Fertilization
The diploid chromosome number is restored at fertilization when two very different gamete nuclei fuse to form the zygote.
The variation present at fertilization is from three sources:
- Crossing over that occurs during prophase I.
- Random alignments at metaphase I that lead to millions of combinations of maternal and paternal chromosomes in each gamete.
- Of all the genetically diverse gametes produced, chance will determine which two will meet.
How Mitosis and Meiosis Differ
- Mitotic cell division produces identical cells (clones). This type of division is common in single-celled, asexually reproducing organisms and in the growth process of multicelled forms.
- Meiosis occurs only in the germ cells used in sexual reproduction. It gives rise to novel combinations of alleles in offspring.
PREVIOUS
END OF LECTURE 5
LECTURE 5 INDEX
MAIN INDEX