Worms, sea stars, planaria, sponges, etc., (please improve).
No animal appears on the US two cent piece, it is a union shield on the front and a wreath on the back
The color of the organism's eyes would likely be the least useful piece of information for classifying it as an animal. Characteristics such as body structure, presence of a backbone, method of reproduction, and diet are more relevant in determining classification within the animal kingdom.
plants can carry both the sperm and the egg cell, making technically both male and female. This means it just mixes its pollen and egg to create a seed, as opposed to two mammals having to mate to create a baby. Plants might use an outside force, however, to take the pollen to the egg to fertilize it and create a seed. This is where bees, wind, etc. come in. Bees take pollen from flowers and spread it. Wind can shake a pine tree, making it release pollen from pine cones when open (try shaking a pine tree when the pine cones are open, you see a big fog of pollen).
Well, honey, the ridge down an animal's back is typically darker than the rest of its back. It's like nature's way of giving them some extra flair. So, if you're looking for a bold statement piece on an animal, that's where you should be focusing your attention.
At their tender age, it is more likely to be a playful tug of war, rather than an actual fight. As with all young, of any animal, play is important in development.
Clone
cloning
Examples of asexual reproduction in prokaryotes include binary fission in bacteria, where a parent cell divides into two identical daughter cells. In eukaryotes, examples include budding in yeast, where a new individual grows off the parent, and fragmentation in plants, where a piece of the parent organism develops into a new individual.
outlier
budding or fragmentation. Budding involves the growth of a new sponge from the parent sponge, while fragmentation occurs when a piece of the sponge breaks off and grows into a new sponge.
regeneration is where a piece of something breaks off then grows back
No.
a piece of an animal
No, it is a piece of software.
No animal appears on the US two cent piece, it is a union shield on the front and a wreath on the back
a section of topsoil and grass, (about 3-4 inches of soil and the grass that grows out of it)
potato is plant that grows on ground, the actual piece you eat is underground