life histories of sexually reproducing organisms sexually reproducing organisms typically go through...

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Life histories of sexually reproducing organisms reproducing organisms typically go through a life cycle that include gametes to begin a diploid (2n) stage of life, followed by meiosis a haploid (n) stage of life, followed by . . . the fusion of gametes organism goes through the cycle only once, and each succeeding n also goes through the cycle once. rnation of phases caused by the fusion of gametes (= syngamy) by meiosis is sometimes called the sexual cycle. [by R.C. Clark, Eastern Kentucky University, 2007)

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Animal pattern of the sexual cycle The details of the sexual cycle vary in different organisms. This is the typical pattern for animals. The reason it seems so familiar is that we are animals, so it is what we do! Notice that in the animal sexual cycle the haploid phase consists only of the gametes. The sex organs of animals are called gonads, and the gametes are produced directly by meiosis.

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Page 1: Life histories of sexually reproducing organisms Sexually reproducing organisms typically go through a life cycle that includes the fusion of gametes to

Life histories ofsexually reproducing organisms

Sexually reproducing organisms typically go through a life cycle that includes thefusion of gametes to begin a diploid (2n) stage of life, followed by meiosis to begin a haploid (n) stage of life, followed by . . . the fusion of gametes . . . etc.

A single organism goes through the cycle only once, and each succeeding generation also goes through the cycle once.

This alternation of phases caused by the fusion of gametes (= syngamy) followed by meiosis is sometimes called the sexual cycle.

[by R.C. Clark, Eastern Kentucky University, 2007)

Page 2: Life histories of sexually reproducing organisms Sexually reproducing organisms typically go through a life cycle that includes the fusion of gametes to

The sexual cycle, in general

Here is a general outline of thesexual cycle. Notice that syngamyand meiosis are both necessaryto complete the cycle.

All organisms that produce gametes go through this cycle.

(diploid)

(haploid)

Page 3: Life histories of sexually reproducing organisms Sexually reproducing organisms typically go through a life cycle that includes the fusion of gametes to

Animal pattern of the sexual cycle

The details of the sexual cycle vary indifferent organisms. This is the typicalpattern for animals.

The reason it seems so familiar is thatwe are animals, so it is what we do!

Notice that in the animal sexual cyclethe haploid phase consists only of the gametes. The sex organs of animals are called gonads, and the gametes are produced directly by meiosis.

Page 4: Life histories of sexually reproducing organisms Sexually reproducing organisms typically go through a life cycle that includes the fusion of gametes to

Plant pattern of the sexual cycle This is the typical sexual cycle pattern forplants.

Notice that the basic cycle is the same. In plants, There also are some close parallels with the animal pattern – for instance, the product of syngamy is still called a zygote, and it developsinto an immature stage called the embryo.

However, there are some fundamentaldifferences between the plant pattern and theanimal pattern. In plants, meiosis occurs insporangia. The products of meiosis are one-celled structures called spores (technically, they are meiospores). The spores typically grow into a multicellularhaploid structure called a gametophyte. The gametophyte develops special structurescalled gametangia (singular = gametangium) The gametangia produce gametes by mitosis. So, gametangia are the sex organs of plants.

Obviously, since gametophytes, gametangia and gametes are haploid, this means thathaploid cells can and do divide by mitosis – this is a fact that biology instructors usuallyforget to mention to their students!

Page 5: Life histories of sexually reproducing organisms Sexually reproducing organisms typically go through a life cycle that includes the fusion of gametes to

Other variations on the sexual cycle

There are millions (probably even billions, if you could count the prokaryotes) of different kinds of organisms on Earth.

The sexual cycle patterns presented here are generalities. Organisms have many systems of genetic recombination that do not fit the patterns. For instance, bacteria can easily exchange DNA fragments with “unrelated” other bacteria.

Some algae (especially brown algae and diatoms) have life cycles very similar tothe animal sexual cycle pattern. Some fungi are not known to have gametes; instead,genetic recombination occurs through a phenomenon called parasexuality.

The complex fungi typically have haploid (n), diploid (2n) and n+n stages in their life cycles. That is a topic we will cover later.

The most basic points to remember are that the life cycles of plants and animals are different. You should know what the differences are, what the structures in a typical plant life history are, where they come from, and what they do.

Asexual reproduction also is common in organisms. The mechanisms of asexualreproduction are extremely varied.

Page 6: Life histories of sexually reproducing organisms Sexually reproducing organisms typically go through a life cycle that includes the fusion of gametes to

The function of sex

It is logical to assume that any widespread characteristic of life must be advantageous to life. If a process or structure were detrimental, it would beselected against, and therefore would be rare.

Therefore, since sex is so widespread, we must assume that sex gives organismssome type of advantage.

The advantage that sex gives organisms is that sex produces and maintainsgenetically variable populations.

Genetically variable populations are more likely to survive extreme environmental conditions.

This does not mean that an entire population will survive an environmental “selection event”, but genetic variability makes it much more likely that at leastsome members of a population will survive an environment crunch.