Overview
Sexual vs Asexual🧬 Why Reproduce at All?
Reproduction is the biological process by which organisms produce offspring — ensuring the survival of the species. Animals have evolved two fundamentally different approaches: asexual reproduction (one parent, genetically identical offspring) and sexual reproduction (two parents, genetically varied offspring). Each has trade-offs, and the environment determines which strategy wins.
| Feature | Asexual Reproduction | Sexual Reproduction |
|---|---|---|
| Number of parents | One | Two |
| Gametes required? | No | Yes — egg and sperm |
| Genetic variation | None — offspring are clones | High — offspring are genetically unique |
| Speed | Fast — no need to find a mate | Slower — mate finding, courtship required |
| Energy cost | Low | High — courtship, mating, often parental care |
| Advantage | Rapid population growth in stable environments | Adaptability — variation allows response to changing environments |
| Disadvantage | No variation — whole population vulnerable to same disease/condition | Time and energy intensive; requires finding a mate |
| Animal examples | Hydra (budding), starfish (fragmentation), aphids (parthenogenesis) | Most multicellular animals |
🌱 Budding
- A new organism grows as an outgrowth (bud) from the parent
- Bud eventually detaches and lives independently
- Example: Hydra, yeast
- Offspring genetically identical to parent
✂️ Fragmentation
- Body breaks into pieces — each piece regenerates a complete organism
- Requires strong regeneration ability
- Example: Starfish, planaria (flatworms)
- Can be triggered by injury or as a reproductive strategy
🦎 Parthenogenesis
- Development of an unfertilised egg into a new individual
- Occurs naturally in some insects, reptiles, fish
- Example: Aphids, Komodo dragons (in captivity), some sharks
- Offspring may be haploid or diploid depending on species
🔄 Binary Fission
- Single organism splits into two equal daughter organisms
- Common in unicellular organisms (amoeba, bacteria)
- Both daughters are genetically identical to parent
- Very rapid — can double population in minutes (bacteria)
⚙️ How It Works
- Two parents produce haploid gametes via meiosis
- Egg (n) + Sperm (n) → Zygote (2n) via fertilisation
- Zygote develops into new organism by mitosis
- Each offspring has a unique combination of alleles from both parents
🌍 Why Variation Matters
- Genetic variation = raw material for natural selection
- Some offspring may have traits better suited to new conditions
- Reduces risk of entire population being wiped out by single pathogen
- Drives evolution — without variation, no adaptation is possible
Fertilisation
Internal vs External🔬 Where Does Fertilisation Happen?
After gametes are produced, they need to meet. Animals have evolved two broad strategies: external fertilisation (gametes released into the environment — water — where they meet) and internal fertilisation (sperm deposited inside the female reproductive tract). Each is adapted to the animal's lifestyle and environment.
| Feature | External Fertilisation | Internal Fertilisation |
|---|---|---|
| Where it occurs | Outside the body — in water | Inside the female reproductive tract |
| Environment needed | Aquatic — water required to carry gametes | Terrestrial or aquatic — no water needed |
| Gamete numbers | Enormous — millions of eggs and sperm released | Fewer eggs produced — each well-protected |
| Fertilisation success | Low per gamete — most never meet | High — sperm delivered directly to egg |
| Parental care | Usually none or minimal | Often extensive — internal development or egg guarding |
| Examples | Fish, frogs, sea urchins, oysters | Reptiles, birds, mammals, insects |
| Survival of offspring | Low individual survival — compensated by numbers | Higher individual survival — protected during development |
🐸 External Fertilisation in Detail
Frog Amplexus
Male frog clasps female (amplexus) and releases sperm over eggs as they are laid in water. Synchronised release maximises fertilisation. Eggs are laid in large masses with jelly coating for protection — but no further parental care.
Fish Spawning
Female releases eggs into water; male releases sperm cloud over them. Some species (salmon) return to exact birth rivers to spawn — environmental cues ensure synchronisation between males and females.
🦅 Internal Fertilisation in Detail
Copulation
Sperm transferred directly into female reproductive tract via copulation. Sperm can survive days to weeks inside the female, fertilising eggs as they are released. No dependence on external water.
Adaptations for Land
Internal fertilisation is a key adaptation allowing animals to colonise terrestrial environments. Combined with amniotic eggs (reptiles, birds) or placenta (mammals), it completely removes dependence on water for reproduction.
Development
Oviparous · Viviparous · Ovoviviparous🥚 Where Does the Embryo Develop?
After fertilisation, the embryo must develop somewhere safe until it is ready to survive independently. Animals have evolved three distinct strategies: lay eggs (oviparous), give birth to live young nourished by placenta (viviparous), or retain eggs inside the body until they hatch (ovoviviparous). Each reflects a different trade-off between parental investment and offspring survival.
