Types of Asexual Reproduction — Passage

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Grades
5
6
7
8
Standards
MS-LS3-2
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ABOUT THIS READER
This science reading passage explains the different types of asexual reproduction, including binary fission, budding, fragmentation, and vegetative propagation. It aligns with NGSS standard MS-LS3-2 (Heredity: Inheritance and Variation of Traits) by illustrating how organisms produce genetically identical offspring. The passage includes real-world examples like bacteria, hydra, starfish, and strawberries, making it engaging for middle school readers. It also highlights the advantages and disadvantages of asexual reproduction, reinforcing key concepts in life science and reading comprehension.
Publisher: Workybooks
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Written by:Workybooks Team
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Illustrated by:

Asexual reproduction is a process by which organisms produce offspring without the fusion of gametes (sex cells). Unlike sexual reproduction, which involves two parents, asexual reproduction requires only one parent, resulting in genetically identical offspring called clones. This method is efficient and allows rapid population growth, making it common in bacteria, plants, fungi, and some animals.

 

Binary Fission and Budding

            One type of asexual reproduction is binary fission, where a single-celled organism, like a bacterium, splits into two identical cells. The parent cell duplicates its DNA and divides, creating two genetically identical daughter cells. Another method, budding, occurs in organisms like yeast and hydra. A small bud grows on the parent, develops into a new organism, and may either detach or remain attached.

 

Fragmentation and Vegetative Propagation
            Fragmentation happens when an organism breaks into pieces, each growing into a new individual. Starfish, for example, can regenerate lost arms into complete organisms. Plants often use vegetative propagation, where new plants grow from stems, roots, or leaves. Strawberries produce runners that take root and form new plants.

 

Real-World Importance
            Asexual reproduction helps species survive in stable environments by quickly increasing their numbers. Farmers use vegetative propagation to grow crops like potatoes and sugarcane efficiently. However, since offspring are genetically identical, they may struggle to adapt to environmental changes.

 

Fun Fact: Some lizards, like the New Mexico whiptail, reproduce entirely asexually—all individuals are females that lay fertile eggs without mating!

What is asexual reproduction?

Reproduction requiring two parentsReproduction without gamete fusionReproduction only in animalsReproduction with genetic variation

Which organism reproduces through binary fission?

HydraBacteriaStarfishStrawberry

How does budding differ from binary fission?

Budding produces non-identical offspringBudding involves a small growth on the parentBudding requires two parentsBudding only occurs in plants

What is a disadvantage of asexual reproduction?

Slow population growthLack of genetic diversityRequires matingOnly occurs in complex organisms

Which plant uses vegetative propagation?

Pine treeStrawberryRose bushOak tree

How does fragmentation help starfish?

They grow new arms that become new organismsThey produce seedsThey require a mateThey change their DNA

What is the main idea of the passage?

Sexual reproduction is better than asexualAsexual reproduction creates genetic varietyAsexual reproduction has different methods and usesOnly plants use asexual reproduction

If a farmer wants identical apple trees, which method should they use?

PollinationVegetative propagationBinary fissionFragmentation

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