Asexual Reproduction Pg 364-367. Introduction  Mitosis is the basis for reproduction by one parent  asexual reproduction  Common in microorganisms,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Types of Asexual Reproduction All types of asexual reproduction produce identical offspring from a single parent.
Advertisements

Asexual Reproduction Living Environment. Mitosis animation: Mitosis animation: bin/jpbrody/animation/files/ html.
ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION – the production of new individuals from one parent by mitosis. New organisms are identical to the parent. BINARY FISSION – a type.
Types of Asexual Reproduction 3/17/2008. Do Now: MeiosisMitosis Forms sex cells (sperm and eggs) ½ the number of chromosomes compared to the parent cell.
TOPIC: Reproduction & Development AIM: How do living things reproduce asexually?
Genetics is the study of heredity.. Organisms resemble their parents because they inherit their genetic material from their parents.
Asexual Reproduction © Lisa Michalek.
Asexual & Sexual Reproduction. Asexual Reproduction  Type of reproduction in which a new organism is produced from ONE parent and the offspring is identical.
Asexual Reproduction Production of offspring from one parent
Reproduction. Asexual Reproduction _____ Parent No union of gametes Offspring genetically _______ to parents (“clone”) Offspring results from _________.
Mitosis and Asexual Reproduction. Life Cycle of a Cell Mitosis Stage: this is the stage in which the cell’s nucleus duplicates and divides to form two.
LO: SWBAT explain the difference between asexual and sexual reproduction and describe different types of asexual reproduction DN: Explain the differences.
Producing Identical Offspring
Asexual Reproduction Question and Answer
Methods of Asexual Reproduction This is what it would look like if humans reproduced by fragmentation!
Produces an offspring that is identical to the parent
Asexual Reproduction Section 2.6, p. 57. Sexual vs. Asexual There are 2 types of reproduction: ◦Sexual reproduction  Two parents contribute genetic information.
Asexual Reproduction. What is Reproduction?  Reproduction is the process in which organisms produce more of their own kind.  Asexual reproduction occurs.
KEY CONCEPT Many organisms reproduce by cell division.
Asexual Reproduction Asexual – the production of a new organism with out the fusion of sex cells. ONE parent is involved.
Asexual Reproduction Bacteria, Protists, Fungi, and Animals.
Unit 4-1 Notes Mr. Hefti – Pulaski Biology
Topic: Reproduction Aim: How is the human body adapted for reproduction?
SEXUAL & ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION INVOLVE CELL DIVISION ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION INVOLVES ONE PARENT: through binary fission, budding, & regeneration –One organism.
Asexual Reproduction The formation of a new individual that has identical genetic information to its parent. Occurs in all five kingdoms –Monera (bacteria)
Asexual reproduction is the formation of new individuals from the cell(s) of a single parent. It is very common in plants; less so in animals.
ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION Involves only one parent Offspring are genetically identical to the parent.
Asexual Reproduction Chapter 5.2. Asexual Reproduction Main points – Only one parent is required – Asexually produced offspring, or clones, have identical.
Recall: All Living Things Share Certain Characteristics -living things are highly organized -living things obtain and use energy -living things grow and.
5.2 Asexual Reproduction.  Asexual reproduction requires only ONE parent  Offspring have identical genetic information and therefore are identical to.
Asexual Reproduction Genetics & Heredity. Asexual Reproduction +  Same DNA  Requires one parent  Rapid -  No genetic variation – same DNA  Can outgrow.
Creating Clones. In The House of the Scorpion and The X-Files episode ‘Eve’, the stories focus on human clones that are produced by reproductive cloning.
Asexual Reproduction. ASEXUAL vs. SEXUAL  Requires only one parent organism  Offspring genetically identical to parent (clones)  No specialized cells.
Reproduction Notes. I.Reproduction A. – offspring arise from a parent and inherit all of the genes of that parent 1. Offspring have of the same chromosomes.
The process of making new individuals (offspring) from existing individuals (parents).
A comparison…. Any form of reproduction in which the offspring are genetically identical to the parent A single parent grows a clone or copy of itself.
5.4 Asexual Reproduction KEY CONCEPT Many organisms reproduce by cell division.
5.2 Asexual Reproduction Science 9.
How do organisms reproduce?. 1) Who thinks they can define Reproduction? The process by which living things produce other living things like themselves.
Asexual Reproduction.
Cell Division and Asexual Reproduction
Types of Asexual Reproduction: (Mitosis)
TOPIC: REPRODUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT
LO: SWBAT explain the difference between asexual and sexual reproduction and describe different types of asexual reproduction DN: Explain the differences.
Asexual Reproduction.
Asexual reproduction In organisms.
LO: SWBAT explain the difference between asexual and sexual reproduction and describe different types of asexual reproduction DN: Explain the differences.
Reproduction.
ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION.
Drill 14 2/12/13 List 3 steps to binary fission.
Types of Asexual Reproduction
Which kind of reproduction results in offspring that are different from the parents- sexual reproduction or asexual reproduction? Explain.
KEY CONCEPT Many organisms reproduce by cell division.
Asexual Reproduction.
2.6 Cell Division and Asexual Reproduction
Assignment # Asexual Reproduction in Simple Organisms
Which kind of reproduction results in offspring that are different from the parents- sexual reproduction or asexual reproduction? Explain.
Methods of Reproduction Focus on Asexual.
Types of Asexual Reproduction
Asexual Reproduction Chapter 5.2.
Reproduction Notes Reproduction: the ability of a species to produce new organisms Asexual Reproduction: 1 parent Offspring genetically identical to parent.
Reproduction.
Asexual Reproduction.
Types of ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION
Topic: Asexual Reproduction 5 Examples of Asexual Reproduction
Asexual and Sexual Reproduction
How do cells make new cells?
Asexual Reproduction Chapter 5.2.
ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION Mr. Richardson Science 10F.
Asexual Reproduction.
Presentation transcript:

