explain reproduction of amoeba and yeast
Answers
Answer:
Binary fission is the division of one cell into two similar cells. It occurs in unicellular organisms like bacteria, yeast, Euglena, Amoeba and Paramecium. Sometimes new individuals develop from the body wall of the parent as bulb like projections called buds. Budding occurs in yeast.
Amoeba reproduces by the common asexual reproduction method called binary fission. After replicating its genetic material through mitotic division, the cell divides into two equal sized daughter cells.
Explanation:
Unicellular organisms, have relatively simple organizations. So, the asexual mode of reproduction is common in them. It is so because by asexual reproduction unicellular organisms can multiply very fast. In Amoeba it occurs by binary fission and in yeast by budding to be described first.
fr diagram see the attachment
Explanation:
reproduction in amoeba.
Amoeba reproduces by the common asexual reproduction method called binary fission. After replicating its genetic material through mitotic division, the cell divides into two equal sized daughter cells. ... In this process, the nucleus of the Amoeba first divides to form two daughter nuclei by the process of Karyokinesis.
reproduction in yeast.
Most yeasts reproduce asexually by an asymmetric division process called budding. First it produces a small protuberance on the parent cell that grows to a full size and forms a bud. The nucleus of the parent cell splits into a daughter nucleus and migrates into the daughter cell