Biology, asked by dhruvsingh073, 4 months ago

Explain why there is no variation in the daughter cells of amoeba

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:

Binary fission is a type of asexual reproduction in which the fully grown parent cell splits into two halves, producing two new daughter cells. It is common among organisms such as Bacteria, Amoeba and Paramecium. After replicating its genetic material through mitotic division, the cell divides into two equal sized daughter cells. First of all nuclear division takes place followed by cleavage of cytoplasm into equal parts. Later it corresponds to the separation of the daughter nuclei into two daughter cells. The outcome of cell reproduction is a pair of daughter cells that are genetically identical to the parent cell.

So the correct option is 'division of cytoplasm is equal'.

Answered by atharva329
3

Answer:

THE AMOEBA REPRODUCES BY MEANS OF ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION (BINARY FISSION) DUE TO WHICH THERE IS NO VARIATION IN THE PARENT AND DAUGHTER CELL.....

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