Posts

Showing posts from November, 2024

Week 14 Advantages of Sexual Reproduction

Image
Advantages of Sexual Reproduction      There are two forms of reproduction: sexual and asexual. Sexual reproduction is the combination of the gametes from two parental organisms, while asexual reproduction produces offspring from one parent, that are genetically identical. While both processes are vastly different, they each have drawbacks and advantages.       Sexual reproduction requires much more energy because it involves several resource-intensive processes. These include finding and attracting a mate, producing gametes (sperm and eggs), and often investing in courtship behaviors or physical displays. Additionally, after mating, there may be further energy spent on nurturing and protecting offspring. In contrast, asexual reproduction only requires one organism to produce offspring, without the need for a mate or the complex processes associated with sexual reproduction, requiring much less energy. Asexual organisms also oftentimes have very large ...

Week 13 Sexual Selection

Image
Sexual Selection Natural selection is not the battle to survive, but the battle to reproduce viable offspring. This high need and battle to find a mate and produce offspring leads to sexual selection. If the main goal is to produce the most, or fittest offspring, animals need to be choosey with whom they are mating. Just as natural selection allows the most fit alleles to be passed along and the least fit to die, sexual selection makes certain traits more or less common due to their ability to find or attract a mate .  Everything is a delicate balance of trade-offs in evolution. For the process of mating and producing offspring, each sex has their own challenges. For the females, it takes a great deal of energy and resources to create and carry offspring. For the males, mating does not require nearly as much energy. Because of this dichotomy, females are typically the ones choosing who they will mate with. If they are going to use that much energy to produce this offspring, then th...

Species, Speciation.... and Definitions

Image
Species, Speciation... and Definitions The biological species concept defines species as members of populations that have the ability to interbreed. Their appearance does not affect whether they could be deemed as the same species, as some animals within a species look similar and some look different. One of the difficulties with this concept is that some organisms within the same species have qualities that allow them to physically mate with each other, but are held back by a barrier of some sort (maybe a mountain or a highway separates them). How big would this separation have to be to consider them two different species. The distances between species becomes a strong question in the case of ring species. Ring species are a series of populations that live in the form of a ring, in which they all interbreed with populations near them, except for populations on the far ends of the rings. This then poses the question, are each their own species, or are the ones that interbreed a species...