2. Identify what characteristics of living things it
is referring to:
Where living tings grow, or increase in size.
Living things are able to reproduce an offspring.
Living things needs energy to perform specific tasks.
Living things must expel waste.
Living things detect changes and are able to response to it.
Living things are able to move.
10. At the end of discussion, you should be
able to;
a. Identify asexual reproduction;
b. Differentiate each forms of asexual
reproduction; and
c. State the importance of asexual
reproduction in conserving species
11. What is reproduction?
Reproduction is when organisms
produce or form new organisms.
This occur when organisms reproduce
to make new individuals of the same
species.
12. Two types of reproduction
Asexual and sexual reproduction.
13. Asexual Reproduction
It is a type of reproduction where living
organisms produce offspring without the
involvement of a male and female parent.
Offspring is genetically identical to the
parent.
14. How does offspring produce in
asexual reproduction?
Binary Fission
Budding
Fragmentation
16. Binary Fission
It is a type of asexual reproduction
wherein an organism splits in half to form
two identical organisms.
It comes from the words bi-, which means
“two,”and fiss, which means “split.”
This is most common in bacteria.
21. Budding
In this kind of reproduction, an outgrowth or
a bud grows from the parent organisms and
develop.
This bud will then detach to form new
individual.
Budding comes from the word bud, which
means “sprout.”
24. Reproduction is not limited to
organisms that we only see with
microscope, like bacteria and yeast.
But also organisms that we can see
with our eyes, like plants and animals.
25. Direction: Please choose the correct form of
asexual reproduction (Budding, Fragmentation,
or Cell Division) shown by the certain organism.
The nucleus divide into two, followed by the division of the cytoplasm. Last, the cell separates into two.
yeast, is responsible for making dough rise during baking. This microorganism undergoes budding.
A bud forms on a single yeast cell. But some of the buds remain attached to the parent cell, forming colonies. Others detach to become a new yeast cell.