Budding (also called burgeoning) is the formation of a new organism by the protrusion of part of another organism. This is very common in plants and fungi, but may be found in some animals as well, such as the Hydra. Usually, the protrusion stays attached to the primary organism for a while, before becoming free. The new organism is naturally genetically identical to the primary one (a clone), so, as with binary fission, there is not as much genetic variation in offspring as occurs with sexual reproduction.
A hydra's diet does not change while budding, but it does eat more often.
Budding
Hydra
Hydra.
Hydra is an example
to kill hydras.
Some examples of organisms that reproduce by budding include Hydra, some species of fungi, and some types of bacteria such as Prochloron.
Yes
hydra\hydrilla
Asexual reproduction.
Organisms, such as single-celled yeasts, sponges, and hydra can produce offspring by budding.
Yeast reproduce through a process called budding, where a small daughter cell forms on the parent cell. Hydra reproduce asexually through budding or sexually through the production of eggs and sperm.