Biology, asked by 2120939, 3 days ago

can humans use binary fission?
and if so how?

Answers

Answered by ScienceMathsLover
0

Answer:

Yes

Explanation:

Binary fission is somehow similar to Mitotic type cell division which appear in somatic (body) cells. In both the cases the cell organelles as well as chromosomes replicate and divide further into 2 daughter cells from one parent cells.

The only difference that can be seen will be that the binary fission occurs in prokaryotes whereas mitosis occurs in eukaryotes where we require nucleus to complete the stage known as karyokinesis (division of nucleated materials like chromosomes, centrosomes,  etc.).

Hope u get satisfied with the answer =)

Answered by ankitpatle0
0
  • Asexual reproduction by splitting the body into two new bodies is known as binary fission.
  • In binary fission, an organism copies its genetic material, or deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), and splits into two sections (cytokinesis), each obtaining one copy of DNA.
  • Prokaryotic creatures reproduce mostly by binary fission.
  • Depending on the axis of cell separation, binary fission in protists is frequently classified as transverse or longitudinal.
  • Strobilation is the term for regular transverse fission in organisms like tapeworms and scyphostome polyps.
  • The fission products—tapworm proglottids and scyphozoan jellyfish ephyrae—commonly form a strobilus, a chain of fission products that develops and separates from the end of the strobilus.
  • Fragmentation is a process in which the body of a few metazoan (multicellular) species gets divided into multiple components at the same time.
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