Question:

Asexual reproduction by budding is present in :

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Budding is like a small "mini-me" growing off the parent.
{Yeast} (unicellular fungus): A small bud forms on the parent cell, grows, and separates.
{Hydra} (simple animal): A bud grows on the body wall and develops into a new hydra. Other options:
Amoeba: Binary fission (splits in two).
Spirogyra: Fragmentation.
  • Amoeba
  • Spirogyra
  • Moss
  • Yeast
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The Correct Option is D

Solution and Explanation

Concept: Asexual reproduction is a mode of reproduction that does not involve meiosis or fertilization; the offspring arise from a single organism and inherit the genes of that parent only. Budding is one specific type of asexual reproduction. Step 1: Understanding Budding In budding, a new organism develops from an outgrowth or bud due to cell division at one particular site on the parent organism. The new organism remains attached as it grows, separating from the parent organism only when it is mature. The new individual is genetically identical to the parent. Step 2: Analyzing reproduction in the given options
(1) Amoeba: Amoeba typically reproduces asexually by binary fission, where the parent cell divides into two identical daughter cells. Some species can also undergo multiple fission under unfavorable conditions.
(2) Spirogyra: Spirogyra is a type of filamentous green alga. It reproduces asexually by fragmentation, where the filament breaks into smaller pieces, and each piece grows into a new filament. It also reproduces sexually by conjugation.
(3) Moss: Mosses (Bryophytes) reproduce both asexually and sexually. Asexual reproduction in mosses can occur by fragmentation or by the formation of specialized structures called gemmae. Budding can also occur from the protonema stage. However, yeast is a more classic and direct example of budding at the cellular level as its primary mode.
(4) Yeast: Yeast is a unicellular fungus. A common mode of asexual reproduction in yeast is budding. A small bud (outgrowth) forms on the parent yeast cell, receives a nucleus, grows, and then detaches to become a new yeast cell. Step 3: Identifying the organism that primarily uses budding While some forms of budding or bud-like structures might be involved in the life cycle of mosses, Yeast is the classic textbook example of an organism that reproduces asexually by budding at the cellular level. Hydra is another common example of an animal that reproduces by budding. Given the options, Yeast is the most direct and common example of asexual reproduction by budding.
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