Biology 1001A Lecture Notes - Lecture 14: Sequential Hermaphroditism, Amphiprioninae, Parthenogenesis

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Sexual reproduction is a source of genetic diversity. Mutation is the only source of new alleles, but sexual reproduction is what allows us to create new multilocus combinations of those alleles. Offspring are genetically distinct from either parent and (usually) from each other: examples of exceptions: armadillos produce litters of four that are all genetically the same; identical twins are also genetically the same. Ex. facultatively asexual (sometimes reproduce asexually and sometimes sexually: ex trees: can send runners that then grow into trees that are genetically the same, but can also produce flowers and pollen and create seeds through sexual reproduction. Sexually reproducing species may be dioecious (separate sexes) or monoecious (hermaphrodites) Ex. humans and ash trees are either males or females. Usually, within a population, the sex ratio is 1:1, but within a family, it may not be 1:1.

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