Biology, asked by harsh7967, 1 year ago

how the yeast/hydra/planaria/protonema of mosses reproduce asexually

Answers

Answered by aarvikhan2
5
Organisms reproduce by asexualmeans also. Fungi multiply and spread easily due to the millions of asexualspores they produce. In lower organisms like yeast and hydra, we observe budding. ... The fungi, the filamentous algae, the protonema of mosses, all easily multiply by fragmentation.
Answered by gratefuljarette
0

Hydra can do budding.

Yeast, protonema may undergo fragmentation.

Planeria regenerates itself.

EXPLANATION:

When the offspring is produced by single parents with or without the involvement of formation of gamete, then this type of reproduction is asexual reproduction.

Fungi spread and multiply easily because they produce millions of 'asexual spores'. In lower organisms like hydra and yeast, budding occurs. The 'fungi filamentous algae', the 'protonema of mosses', all multiply by the process of fragmentation.

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