Biology, asked by Alran1406, 5 months ago

How does the process of budding differ from the process of spore formation? for 3 marks​

Answers

Answered by trixd140
3

Answer:

Explanation:

In budding , a small part of the body of the parent organism grows out as bud which then detaches and becomes a new organism.... While in spore formation the parent plant produces hundreds of microscopic reproductive units called spores .

Answered by vanshikabansal1630
1

Answer:

The key difference between budding and spore formation is that budding is a type of asexual reproduction in which a new organism originates from a small bud-like structure developed on the parent organism, while the spore formation is a form of asexual reproduction in which new individuals originate directly from the spores of the parent.

Budding and spore formation are two different asexual reproduction methods. Both, the budding and spore formation involve a single parent. Hence, there is no genetic material mixing or exchange. That is why the offspring produced through budding and spore formation are genetically identical to their parent organism.

Explanation:

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