html5-img
1 / 18

Ch. 46—Animal Reproduction

Ch. 46—Animal Reproduction. Asexual Reproduction. Offspring arise from a single parent and inherit the genes from that parent only Does not involve meiosis or fertilization

maisie
Download Presentation

Ch. 46—Animal Reproduction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ch. 46—Animal Reproduction

  2. Asexual Reproduction • Offspring arise from a single parent and inherit the genes from that parent only • Does not involve meiosis or fertilization • Primary form of reproduction for single-celled organisms (such as archaea, bacteria, protists) and some plants and fungi

  3. Binary Fission • Parent organism divides into two daughter organisms • Used by prokaryoes (archaea and bacteria) as well as some protists and fungi

  4. Budding • Offspring splits off of parent resulting in a ‘mother’ that is larger and a ‘daughter’ that is smaller than the parent • Examples: yeast, hydra, potatoes • Buds grow into fully matured individuals and eventually break away from parent

  5. Fragmentation • New organisms grows from a fragment of the parent • Each fragment develops into a mature, fully grown individual • Examples: annelids, sea stars, fungi, plants, lichen

  6. Parthenogenesis • Unfertilized egg develops into a new individual • Examples: plants, invertebrates (some ants, bees, and wasps), and some reptiles, amphibians, and fish

  7. Sexual Reproduction • Creation of a new organism be combining the genetic material of two individuals • Meiosis (halving of the number of chromosomes; haploid gametes) • Crossing over (recombination) • Fertilization (fusion of two gametes, the ovum and the sperm to produce a diploid zygote)

  8. Ovulation • A mature ovarian follicle (collection of cells containing an oocyte) ruptures and discharges an ovum (aka oocyte, female gamete, or an egg)

  9. Hermaphroditism • Individual has both male and female reproductive systems • Examples: snails, slugs, some fish, most plants

  10. Sex Reversal • Individual changes sexes during its lifetime • Example: Bluehead wrasse • Females can change sex and function as males

  11. Fertilization • Union of egg and sperm • External fertilization • Eggs are shed by female • And male releases sperm on the eggs • Happens externally (outside the body), usually in water • Examples: coral, hydra, sponges, most fish • Internal fertilization • Sperm are deposited in female reproductive tract, where fertilization occurs • Can occur in dry environments • Examples: some fish, most reptiles & birds, all dinosaurs and mammals

  12. Gonads • Organs that make haploid gametes • Males = testes (produce sperm) • Females = ovaries (produce eggs)

  13. Male Anatomy

  14. Spermatogenesis • Production of mature sperm cells • Spermatogoniaundergo meiosis and develop into mature, motile sperm • Occurs in seminiferous tubules • Between the tubules are Leydig cells • Produce testosterone

  15. Oogenesis • Development of mature ova • Oogonia multiply, undergo meiosis, stop at prophase I of meiosis I and are now called primary oocytes • From puberty until menopause, FSH stimulates a follicle to grow and its primary oocyte to complete meiosis I and II, after which is called a secondary oocyte

  16. Female Anatomy

  17. Menstrual Cycle • Other mammals have estrous cycles • Vagina is receptive to mating • Primates have a menstrual cycle • 3 phases: • Menstrual flow phase (day 1-5)—endometrium is shed • Proliferative phase (day 6-14)—endometrium regenerates and thickens • Secretory phase (day 15-28)—endometrium continues to thicken; if embryo has not implanted, menstruation begins

  18. Ovarian Cycle • Follicular Phase (day 1-14) • Follicle grows and matures (follicle includes support cells and the oocyte) • FSH and LH stimulate follicle to grow and mature • Follicle cells also produce estradiol (an estrogen that promotes thickening of endometrium) • Ovulation (day 14) • Oocyte is released from the follicle and ovary to the fallopian (uterine) tubes • Triggered by surge in LH • Luteal Phase (day 15-28) • Remaining follicle cells grow in the ovary and form the corpus luteum • Corpus luteum secretes progesterone and estradiol (maintains the endometrium during pregnancy) • Corpus luteum then degenerates if egg is not fertilized • Sharp decline in estragiol and progesterone lead to shedding of endometrium)

More Related