Asked by bob
A cheetah is a multicellular organism. A paramecium is a unicellular organism. How do these two organisms differ in terms of how they produce offspring?(1 point)
Responses
The cheetah uses sexual reproduction, but the paramecium uses meiosis.
The cheetah uses sexual reproduction, but the paramecium uses meiosis.
The cheetah uses binary fission, but the paramecium uses sexual reproduction.
The cheetah uses binary fission, but the paramecium uses sexual reproduction.
The cheetah uses asexual reproduction, but the paramecium uses binary fission.
The cheetah uses asexual reproduction, but the paramecium uses binary fission.
The cheetah uses sexual reproduction, but the paramecium uses asexual reproduction.
The cheetah uses sexual reproduction, but the paramecium uses asexual reproduction.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
The cheetah uses sexual reproduction, but the paramecium uses asexual reproduction.
Explanation: Cheetahs (multicellular mammals) reproduce sexually (fusion of gametes). Paramecia (single-celled) usually reproduce asexually by binary fission (though they can exchange genes by conjugation).
Explanation: Cheetahs (multicellular mammals) reproduce sexually (fusion of gametes). Paramecia (single-celled) usually reproduce asexually by binary fission (though they can exchange genes by conjugation).
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