Asexual reproduction - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Asexual reproduction is reproduction which does not involve meiosis, ploidy reduction, or fertilization. Only one parent is involved in asexual reproduction. A more stringent definition is agamogene...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asexual_reproduction
Reproduction - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Reproduction is the biological process by which new individual organisms are produced. Reproduction is a fundamental feature of all known life; each individual organism exists as the result of reprod...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reproduction
They instead produce single ciliated offspring called swarmers by a process called budding. ... Sometimes new colonies are formed by budding, the division or accidental separation of part of a colony from an original nest. When this occurs, supplementary reproductives take over as the reproductive pair. Another method of...
www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/83411/budding/83411r... www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/83411/budding/83411rellinks/Related-Links
7.1. Nature of the Reproductive Process ... b. Budding occurs in cnidarians and some other animal phyla. ... a. Also called biparental, bisexual reproduction produces offspring from union of gametes from two genetically different parents.
www2.nemcc.edu/Mbaragona/Zoo%20I/Lecture%20Notes/Chapte... www2.nemcc.edu/Mbaragona/Zoo%20I/Lecture%20Notes/Chapter%207%20Reproduction.htm
Reproduction is a marvelous culmination of individual transcendence. Individual organisms come and go, but, to a certain extent, organisms "transcend" time by reproducing offspring. Let's take a look at reproduction in animals. ... Hydras exhibit this type of reproduction. Hydra Budding ; Image courtesy of BIODIDAC...
biology.about.com/library/weekly/aa090700a.htm
4. The process by which a starfish grows back a missing arm is called _______________. This process involves the restoration of lost body parts. ... This best illustrates the reproductive process called (1.) budding (2.) sexual reproduction (3.) regeneration (4.) binary fission...
www.ekcsk12.org/faculty/jbuckley/regbio/mitosisqz.html
Because adenine always falls in place opposite thymine and guanine opposite cytosine, the process is called a template replication—one strand serves as the mold for the other. It should be added that the steps involving ... Dragonflies exhibit unique mating and reproductive postures.[Credits : ... budding (reproduction)
www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/498542/reproduction www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/498542/reproduction
Each Polyp produced from a Planula is able to reproduce new Polyps by a process called budding. ... Budding is the development of a completely new Polyp that comes from the body wall of the original creature, much like a branch growing from the side of a tree. These become detached as separate small Polyps.
www.animalcorner.co.uk/marine/jellyfish/jellyfish_repro... www.animalcorner.co.uk/marine/jellyfish/jellyfish_reproduction.html
This process is called “swarming.” Termites whose role is to “back-up” the primary queen in their colony by producing extra eggs are called supplementary reproductives. Their role is to help to expand the colony’s foraging territory – a process called “budding.”...
www.termites101.org/termite-basics/colonies/
The Great Barrier Reef Visitors Bureau Info Site - What is The Great Barrier Reef, Coral, and how to get there. ... Polyps that form a colony also reproduce through a process called "budding" in which a bud from a parent polyp secretes its own skeleton. As new polyps develop, old ones die, leaving behind their skeletons.
www.greatbarriereef.com/