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Question
your options are: binary fission, budding, fragmentation, grafting, parthenogenesis, plant tissue culture, spores, vegetative reproduction
The diagram shows a single cell (with a nucleus) dividing into two identical cells, then those dividing further. Binary fission is a form of asexual reproduction where a single organism divides into two identical daughter cells, typical in prokaryotes (and some eukaryotic cells like amoeba). The process here matches binary fission: one cell splits into two, then those split, showing the characteristic division of a cell into two equal parts. Other options like budding (unequal division, e.g., yeast), fragmentation (body breaks into fragments, e.g., flatworms), grafting (plant propagation), parthenogenesis (reproduction from unfertilized egg), plant tissue culture (in vitro plant growth), spores (reproductive cells for dispersal), or vegetative reproduction (plant asexual via vegetative parts) don't fit this single - cell dividing into two equal cells repeatedly.
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binary fission