Asexual and Sexual Reproduction

Comparison of the Clones of Mitosis and Sex Cells of Meiosis

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Hydra budding - Mark Simmons Microbus
Hydra budding - Mark Simmons Microbus
Some living things reproduce by cloning; producing offspring that are genetically identical to the parent. Organisms that procreate sexually create genetic novelty.

Asexual Reproduction - Mitosis

Prokaryote Binary Fission

Many single-celled organisms reproduce by binary fission; the splitting of a parent cell after genetic material has been duplicated. Each “daughter cell” is a clone, an exact copy of the parent.

Eukaryotes and Asexual Reproduction

Some multicellular organisms can also reproduce asexually, to produce clones (offspring genetically identical to parent).

The hydra, a relative of jellyfish, can reproduce via budding. A miniature version of the parent grows as a bud of mitotically dividing cells. When the bud is sufficiently developed, it detaches from the parent and becomes an independent hydra.

Another example of asexual reproduction is the fragmentation of starfish. If part of an arm breaks off, the starfish not only regenerates the arm, but the broken piece of arm can grow into an entire starfish!

Starfish (aka seastars) prey on abalone, a type of mollusk. Human who harvest abalone must compete with starfish for the shellfish delicacies. At one time it was common practice for abalone fishermen to try to reduce the number of starfish by catching them, cutting them up and dumping the starfish pieces back into the sea. Ooops! The fishermen were inadvertently increasing the number of starfish!

Asexual Reproduction Is Mitosis

When these eukaryotic, multicellular organisms, like starfish and hydra reproduce via budding or fragmentation, the reproduction is accomplished through mitosis; a type of cell division in which cells divide to produce more, genetically identical clone cells.

This is the same process of cellular division that allows our bodies to grow and develop from a fertilized egg into an adult human. Mitosis also enables our cells to repair our body, producing new cells to replace older cells or damaged tissue. Most cells in the body are produced by mitosis.

Only gametes (sperm and eggs) are produced by meiosis, a different type of cell division that produces only sex cells.

Sexual Reproduction – Meiosis

Although sexually reproducing organisms often resemble their parents more closely than they resemble less related individuals, offspring that result from sexual reproduction are not clones of their parents and are not identical to their siblings.

Genetic Shuffling of Meiosis

Sexual reproduction allows for multiple instances of ‘genetic shuffling’; including the independent assortment and crossover of meiosis and the combination of genes from two parents.

Offspring acquire genes from parents by inheriting a set of chromosomes from each parent; half of the genes from a female parent and half from a male parent. These genes, and the chromosomes in which they reside, are transmitted to the offspring through the parents’ gametes (sperm of the father and the egg of the mother). The fusion of two gametes to produce a single zygote.

More Information

To learn more about cell biology, see the excellent websites Science Prof Online and Cells Alive, or look to additional Suite101 biology articles, including What Is Mitotic Cellular Division, Nucleotides & Nucleic Acids, Prokaryotic & Eukaryotic Cells and Nucleic Acids & Replication.

Sources

Campbell, N. A. & Reece J. B. (2005) Biology, seventh edition. Pearson Education Inc.

Campbell, N. A., Reece J. B. & Simon, E. (2004) Essential Biology with Physiology. Pearson Education Inc.

Tami Port, MS, Tami Port

Tami Port - Tami Port is a college professor of cell and microbiology and creator of ScienceProfOnline.com, a free science education website.

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Comments

Mar 10, 2009 12:20 PM
Guest :
what is the difference between asexual reproduction and sexual reproduction???? that is what I want to know...
Mar 28, 2009 1:24 PM
Guest :
why offsprings resmble their parents and not identical to them?
Sep 21, 2009 1:20 PM
Guest :
I have a question. Obviously. How is the Asexual part formed. I never found it in this article
Oct 8, 2009 6:17 PM
Guest :
the difference between asexual is that axsexual has a faster process needing only one cell and sexual reprodution is u noe 2 parents having blah blah nd the offspring dosent look just only like one parent but both it is a 23% each half nd half of ur mom nd dads dna
Oct 9, 2009 10:06 AM
Guest :
how often do cells reproduce asexually?
Nov 5, 2009 8:38 AM
Guest :
um i need to do a research paper and would like to know the differences and likenesses of sexual and a sexual reproduction?????????????? uh thanks i guess
Nov 5, 2009 9:33 AM
Guest :
the difference between a asexual reproduction is that asexual involes one perent
Nov 5, 2009 12:29 PM
Guest :
what is the difference between sperm cells and egg cells
Nov 30, 2009 2:38 PM
Guest :
What is the similarity between a parent and clone?
Dec 10, 2009 12:41 AM
Guest :
what is 2 methods of reproduction
Jan 24, 2010 2:14 PM
Guest :
it was very helpful and it helped with the definition i was looking for
Feb 23, 2010 12:42 PM
Guest :
u should label when asexual reproduction starts!!!!!!!!!
Feb 23, 2010 12:43 PM
Guest :
i need to know the difference wow!!
Mar 3, 2010 11:43 AM
Guest :
It was alot of help i loved it thank you so much
Mar 4, 2010 10:26 AM
Guest :
What Are The Similarities Between Sexual And Asexuak Reproduction.?!
Apr 15, 2010 9:14 PM
Guest :
This doesn't provide the information that is asked. It explains a lot but not what is asked of it.To whom ever is reading this, you should consider making this kid friendly because they will most likely be the person/people to look at this website.
Aug 1, 2010 8:31 AM
Guest :
WHY THERE IS KINDS OF REPODICTION
Sep 29, 2010 3:14 PM
Guest :
Why prokaryotesare more likely to produce asexually then eukaryotes?
Mar 9, 2011 5:20 PM
Guest :
Why does there have to be a difference between asexual reproduction and sexual reproduction? I mean sex is sex right?
Sep 29, 2011 3:50 PM
Guest :
is it possible for a asexaul reproudunctoin to happen to humans ????
20 Comments
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