Bisection is the process by which asexual reproduction occurs in bacteria. During bifurcation, one creature becomes two separate creatures. Bisection is also used to describe repeating organelles in eukaryotes and is sometimes used to describe the reproduction of invertebrates vegetatively propagating by germination. Those cells undergo mitosis, but this process is called two divisions because it produces one to two organisms. With similar multiple division, organisms are divided into two or more
Bivariart is the main method of breeding prokaryotes. In protists, bisections are usually classified according to the axis of cell separation, such as lateral and longitudinal. In certain creatures such as aphids and anal anastomotic polyps, normal lateral division is called strobolation. Typically, this results in a series of split products called stellovirus, aphid arthropods, and lepidopteran jellyfish spines, each precursor or flash mature in tandem, and their ends . Several metazoan (multicellular) species frequently divide into several units at the same time. This is a process called fragmentation. The division and division of worms usually represents direct breeding, where each part plays a lost part and becomes a complete new animal.