Biology, asked by khanrasid03006, 7 months ago

asexual reproduction structure in hyra is ​

Answers

Answered by sumit06khatri11
1

Answer:

Reproduction and life cycle When food is plentiful, many Hydra reproduce asexually by producing buds in the body wall, which grow to be miniature adults and break away when they are mature. When a hydra is well fed, a new bud can form every two days.

Answered by dp14380dinesh
2

Answer:

Hydra (/ˈhaɪdrə/ h-EYE-drə) is a genus of small, fresh-water organisms of the phylum Cnidaria and class Hydrozoa. They are native to the temperate and tropical regions.[2][3] Biologists are especially interested in Hydra because of their regenerative ability – they do not appear to die of old age, or indeed to age at all.

Hydra

Kingdom:

Animalia

Phylum:

Cnidaria

Class:

Hydrozoa

Order:

Anthoathecata

Family:

Hydridae

Dana, 1846

Genus:

Hydra

Linnaeus, 1758[1]

Species[1]

List

* Hydra baikalensis Swarczewsky, 1923

* Hydra beijingensis Fan, 2003

* Hydra canadensis Rowan, 1930

* Hydra cauliculata Hyman, 1938

* Hydra circumcincta Schulze, 1914

* Hydra daqingensis Fan, 2000

* Hydra ethiopiae Hickson, 1930

* Hydra hadleyi (Forrest, 1959)

* Hydra harbinensis Fan & Shi, 2003

* Hydra hymanae Hadley & Forrest, 1949

* Hydra iheringi Cordero, 1939

* Hydra intaba Ewer, 1948

* Hydra intermedia De Carvalho Wolle, 1978

* Hydra japonica Itô, 1947

* Hydra javanica Schulze, 1929

* Hydra liriosoma Campbell, 1987

* Hydra madagascariensis Campbell, 1999

* Hydra magellanica Schulze, 1927

* Hydra mariana Cox & Young, 1973

* Hydra minima Forrest, 1963

* Hydra mohensis Fan & Shi, 1999

* Hydra oligactis Pallas, 1766

* Hydra oregona Griffin & Peters, 1939

* Hydra oxycnida Schulze, 1914

* Hydra paludicola Itô, 1947

* Hydra paranensis Cernosvitov, 1935

* Hydra parva Itô, 1947

* Hydra plagiodesmica Dioni, 1968

* Hydra polymorpha Chen & Wang, 2008

* Hydra robusta (Itô, 1947)

* Hydra rutgersensis Forrest, 1963

* Hydra salmacidis Lang da Silveira et al., 1997

* Hydra sinensis Wang et al., 2009

* Hydra thomseni Cordero, 1941

* Hydra umfula Ewer, 1948

* Hydra utahensis Hyman, 1931

* Hydra viridissima Pallas, 1766

* Hydra vulgaris Pallas, 1766

* Hydra zeylandica Burt, 1929

* Hydra zhujiangensis Liu & Wang, 2010

please like and follow me

Similar questions