Biology, asked by ProSubha, 9 months ago

how do binary fission differs from multiple fission??



Answers

Answered by kausalya61
1

Answer:

In binary fission, the parent cell divides itself into two equal and identical daughter cells. ... In multiple fission, a single parent cell is divided into many daughter cells.

Multiple fission

The nucleus of the parent cell divides several times by amitosis, producing several nuclei. The cytoplasm then separates, creating multiple daughter cells. Some parasitic, single-celled organisms undergo a multiple fission-like process to produce numerous daughter cells from a single parent cell.

Answered by keshavkuldeep2004
1

Explanation:

IN BINARY FISSION , A PARENT CELL DIVIDES IT'S GENERIC MATERIAL (DNA) AND IT'S CELL BODIES SUCH AS CYTOPLASM ETC, INTO TWO PARTS,WHICH SLOWLY DIVIDES ITSELF INTO A PARENT AND DAUGHTER CELL, WHICH IS USUALLY SMALLER IN THAN PARENT CELL, BUT IN MULTIPLE FISSION THE PARENT DIVIDES ITSELF ITNI IT'S MULTIPLE PARTS OF DNA AND CYTOPLASM,WHICH THEN LEAD TO FORMATION OF MULTIPLE CELLS WHICH ARE SIMILAR IN SIZE.

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