Plants and animals produce special sex cells called gametes. There are two types of gametes:
Eggs are produced by female organisms, so they're also called female gametes. Sperm is produced by male organisms, so they're also called male gametes.
A human egg surrounded by sperm (magnified 400 times).
Mating is the act of transferring sperm from male to female. A sperm must reach the egg for their genes to be combined.
For most plants, the flowers are the reproduction organs. Flowers usually contain both male and female organs (sperm are found inside pollen).
Pollination is the act of transferring pollen from the male to the female organs of the plant.
Gametes, Chromosomes and Fertilization
There is a complete set of genes inside each egg or sperm. Each gamete contains around 30,000 genes.
These genes are linked to one another in long strings called chromosomes.
A human gamete usually has 23 chromosomes, so a chromosome consists of thousands of genes.
After mating (or pollination), the sperm swim to the eggs. Fertilization occurs when one sperm fuses with an egg.
Early human zygote observed 18 – 20 hours after insemination. The two pronuclei (male & female) have not yet fused and combined their genetic information.
Fertilized egg of the roundworm Ascaris lumbricoides (multiplied 400 times).
The resulting cell is called a zygote. It's the start of a new organism.
The zygote has twice as many chromosomes as the sperm or egg. It has received 23 chromosomes from each gamete, so now it has 23 pairs (46 chromosomes in total). They're located in the zygote's cell nucleus.
A cell that has the full 23 pairs of chromosomes is diploid (most human cells are diploid). But gametes have only 23 individual chromosomes, so they are haploid.
The zygote divides into two cells via the process of mitosis. Now there are two cells, each with a complete identical copy of the original zygote's chromosomes.
The new organism continues to grow, as the process of mitosis continues. Eventually it becomes an embryo, consisting of thousands of cells.
An embryo at the end of 7 weeks of development (derived from an ectopic pregnancy). It is 10mm in length.
Different cells become specialized into different tissues (e.g. skin, nerves & muscle). These form organs (e.g. arms & legs).
This process is called growth and development.
Growth & development continues until a complex organism is formed, made of millions of cells.
Each body cell has a set of chromosomes that are identical to those of the original zygote (due to the process of mitosis).
The zygote inherited a complete haploid set of genes from each parent Therefore, the growing organism has two genes for each trait (one from each parent).
The two genes for a particular trait may be identical (e.g. two genes for blue eyes). Or the two genes may code for different forms of that trait (e.g. one gene for blue eyes, and the other for brown eyes).
Mitosis is a process whereby a single cell divides once into two identical daughter cells (via cell division). The main purposes of mitosis are growth and replacing worn-out cells.
First, the DNA in the cell is copied in preparation for cell division. This results in two identical sets of chromosomes.
The membrane around the cell nucleus dissolves away, releasing the chromosomes.
A membrane forms around each set of chromosomes, creating two new nuclei.
The single cell pinches in the middle, forming two separate daughter cells. Each has a full set of chromosomes within a nucleus.
A mature organism produces gametes from body cells via the process of meiosis. Female animals produce eggs in their ovaries, and male organisms produce sperm in their testicles.
The chromosomes are sorted so that each gamete gets half the number of chromosomes found in body cells, and so that each gamete ends up with a different set of chromosomes.
When a sperm & egg collide at fertilization, the new organism inherits a unique collection of chromosomes.
This process of allocating chromosomes at meiosis, and creating new combinations at fertilization, is what produces the variation seen among siblings.
It also helps to generate variation within plant & animal species. This is important for survival when the environment changes.
Gametes are formed via the process of meiosis. This is a process whereby a single cell divides twice to produce four cells, each with only 23 individual chromosomes (instead of 23 pairs of chromosomes).
The DNA in the cell is duplicated, which results in two full sets of chromosomes. The pair of chromosomes may then exchange bits of DNA, in a process called recombination (or crossing over).
The membrane around the cell nucleus dissolves away, releasing the chromosomes.
The chromosomes are pulled apart, so that at each pole of the cell, a full set of chromosomes gathers together. A membrane forms around each set of chromosomes to create two new nuclei.
The single cell then pinches in the middle to form two separate daughter cells, each with a full set of chromosomes within a nucleus.
Now you have two daughter cells, each with 23 pairs of chromosomes. The second part of meiosis happens the same way to both daughter cells, at the same time.
A pair of chromosomes is made up of two chromatids, which are joined at the centromere.
As before, the membrane around the cell nucleus dissolves away to release the chromosomes. But now the pairs split apart, so that each chromatid of a pair moves to opposite ends of the cell. Now you have 23 individual chromosomes (or chromatids) at each pole of the cell.
A membrane forms around each set of 23 chromosomes to create two new cell nuclei. The cell pinches in half to form two new “grand-daughter” cells, each with only 23 individual chromosomes.
At the end of the process, there are four gametes, produced from one single parent cell.
Identical twins are formed from a single egg and a single sperm. They combine to form a zygote, and the zygote divides into two cells as usual (each with the same set of chromosomes). But these two cells then separate, and each grows into an independent organism.
Each organism has identical genes, so they grow up to be identical twins.
Non-identical twins are formed from two eggs, each of which is fertilized by a single sperm. So non-identical twins are no more alike than regular siblings.
Abdominal ultrasonography of twins at gestational age of 15 weeks.
Source: Science: NCEA Level 1 (New Zealand Pathfinder series).