Jellyfish reproduce both sexually and asexually.
They can reproduce asexually and sexually
Justme4life<3
Externally
asexual reproduction A jellyfish is not just asexual but sexual too. They're both.
asexual
No but crystal jellyfish do. Crystals reproduce by alternating between asexual benthic polyps and seasonal planktonic medusae.
Believe it or not, animals from several different orders in the animal kingdom have adopted the jellyfish form. Generally adult jelly fish use sexual reproduction. A number of jellyfish reproduce asexually in a juvenile state.
Jellyfish reproduction involves several different stages. In the adult, or medusa, stage of a jellyfish, they can reproduce sexually by releasing sperm and eggs into the water, forming a planula. In this larval stage of jellyfish life, the planula hooks on to the bottom of a smooth rock or other structure and grows into another stage of jellyfish life, the polyp--which resembles a miniature sea anemone. During this stage, which can last for several months or years, asexual reproduction occurs. The polyps clone themselves and bud, or strobilate, into another stage of jellyfish life, called ephyra. It is this form that grows into the adult medusa jellyfish.
Asexual reproduction through gamules occurs in the phyla Porifera (sponges) and Cnidaria (corals, jellyfish, etc.). Gamules are specialized reproductive cells that are released from the parent organism and develop into new individuals without fertilization.
Asexual
asexual. its what plants do
An amoeba
asexual
Asexual
well, there's budding, which is utilized by the potatoe and the hydra.