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Reproduction in Flowering plants summary - IEB syllabus

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REPRODUCTION IN FLOWERING PLANTS
 2 types of production:
1. Asexual  production of a new generation by one parent
2. Sexual  production of a new generation by bringing together genetic
material of two parents
 SIMILARITIES: prevent species from dying out and becoming extinct,
result in food bring produced – vital in feeding the world’s growing
population
 DIFFERENCES:
 ASEXUAL 
1. One parent, all individuals can produce offspring
2. One stage – mitosis with no fusion of cells
3. No gametes formed
4. Offspring are genetically identical to the parent
5. In a stable environment, well adapted individuals are preserved
6. Reproduction is possible where there are no or few mates
7. Faster reproduction – all individuals can produce offspring
8. More efficient, no energy input needed
9. Unable to adapt to environment
10. Usually no genotype variation
 Advantages  all individuals can reproduce, thus no energy is
wasted on gamete production
 The process is simple[le and fast, only involves mitosis
 Useful in a stable environment if the parent is well adapted
 A favourable/useful mutation can spread fast enabling fast
adaptation to new conditions
 Disadvantages  no variation in offspring, species might die
out as they cannot adapt to environmental changes
 Overcrowding my occur with resources becoming limited
 SEXUAL 
1. 2 parents with 2 genders
2. Two stages, meiosis & fertilisation with fusion of 2 cells
3. Gametes are formed
4. Offspring are genetically different to parents as alleles are shuffled
during meiosis and fertilisation
5. In a changing environment, individuals with variations can adapt to
new conditions
6. Slower process – half of the population are males who cannot
produce offspring
7. Less efficient – energy input is needed to produce gametes
8. Pollinators often necessary for pollination
9. They can adapt to the environment
10. Good genotype variation
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