Biology, asked by arunaday5973, 4 months ago

Do you think, unicellular organisms are effectively immortal? Explain your answer with an example.​

Answers

Answered by rishyabhuded
1

Answer:

Unicellular organisms are considered biologically immortal because they do not grow old and die. Instead, they reproduce asexually through mitosis.

Explanation:

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Answered by Anonymous
3

Answer:

➡️. Single celled organisms reproduce by cell division into two individuals, there is no natural death for them and hence they are considered immortal.

➡️. In multicellular organisms, reproduction occurs in specialised organs involving specialised cells, their body as a whole dies due to ageing and senescence\

unicellular organs like amoeba are immortal because their next generation is produced because they divide into 2 different organisms whereas multicellular organisms die some day or the other

Explanation:

for example, but the microbes can be immortal if nothing kills off the whole batch of them.

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