Q1: What is placenta? Mention its role during pregnancy.
Ans: A disc shaped special tissue connection between embryo and uterine wall is called placenta. It contains villi on the embryo’s side of the tissue which are surrounded by blood spaces on the mother’s side.
Roles of placenta are:
Q2: What are various ways to avoid pregnancy? Elaborate any one method.
Ans: (a) Contraceptive methods are used to avoid pregnancy which are of the following types:
(b) Surgical Methods:
Q3: How does fertilisation take place? Fertilisation occurs once in a month. Comment.
Ans:
Q4: Reproduction is essentially a phenomenon that is not for survival of an individual but for the stability of a species. Justify.
Ans:
Q5: Describe sexually transmitted diseases and mention the ways to prevent them.
Ans: Sexually transmitted diseases are infectious diseases transmitted during sexual contact. Various agents like bacteria and virus cause these diseases. For example, Gonorrhoea, syphilis, genital herpes, chlamydiasis, genital warts, trichomoniasis, hepatitis-B and HIV-AIDS are sexually transmitted diseases.
Principles to follow to prevent such infections:
Q6: Why are budding, fragmentation and regeneration all considered as asexual types of reproduction? With neat diagrams explain the process of regeneration in Planaria.
Ans: They are considered as asexual types of reproduction as all of them involve a single parent and no fusion of gametes take place in them.
Q7: Write two points of difference between asexual and sexual types of reproduction. Describe why variations are observed in the offspring formed by sexual reproduction.
Ans: Asexual Reproduction:
Sexual Reproduction:
Fusion of gametes occurs during sexual reproduction. The gametes contain the same number of chromosomes but their DNA is not identical so variations arise among the offsprings.
Q8: Distinguish between pollination and fertilisation. Mention the site and product of fertilisation in a flower. Draw a neat, labelled diagram of a pistil showing pollen tube growth and its entry into the ovule.
Ans:
Q9: Distinguish between a gamete and zygote. Explain their roles in sexual reproduction.
Ans: The sex cell or germ cell in sexual reproduction is called gametes. There are two types of gametes, male and female. A male and a female gamete fuse with each other during fertilisation to form a zygote.
The gametes possess characters of their parents in their DNA and their fusion brings characters of both parents into one zygote cell. Zygote is the first cell of the next generation which divides to form an embryo which subsequently grows into a new individual.
Q10: Draw the diagram of a flower and label the four whorls. Write the names of gamete producing organs in the flower.
Ans: Male gamete forming part – anther/stamen
Female gamete forming part – pistil/ovary/ovule
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1. How do organisms reproduce? |
2. What is the difference between sexual and asexual reproduction? |
3. What are the advantages of sexual reproduction? |
4. What are the advantages of asexual reproduction? |
5. Can organisms switch between sexual and asexual reproduction? |
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