Reproduction - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 26
About This Presentation
Title:

Reproduction

Description:

... whether the egg is the size of a human oocyte or the size of an ostrich egg. An ostrich egg is about 18 cm long. It is 10,000 times bigger than a human oocyte. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:30
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 27
Provided by: kest
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Reproduction


1
Reproduction
Biology The Science of Life Making New Life
The Basics of Reproduction
2
Why is Reproduction Necessary
  • The survival of an individual does not require
    reproduction.
  • An individual can live a long and fruitful life
    without ever reproducing.
  • Individuals, however, will eventually die.
  • Therefore, for the species to survive,
    reproduction is necessary.

3
Biological Success
  • Biological success for a species lies in its
    members ability to reproduce and have offspring
    before death occurs.
  • Extinction occurs if members of the species fail
    to reproduce or if they fail to leave enough
    offspring to allow for deaths as a result of
    accidents and disease.
  • Successful reproduction is essential to the
    continued existence of a species.

4
Reproduction of a Cell vs. Reproduction of an
organism
  • When a parent cell divides into two daughter
    cells through mitosis, the parent cell disappears
    and the two daughter cells replace it.
  • When an entire organism reproduces, the parent
    often lives on in order to care for the offspring.

5
Reproduction
  • Reproduction is the formation of new individuals
    that are like their parents.
  • The ability to reproduce is a fundamental, unique
    characteristic of living organisms.
  • New organisms grow, develop and eventually become
    large enough and mature enough to reproduce.
  • The time in the life cycle when an organism
    becomes able to reproduce varies from species to
    species.

6
Life Cycle
  • A life cycle is all the events that occur between
    the beginning of one generation and the beginning
    of the next.
  • The term is usually used to refer to the time
    from birth to sexual maturity to the birth of the
    next generation.

7
Generation
  • There are lots of ways to think of the word
    generation. For our purposes use the following
    example
  • Great GrandparentsGeneration 1
  • GrandparentsGeneration 2
  • ParentsGeneration 3
  • KidsGeneration 4
  • GrandkidsGeneration 5
  • We could carry this example all the way back to
    the first humans or even pre-human ancestors.

8
Reproductive Maturity
  • Single celled organisms such as bacteria and
    yeast can only reproduce once before they die.
  • Bacteria, can reproduce every 20 minutes.
  • Multicellular organisms may reproduce several
    times in their lifetime.
  • Multicellular organisms often require months or
    years to reach sexual maturity.

9
Reproductive Periods
  • Some organisms, such as humans, outlive their
    reproductive periods.
  • Other organisms continue to reproduce until they
    die.
  • The giant tortoises of the Galapagos Islands may
    live up to 200 years.
  • They cannot reproduce before about 40.
  • Thereafter, they reproduce as long as they live.

10
Asexual Reproduction No Genetic Diversity
  • In asexual reproduction, new individuals
    originate from a single parent.
  • Parent divides into two or more individuals
  • New individuals arise from as buds from the
    parents body
  • Because new individuals come from only one
    parent, asexual reproduction does not increase
    genetic variation in a population.
  • New individuals are genetically identical to the
    parent organism.
  • http//www.teachersdomain.org/resource/tdc02.sci.l
    ife.repro.asexual/

11
Sexual Reproduction
  • In complex organisms, reproduction generally
    requires two parents.
  • Each parent contributes a unique sex cell called
    a gamete.
  • The male gamete is called the sperm.
  • The female gamete is called the egg.
  • A new individual begins when the gametes unite by
    fusing together into a zygote.
  • This process is called fertilization.

12
Gametes Carry Genetic Info
  • The egg and sperm carry the genetic information
    which the parents will pass to the offspring.
  • The new individuals develop in response to these
    genetic instructions.
  • Because it combines genetic material from two
    different individuals, sexual reproduction
    increases the amount of genetic variation in a
    population.

13
Some Organisms Reproduce Both Asexually and
Sexually
  • Most plants and some animals can reproduce both
    asexually and sexually.
  • Potatoes can use sexual reproduction to produce
    seeds.
  • They can also bud asexually through a process
    called vegetative reproduction. The little eyes
    on potatoes are actually buds.
  • Buds are groups of cells that can undergo rapid
    mitosis and develop into new plants.

