Science, asked by vinaypal17, 1 year ago

how does the reproduction in Amoeba different from the of Paramecium

Answers

Answered by aqibkincsem
5

"Paramecium repeats, similar to one-celled critter, by paired splitting. The ciliate quits moving and both super and micronucleus separation and move to inverse closures of the living being.

The cytoplasm at that point isolates at right edges to the long hub and the little girl paramecia discrete. Paired parting may happen 2 or multiple times every day.

There is additionally a complex sexual procedure in which two paramecia join by their oral surfaces. The meganucleus separates and the micronucleus isolates.

One of the micronuclei of every individual crosses to the accomplice and wires with the remaining micronucleus there. The accomplices at that point discrete and repeat by parallel splitting."

Answered by smartbrainz
2

Explanation:

  • The reproduction in amoeba is different from the paramecium. The amoeba exhibits the reproduction by the binary fission. The paramecium exhibits sexual reproduction by the process called conjugation.
  • The locomotion mechanism by amoeba is by pseudopodia and by paramecium is using or by beating the cilia.
  • The binary fission is asexual reproduction and a DNA replication which occurs simultaneously. It occurs in  the single-stage celled eukaryotes or amoeba.

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