Yeast reproduce by:
(a) budding
(b) sexual reproduction
(c) vegetative reproduction
(d) spore formation
Answers
Answer:
spore formation is right answer of this question.
Answer:
(a) budding
Explanation:
Yeasts are generally reproduced through budding that is a process involving the formation of a small growth on a parental cell. The nucleus of that cell divides, and the new nucleus moves into the bud and which grows and eventually becomes a separate cell. Other yeasts use sexual reproduction through the joining of cells and fusing nuclei to create a new diploid cell and which starts budding and making its own colony of cells.
Some yeasts reproduce through fission. In which one cell splits into two daughter cells.
Fission and budding are the asexual forms of yeast reproduction, and only diploid cells reproduce in this way. In common term, this process is quite similar to general mitosis. The new cells are precise copies of the parent cells and can either be haploid or diploid.