Syllabus Edition

First teaching 2023

First exams 2025

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Sexual & Asexual Reproduction (SL IB Biology)

Revision Note

Cara Head

Author

Cara Head

Last updated

Comparing Sexual & Asexual Reproduction

  • Sexual reproduction involves two parents and is the fusion of the nuclei of two gameteto form a zygoteand the production of offspring that are genetically different from each other
    • A gamete is a sex cell (in animals: sperm and ovum; in plants: pollen nucleus and ovum)
      • Gametes differ from normal cells as they contain half the number of chromosomes found in other body cells - we say they have a haploid nucleus
      • This is because they only contain one copy of each chromosome, rather than the two copies found in other body cells
      • In human beings, a normal body cell contains 46 chromosomes but each gamete contains 23 chromosomes
    • When the male and female gametes fuse, they become a zygote (fertilised egg cell)
      • This contains the full 46 chromosomes, half of which came from the father and half from the mother - we say the zygote has a diploid nucleus
  • There are number advantages and disadvantages to an organism carrying out sexual reproduction

Advantages & disadvantages of sexual reproduction table

Advantages & Disadvantages of Sexual Reproduction table

  • Asexual reproduction
    • Asexual reproduction does not involve gametes or fertilisation
      • Only one parent is required so there is no fusion of gametes and no mixing of genetic information
      • As a result, the offspring are genetically identical to the parent and to each other (they are clones)
    • Many plants reproduce via asexual reproduction
    • Bacteria produce exact genetic copies of themselves in a type of asexual reproduction called binary fission
  • There are a number of advantages and disadvantages to an organism carrying out asexual reproduction

Advantages & disadvantages of asexual reproduction table

Advantages & Disadvantages of Asexual Reproduction table

  • The key differences between sexual and asexual reproduction include:
    • The number of parent organisms
    • How offspring are produced (the type of cell division required)
    • The level of genetic similarity between offspring
    • The possible sources of genetic variation in offspring
    • The number of offspring produced
    • The time taken to produce offspring

Comparing sexual & asexual reproduction table

Sexual and asexual reproduction comparison_1

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Cara Head

Author: Cara Head

Expertise: Biology

Cara graduated from the University of Exeter in 2005 with a degree in Biological Sciences. She has fifteen years of experience teaching the Sciences at KS3 to KS5, and Psychology at A-Level. Cara has taught in a range of secondary schools across the South West of England before joining the team at SME. Cara is passionate about Biology and creating resources that bring the subject alive and deepen students' understanding