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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...
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Reproduction - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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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...
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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)
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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.
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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.”...
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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.
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