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Reproductive Strategies for Survival

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Demersal Spawning. Demersal eggs do not float and a female fish that produces ... Unlike broadcast spawning, demersal spawner give some care to their eggs by ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Reproductive Strategies for Survival


1
Reproductive Strategies for Survival
2
Sex at Sea
  • Broadcast spawning is when reef fish gather and
    simultaneously release their eggs and sperm into
    the water where fertilisation occurs

3
Sex at Sea
  • Broadcast spawning is when reef fish gather and
    simultaneously release their eggs and sperm into
    the water where fertilisation occurs
  • This occurs where there are strong currents which
    allows the fertilised eggs to be carried away
    from the reef and the predators that live in the
    habitat.

4
Sex at Sea
  • Some examples of broadcast spawners include
  • Butterfly fish
  • Coral trout

5
Sex at Sea
  • Broadcast spawners put all their energy into egg
    production and produce very large numbers of eggs.

6
Sex at Sea
  • Broadcast spawners put all their energy into egg
    production and produce very large numbers of
    eggs.
  • Any fertilised eggs are left on their own.

7
Sex at Sea
  • Broadcast spawners put all their energy into egg
    production and produce very large numbers of
    eggs.
  • Any fertilised eggs are left on their own.
  • Embryonic development takes place within the
    membranes that enclose the egg.

8
Sex at Sea
  • Broadcast spawners put all their energy into egg
    production and produce very large numbers of
    eggs.
  • Any fertilised eggs are left on their own.
  • Embryonic development takes place within the
    membranes that enclose the egg.
  • The egg yolk provides nutrients

9
Sex at Sea
  • Broadcast spawners put all their energy into egg
    production and produce very large numbers of
    eggs.
  • Any fertilised eggs are left on their own.
  • Embryonic development takes place within the
    membranes that enclose the egg.
  • The egg yolk provides nutrients
  • After several days the newly hatched eggs break
    from the membranes.

10
Sex at Sea
  • Broadcast spawners put all their energy into egg
    production and produce very large numbers of
    eggs.
  • Any fertilised eggs are left on their own.
  • Embryonic development takes place within the
    membranes that enclose the egg.
  • The egg yolk provides nutrients
  • After several days the newly hatched eggs break
    from the membranes.
  • The larva are small and float in the see making
    up zooplankton.

11
Sex at Sea
  • Broadcast spawners put all their energy into egg
    production and produce very large numbers of
    eggs.
  • Any fertilised eggs are left on their own.
  • Embryonic development takes place within the
    membranes that enclose the egg.
  • The egg yolk provides nutrients
  • After several days the newly hatched eggs break
    from the membranes.
  • The larva are small and float in the see making
    up zooplankton.
  • When the yolk supply is used up, the larva must
    find their own food and eventually become
    juvenile fish and later a sexually mature adult
    fish, which can take many years

12
Sex at Sea
13
Demersal Spawning
  • Demersal eggs do not float and a female fish that
    produces such eggs may lay them in a nest in the
    sand, or attach them to some part of the reef
    surface.

14
Demersal Spawning
  • Demersal eggs do not float and a female fish that
    produces such eggs may lay them in a nest in the
    sand, or attach them to some part of the reef
    surface.
  • After being laid, the eggs are fertilised.

15
Demersal Spawning
  • Demersal eggs do not float and a female fish that
    produces such eggs may lay them in a nest in the
    sand, or attach them to some part of the reef
    surface.
  • After being laid, the eggs are fertilised.
  • Unlike broadcast spawning, demersal spawner give
    some care to their eggs by guarding them until
    they hatch
  • E.G the anemone clownfish.

16
Demersal Spawning
  • Demersal eggs do not float and a female fish that
    produces such eggs may lay them in a nest in the
    sand, or attach them to some part of the reef
    surface.
  • After being laid, the eggs are fertilised.
  • Unlike broadcast spawning, demersal spawner give
    some care to their eggs by guarding them until
    they hatch
  • E.G the anemone clownfish.

17
Demersal Spawning
  • Because demersal spawners invest energy into
    guarding their eggs, they produce fewer are
    larger eggs than broadcast spawners

18
Sex at Sea
  • Living organisms have evolved many different
    reproductive strategies, which must be suitable
    for the environmental conditions in the habitats
    where the species live.

19
Reproductive Strategies
  • Type of reproduction
  • Asexual
  • Sexual

20
Reproductive Strategies
  • Type of reproduction
  • Asexual
  • Sexual
  • Gender system
  • Separate males and females
  • Hermaphrodite
  • Parthenogenesis (fertilisation occurs without a
    male)

21
Reproductive Strategies
  • Type of reproduction
  • Asexual
  • Sexual
  • Gender system
  • Separate males and females
  • Hermaphrodite
  • Parthenogenesis (fertilisation occurs without a
    male)
  • Mode of fertilisation
  • External
  • internal

22
Reproductive Strategies Mating Systems
  • Monogamy is when one male only mates with one
    female for one or more breeding seasons or for
    life.

23
Reproductive Strategies Mating Systems
  • Monogamy is when one male only mates with one
    female for one or more breeding seasons or for
    life.
  • Most bird species (about 90) are monogamous e.g.
    emperor penguins and eagles

24
Reproductive Strategies Mating Systems
  • Monogamy is when one male only mates with one
    female for one or more breeding seasons or for
    life.
  • Most bird species (about 90) are monogamous e.g.
    emperor penguins and eagles
  • Monogamous parenting requires the care of both
    parents for tasks
  • Defending a nesting site
  • Incubating eggs
  • Feeding offspring

25
Reproductive Strategies Mating Systems
  • Monogamy is when one male only mates with one
    female for one or more breeding seasons or for
    life.
  • Most bird species (about 90) are monogamous e.g.
    emperor penguins and eagles
  • Monogamous parenting requires the care of both
    parents for tasks
  • Defending a nesting site
  • Incubating eggs
  • Feeding offspring
  • The young of many, are born featherless, blind
    and helpless.

26
Reproductive Strategies Mating Systems
27
Reproductive Strategies Mating Systems
  • Polygamy is when one male or one female has
    multiple partners during breeding season.

28
The End
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