Clone
Asexual Reproduction: Only One Parent
Cloning a Frog
Cloning an Extinct Organism? Tasmanian Tiger
Cloning Extinct Organisms? Wooly Mammoth Put DNA (must be good) into a cell and stimulate the cell to divide.
Cloning Extinct Organisms? Cloning Aurochs? To clone you put DNA (must not be degraded) into a cell and stimulate the cell to divide. Scientists hope to gain auroch DNA from teeth and bone samples of extinct aurochs. They died out in the 1600s.
Cloning Aurochs Aurochs had been bred into other smaller and tamer cattle types by the time they died out in the 1600s. The DNA from extinct Aurochs will be placed in an egg cell of cattle descended from the Aurochs to bring this organism back from extinction.
Binary Fission: One-celled Organism Dividing
Bacteria Binary Fission
Budding: Hydras and Sponges
Budding: Yeast
Fragmentation: Starfish and Planaria Worms
Eurasian Milfoil Fragmentation
Vegetative Reproduction: Plants Cloning Themselves
Native Camas: Bulbs Harvested by First Nations
Cuttings: Ways to Rapidly Grow New Plants Plant stems are cut off and dipped into rooting powders.
Grafting for Rapid Reproduction
Spore Formation: Fungi
Cloning Dolly, The First Cloned Mammal
Therapeutic Cloning
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