The term "budding" translates as "budding" and in biology refers to a form of asexual reproduction in which a new individual develops from a generative anatomical point on the parent organism. In some species, budding can occur from almost any point on the body, but in many cases budding is restricted to specialized areas. The initial protrusion of proliferating cytoplasm or cells, the bud, eventually develops into an organism that duplicates the parent.
The new individual may detach to exist independently, or the buds may remain together and form aggregates or colonies.
Budding is characteristic of a few unicellular organisms (e.g., certain bacteria, yeasts, and protozoa). However, a number of metazoans (e.g., certain cnidarian species) regularly reproduce by budding.
In virology, budding in enveloped viruses is the final step of their morphogenesis in the host cell. Budding is simultaneously associated with envelopment of the capsid with a cellular lipid membrane and shedding of a new virion.