The Cell Reproduction Adventure!!!

Download Report

Transcript The Cell Reproduction Adventure!!!

Why are we studying cells…
The purpose of studying cells is because it is apart of our
body and nature. Cells are a significant part of life to study
about because they help you understand more about our
body cells, animal cells, plant cells, and etc. As you study
cells you will learn about:
 the life of cells
different types of cells
how cells function
how they develop
 the purpose of cells
HOW DO CELLS
FUNCTION…
Cells have many functions. They do many
different things in plenty of ways. Did you
know that muscle and nerve cells don’t
divide. Muscle cells in your body don’t
divide in your body and nerve cells. Skin
cells copies its DNA and gets ready for cell
division. A cell plate develops in the middle
of a cell for plant cells. Cell membranes
develop inside the cell walls. As you can
see each cell has its different type of ways
of functioning. Each cell is capable of
doing many things.
What are cells composed of…
Inside cells they contain many different elements. Such as nucleus,
chromosomes, sulfur, carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, and
phosphorous, etc. Cells also contain the cell wall. Cells can be
composed with many things that make up a cell. That means that
plant, animal, and body cells contain many unique elements inside
of each and one of those cells.
What are the functions
of cells…
Cells function in different type of ways. One way
cells function is in a cycle. A cell cycle for some
human cells takes almost about sixteen hours.
Some cells in plants take almost nineteen hours.
The cell cycle has three parts which are mitosis,
interphase, and cytoplasm division. Each cell is
capable of a different job to accomplish in order to
keep the cell cycle going.
Cell division…
Cell division is a process in which cells divide.
Organisms start off as only one cell, then that cell
divides and eventually becomes two cells, after
the two cells form they turn into four cells, four
cells start to become eight, and it keeps going on.
Through this process the organism keeps
developing and growing. To sum it all up cell
division basically is the way a single celled
organism creates another organism of its kind.
The purpose of it is to replace worn out cells with
new cells.
Parts of plants and
animal cells…
There are different parts in plant cells and animal cells. In
animal cells it has centrioles, and the cell membrane
pinches in the middle then the cell divides directly at the
pinched area to develop two new cells, and in each new cell
it contains half the cytoplasm from the old cell. In plant cells
there is a cell plate that forms in the middle of the cell. The
cell plate divides the cytoplasm into two separate parts, and
cell membranes form inside cell walls when new cell walls
develop along the cell plate.
Single cells…
Single cells contain the most bacteria in side of it.
The single cell is only one cell. The bacteria only
applies to single cells and if a cell has more than
one cell than that cell contains no bacteria in it
since it is not a single cell.
Multi cellular…
Multi cellular organisms are organisms that consist
of one cell or more, also in contrast to the single
celled organisms. Multi cellular also have a set of
cells that specialize in the cell reproduction. Most
animal cells and plant cells are multi cellular
because they consist of more than one cell.
Parts of the plant
cells…
Plant cells have plenty of different parts. One part
is a cell plate which forms in the middle of that
cell. Another part is called the cytoplasm and the
cell plate divides cytoplasm into two parts. The
other part is the cell wall forming right along the
cell plate.
How are cells
classified…
Cells can be classified in several ways. Like plant
cells or animal cells. Also body cells, nerve cells,
muscle cells, DNA cells, prokaryotic cells,
eukaryotic cells, complex cells, early cells, simple
cells, nucleated eukaryotic cells, non-nucleated
prokaryotic cells, and etc. The different types of
cells have plenty of thing in common.
Credits…
 Credit to ms. Mosby
 Credit to my cells reproduction packet
 Credit to www.answers.com
 Credit to www.yahoo.com
 Credit to wikipedia, the free encylopedia
 Credit to www.google.com (pictures)