survival during struggles created by naturetheir number is more than sexually reproducing organism
Offspring does not look exactly like the parent because in humans, only sexual reproduction is possible, which involves 2 parents which exchange DNA to form offspring with different DNA and genetic information than both parents.
If an offspring was produced through asexual reproduction, its genes will be exactly like its parent. This is more or less a clone of the parent. An example of this is a bacterium. If an offspring is produced through sexual reproduction, it will contain genes from both parents. (such as humans)
Offspring don't look exactly like their parents due to a combination of genetic variability from both parents, random assortment of genes during reproduction, and genetic mutations that can occur. This genetic diversity is what allows for evolution and adaptation to changing environments.
hen an offspring is produced asexually and looks exactly like the parent.
asexual offsprings are exactly alike with their parent.they show little variation so little chance for survival during struggles created by naturetheir number is more than sexually reproducing organism
Offspring does not look exactly like the parent because in humans, only sexual reproduction is possible, which involves 2 parents which exchange DNA to form offspring with different DNA and genetic information than both parents.
If an offspring was produced through asexual reproduction, its genes will be exactly like its parent. This is more or less a clone of the parent. An example of this is a bacterium. If an offspring is produced through sexual reproduction, it will contain genes from both parents. (such as humans)
The genes passed on by each parent causes a 'mixing' in a way they are expressed. You and your parents do not have exactly the same genes. Your DNA is so unique that it can identify you from every other human.
Offspring don't look exactly like their parents due to a combination of genetic variability from both parents, random assortment of genes during reproduction, and genetic mutations that can occur. This genetic diversity is what allows for evolution and adaptation to changing environments.
it is called chlorobiastic which means the offspring looks exactly like its parent.
hen an offspring is produced asexually and looks exactly like the parent.
Offspring of asexual reproduction are genetically identical to the parent, so they look very similar or identical to the parent organism. They do not exhibit genetic variation like offspring from sexual reproduction.
Offspring in sexual reproduction exhibit a combination of traits from both parents, blending their physical characteristics. This results in genetic diversity and variations in appearance among offspring, making each individual unique.
Sexual reproduction is with two parents and takes one sperm and one egg cell to create one embryo. The two parents and the offspring have different genetic information. Asexual reproduction is with one parent and both the parent and the offspring have the same genetic information, duh.
because of the chromosomes the parents will give 23 of their chromosomes to the baby born and then that baby has 46 chromosomes in all.this method is called mitosis.
Offspring from sexual reproduction have combined DNA from each of their parents. They are varied, as in a mixture of both parents. Example: if two bean plants, one tall and one short, sexually reproduce, the genotype will be Tt and offspring will most likely be tall (phenotype). Offspring from asexual reproduction does not vary. It is an exact copy of its parent organism, a clone, if you will. Example: If a short bean plant--a complete bean plant--asexually reproduces, it will have a genotype tt, (phenotype short) offspring that looks identical to it. I'm in 7th grade biology right now, and we learned this in December. Hope I helped!:) BvR