asexual reproduction
(noun)
any form of reproduction that involves neither meiosis nor fusion of gametes
Examples of asexual reproduction in the following topics:
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Methods of Reproducing
- Animal reproduction is essential to the survival of a species; it can occur through either asexual or sexual means.
- The known methods of reproduction are broadly grouped into two main types: sexual and asexual.
- In asexual reproduction, an individual can reproduce without involvement with another individual of that species.
- The division of a bacterial cell into two daughter cells is an example of asexual reproduction.
- Organisms that reproduce through asexual reproduction tend to grow in number exponentially.
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Asexual Reproduction in Plants
- Plants can reproduce asexually, without the fertilization of gametes, by either vegetative reproduction or apomixis.
- Many plants are able to propagate themselves using asexual reproduction.
- Plants have two main types of asexual reproduction: vegetative reproduction and apomixis.
- An advantage of asexual reproduction is that the resulting plant will reach maturity faster.
- Different types of stems allow for asexual reproduction.
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Plant Reproductive Development and Structure
- Plants have developed various strategies, both sexual and asexual, to ensure reproductive success.
- Some plants reproduce sexually while others reproduce asexually, in contrast to animal species, which rely almost exclusively on sexual reproduction.
- Plant sexual reproduction usually depends on pollinating agents, while asexual reproduction is independent of these agents.
- Vegetative reproduction is a type of asexual reproduction.
- The flower is the reproductive organ of plants classified as angiosperms.
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Animal Reproduction and Development
- This fact distinguishes animals from fungi, protists, and bacteria where asexual reproduction is common or exclusive.
- However, a few groups, such as cnidarians, flatworms, and roundworms, undergo asexual reproduction, although nearly all of those animals also have a sexual phase to their life cycle.
- Some animal species (including sea stars and sea anemones, as well as some insects, reptiles, and fish) are capable of asexual reproduction.
- In contrast, a form of asexual reproduction found in certain insects and vertebrates is called parthenogenesis where unfertilized eggs can develop into new offspring.
- However, for animals that are limited in their capacity to attract mates, asexual reproduction can ensure genetic propagation.
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Fungi Reproduction
- Fungi reproduce sexually and/or asexually.
- Perfect fungi reproduce both sexually and asexually, while imperfect fungi reproduce only asexually (by mitosis).
- In both sexual and asexual reproduction, fungi produce spores that disperse from the parent organism by either floating on the wind or hitching a ride on an animal.
- The most common mode of asexual reproduction is through the formation of asexual spores, which are produced by one parent only (through mitosis) and are genetically identical to that parent .
- Fungi may utilize both asexual and sexual stages of reproduction; sexual reproduction often occurs in response to adverse environmental conditions.
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Natural and Artificial Methods of Asexual Reproduction in Plants
- Plants can undergo natural methods of asexual reproduction, performed by the plant itself, or artificial methods, aided by humans.
- Natural methods of asexual reproduction include strategies that plants have developed to self-propagate.
- Artificial methods of asexual reproduction are frequently employed to give rise to new, and sometimes novel, plants.
- Grafting is an artificial method of asexual reproduction used to produce plants combining favorable stem characteristics with favorable root characteristics.
- Distinguish between natural and artificial methods of asexual reproduction in plants
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Reproductive Cloning
- Reproductive cloning, possible through artificially-induced asexual reproduction, is a method used to make a clone of an entire organism.
- Recent advances in biotechnology have made it possible to artificially induce asexual reproduction of mammals in the laboratory.
- Parthenogenesis, or "virgin birth," occurs when an embryo grows and develops without the fertilization of the egg occurring; this is a form of asexual reproduction.
- This idea forms the basis for reproductive cloning.
- The success rate of reproductive cloning at the time was very low.
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Types of Sexual and Asexual Reproduction
- Asexual and sexual reproduction, two methods of reproduction among animals, produce offspring that are clones or genetically unique.
- Animals may reproduce asexually through fission, budding, fragmentation, or parthenogenesis.
- Budding is a form of asexual reproduction that results from the outgrowth of a part of a cell or body region leading to a separation from the original organism into two individuals.
- Many sea stars reproduce asexually by fragmentation.
- Parthenogenesis is a form of asexual reproduction where an egg develops into a complete individual without being fertilized.
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Advantages and Disadvantages of Sexual Reproduction
- These methods of asexual reproduction do not require another organism of the opposite sex.
- In addition, in asexual populations, every individual is capable of reproduction.
- In theory, an asexual population could grow twice as fast.
- Nevertheless, multicellular organisms that exclusively depend on asexual reproduction are exceedingly rare.
- The only source of variation in asexual organisms is mutation.
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Prokaryotic Reproduction
- Prokaryotes reproduce asexually by binary fission; they can also exchange genetic material by transformation, transduction, and conjugation.
- Reproduction in prokaryotes is asexual and usually takes place by binary fission.
- Reproduction can be very rapid: a few minutes for some species.