binary fission
Biology
(noun)
 the process whereby a cell divides asexually to produce two daughter cells
Microbiology
Examples of binary fission in the following topics:
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Binary Fission
- Binary fission is the method by which prokaryotes produce new individuals that are genetically identical to the parent organism.
 - Prokaryotes, such as bacteria, propagate by binary fission.
 - Due to the relative simplicity of the prokaryotes, the cell division process, or binary fission, is a less complicated and much more rapid process than cell division in eukaryotes.
 
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Prokaryotic Reproduction
- Prokaryotes reproduce asexually by binary fission; they can also exchange genetic material by transformation, transduction, and conjugation.
 - Reproduction in prokaryotes is asexual and usually takes place by binary fission.
 - Binary fission does not provide an opportunity for genetic recombination or genetic diversity, but prokaryotes can share genes by three other mechanisms .
 - Besides binary fission, there are three other mechanisms by which prokaryotes can exchange DNA.
 
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Common Bacterial Traits
- Bacteria grow to a fixed size and then reproduce through binary fission, a form of asexual reproduction .
 
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Spirochaetes
- During reproduction, the spirochaete is capable of undergoing asexual reproduction via binary fission.
 - The binary fission allows for production of two separate spirochaetes.
 
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Generation Time
- Bacterial growth occurs by the division of one bacterium into two daughter cells in a process called binary fission.
 - Bacterial growth is the division of one bacterium into two daughter cells in a process called binary fission.
 - It emphasizes clonality, asexual binary division, the short development time relative to replication itself, the seemingly low death rate, the need to move from a dormant state to a reproductive state or to condition the media, and finally, the tendency of lab adapted strains to exhaust their nutrients.
 
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African Trypanosomiasis
- ., lymph, spinal fluid), and continue to replicate by binary fission.
 - In the fly's midgut, the parasites transform into procyclic trypomastigotes, multiply by binary fission, leave the midgut, and transform into epimastigotes.
 - The epimastigotes reach the fly's salivary glands and continue multiplication by binary fission.The entire life cycle of the fly takes about three weeks.
 
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The Cell Wall of Bacteria
- These ancestral cells reproduce by means of binary fission, duplicating their genetic material and then essentially splitting to form two daughter cells identical to the parent.
 
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Nuclear Fission
- Nuclear fission is a process by which the nucleus of an atom is split into two or more smaller nuclei, known as fission products.
 - Most fissions are binary fissions that produce two charged fragments.
 - These nuclei are called unstable, and this instability can result in radiation and fission.
 - In order to initiate fission, a high-energy neutron is directed towards a nucleus, such as 235U.
 - While nuclear fission can occur without this neutron bombardment, in what would be termed spontaneous fission, this is a rare occurrence; most fission reactions, especially those utilized for energy and weaponry, occur via neutron bombardment.
 
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Types of Sexual and Asexual Reproduction
- Animals may reproduce asexually through fission, budding, fragmentation, or parthenogenesis.
 - Fission, also called binary fission, occurs in prokaryotic microorganisms and in some invertebrate, multi-celled organisms.
 - Some unicellular eukaryotic organisms undergo binary fission by mitosis.
 - Some sea anemones and some coral polyps also reproduce through fission .
 - Coral polyps reproduce asexually by fission, where an organism splits into two separate organisms.
 
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Damage to the Cell Wall
- A bacterial cell with a damaged cell wall cannot undergo binary fission and is thus certain to die .