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What are the reproductive behaviors of animals?
Animal reproductive behavior includes a series of complex behaviors, such as recognition, occupying space, courtship, mating, hatching eggs and feeding offspring. Reproduction is also called reproduction, and reproductive behavior usually refers to the behavior pattern of mate formation and mating activities. This behavior pattern is the physiological process of producing offspring for the continuation of race, that is, the process of producing new individuals. Reproduction is one of the basic phenomena of all life. Every living individual is the result of reproduction of the previous generation.

Asexual reproduction:

The process of asexual reproduction involves only one individual, for example, bacteria reproduce asexually through cell division. Asexual reproduction is not limited to single-celled organisms. Most plants can reproduce asexually. Common asexual reproduction includes vegetative organ reproduction, budding reproduction, cleavage reproduction, spore reproduction and fission reproduction. In vitro plant tissue culture is also a means of asexual reproduction.

Sexual reproduction:

Sexual reproduction involves two individuals of different sexes.

Human reproduction is a sexual reproduction. Generally speaking, higher organisms reproduce sexually and lower organisms reproduce asexually.