differentiate between the fission of amoeba Paramecium plasmodium and leishmania
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Binary fission is a common asexual reproduction method shown by single cell organisms including bacteria, amoeba and leishmania. Matured parent cell splits into two identical daughter cells in binary fission. The amoeba cell does not have a definite shape. It has a floating cytoplasm covered in a flexible cell membrane. Hence, the shape can be changed at any time. Binary fission in amoeba can also happen from any place of the cell. Leishmania is a common human parasitic protozoan which also has a single cell structure. At one end of leishmania, there is a flagellum. Hence, the binary fission of leishmania has a definite orientation. This is the main difference between binary fission of amoeba and leishmania.
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Binary fission is a common asexual reproduction method shown by single cell organisms including bacteria, amoeba and leishmania. Matured parent cell splits into two identical daughter cells in binary fission. The amoeba cell does not have a definite shape. It has a floating cytoplasm covered in a flexible cell membrane. Hence, the shape can be changed at any time. Binary fission in amoeba can also happen from any place of the cell. Leishmania is a common human parasitic protozoan which also has a single cell structure. At one end of leishmania, there is a flagellum. Hence, the binary fission of leishmania has a definite orientation. This is the main difference between binary fission of amoeba and leishmania.
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