BIOL 103 Chapter Notes - Chapter 46: Komodo Dragon, Hammerhead Shark, Aspidoscelis

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Fission: the separation of a parent organism into two individuals of equal size. Budding: new individuals arise from outgrowths of existing ones. Ex. stony coral buds remain attached to the parents and they all live as individuals together in a colony. Some invertebrates release specialized groups of cells that can grow into other individuals. This is done by many sponges, cnidarians, bristle worms, and sea squirts. This occurs in some bees, wasps and ants. If they are haploid the offspring develop into adults that produce gametes. Not as common in vertebrates but it is seen in the komodo dragon and the hammerhead shark. Asexual reproduction increases frequency at each generation because you only need one individual instead of 2. Offspring of varied genotypes are produced sexually and this may enhance reproductive success of parents when environmental factors change rapidly. Varied genotypes arise from random sorting in the gametes, meiotic recombination and fertilization.

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