Sie sind auf Seite 1von 25

Chapter 13 RQ

1. What are hereditary units of information


called?
2. All chromosomes besides the X and Ys
are known as _____________.
3. What keeps sister chromatids together
until anaphase?
4. What is the purpose of meiosis?
5. What is the term for a fertilized egg?
1. Explain why organisms only reproduce their own kind, and
why offspring more closely resemble their parents than
unrelated individuals of the same species.

It is a consequence of heredity,
which results from the transmission
of genes from parents to offspring
Because they share similar genes,
offspring more closely resemble their
parents or close relatives than others

2. Explain what makes heredity possible.

DNA is precisely replicated producing


copies of genes that can be passed
along from parents to offspring
Sperm and ova carrying each parents
genes are combined in the nucleus of
the fertilized egg
3. Distinguish between asexual and sexual
reproduction.

Asexual Sexual
Single parent 2 parents each
passes on all of its parent passes on of
genes its genes
Offspring are Offspring have a
genetically identical to unique combination of
parent genes inherited from
Results in a clone both parents
Genetic differences Results in greater
may occur as a result genetic variation
of mutation (change in offspring vary
DNA) genetically from their
siblings & parents
4. Diagram the human life cycle and indicate where in the
human body that mitosis and meiosis occur; which cells are the
result of meiosis and mitosis; and which cells are haploid.

Mitosis somatic cells, diploid (46


chromosomes); growth
Meiosis gametes, haploid (23
chromosomes); sperm cells and ova
5. Distinguish among the life cycle patterns
of animals, fungi, and plants.

Animals
Gametes are the
only haploid (n)
cells
Meiosis halves the
cells (2n n + n)
Fertilization makes
the 2n organism
Fungi
Only diploid (2n)
stage is the zygote
Resulting haploid
(n) cells divide by
mitosis to make the
n organism
Gametes produced
by mitosis
Plants

Life cycles Alternate generations


2n stage sporophyte
(makes spores by
meiosis)
Haploid spores divide
mitotically to produce
a multicellular haploid
gametophyte (haploid
gametes produced by
mitosis)
Fertilization produces
a diploid zygote
sporophyte
6. List the phases of meiosis I and meiosis II
and describe the events characteristic of
each phase.

Meiosis I cell division that segregates


the two chromosomes of each homologous
pair and reduces the chromosome number
by one-half; includes four phases:
1. Prophase I
2. Metaphase I
3. Anaphase I
4. Telophase I and Cytokinesis
Meiosis I
Prophase I long and complex; 90% of time for
meiosis
- synapsis occurs (homologous chromosomes come
together to form a tetrad; four chromatids)
- crossing over occurs
Metaphase I tetrads align at metaphase plate
Anaphase I homologues separate and are moved
toward the poles by the spindle apparatus
Telophase I & cytokinesis the spindle apparatus
continues to separate homologous chromosome
pairs until the chromosomes reach the poles
Meiosis II
Meiosis II this division separates
sister chromatids of each
chromosome; includes four phases:
1. Prophase II
2. Metaphase II
3. Anaphase II
4. Telophase II and Cytokinesis
Meiosis II
Prophase II spindle apparatus forms and
chromosomes move toward the metaphase II plate
Metaphase II chromosomes align singly on the
metaphase plate
Anaphase II centromeres of sister chromatids
separate, sister chromatids of each pair move
towards opposite poles of the cell
Telophase II and cytokinesis nuclei form at
opposite poles of the cell
- cytokinesis occurs producing four haploid
daughter cells
7. Describe the process of synapsis during
prophase I, and explain how genetic
recombination occurs.

Synapsis
homologous
chromosomes come
together as pairs
Crossing over can
happen where the
nonsister
chromatids are
linked
8. Describe key differences between mitosis
and meiosis; explain how the end result of
meiosis differs from that of mitosis.

Meiosis
1. Is a reduction division
2. Creates genetic variation
3. Is 2 successive nuclear divisions
- produces gametes in animals
Mitosis
- crossing over doesnt occur
- occurs in somatic cells (body cells)
- copies the cells
9. Explain how independent assortment, crossing
over, and random fertilization contribute to genetic
variation in sexually reproducing organisms.

Independent assortment orientation of the chromosome


pairs is random at the poles (meiosis I)
- each homologous pair orients independently of the others
at metaphase I
Crossing over exchange of genetic material between
homologues (prophase I)
- occurs when homologous portions of 2 nonsister chromatids
trade places
Random fertilization an egg is representative of 1 in 8
million possible chromosome combinations (same with sperm)
- resulting zygote can have 1 in 64 trillion possible diploid
combinations (not including crossovers)
10. Explain why inheritable variation was
crucial to Darwins theory of evolution.

It is the basis for natural selection


- variations selected that increase
reproductive success
- adaptation (the accumulation of
heritable variations)
11. List the sources of genetic variation.

1. Sexual reproduction independent


assortment, crossing over, random
gamete fusion
2. Mutation random and rare
structural changes made during
DNA replication in a gene that could
result from mistakes

Das könnte Ihnen auch gefallen