Biology, asked by diwanmohideen661, 3 months ago

How does binary fission differ from mutiple fission?​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
11

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.

Answered by gayathridevimj
1

Answer:

In binary fission, the parent organism splits to form two new organisms. In multiple fission, the parents organism splits to form many new organisms at the same time. ... It takes place in organisms like Amoeba, Paramecium, etc. It takes place in organism like Plasmodium.

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