Asked by sk
Complex organisms reproduce sexually, and simple organisms reproduce asexually. Is this statement always true?(1 point)
Yes, because larger organisms reproduce sexually, and smaller organisms reproduce asexually.
Yes, because multicellular organisms reproduce sexually and unicellular organisms reproduce asexually.
No, because complex organisms like starfish and plants use asexual reproduction more often.
No, because some complex organisms like komodo dragons can reproduce both ways.
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No — "No, because some complex organisms like komodo dragons can reproduce both ways."
Explanation: Many complex (multicellular) organisms can reproduce asexually or switch between sexual and asexual reproduction (e.g., komodo dragons via parthenogenesis, starfish by fragmentation, many plants by vegetative propagation), so the original statement is not always true.
Explanation: Many complex (multicellular) organisms can reproduce asexually or switch between sexual and asexual reproduction (e.g., komodo dragons via parthenogenesis, starfish by fragmentation, many plants by vegetative propagation), so the original statement is not always true.
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