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1 1 Asexual Reproduction Mitosis DSQ: Mitosis is the process in which the nucleus divides to form two new nuclei. How does mitosis differ in plants and animals? Mrs. Camp 7 th Grade Life Science
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Asexual Reproduction

Feb 03, 2016

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Asexual Reproduction. Mitosis. DSQ: Mitosis is the process in which the nucleus divides to form two new nuclei. How does mitosis differ in plants and animals?. Mrs. Camp 7 th Grade Life Science. 1. Ready?. Begin!. 4:00. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Asexual Reproduction

1 1

Asexual ReproductionMitosis

DSQ: Mitosis is the process in which the nucleus divides to form two new nuclei. How does mitosis differ in plants and animals?

Mrs. Camp

7th Grade Life Science

Page 2: Asexual Reproduction
Page 3: Asexual Reproduction

DSQ: Mitosis is the process in which the nucleus divides to form two new nuclei. How does mitosis differ in plants and animals?

Page 4: Asexual Reproduction

DSQ: Mitosis is the process in which the nucleus divides to form two new nuclei. How does mitosis differ in plants and animals?

Page 5: Asexual Reproduction

DSQ: Mitosis is the process in which the nucleus divides to form two new nuclei. How does mitosis differ in plants and animals?

Page 6: Asexual Reproduction

DSQ: Mitosis is the process in which the nucleus divides to form two new nuclei. How does mitosis differ in plants and animals?

Page 7: Asexual Reproduction
Page 8: Asexual Reproduction

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Asexual ReproductionMitosis

DSQ: Mitosis is the process in which the nucleus divides to form two new nuclei. How does mitosis differ in plants and animals? ANALYZE (break apart, study the pieces)

There is a question within a question in this DSQ. Can you identify the

question within the DSQ?

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How do little elephants grow up to be BIG elephants?

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The process of asexual reproduction begins

after a sperm fertilizes an egg.

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Skin cancer - the abnormal growth of skin cells - most often develops on skin exposed to the sun.

Cell that reproduce by asexual reproduction reproduce constantly.

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Animated Mitosis Cyclehttp://www.cellsalive.com/mitosis.htm

• Interphase

• Prophase

• Metaphase

• Anaphase

• Telophase & Cytokinesis

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• Chromosomes are copied (# doubles)• Chromosomes appear as threadlike coils

(chromatin) at the start, but each chromosome and its copy(sister chromosome) change to sister chromatids at end of this phase

CELL MEMBRANENucleus

Cytoplasm

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Animal Cell Plant Cell

Photographs from: http://www.bioweb.uncc.edu/biol1110/Stages.htm

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• Mitosis begins (cell begins to divide)• Centrioles (or poles) appear and begin to

move to opposite end of the cell. • Spindle fibers form between the poles.

CentriolesSister chromatids

Spindle fibers

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Animal Cell Plant Cell

Photographs from: http://www.bioweb.uncc.edu/biol1110/Stages.htm

Spindle fibers

Centrioles

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• Chromatids (or pairs of chromosomes) attach to the spindle fibers.

Centrioles

Spindle fibers

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Animal Cell Plant Cell

Photographs from: http://www.bioweb.uncc.edu/biol1110/Stages.htm

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• Chromatids (or pairs of chromosomes) separate and begin to move to opposite ends of the cell.

Centrioles

Spindle fibers

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Animal Cell Plant Cell

Photographs from: http://www.bioweb.uncc.edu/biol1110/Stages.htm

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• Two new nuclei form. • Chromosomes appear as chromatin

(threads rather than rods).• Mitosis ends.

NucleiNuclei

Chromatin

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Animal Cell Plant Cell

Photographs from: http://www.bioweb.uncc.edu/biol1110/Stages.htm

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• Cell membrane moves inward to create two daughter cells – each with its own nucleus with identical chromosomes.

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Animal Mitosis -- Review

Interphase

                                              

              

Prophase

                                             

               

Metaphase

                                              

              

Anaphase

                                             

               

Telophase

                                              

              

Interphase

                                             

               

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Plant Mitosis -- ReviewInterphase

                                                        

    

Prophase

                                                       

     

Metaphase

                                                        

    

Anaphase

                                                       

     

Telophase

                                                        

    

Interphase

                                                       

     

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- Cell Division

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http://www.cellsalive.com/mitosis.htm