Biology, asked by subhamkumarkumar84, 9 months ago

how is reproduction to be achieved from a single cell type, if the organism itself consists of many cell type?​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:

Just to be clear - the vast majority of organisms are not composed of many cells but are single cells. But leaving that aside, the answer is that we can reproduce using a single pair of cells (not one cell, it takes one sperm and one egg) because all our cells share the same DNA, which contains the instructions for all the cells in our bodies, from our bones to our muscles to our neurons. As a new embryo develops, its cells start to specialise, some becoming muscles, some skin and so on.

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Explanation:

Answered by Anonymous
6

Answer:

Single-celled organisms which use asexual reproduction can do so very rapidly simply by dividing into two equal halves. This is called binary fission. In yeasts the cell does not divide equally in two halves; instead, there is a large mother cell and a smaller daughter cell. This is called budding.

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