bellringer: complete the punnett square in roses having thorns is dominant to not having thorns. use...

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Bellringer: Complete the Punnett Square In Roses having thorns is dominant to not having thorns. Use the punnett square to predict the probability that the offspring produced between two heterozygous roses will have thorns. T t T t 1 Genotype: 25% Homozygous TT 50% Heterozygous Tt 25% Homozygous tt Phenotype: 75% Thorns 25% No Thorns TTTt tt Slide 2 Bellringer: Complete the Punnett Square R- Red flowers r- white flowers R R R r 2 RR Rr Genotype: 50% Homozygous RR 50% Heterozygous Rr Phenotype: 100% Red Flowers Slide 3 3 -REVIEW: What is Heredity? The passing of traits from parents to the offspring. -MAKE CONNECTIONS: How is heredity related to reproduction? Parents create offspring through reproduction which enables them to pass their traits to the next generations. Slide 4 Sexual Reproduction 1. 2 parents: Male and Female 2. Gametes are created through Meiosis: sperm (male)and egg(female) 3. Sperm and egg join= fertilization. After fertilization occurs the fertilized egg develops into the offspring. 4. Offspring look different from parent (mixed DNA) Slide 5 Sexual Reproduction Meiosis- process of cell division that creates reproductive cells (gametes)with the number of chromosomes as the original parent cell. 5 Slide 6 Slide 7 Sexual Reproduction All the members of the Animal Kingdom Fish Mammals Amphibians Birds Reptiles Insects Crustaceans 7 Slide 8 Sexual Reproduction Plant Kingdom Flowers are the reproductive organs of plants. Some flowers have both male and female reproductive organs on the same flower. 8 Male flower Female flower Slide 9 Asexual Reproduction 1. One parent 2. No gametes/reproductive cells are involved 3. Offspring produced by cell division (Mitosis) 4. Offspring identical to parent (same DNA) 5. Several different types of asexual reproduction. Slide 10 Asexual Reproduction Offspring have 100% the same chromosomes as the parent. 10 Slide 11 Asexual Reproduction Binary Fission Bacteria Protists 11 Binary fission is a form of asexual reproduction where every organelle is copied and the organism divides in two. Slide 12 Plant Reproduction Plant cuttings (Plantlets) 12 Small pieces of a plant are cut off and rooted, to produce a new identical plant. Slide 13 Plant Reproduction Tubers: an underground stem that contains stored nutrients (starch). Potatoes can be cut into pieces with each piece having an eye which can grow into a new potato plant. Slide 14 Plant Reproduction Bulbs: Short underground stems surrounded by thick fleshy leaves that contain stored food. New bulbs sprout from the old one. Each bulb can grow into a new plant Ex. Onions, tulips, garlic. Slide 15 Plant Reproduction Runner : Stem that grows sideways along the surface of the ground that has buds that can grow into new plants when they contact soil. Ex. Strawberry plants Slide 16 Plant Reproduction Rhizome: Stem that grows sideways underground. Enlarged portions called nodes grow into buds which can form new plants. Ex. Irises, ginger. Slide 17 Budding Yeast Hydra 17 Budding is a means of asexual reproduction where a new individual develops from an outgrowth of a parent, splits off, and lives independently. Slide 18 Regeneration -Starfish 18 Regeneration occurs when a body part has broken off and the organism grows a new one. Slide 19 Regeneration Fragmentation 19 Fragmentation is a means of asexual reproduction where a single parent breaks into parts that regenerate into whole new individuals. Leech Slide 20 Sporulation: Spore formation Occurs in fungus, algae and mold Tiny spores form inside the parent cell and are released and can grow into an adult organism. Slide 21 Homework: Make a Venn Diagram 21 Asexual ReproductionSexual Reproduction Both Types of reproduction in living organisms Pass DNA from parent to offspring