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Reproduction and Asexual Modes

🎓 Class 10 Science CBSE Theory Ch 7 — How do Organisms Reproduce? ⏱ ~20 min
🌐 Language: [gtranslate]

This MCQ module is based on: Reproduction and Asexual Modes

[myaischool_lt_science_assessment grade_level="class_10" science_domain="biology" difficulty="intermediate"]

Introduction — Why Do Organisms Reproduce?

A single bacterium divides and within a day becomes a colony of millions. A mustard seed, no bigger than a full stop, becomes an entire plant bearing hundreds of new seeds. A human baby, born helpless, one day becomes a parent. The common thread is reproduction — the one life process which, unlike digestion or breathing, is not needed for the survival of the individual, yet without which no species would continue.

Why then do organisms spend so much energy on it? Three big reasons:

  • Continuity of species — every individual eventually dies; only by producing offspring is the species kept alive.
  • Transfer of genetic information — the "body design" stored in DNA is passed on to the next generation.
  • Introducing variation — small differences between offspring give a species the flexibility to survive a changing environment.

7.1 Do Organisms Create Exact Copies of Themselves?

At first glance reproduction looks like simple "copying". A bacterium divides into two bacteria, both looking identical to the parent. But biology is never as precise as a photocopier. Every time DNA is copied, tiny errors creep in. These small differences are called variations.

Variations are not mistakes — they are an opportunity. Suppose a population of bacteria living in warm water suddenly faces a rise in temperature. Most bacteria will die, but a few with a variation that lets them tolerate heat will survive and multiply. The species, as a whole, survives the crisis. Without variation, one bad day could wipe out an entire species.

Key idea: Reproduction produces "copies with small differences". These differences are the raw material of evolution.

7.2 Modes of Reproduction Used by Single Organisms

Organisms that live as single cells, or which have a simple body plan, reproduce using a single parent — this is asexual reproduction. No gametes, no partner, no fertilisation. The main methods seen in Class 10 are fission, fragmentation, regeneration, budding, vegetative propagation and spore formation.

7.2.1 Fission

In unicellular organisms the simplest thing to do is split the whole cell into two (or many) new cells. This is called fission.

Binary fission — the parent cell divides into two equal daughter cells. Seen in Amoeba, Leishmania (which causes kala-azar) and bacteria. In Amoeba the split can happen in any plane; in Leishmania (with its whip-like flagellum) the split occurs along a definite axis.

Multiple fission — under unfavourable conditions the parent cell produces a tough cyst wall and inside it the nucleus divides many times. When conditions become favourable the cyst ruptures and releases many daughter cells at once. Example: Plasmodium, the malarial parasite.

Binary fission (Amoeba) 1. Parent 2. Nucleus divides 3. Two daughter cells Multiple fission (Plasmodium) 1. Parent with cyst 2. Many nuclei form 3. Many daughters plane of division
Fig 7.1 — Binary fission of Amoeba (two daughters) vs. multiple fission of Plasmodium (many daughters at once).

7.2.2 Fragmentation

Some multicellular organisms with a simple body, such as the filamentous green alga Spirogyra, simply break into two or more pieces when they grow big. Each piece then grows into a complete organism. This is called fragmentation. It works only when the body is made of a uniform tissue — in a complex animal, a fragment would be missing vital organs.

Spirogyra filament breaks Each fragment → new filament
Fig 7.2 — Fragmentation in Spirogyra.

7.2.3 Regeneration

Some simple animals like Planaria (a flatworm) and Hydra can be cut into small pieces and each piece grows back the missing parts to form a complete new organism. This is called regeneration. It is possible because these animals contain specialised cells that can divide and turn into any body part. Regeneration is NOT the same as true reproduction — it happens only when an accident cuts the body. But the principle shows how powerful simple body plans can be.

Complex animals (humans, dogs) cannot regenerate because their bodies are organised into highly specialised organs — a piece of stomach cannot grow a brain or a heart.

Planaria cuts 3 new worms
Fig 7.3 — Each fragment of Planaria regenerates a whole new worm.

7.2.4 Budding

In Hydra and in yeast, a small outgrowth called a bud appears on the side of the parent. The bud grows, develops all the parent's features, and finally detaches as a new individual. In yeast buds can appear while the previous bud is still attached, giving a short chain of cells.

Budding in Hydra Parent Bud forms Bud develops tentacles New Hydra detached
Fig 7.4 — Budding in Hydra: a bud grows, develops tentacles and finally breaks off as a new individual.

