1/9/14 Pick a partner or work by yourself Grab a chart and one set of organisms. from the front...

19
1/9/14 • Pick a partner or work by yourself • Grab a chart and one set of organisms. from the front table. ONE PER GROUP • Begin reading about your organisms and fill in you chart. • You will have until 10 mins after the bell rings to complete this task.

Transcript of 1/9/14 Pick a partner or work by yourself Grab a chart and one set of organisms. from the front...

Page 1: 1/9/14 Pick a partner or work by yourself Grab a chart and one set of organisms. from the front table. ONE PER GROUP Begin reading about your organisms.

1/9/14

• Pick a partner or work by yourself• Grab a chart and one set of organisms. from

the front table. ONE PER GROUP• Begin reading about your organisms and fill in

you chart. • You will have until 10 mins after the bell rings

to complete this task.

Page 2: 1/9/14 Pick a partner or work by yourself Grab a chart and one set of organisms. from the front table. ONE PER GROUP Begin reading about your organisms.

Reproduction

Asexual and Sexual

Page 3: 1/9/14 Pick a partner or work by yourself Grab a chart and one set of organisms. from the front table. ONE PER GROUP Begin reading about your organisms.

All Living Things……

1. Are made of cells,2. Require energy, 3. Grow and develop,4. Respond to their surroundings

(stimulus/response)5. Display organization6. Maintain homeostasis7. Adapt and evolve over time8. REPRODUCE

Page 4: 1/9/14 Pick a partner or work by yourself Grab a chart and one set of organisms. from the front table. ONE PER GROUP Begin reading about your organisms.

Thinking Points

• What is the result of reproduction?• Why do organisms bother to reproduce? Why

don't they just live forever? • What would eventually happen to a species if

every member suddenly lost its ability to reproduce?

Page 5: 1/9/14 Pick a partner or work by yourself Grab a chart and one set of organisms. from the front table. ONE PER GROUP Begin reading about your organisms.

Reproduction=making babies!

Page 6: 1/9/14 Pick a partner or work by yourself Grab a chart and one set of organisms. from the front table. ONE PER GROUP Begin reading about your organisms.

Two Types of Reproduction

1. Asexual reproduction - production of genetically identical offspring from a single parent.

2. Sexual reproduction - production of genetically different offspring from two parents.

Page 7: 1/9/14 Pick a partner or work by yourself Grab a chart and one set of organisms. from the front table. ONE PER GROUP Begin reading about your organisms.

Review:What does this word “genetic” mean anyway?

DNA

DNA is an instruction manual for an organism

Page 8: 1/9/14 Pick a partner or work by yourself Grab a chart and one set of organisms. from the front table. ONE PER GROUP Begin reading about your organisms.

Asexual Reproduction5 Types You Need to Know

1. Binary Fission2. Vegetative reproduction3. Budding4. Spore formation5. Regeneration

BRAIN POP!

Page 9: 1/9/14 Pick a partner or work by yourself Grab a chart and one set of organisms. from the front table. ONE PER GROUP Begin reading about your organisms.

Binary Fission

Prokaryotic cells divide into 2 genetically identical cells

Page 10: 1/9/14 Pick a partner or work by yourself Grab a chart and one set of organisms. from the front table. ONE PER GROUP Begin reading about your organisms.

Vegetative Reproduction

Production of a new plant from a portion of another plant, such as a stem or branch. Also called vegetative propagation.

Page 11: 1/9/14 Pick a partner or work by yourself Grab a chart and one set of organisms. from the front table. ONE PER GROUP Begin reading about your organisms.

Budding

Budding is the process of a parent organism pinching off to form a new organism genetically identical to the parent.

Page 12: 1/9/14 Pick a partner or work by yourself Grab a chart and one set of organisms. from the front table. ONE PER GROUP Begin reading about your organisms.

Spore Formation

Spores are released from parent to produce genetically identical offspring. (Bacteria, plants, algae, and fungi.)

Page 13: 1/9/14 Pick a partner or work by yourself Grab a chart and one set of organisms. from the front table. ONE PER GROUP Begin reading about your organisms.

Regeneration

The ability to replace or regrow missing body parts

Page 14: 1/9/14 Pick a partner or work by yourself Grab a chart and one set of organisms. from the front table. ONE PER GROUP Begin reading about your organisms.

Is a form of Sexual Reproduction

Page 15: 1/9/14 Pick a partner or work by yourself Grab a chart and one set of organisms. from the front table. ONE PER GROUP Begin reading about your organisms.
Page 16: 1/9/14 Pick a partner or work by yourself Grab a chart and one set of organisms. from the front table. ONE PER GROUP Begin reading about your organisms.

Disadvantages

• Asexual – no genetic variation (less genetic diversity among the species) so less chance for survival if environment should change

• Sexual – – takes longer to make offspring, – requires two parents, – can’t reproduce as often in a single lifetime

Page 17: 1/9/14 Pick a partner or work by yourself Grab a chart and one set of organisms. from the front table. ONE PER GROUP Begin reading about your organisms.

Advantages

• Asexual– Requires only one parent– Organisms can reproduce rapidly– Requires less metabolic energy– No special sex organs necessary– Low genetic variability allows a higher success rate

AS LONG AS THE ENVIRONMENT DOESN’T CHANGE.

Page 18: 1/9/14 Pick a partner or work by yourself Grab a chart and one set of organisms. from the front table. ONE PER GROUP Begin reading about your organisms.

Advantages

• Sexual – – Because DNA from two parents is combined, lots

of genetic diversity– Organisms reproduce less frequently– Genetic variation allows better chance for survival

if environmental conditions should change– Genetic variation can lead to resistance to certain

types of disease– Genetic variation enables evolution within a

population

Page 19: 1/9/14 Pick a partner or work by yourself Grab a chart and one set of organisms. from the front table. ONE PER GROUP Begin reading about your organisms.

Who does it?

• Asexual – organisms from the archaebacteria, eubacteria, and Protista kingdoms, some fungi, some plants, and some simple animals

• Sexual – most animals and plants, some protists, some fungi, humans, some prokaryotes (conjugation).