14
Some Organisms Reproduce Asexually and Sexually
  • Sea stars are animals that can reproduce sexually
    or asexually.
  • Sea star arms can regenerate an entire sea star
    as long as part of the central body is attached.

15
Different Gametes
  • Most sexual organisms have two different types of
    gametes
  • Large stationary gametes called eggs or ova
    produced by the female.
  • Small mobile gametes called sperm produced by the
    male.

16
Sperm
  • Sperm are usually quite small and simple.
  • The nucleus is in the head.
  • The tail is built for motility to move the sperm.
  • In the middle are the mitochondria which produce
    energy for the tail to move.

A human sperm cell is about 5 micrometers in
diameter. A micrometer is 1 millionth of a meter.
17
Ovum or Egg
  • Ovum are usually much larger than the sperm.
  • In some cases 1000X larger.
  • The ovum is usually much more complicated
  • Nucleus
  • Other organelles such as mitochondria and
    ribosomes.
  • Reserve supply of food for the new organism.

The plural for ovum is ova
The ovaries are the organs that produce the ova
18
The Human Egg
  • A woman has the maximum number of potential eggs
    (primary oocytes) while still a fetus.
  • She has more than 7 million potential eggs. 
  • An oocyte is the cell that develops into the egg.
  • By birth the number has fallen to 1 or 2 million,
    and by puberty to about 300,000. 
  • Only 300 to 400 reach maturity.
  • A human oocyte is about 100 micrometers in
    diameter, which is large for a cell. 
  • A micrometer is 1/1,000,000 of a meter.
  • If it is not fertilized within a day of its
    ejection from the ovary, it dies.

19
An Egg is a Single Cell
  • Every egg is only a single cell.
  • This is true whether the egg is the size of a
    human oocyte or the size of an ostrich egg.
  • An ostrich egg is about 18 cm long.
  • It is 10,000 times bigger than a human oocyte.

20
Determining Sex
  • In general the organism that produces sperm is
    male and the one that produces the ovum is
    female.
  • However, some species change sex during their
    lifetime.
  • This allows an individual to be whatever sex is
    most advantageous to a species at any given time.

21
Organisms That Change Sex
  • The blue headed wrasse is a fish lives in
    tropical reefs and eats parasites off the scales
    of other fish.
  • Usually one male lives with five or six females.
  • The male is larger than the females.
  • When the male dies, the largest female becomes
    male.
  • Within an hour after the males death she starts
    acting like a male.
  • Within two weeks she produces sperm.

22
Body Cells vs. Sex Cells
  • In body cells, chromosomes occur in matching
    pairsone from the male parent and one from the
    female parent.
  • Each member of the pair has genes that code for
    the same traits.
  • The two chromosomes of a matching pair are called
    a homologous pair.
  • Body cells are represented by the symbol 2n
    meaning diploid.
  • What is the diploid in humans.

23
Gametes are Haploid
  • Gametes not only look different than body cells.
  • Gametes also contain only half the chromosomes of
    body cells23 chromosomes.
  • The chromosomes that determine sex are the X and
    Y chromosomes.
  • Females have two X chromosomes in their somatic
    cells.
  • Males have an X and Y chromosome in their somatic
    cells.
  • Do gametes only contain the sex chromosomes?

24
The Sex Chromosomes
  • Every cell has the sex chromosomes.
  • However, they are only activated in the gametes.
  • The gametes have one of every chromosome, not
    just the X and Y chromosome.
  • Each egg of a female will contain one X
    chromosome.
  • Each sperm of a male will contain either an X or
    a Y chromosome.

25
(No Transcript)
26
Gametes Have Half the Chromosomes
  • Gametes are haploid and are represented by the
    symbol n.
  • The union of two haploid gametes to form a
    fertilized zygote restores the number of
    chromosomes to the diploid number.
  • Gametes become haploid through a special type of
    cell division called meiosis.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com