Fungi can reproduce both sexually and asexually. In sexual reproduction, fungi form spores that combine genetic material from two parent fungi. Asexual reproduction involves the production of spores that are genetically identical to the parent fungus. Both processes help fungi spread and adapt to their environment.
Angiosperms reproduce sexually through the process of pollination, where pollen is transferred from the male reproductive organ to the female reproductive organ. Asexual reproduction in angiosperms can occur through processes such as vegetative propagation, where new plants are produced from vegetative structures like roots, stems, or leaves without the involvement of seeds or spores.
Protists can reproduce both asexually through processes like binary fission or budding, and sexually through processes like conjugation or syngamy (fusion of gametes). The method of reproduction can vary depending on the species of protist and environmental conditions.
Archaebacteria reproduce asexually: by division, budding, or fragmentation.Miosis is not part of the reproductive processes for archaebacteria. They are also unicellular.
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.
No, not all cells reproduce asexually. While some cells such as bacteria and yeast can reproduce asexually through processes like binary fission or budding, multicellular organisms reproduce sexually through the fusion of gametes.
If it is a living organism it must reproduce itself sexually or asexually. Reproduction of the organism ( not viral hijacking of the reproductive mechanisms ) is one part of the definition of living things.
They reproduce Asexually
gymno sperms are like many other plats they can reproduce sexually or they can reproduce asexually thast it
Angiosperms reproduce sexually through the process of pollination, where pollen is transferred from the male reproductive organ to the female reproductive organ. Asexual reproduction in angiosperms can occur through processes such as vegetative propagation, where new plants are produced from vegetative structures like roots, stems, or leaves without the involvement of seeds or spores.
Plants can reproduce both sexually (through seeds formed by the fusion of male and female reproductive cells) and asexually (via methods like vegetative propagation, fragmentation, or spore formation).
Protists can reproduce both asexually through processes like binary fission or budding, and sexually through processes like conjugation or syngamy (fusion of gametes). The method of reproduction can vary depending on the species of protist and environmental conditions.
asexually- by themselves sexually- by the union of male & female reproductive cells
The mustard plant drops seeds.
a host cell
Echinoderms typically reproduce sexually, with most species having separate sexes and external fertilization. However, some echinoderms can also reproduce asexually through processes such as fragmentation or cloning.
They reproduce asexually
they reproduce asexually through regeneration