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reproduction in organism one shot

 reproduction in organism one shot

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Some IMP points

  •  The period from birth to the natural death of an organism represents its life span.
  •  Life spans of organisms are not necessarily correlated with their sizes; the sizes of crows and parrots are not
  • very different yet their life spans show a wide difference.
  •  Similarly, a mango tree has a much shorter life span as compared to a peepal tree. Whatever be the life span,
  • death of every individual organism is a certainty, i.e., no individual is immortal, except single-celled organisms. 
  •  

Approximate life spans of some organisms

  1. Elephant (65-90 years)
  2. Rose (5-7 years)
  3. Dog (20-30 years)
  4. Butter fly (1-2 weeks)
  5. Crow (15 years)
  6. Banana tree (20-25 years)
  7. Cow (15-25 years)
  8. Parrot (140 years)
  9. Rice plant (3-4 months) 
  10. Tortoise (100-150 years) 
  11. Banyan tree (200-300 years)
  12. Crocodile (60 years) 
  13. Horse (62 years) 
  14.  Fruit fly (about 20-30 days) 
  • Reproduction is defined as a biological process in which an organism gives rise to young ones (offspring) similar
    to itself.
  • The offspring grow, mature and in turn produce new offspring. Thus, there is a cycle of birth, growth and death.
  • Reproduction enables the continuity of the species, generation after generation.
  • The organism’s habitat, its internal physiology and several other factors are collectively responsible for how it reproduces.
  • When offspring is produced by a single parent with or without the involvement of gamete formation, the
  • reproduction is asexual. When two parents (opposite sex) participate in the reproductive process and also involve
  • fusion of male and female gametes, it is called sexual reproduction. 
 
ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION
  • In this method, a single individual (parent) is capable of producing offspring. As a result, the offspring that are
  • produced are not only identical to one another but are also exact copies of their parent.
  • Are these offspring likely to be genetically identical or different? Answer will be genetically identical.
  •  The term clone is used to morphologically and genetically similar individuals
  •  Many single-celled organisms (monerans and protists) reproduce by binary fission.
  •  Member of kingdom fungi and algae reproduce through special asexual reproductive structures called zoospores.
  •  Conidia (Penicillum) buds (Hydra) and gemmules (sponge) are other common asexual reprodutive structures 
  • In plants, the units of vegetative propagation such as runner, rhizome, sucker, tuber, offset, bulb are all
    capable of giving rise to new offspring. These structures are called vegetative propagules.
 
SEXUAL REPRODUCTION
  •  Sexual reproduction involves formation of the male and female gametes, either by the same individual or by
  • different individuals of the opposite sex. These gametes fuse to form the zygote which develops to form the
  • new organism. It is an elaborate, complex and slow process as compared to asexual reproduction.
  •  Because of the fusion of male and female gametes, sexual reproduction results in offspring that are not identical
  • to the parents or amongst themselves.
  •  A study of diverse organisms–plants, animals or fungi–show that though they differ so greatly in external
  • morphology, internal structure and physiology, when it comes to sexual mode of reproduction, surprisingly, they
  • share a similar pattern. Let us first discuss what features are common to these diverse organisms.
  •  All organisms have to reach a certain stage of growth and maturity in their life, before they can reproduce sexually.
  • That period of growth is called the Juvenile phase. It is known as vegetative phase in plants. This phase
  • is of variable durations in different organisms.
  •  In some plants, where flowering occurs more than once, what would you call the inter-flowering period – juvenile
  • or mature? Answer will be mature
 

 

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