Biology, asked by syedayfa, 8 months ago

Describe binary fission in amoeba and budding in hydra.

Answers

Answered by vanshdubey
6

Answer:

Budding is the asexual mode of reproduction. In budding, a genetically identical new organism grows attached to the body of parent Hydra and separates later on.

In the process of budding, a bud develops as an outgrowth due to repeated cell division at one specific site. This bud grows randomly and there is no specific order or direction they follow.

Amoeba is the single-celled eukaryotic organism with no definite shape and moves by means of pseudopodia and it belongs to the kingdom protozoa. Amoeba shows extremely diverse in nature so they reproduce using varieties of different methods such as binary fission, spore and even sexually.

Binary fission is the most common method asexual reproduction employed by amoeba. During this stage, amoeba stops its movement by withdrawing its pseudopodia and forms a spherical shape.

The genetic material is divided by the process of mitosis, after the division of cytoplasm follows the division of the nucleus, resulting in two daughter cells which are identical clones obtained by parent cells.

Answered by ksivapriya21
5

Binary fission is the most common method asexual reproduction employed by amoeba. During this stage, amoeba stops its movement by withdrawing its pseudopodia and forms a spherical shape.

The genetic material is divided by the process of mitosis, after the division of cytoplasm follows the division of the nucleus, resulting in two daughter cells which are identical clones obtained by parent cells.

Budding is the asexual mode of reproduction. In budding, a genetically identical new organism grows attached to the body of parent Hydra and separates later on.

In the process of budding, a bud develops as an outgrowth due to repeated cell division at one specific site. This bud grows randomly and there is no specific order or direction they follow.

hope it helps...

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