Yes
Yes
budding, spore formation, and binary fission
The difference is alge is a plant and plants both can do asexual and sexual reproduction so there's no diffrence
Asexual reproduction in fungi can occur through methods such as binary fission, fragmentation, budding, or spore formation. These methods allow fungi to reproduce rapidly and efficiently, especially in favorable environmental conditions.
Fungi use two main types of asexual reproduction: budding and spore formation. In budding, a new individual forms as a small outgrowth on the parent cell. Spore formation involves the production of specialized reproductive cells that can develop into new individuals under favorable conditions.
An asexual spore is a reproductive structure produced by fungi, algae, and plants that is capable of developing into a new individual without the need for fertilization. These spores are formed through mitosis and are used for dispersal and propagation of the organism in favorable conditions.
-Only one parent is required to produce offspring binary fission budding fragmentation spore formation vegetative reproduction
By their asexual spore reproduction.
i have no idea sorry
Spore formation is a form of asexual reproduction where specialized cells called spores are produced and dispersed to grow into new organisms. In contrast, sexual reproduction involves the fusion of gametes from two parents to create genetically diverse offspring. Spore formation does not involve the fusion of gametes and relies on a single parent organism.
Fungus-like protists reproduce through both sexual and asexual methods. Asexual reproduction usually involves spore formation, while sexual reproduction involves the fusion of gametes.