The organisms in the kingdom Fungi reproduce by spores, meaning they reproduce asexually. Some can, however (such as mushrooms) reproduce sexually by adapting to their environment.
Yeasts reproduce asexually through a process called budding. In budding, a new yeast cell forms as an outgrowth on the parent cell. The new cell eventually detaches and becomes an independent organism.
An example of an organism that can reproduce asexually is an amoeba. Amoebas are unicellular organisms that can divide through a process called binary fission to produce genetically identical offspring. Mice reproduce sexually through the union of egg and sperm cells.
Hydra may reproduce asexually
Most protozoan species can reproduce both asexually and sexually!!!
Bacteria, yeast, sponges
bacteria
One example is an "aphid".
They reproduce Asexually
sexually
The organisms in the kingdom Fungi reproduce by spores, meaning they reproduce asexually. Some can, however (such as mushrooms) reproduce sexually by adapting to their environment.
Amoeba reproduce asexually, along with every other type of bacteria.
A new organism that is produced by a parent is called an offspring. Some organisms reproduce asexually while others reproduce sexually.
An organism that reproduces asexually does not have to find a mate. This is because asexual reproduction only involves one parent, so there is no need to search for a partner to reproduce.
They reproduce asexually
They reproduce sexually
they reproduce asexually through regeneration