Biology, asked by naga123430, 10 months ago

how does binary fission differ from Multiple Fission​

Answers

Answered by vaibhavipadalkar1106
15

Answer:

binary fission is different from the multiple fission because binary fission divides an organism in two halves at a time but Multiple fission divides an organism in more than two halves.

Answered by NarutoDattebayo
11

Answer:

In binary fission, the parent cell divides itself into two equal and identical daughter cells. It is the most common form of reproduction in prokaryotes such as bacteria. In multiple fission, a single parent cell is divided into many daughter cells.

alternate answer:

Binary fission ("division in half") is a kind of asexual reproduction. It is the most common form of reproduction in prokaryotes and occurs in some single-celled eukaryotes like Amoeba. In binary fission , the fully grown parent cell splits into two halves , producing two new cells.

Multiple fission at the cellular level occurs in many protists, e.g. sporozoans and algae. The nucleus of the parent cell divides several times by mitosis, producing several nuclei. The cytoplasm then separates, creating multiple daughter cells.

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