7.2.5 Vegetative Propagation

Many flowering plants can produce new plants from a piece of root, stem or leaf, without the need for seeds. This is called vegetative propagation.

Natural methods:

  • Roots — sweet potato, dahlia form buds on the roots.
  • Stems — potato tubers have "eyes" (buds); ginger and turmeric have underground rhizomes; onion has a bulb.
  • LeavesBryophyllum leaves carry tiny buds at their notches. When the leaf touches moist soil, each bud grows into a new plant.

Artificial methods used by farmers and gardeners:

  • Cutting — a piece of stem with a node (sugarcane, rose) is planted in soil where it develops roots.
  • Layering — a branch (jasmine) is bent into the soil; once roots form it is cut off from the parent.
  • Grafting — the stem of one plant (the scion, e.g. a desired rose variety) is joined to the rooted stem of another plant (the stock). Useful for mango, apple, rose.
Why farmers like vegetative propagation: (i) the new plants are identical to the parent, so fruit/flower quality is guaranteed, (ii) they produce crops faster than seeds, (iii) seedless plants like banana, orange and rose can only be multiplied this way.
Potato tuber 'eyes' (buds) new plant Bryophyllum leaf buds at notches → new plants Stem cutting (rose) new roots develop
Fig 7.5 — Examples of vegetative propagation: potato "eyes", Bryophyllum leaf buds and a rose stem cutting.

7.2.6 Spore Formation

Many fungi and some simple plants produce tiny, light-weight spores inside a knob-like structure called the sporangium. When the sporangium bursts, the spores are scattered by wind or water. If a spore lands on a moist substrate (like bread) it germinates and grows a new fungus. The classic Class 10 example is Rhizopus, the black mould that appears on stale bread.

bread substrate hyphae sporangium spores released
Fig 7.6 — Rhizopus on bread: hyphae bear sporangia at the tip; spores released from a burst sporangium found new colonies.
Activity 7.1 — Growing Bread MouldL3 Apply

Aim: To observe spore formation in Rhizopus on a slice of moist bread.

Procedure:

  1. Take a slice of bread, sprinkle a few drops of water on it and place it in a covered container.
  2. Keep the container in a warm, dark corner for 3–4 days.
  3. Observe the bread daily with a hand lens. Note the colour changes.
Predict: What will you see first — a white fluff or a black mat? Why does the mould only grow on moist bread?

Observation: On day 1–2 a white cottony growth appears (the hyphae). On day 3–4 tiny black pin-heads develop on top of the hyphae — these are the sporangia. When disturbed, a black powder (spores) spreads around.

Explanation: Rhizopus spores are present everywhere in the air. Moisture and warmth let them germinate on the bread. The fungus spreads through hyphae, then produces sporangia containing thousands of spores. Each spore, on a fresh piece of bread, can start a new colony — that is asexual reproduction by spore formation.

Interactive — Identify the Mode of Reproduction

Click an organism. The panel tells you which asexual mode it uses and why.

Tap an organism to reveal its reproductive mode.

Competency-Based Questions

Meera kept two slices of bread — one dry on a shelf, another moistened inside a closed box. After four days only the moist slice was covered with a furry mass that turned black. Her sister argued, "Moulds came because the bread spoiled." Meera disagreed: "They grew from spores already in the air."
Q1. Who is correct, Meera or her sister? Justify using the idea of spore formation. L2 Understand
Meera is correct. Rhizopus spores are always present in air. They land on the bread but can germinate only when moisture and warmth are available. The dry slice has no moisture, so no mould grows.
Q2. (MCQ) Reproduction by multiple fission is seen in L1 Remember
  • (a) Amoeba
  • (b) Plasmodium
  • (c) Hydra
  • (d) Spirogyra
(b) Plasmodium — under unfavourable conditions it divides many times inside a cyst.
Q3. A gardener plants a piece of sugarcane stem with a node and it grows into a new plant. Name the method and give one advantage. L3 Apply
Method: stem cutting (artificial vegetative propagation). Advantage: the new plant is genetically identical to the parent so it retains the desired sweet variety; it also grows faster than from seed.
Q4. True/False — Regeneration is the same as true reproduction. Justify. L4 Analyse
False. Regeneration begins only when the body is accidentally cut into pieces. True reproduction is a deliberate, regular life process that produces offspring. Regeneration is possible only in organisms with simple body plans containing specialised dividing cells.
Q5. Why can a bacterium divide every 20 minutes while a human needs about 20 years to produce the next generation? L4 Analyse
A bacterium is a single cell — copying its DNA and splitting takes minutes. A human body has trillions of highly specialised cells; a new human must grow complex organs, mature sexually, and only then can reproduce. Complexity of body plan is the trade-off for fast vs. slow reproduction.

