This is an interesting thread! Understood that the original post is quite specific about the type of curve or surface involved, and I think the question is answered.
I was prompted to post because I wondered if some people reading through might think that, in Fusion, all surfaces have a "degree". Indeed, some surfaces are splines and do have a degree. But many surfaces are not defined as splines, and do not have a degree. There are analytics; sphere, cones, torus shapes. But, more interestingly, there are "procedural surfaces" which may look like splines, but are not splines. I created an example to explore the difference between a red loft (procedural) and a blue spline (a close approximation to the same shape).

One difference becomes evident when we consider how these two surfaces extend. The red loft is defined to follow a circular section. Its procedural definition makes the extension follow that input shape. In contrast, the extension of the blue spline follows a different path; it's still a valid extension but the extension is inferred from the spline control points, it's not procedurally connected to the circle.

This difference in extension shape could seem just a curiosity but it's significant when we have neighbouring geometry that we want to remain coherent through modeling operations. Here's a view of the two extensions again when there’s a neighbouring cylinder. It's much more useful to have the extension match up with neighbouring surfaces (as in the red procedural loft) rather than diverge (like the blue spline).


These kinds of surface extensions can happen during other Fusion operations (filleting, thickening, direct-edit of a model, replacing or healing up missing faces,…). That's why procedural geometry works well for Fusion and, for many surfaces, there's no notion of "degree".
If you export a Fusion surface into another CAD package, the data translation work may need to convert the procedural surface into a spline. What you see in the other CAD package might not reflect exactly the definition that was in Fusion.
Hope that gives some interesting "under the hood" insight!
Jean Flower
Product Manager
Autodesk, Inc.