cheetah is a multicellular organism. A paramecium is a unicellular organism. How do these two organisms differ in terms of how they produce offspring?

The cheetah uses sexual reproduction, while the paramecium uses meiosis.
The cheetah uses binary fission, while the paramecium uses sexual reproduction.
The cheetah uses asexual reproduction, while the paramecium uses binary fission.
The cheetah uses sexual reproduction, while the paramecium uses asexual reproduction.

1 answer

The correct statement regarding the differences in how cheetahs and paramecia produce offspring is:

The cheetah uses sexual reproduction, while the paramecium uses asexual reproduction.

Cheetahs, as multicellular organisms, typically reproduce sexually, involving the combination of genetic material from two parents. In contrast, paramecia, as unicellular organisms, primarily reproduce asexually through a process called binary fission, where a single organism divides into two identical offspring. Paramecia can also engage in a form of sexual reproduction called conjugation, but this is not their primary method of reproduction.