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How does the DNA of the Parent Spider
Plant compare to that of the plantlets?

Identical....because there is only one parent.

Different....because there is only one parent.

Similar....because there is only one parent.

Respuesta :

Answer:

Identical....because there is only one parent.

Explanation:

According to the options provided in the question, the spider plant involved reproduced asexually since only one parent is involved. Cell replicate via DIVISION in which one parent cell forms two daughter cells. However, before cell division (binary fission), the genetic material (DNA) needs to be duplicated.

Hence, the DNA content in the cell doubles in a process called DNA replication. The identical DNA is shared equally among the two daughter cells during the division process. Hence, the DNA of the parent spider plant will be IDENTICAL to that of the plantlets because there is only one parent.

Lanuel

The way in which the deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) of a Parent Spider  Plant compare to that of the plantlets is: A. Identical, because there is only one parent.

In Biology, duplication division refers to a process in which two (2) genetically identical daughter cells produced by one (1) parent cell have the same number of chromosomes as their parent cell.

Mitosis is a type of cell division (duplication) through which only one (1) parent cell produces two (2) genetically identical daughter cells.

During mitotic division, the two (2) genetically identical daughter cells produced by only one (1) parent cell generally have the same deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) as their parent cell.

This ultimately implies that, the deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) of a Parent Spider  Plant is identical to that of its plantlets (offspring) because there is only one (1) parent.

Read more: https://brainly.com/question/12103012

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