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RRB Group D Reproduction

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This page covers RRB Group D Reproduction with complete concept notes, 4 graded practice MCQs, key points and exam-specific tips. Free to study.

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Concept Notes

Reproduction— Rules & Concept

Core ConceptRead this first — the foundation of the topic
There are two main types

Asexual Reproduction and Sexual Reproduction. --- TYPE 1: ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION Only ONE parent is involved. No gametes (sex cells) are needed. Offspring are genetically identical to the parent (called clones)

Modes of Asexual Reproduction

• Binary Fission — Parent splits into TWO equal parts

Example

Amoeba, Bacteria (like Leishmania splits lengthwise) • Multiple Fission — Parent splits into MANY parts

Example

Plasmodium (malaria parasite) • Budding — Small bud grows on parent, detaches and forms new organism

Example

Hydra, Yeast • Fragmentation — Body breaks into pieces, each piece grows into new organism

Example

Spirogyra (algae) • Regeneration — If an organism is cut, each part can grow into a full organism

Example

Planaria, Starfish • Spore Formation — Organisms produce spores that germinate into new plants

Example

Rhizopus (bread mould), Ferns, Mosses • Vegetative Propagation — New plants grow from roots, stems, or leaves

Example

Potato (eyes/buds), Rose (stem cutting), Bryophyllum (leaf margin buds) --- TYPE 2: SEXUAL REPRODUCTION TWO parents are involved (male and female). Gametes are formed — male gamete (sperm) and female gamete (egg/ovum). Fertilisation joins them to form a zygote. The zygote develops into offspring

Key Terms

• Gamete = Sex cell (sperm or egg) • Fertilisation = Fusion of male and female gametes • Zygote = Cell formed after fertilisation • Internal Fertilisation — inside female body

Example

Humans, Cow, Dog • External Fertilisation — outside female body, in water

Example

Frog, Fish In Humans: • Puberty in girls: Around 10–12 years. Menstruation starts. • Puberty in boys: Around 13–14 years. • Menstrual cycle = 28 days • Gestation period (pregnancy) = 9 months (approximately 280 days) • Fertilisation occurs in the Fallopian tube • Implantation occurs in the Uterus In Plants (Flowers): • Stamen = Male part (produces pollen = male gamete) • Pistil/Carpel = Female part (contains ovule = female gamete) • Pollination = Transfer of pollen from stamen to pistil • Self-pollination = Same flower or same plant • Cross-pollination = Different plant of same species • Fertilisation in plants forms SEED. Ovary becomes FRUIT. ---

Formula BlockMemorise — at least one formula appears in every paper

(

Memory HookRemember this — never confuse the two again

): Zygote = Male Gamete + Female Gamete Fruit = Fertilised Ovary | Seed = Fertilised Ovule ---

Exam PatternsWhat examiners ask — read before attempting PYQs

RRB Group D asks: Which organism reproduces by budding? / Where does fertilisation occur in humans? / What is the gestation period? / Vegetative propagation examples. --- SHORTCUT/TRICK: Trick 1 — Remember Budding: 'HY-dra and Yeast = HY-5 = Budding Brothers' Trick 2 — For plant parts: 'SiPF' = Stamen is Pollen (male), Pistil is Female ---

Worked ExampleSolve this step-by-step before moving on

Question: Bread mould reproduces by

When to UseQuickly decide which method to apply in the exam

? Step 1: Bread mould = Rhizopus fungus Step 2: Rhizopus produces tiny spore sacs called sporangia Step 3: These sporangia burst and release spores into air Step 4: Spores germinate in suitable conditions to form new mould Answer: Spore Formation ---

Exam TrapsCommon mistakes students make — avoid these

Students confuse Regeneration with Fragmentation. Remember — Fragmentation means the organism naturally BREAKS apart (like Spirogyra). Regeneration means an organism can REGROW from a cut piece (like Planaria).

Also, many students think Yeast uses Binary Fission — it does NOT. Yeast uses BUDDING.

Key Points to Remember

  • Asexual reproduction involves ONE parent; offspring are genetically identical (clones) to the parent.
  • Binary fission = splitting into 2 equal halves — Amoeba and Bacteria; Multiple fission = many parts — Plasmodium.
  • Budding occurs in Hydra (animal) and Yeast (fungus) — a small bud forms and detaches.
  • Spore formation occurs in Rhizopus (bread mould), Ferns, and Mosses.
  • Vegetative propagation examples: Potato (stem tuber/buds), Bryophyllum (leaf), Rose (stem cutting).
  • In humans, fertilisation occurs in the Fallopian tube; implantation occurs in the Uterus.
  • Fruit = fertilised and ripened Ovary; Seed = fertilised Ovule — key plant reproduction fact.
  • Human gestation period = approximately 9 months (280 days); Menstrual cycle = 28 days.

Exam-Specific Tips

  • Fertilisation in humans occurs in the Fallopian tube (oviduct), NOT in the uterus.
  • Plasmodium (malaria parasite) reproduces by Multiple Fission — splits into many cells at once.
  • Bryophyllum reproduces vegetatively through buds on the margins (edges) of its leaves.
  • Leishmania (causes kala-azar) reproduces by Binary Fission — it divides lengthwise (longitudinal).
  • Rhizopus (bread mould) reproduces by Spore Formation using structures called Sporangia.
  • Human gestation period = 280 days (approximately 9 months); menstrual cycle = 28 days.
  • Spirogyra (green algae) reproduces by Fragmentation — body breaks into pieces, each grows into new organism.
  • Stamen is the male reproductive part of a flower; Pistil (Carpel) is the female reproductive part.
Practice MCQs

Reproduction — Practice Questions

4graded MCQs · easy to hard · full solution & trap analysis

All MCQs →
Practice 1easy

Which of the following statements correctly describes the role of the placenta during human pregnancy?

Practice 2medium

During human reproduction, the fertilised egg (zygote) undergoes repeated cell divisions and develops into a blastocyst. At what stage does the blastocyst implant into the uterine wall?

Practice 3medium

During human reproduction, after fertilisation occurs in the fallopian tube, the zygote undergoes multiple mitotic divisions to form a ball of cells called a blastocyst. This blastocyst then travels to the uterus and gets implanted in the endometrium. After implantation, which of the following structures develops from the tissue that surrounds the embryo and helps in nutrient exchange between mother and fetus?

Practice 4hard

During human reproduction, the secondary oocyte completes meiosis II and forms a mature ovum only after which event occurs?

60-Second Revision — Reproduction

  • Remember: Asexual = 1 parent, no gametes, clones produced; Sexual = 2 parents, gametes fuse to form zygote.
  • Budding Duo: Hydra (animal) + Yeast (fungus) — do NOT confuse Yeast with Binary Fission.
  • Trap: Fertilisation in humans = Fallopian tube; Implantation = Uterus — exams swap these two locations.
  • Formula: Fruit = Ripened Ovary | Seed = Fertilised Ovule — direct MCQ answers in plant reproduction.
  • Remember: Plasmodium = Multiple Fission | Amoeba/Bacteria = Binary Fission | Planaria = Regeneration.
  • Trick: SiPF — Stamen is Pollen (male) | Pistil is Female — never mix up flower parts.
  • Trap: Fragmentation (Spirogyra breaks naturally) is NOT the same as Regeneration (Planaria regrows from cut piece).
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