Reproduction, A Characeristic of Living Things
Reproduction, A Characeristic of Living Things
Reproduction, A Characeristic of Living Things
2º ESO
1. Concepts of reproduction
Living beings are able to multiply and generate new individuals. The function of
reproduction perpetuates life and maintains the species on the Earth.
At the same time, genetic information is transmitted from parents to children to develop
and keep the being alive and to conserve the characteristics of the species in the future.
• Sexual reproduction: two individuals of the opposite sex are necessary, a male
and a female. Each one of them makes special cells, the gametes, which join
together and become a single cell, a zygote, by means of fertilisation.
Animal fertilisation
1) Formation of gametes. One cell in a living thing divides and forms daughter
cells, the gametes, which have half the number of chromosomes as their parent
cell.
Animal gametes
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Bilingual Section. IES Aljanadic Natural Science. 2º ESO
2) Fertilisation is the fusion of the male and female gametes, which form a new
cell, which is called the ovum (egg cell) or zygote.
3) Embryonic development is a long process in which the cells divide quickly and
increase in number. The initial cell or zygote multiplies to make the embryo, and
this becomes the new being.
Plants which are produced asexually are identical to their progenitors. We call them
clones.
Plants use different parts of their body to reproduce asexually. For instance:
• Bulbs: bulbs are subterranean stems, formed by concentric meaty leaves. They
have buds which will become a new plant, such as the case with an onion or
tulip.
• Stolons: are aerial stems which root when they touch the ground and produce
new stems. If they become isolated from the mother plant they will become new
individuals. An example of this is the strawberry.
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Bilingual Section. IES Aljanadic Natural Science. 2º ESO
• Stem tubers: these are subterranean stems with a reserve of food and buds
(often called ‘eyes´) which form roots and stems giving rise to new individuals,
for example, the potato.
• Rhizomes: rhizomes are subterranean stems which form new stems and shoots
on certain stems to make a new plant. These can be found in canes, grass or
ferns.
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Bilingual Section. IES Aljanadic Natural Science. 2º ESO
• Cuttings: these are pieces of stem which are partially put into the ground and
which become a new plant, such as roses and geraniums.
• Shoots: this consists of burying a branch joined to the stem and waiting until it
roots. Then it is cut off and it becomes a new plant, such as strawberries.
• Grafts: this consists of introducing a branch of one species into the stem of
another with fruit trees.
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Bilingual Section. IES Aljanadic Natural Science. 2º ESO
Plants also reproduce sexually using the gametes (sex cells), which are found in the
flowers.
Typical flowers are made up of four concentric layers, or whorl, of modified leaves.
• Calyx: this is made up of sepals, which are green. Their function is to protect the
development of the flower.
• Corolla: this is made up of brightly coloured petals. At the base of the petals
there are glands which secrete sweet and fragrant substances like nectar. Their
function is to attract insects to favour pollination.
• Androecium: this is made up of stamen with a filament and some sacks known
as anthers. Their function is the production of grains of pollen.
• Gynoecium: this is also called the pistil. It is made up of one, two or three
carpals. It is shaped like a bottle. The wide part is the ovary, the long part the
style and, at the end, the stigma.
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Bilingual Section. IES Aljanadic Natural Science. 2º ESO
Pollination is the transporting of the grain of pollen from the anther of the stamen to the
stigma of the pistil. It can be done by the wind or insects such as bees or butterflies.
For fertilisation, the grain of pollen emits a pollen tube which allows the male gametes
to reach the ovule, where the female gamete is (the oosphere).
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Bilingual Section. IES Aljanadic Natural Science. 2º ESO
Following fertilisation, the zygote produces the embryo which is inside the seed, the
flower loses the calyx and the corolla and the ovary grows and becomes the fruit.
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Bilingual Section. IES Aljanadic Natural Science. 2º ESO
1) Make a list of the types of asexual reproduction in plants and find an example of
each one.
a.
b.
c.
d.
- stamen:
- petal:
- pistil:
- sepal:
- pollen:
- seed: