Biology, asked by misshakundra, 10 months ago

What is the special Asexual Reproduction unit in yeast and hydra

Answers

Answered by Pikachu07
0

Answer:

budding

Hydra reproduce asexually through a process known as budding. For Hydra, this is the most common mode of reproduction and occurs under favorable environmental conditions. During budding, a small bud develops near the basal part of the parent Hydra through repeated mitotic division of the epidermal interstitial cells

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Answered by hashimma12345
0

Answer:

Budding in Yeast

Most yeasts reproduce asexually by an asymmetric division process called budding. First it produces a small protuberance on the parent cell that grows to a full size and forms a bud. The nucleus of the parent cell splits into a daughter nucleus and migrates into the daughter cell.

Hydra reproduce asexually through a process known as budding. For Hydra, this is the most common mode of reproduction and occurs under favorable environmental conditions. During budding, a small bud develops near the basal part of the parent Hydra through repeated mitotic division of the epidermal interstitial cells.

Explanation:

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