Lecture 5 Flashcards
Asexual Reproduction Advantages
- quick and energy efficient
* Sexual reproduction takes about twice as long as asexual reproduction (in species that do both)
Asexual reproduction disadvantages
• Phenotypic diversity depends on
mutation
• ‘Muller’s Ratchet’: Accumulation of deleterious mutations
• Asexual reproduction can’t produce a genome with less deleterious mutations than the parent (sexual reproduction can)
Sexual reproduction advantages
- Debated – several theories
- Main advantage (?): Ability to mix and match successful genes (more rare or novel genotypes)
- Organisms with asexual reproduction depend on mutation for genetic variation
Sexual reproduction disadvantages
- Energetically costly (courtship, defence…)
- Main disadvantage: males do not directly produce offspring
- ‘twofold’ cost of sex (John Maynard Smith, 1971)
Biological Species Concept:
Characterizes species by their ability to interbreed to produce fertile offspring
Morphological Species Concept:
Characterizes species by body shape and other morphological features
Ecological Species Concept:
Characterizes species in terms of its ecological niche
Types of Asexual Reproduction (5)
- Binary Fission
- Multiple Fission (Schizogony)
- Budding
- Gemmulation
- Fragmentation
Binary Fission
Common among bacteria and protozoa
The parent divides by mitosis into two parts
Each grows into an individual similar to the parent E.g. protozoans like Paramecium
Multiple Fission/ Schizogony
Nucleus divides repeatedly
Cytoplasmic division then produces many daughter cells simultaneously
E.g. parasitic protozoa like malaria
Budding
- Unequal division of an organism
- Bud is an outgrowth of the parent
- Develops organs and then detaches
- E.g. Occurs in hydra
Gemmulation
Formation of a new individual from an aggregation of cells
• Cells are surrounded by a resistant capsule – a “gemmule”
• E.g. Freshwater sponges
• gemmules develop in the fall and survive the winter in the dried or frozen body of the parent
Fragmentation
• Like ‘binary fission’ for multicellular
animals
• breaks into two or more fragments that become a new individual
• Different from budding because each fragment grows new parts
• E.g. Occurs in many anemones, sea stars
Sexual Reproduction
- Generally involves two parents
- Specialized germ cells unite to form a zygote
- Sexual reproduction recombines parental characters • Results in a more diverse population
Types of Sexual Reproduction
Bisexual
hermaphroditism
Parthenogenesis