⚙️ How It Works
- Fertilised egg is laid outside the mother
- Embryo develops inside the egg using yolk as food source
- Egg provides protection — shell (birds, reptiles) or jelly (amphibians, fish)
- Amniotic egg (reptiles and birds) — has amnion, chorion, allantois, yolk sac — allows development on land
- Hatching = breaking out of egg at end of development
✅ Advantages / ❌ Disadvantages
- ✅ Mother not burdened by carrying embryo
- ✅ Can produce many eggs simultaneously
- ✅ Amniotic egg is highly adapted for land
- ❌ Eggs vulnerable to predators and desiccation
- ❌ No direct nutritional connection to mother after laying
⚙️ How It Works
- Embryo implants in uterus wall after fertilisation
- Placenta forms — allows exchange of nutrients, oxygen, and waste between mother and embryo via diffusion
- Umbilical cord connects embryo to placenta
- Embryo fully protected inside the mother
- Born at an advanced stage of development (compared to egg-layers)
✅ Advantages / ❌ Disadvantages
- ✅ Embryo protected from predators and environment
- ✅ Constant temperature and nutrition via placenta
- ✅ Offspring born more developed and better able to survive
- ❌ Higher energy cost for mother
- ❌ Fewer offspring at one time
- ❌ Mother is less mobile during pregnancy
⚙️ How It Works
- Eggs are fertilised and retained inside the mother
- No placenta — embryo nourished by egg yolk, not mother directly
- Eggs hatch inside the mother or very shortly after being laid
- Young are born live-looking but were technically in eggs
✅ Advantages / ❌ Disadvantages
- ✅ Eggs protected inside mother — not exposed to predators
- ✅ Young are more developed at birth than egg-layers
- ❌ No direct nutritional link — embryo depends entirely on yolk
- ❌ Mother carries developing young — some mobility cost
| Feature | Oviparous | Viviparous | Ovoviviparous |
|---|---|---|---|
| Eggs laid? | Yes — outside body | No | Eggs retained inside |
| Placenta? | No | Yes | No |
| Food source for embryo | Egg yolk | Mother via placenta | Egg yolk |
| Born alive? | No — hatches | Yes | Yes (hatches inside/at birth) |
| Examples | Hens, frogs, crocodiles | Humans, dolphins, dogs | Guppies, some sharks, some snakes |
r vs K Strategies
Quantity vs Quality📊 Two Ways to Win at Reproduction
Ecologists describe reproductive strategies along a spectrum from r-strategists (produce many offspring with little parental care, relying on numbers for survival) to K-strategists (produce few offspring with intensive parental care, relying on individual survival). Both strategies are successful — each is adapted to a different ecological niche and set of environmental pressures.
| Feature | r-Strategists (Quantity) | K-Strategists (Quality) |
|---|---|---|
| Offspring numbers | Many — hundreds to millions | Few — one to a handful |
| Parental care | Little or none | Extensive and prolonged |
| Offspring survival rate | Low — most die before reproducing | High — each offspring has strong survival chance |
| Age at first reproduction | Early — reproduces quickly | Late — long juvenile period |
| Body size | Usually small | Usually large |
| Lifespan | Short | Long |
| Population growth | Rapid — boom and bust cycles | Slow and stable — near carrying capacity (K) |
| Habitat preference | Unstable, unpredictable, disturbed environments | Stable, competitive environments |
| Examples | Mice, insects, fish, frogs, dandelions | Elephants, whales, humans, great apes, albatross |
🐭 r-Strategist Logic
In an unstable or unpredictable environment, you cannot guarantee any single offspring will survive. The solution: produce so many that some will survive by chance, even if conditions are harsh. The cost per offspring is very low (no parental care), so the parent can afford enormous numbers.
Classic example: Oyster
A single oyster can release up to 100 million eggs in one spawning event. Almost all are eaten or fail to settle. But the sheer number ensures that some survive to adulthood in even unfavourable conditions.
🐘 K-Strategist Logic
In a stable, competitive environment, survival depends on individual competitiveness — size, skill, social learning. A well-cared-for offspring who learns from parents has a far higher chance of surviving and reproducing than an abandoned one. The investment is enormous, but so is the return per offspring.
Classic example: Elephant
An elephant carries its calf for 22 months (longest gestation of any land mammal), nurses for 2–3 years, and the calf remains in the family herd learning for over a decade. One offspring per female every 4–5 years — but survival is high.
🎯 Strategy Assessment
Eight questions on animal reproductive strategies.