Assertion–Reason Questions

Options: (A) Both A & R true, R correctly explains A. (B) Both A & R true, R does NOT explain A. (C) A true, R false. (D) A false, R true.

Assertion (A): Variations among offspring give a species a better chance to survive environmental changes.
Reason (R): Small inaccuracies during DNA copying produce individuals with slightly different features.
(A) — Both statements are true and R correctly explains A. Copying errors are the source of variation, which is why populations can adapt.
Assertion (A): Seedless bananas are grown commercially by vegetative propagation.
Reason (R): Vegetative propagation allows plants without viable seeds to still multiply.
(A) — Both statements are true and R correctly explains A.
Assertion (A): Humans cannot regrow a lost limb through regeneration.
Reason (R): Human cells cannot divide at all after birth.
(C) — A is true but R is false. Human cells do divide (skin, blood, bone marrow), but our body plan is too highly specialised for the coordinated regrowth of a whole limb.

Frequently Asked Questions — Reproduction & Asexual Modes

What is reproduction & asexual modes in Class 10 Science (CBSE board)?

Reproduction & Asexual Modes is a key topic in NCERT Class 10 Science Chapter 7 — How Do Organisms Reproduce?. It explains why organisms reproduce and the various asexual modes — fission, budding, fragmentation, vegetative propagation and spore formation. Core ideas covered include reproduction, variation, DNA copying, fission. Mastering this subtopic is essential for scoring well in the CBSE Class 10 Science board exam because board papers repeatedly test these concepts through MCQs, short answers and long-answer questions. This part gives a complete, exam-ready explanation with activities, diagrams and competency-based practice aligned to NCERT.

Why is reproduction important in NCERT Class 10 Science?

Reproduction is important in NCERT Class 10 Science because it forms the foundation for understanding reproduction & asexual modes in Chapter 7 — How Do Organisms Reproduce?. Without a clear idea of reproduction, students cannot answer higher-order CBSE board questions involving variation, DNA copying, fission. Board papers regularly include 2-mark and 3-mark questions on this concept, and competency-based questions often link reproduction to real-life situations. Building clarity here pays off directly in board marks.

How is reproduction & asexual modes tested in the Class 10 Science CBSE board exam?

The CBSE Class 10 Science board exam tests reproduction & asexual modes through a mix of 1-mark MCQs, 2-mark short answers, 3-mark explanations with examples, 5-mark descriptive questions (often with diagrams or balanced equations) and 4-mark competency-based questions. Expect direct questions on reproduction, variation, DNA copying and application-based questions drawn from NCERT activities. Students who follow NCERT thoroughly and practice this chapter's questions consistently score in the 90%+ range.

What are the key terms to remember for reproduction & asexual modes in Class 10 Science?

The key terms to remember for reproduction & asexual modes in NCERT Class 10 Science Chapter 7 are: reproduction, variation, DNA copying, fission, budding, fragmentation. Each of these concepts carries exam weightage and regularly appears in the CBSE board paper. Write clear one-line definitions of every term in your revision notes and revisit them before the exam. Linking these terms visually through a flowchart or concept map makes recall easier during the Class 10 Science board exam.

Is Reproduction & Asexual Modes included in the Class 10 Science syllabus for 2025–26 CBSE board exam?

Yes, Reproduction & Asexual Modes is a part of the NCERT Class 10 Science syllabus (2025–26) prescribed by CBSE. It falls under Chapter 7 — How Do Organisms Reproduce? — and is examined in the annual board paper. The current syllabus retains the full treatment of reproduction, variation, DNA copying as per the NCERT textbook. Because CBSE bases every board question on NCERT, studying this part thoroughly ensures complete syllabus coverage and guarantees marks from this chapter.

How should I prepare reproduction & asexual modes for the CBSE Class 10 Science board exam?

Prepare reproduction & asexual modes for the CBSE Class 10 Science board exam in three steps. First, read this NCERT part carefully, highlighting definitions and diagrams of reproduction, variation, DNA copying. Second, solve every in-text question and end-of-chapter exercise — CBSE questions often come directly from NCERT. Third, practice competency-based and assertion-reason questions to sharpen reasoning. Write answers in the exam-style format (point-wise with diagrams) and time yourself. This method delivers confidence and full marks in the board exam.

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