enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Hybrid incompatibility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hybrid_incompatibility

    Hybrid incompatibility is a phenomenon in plants and animals, wherein offspring produced by the mating of two different species or populations have reduced viability and/or are less able to reproduce. Examples of hybrids include mules and ligers from the animal world, and subspecies of the Asian rice crop Oryza sativa from the plant world ...

  3. Mule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mule

    The mule is a domestic equine hybrid between a donkey and a horse.It is the offspring of a male donkey (a jack) and a female horse (a mare). [1] [2] The horse and the donkey are different species, with different numbers of chromosomes; of the two possible first-generation hybrids between them, the mule is easier to obtain and more common than the hinny, which is the offspring of a male horse ...

  4. Reproductive isolation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reproductive_isolation

    A cross will produce offspring (mule or hinny) with 63 chromosomes, that will not form pairs, which means that they do not divide in a balanced manner during meiosis. In the wild, the horses and donkeys ignore each other and do not cross.

  5. Hybrid (biology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hybrid_(biology)

    A mule is a sterile hybrid of a male donkey and a female horse.Mules are smaller than horses but stronger than donkeys, making them useful as pack animals.. In biology, a hybrid is the offspring resulting from combining the qualities of two organisms of different varieties, subspecies, species or genera through sexual reproduction.

  6. Sexual reproduction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sexual_reproduction

    Some proteins and other features that are key for sexual reproduction may have arisen in bacteria, but sexual reproduction is believed to have developed in an ancient eukaryotic ancestor. [10] In eukaryotes, diploid precursor cells divide to produce haploid cells in a process called meiosis. In meiosis, DNA is replicated to produce a total of ...

  7. Microevolution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microevolution

    Depending on how far two species have diverged since their most recent common ancestor, it may still be possible for them to produce offspring, as with horses and donkeys mating to produce mules. [34] Such hybrids are generally infertile, due to the two different sets of chromosomes being unable to pair up during meiosis. In this case, closely ...

  8. Cell division - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cell_division

    In humans, other higher animals, and many other organisms, the process of meiosis is called gametic meiosis, during which meiosis produces four gametes. Whereas, in several other groups of organisms, especially in plants (observable during meiosis in lower plants, but during the vestigial stage in higher plants), meiosis gives rise to spores ...

  9. Parthenogenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parthenogenesis

    When endomitosis occurs before meiosis [26] [27] or when central fusion occurs (restitutional meiosis of anaphase I or the fusion of its products), the offspring get all [26] [28] to more than half of the mother's genetic material and heterozygosity is mostly preserved [29] (if the mother has two alleles for a locus, it is likely that the ...

  1. Related searches why mules cannot reproduce by meiosis are called give different proteins

    mule horse breedingwhat is a mule