Sex and mating Flashcards

1
Q

What is reproduction?

A

The production of offspring

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2
Q

What is sex?

A

Fusion of genetic material from two different parents

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3
Q

What is different about asexual reproduction?

A

Doesn’t require sex, as all genes come from one parent, to make genetically identical offspring

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4
Q

What are the benefits of asexual reproduction?

A

Quick, easy, cheap and relatively effort free and straightforward

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5
Q

What are the types of asexual reproduction?

A

fragmentation, binary fission, budding, parthenogenesis

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6
Q

What is fragmentation?

A

The breaking of the body into pieces followed by the regeneration of body parts missing - net effect is reproduction

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7
Q

What is binary fission?

A

Single cells divide into the independent, identical daughter cells

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8
Q

What is budding?

A

Offspring grows out of the body of the parent, specialised masses of cells are released form the parent that develop onto a new individual e.g. in hydra

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9
Q

What is parthenogenesis?

A

virgin birth, occurs in several fish/insects, unfertilised eggs develop into offspring but are not haploid - not in mammals due to haploid printing

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10
Q

When in a cycle of asexual/sexual reproduction would you expect each type to occur?

A

Low stress = asexual
high stress = sexual
depends on environmental factors

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11
Q

When did sexual reproduction evolve?

A

1.5 - 2 billion years ago

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12
Q

What are the three fundamental processes involved in sexual reproduction?

A

Gametogenesis (formation of gametes), mating (transferring of gametes), fertilisation (fusion of gametes)

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13
Q

What are the requirements of external fertilisation?

A

Requires water, gametes are shed into the water

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14
Q

What are the problems encountered with external fertilisation?

A

Can’t control delivery, requires a huge number of gametes and there is heavy predation of eggs

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15
Q

What is indirect internal fertilisation?

A

Male deposits sperm ‘packet’ (spermatophore) and the female picks it up

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16
Q

What is direct fertilisation?

A

Copulation, sperm is transferred directly into the female, often by intermittent organs

17
Q

What is a hectocotylus?

A

a modified arm used by male octopuses and some other cephalopods to transfer sperm to the female in direct fertilisation

18
Q

What is a hermaphrodite?

A

Individual has both male and female parts, generally not self fertilising. Partners exchange sperm and use it to fertilise their own eggs

19
Q

What happens during the copulation of bean weevils?

A

Female is wounded internally as penis has spines, leading to early death in the female. Female kicks to dislodge the male

20
Q

What is traumatic insemination?

A

Female lacks genital opening, males pierce membranes and place sperm into the females haemocoel e.g. in bed bugs

21
Q

What is sexual cannibalism and why might it be advantageous?

A

Female kills mate during or after copulation, may be partly for nutrition, could be beneficial for males to maximise paternity, or for females to prevent paternal monopoly

22
Q

How does the Wolbachia hijack sexual reproduction?

A

Is a type of Bactria, transferred in eggs of wasps and antes etc, but not in sperm, can kill males in some species