Biology, asked by Deepshikharsahu, 1 year ago

explain how the process of budding in yeast differs from that in hydra​

Answers

Answered by shrutimohta0220
3

Budding in yeast.

- Yeast is unicellular and it itself is divided into one larger mother cell and a smaller daughter cell.

- Budding here is similar to mitosis except that cytokinesis is unequal resulting in a unicellular bud.

- When a yeast cell becomes mature then only it divides to form the mother cell and daughter cell. If the size is not achieved mother cell will spend the cell cycle.

Budding in hydra.

-Hydra is a multicellular organism. Budding starts on the parent organism and then the offsprings gets detached from the parent surviving as an independent organisms

- Multiple mitotic divisions are required for formation of a bud.

- Uses regenerative cells for reproduction.

Hope it helped


Deepshikharsahu: thanx
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