Asexual Reproduction Pg

Introduction  Mitosis is the basis for reproduction by one parent  asexual reproduction  Common in microorganisms, plants, fungi, and some animals  All offspring identical to parents (including DNA) and each other  called clones

Budding and Binary Fission  Budding: offspring begins as growth (bud) on parent  When it can survive on its own, the bud detaches  Unequal division of parent organism  Eg: yeast, hydra

 Yeast Hydra 

Binary Fission  Organism divides into two equal cells  Parent is lost in the process  DNA copied, cells divide  What process is this similar to?  Eg: bacteria and protists

Asexual reproduction by binary fission New individuals (Paramecium)

Amoeba binary fission

A single bacteria cell can reproduce every 20 minutes Over a 12 hour period a single bacterium can produce 10 million copies of itself

Which of the following is Budding?

Which of the following is Binary Fission? DRAW THE ANSWERS !!

Fragmentation  Fragments of the parent break off and grow into new individuals  Can occur by accident or purposely  Eg: planaria

Regeneration  Re-growing a lost body part or limb  Usually occurs only if central part of body is intact  Eg: salamanders, starfish, crabs

Spore formation  Parent produces spores, which often have protective covering  When conditions are good, they develop into new organism  Eg: plants, algae

Asexual reproduction in plants

Grafting  Used to propagate a desired variety of shrub or tree  Take a scion (twig) and insert into stock (cut stump)  Eg: all apple trees

Vegetative reproduction  Runners: plant sends out aboveground stems  New plant grows at end of runner  Eg: strawberry plants

Vegetative reproduction  Other plants produce thickened underground stems  Rhizomes, bulbs, tubers (storage)  Eg: asparagus, tulips, ginger

Vegetative reproduction  Leaves can also form new plants  Eg: jade plant  Some plants use roots for asexual repro  Eg: aspen trees, dandelions

Outcomes of asexual repro  Genetically identical offspring = clones  When is asexual reproduction beneficial?  -when a organism must reproduce quickly  -when the environment is unchanging  -when a mate is hard to find  What happens when the environment is not predictable?

Homework  Review 16.2 #1-7  Read pages …tomorrow’s topic