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regeneration
Sea stars reproduce by an asexual method called regeneration
If a five-armed sea star is cut into five equal pieces, each piece has the potential to regenerate into a new sea star, provided that each piece contains part of the central disc. Therefore, ideally, you could end up with five new sea stars, assuming each piece is sufficiently large and contains necessary biological structures for regeneration. However, successful regeneration can depend on various factors, including the health of the sea star and environmental conditions.
budding is when a part of the organism brakes off it grows and becomes identical to the organism it broke of of or when it just grows on the organism and regeneration is when a sea star losses a limb and it grows back.
The sea star can, like a lizard, regrow a limb if cut or removed. So, like if one of its legs got cut or torn off, it would regrow. The seastar is also asexual
Some species of cnidarians, such as hydras, reproduce by budding. Budding is the process in which a new individual develops as an outgrowth or bud on the parent organism and eventually detaches to become independent.
Crabs, sharks, killer whale, sea lion, dolphins, lobster, fish, sea otter, star fish, clams,squid, octopus, shrimp, lizard fish, blind eel, sting rays, and sea horse. MUCH MORE!
Regeneration is what causes sea stars to repair their limbs.
A sea star is called a sea star simply because of where it lives (the sea) and what it looks like (a star), simple!
5 to 10 minutes
regeneration
Whiptail Lizard, Sea star, Sea Anemones ( I don't know the other two)