Information about Fragmentation (biology)

There is a separate article about habitat fragmentation.
Fragmentation or Clonal Fragmentation is a form of asexual reproduction or cloning where an organism is split into fragments. The splitting may or may not be intentional. Each of these fragments develop into mature, fully grown individuals that are a clone of the original organism. If the organism is split any further the process is repeated.

Fragmentation is seen in many organisms such as molds, some annelid worms, and starfish. Binary fission of single-celled organisms such bacteria, protozoa and many algae is a type of fragmentation.

Molds, yeast, and mushrooms, all of which are part of the Fungi kingdom, produce tiny filaments called hyphae. These hyphae obtain food and nutrients from the body of other organisms to grow and fertilize. Then a piece of hyphae breaks off and grows into a new individual and the cycle continues.

Fragmentation is observed in nonvascular plants as well, liverworts and mosses.

Plants

Fragmentation is a very common type of vegetative reproduction in plants. Many trees, shrubs, nonwoody perennials, and ferns form clonal colonies by producing new rooted shoots, which increases the diameter of the colony. If a rooted shoot becomes detached from the colony, then fragmentation has occurred. There are several other mechanisms of natural fragmentation in plants.
  • A few plants produce adventitious plantlets on their leaves, which drop off and form independent plants, e.g. Tolmiea menziesii and Kalanchoe daigremontiana.
  • Some woody plants naturally shed twigs, termed cladoptosis, e.g. willow. The twigs may form roots in a suitable environment to establish a new plant.
  • River currents often tear off branch fragments from certain cottonwood species growing on riverbanks. Fragments reaching suitable environments can root and establish new plants. [1]
  • Small pieces of moss "stems" or "leaves" are often scattered by wind, water or animals. If a moss fragment reaches a suitable environment, it can establish a new plant. http://www.sbs.auckland.ac.nz/info/schools/nzplants/moss_asexual.htm
  • Some cacti and other plants have jointed stems. When a stem segment, called a pad, falls off, it can root and form a new plant.
  • Leaves of some plants readily root when they fall off, e.g. Sedum and Echeveria.
People use fragmention to artificially propagate many plants via division, layering, cuttings, grafting, micropropagation and storage organs, such as bulbs, corms, tubers and rhizomes.

Corals

Within the reef aquarium hobby, enhusiasts reguarly fragment corals for a multitude of purposes including shape control; selling to, trading with, or sharing with others; regrowth experiments; and minimizing damage to natural coral reefs. Both hard and soft corals can be fragmented, with the level of success depending on the skill of the aquarist, method used, tolerance of the specific species, and conditions of care. Species that have shown to be highly tolerant of fragmentation include acropora, montipora, pocillopora, euphyllia, and caulastrea among many others.

References

1. ^ Rood, S.B., Kalischuk, M.L., and Braatne, J.H. 2003. Branch propagation, not cladoptosis, permits dispersive, clonal reproduction of riparian cottonwoods. Forest Ecology and Management 186: 227–242. [1]
Habitat fragmentation is a process of environmental change important in evolution and conservation biology. As the name implies, it describes the emergence of discontinuities (fragmentation) in an organism's preferred environment (habitat).
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Fragmentation may refer to:
  • Fragmentation (biology), a form of asexual reproduction
  • Fragmentation (computer) a phenomenon of computer storage
  • Fragmentation (economics), a process of globalisation
  • Fragmentation (music), a compositional technique

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Cloning is the process of creating an identical copy of something. In biology, it collectively refers to processes used to create copies of DNA fragments (molecular cloning), cells (cell cloning), or organisms.
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Plantae
  • Chromalveolata
  • Heterokontophyta
  • Haptophyta
  • Cryptophyta
  • Alveolata

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  • Molds (or moulds, see spelling differences) include all species of microscopic fungi that grow in the form of multicellular filaments, called hyphae.[1] In contrast, microscopic fungi that grow as single cells are called yeasts.
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    Annelida
    Lamarck, 1809

    Classes and subclasses

    Class Polychaeta (paraphyletic?)
    Class Clitellata*
       Oligochaeta - earthworms, etc.
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    Binary fission is the form of asexual reproduction in single-celled organisms by which one cell divides into two cells of the same size, used by most prokaryotes. This process results in the reproduction of a living cell by division into two equal or near-equal parts.
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    Bacteria

    Phyla

    Actinobacteria
    Aquificae
    Chlamydiae
    Bacteroidetes/Chlorobi
    Chloroflexi
    Chrysiogenetes
    Cyanobacteria
    Deferribacteres
    Deinococcus-Thermus
    Dictyoglomi
    Fibrobacteres/Acidobacteria
    Firmicutes
    Fusobacteria
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    Protozoa (in Greek proto = first and zoa = animals) are one-celled eukaryotes (that is, unicellular microbes whose cells have membrane-bound nuclei) that commonly show characteristics usually associated with animals, mobility and heterotrophy.
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    phytoplankton — provide the food base for most marine food chains. In very high densities (so-called algal blooms) these algae may discolor the water and outcompete or poison other life forms.
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    Ascomycota (sac fungi)
    • Saccharomycotina (true yeasts)
    • Taphrinomycotina
    • Schizosaccharomycetes (fission yeasts)
    Basidiomycota (club fungi)
    • Urediniomycetes

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    A Mushroom is the fleshy, spore-bearing fruiting body of fungus typically produced above ground on soil or on their food source. The standard for the name mushroom is the cultivated white button mushroom, Agaricus bisporus
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    Eukarya
    Whittaker & Margulis, 1978
    (unranked) Opisthokonta

    Kingdom: Fungi
    (L., 1753) R.T. Moore, 1980[1]

    Subkingdom/Phyla

    Chytridiomycota
    Blastocladiomycota

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    A hypha (plural hyphae) is a long, branching filamentous cell of a fungus, and also of unrelated Actinobacteria.[1] In fungi, hyphae are the main mode of vegetative growth, and are collectively called a mycelium.
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    Non-vascular plants

    Divisions

    Simple nonvascular plants
      Green algae
    Complex nonvascular plants
      Bryophyta, mosses
      Marchantiophyta, liverworts
      Anthocerotophyta, hornworts

    Non-vascular plants
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    Vegetative reproduction is a type of asexual reproduction found in plants also called vegetative propagation or vegetative multiplication. It is a process by which new plant "individuals" arise or are obtained without production of seeds or spores.
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    Plantae
    Haeckel, 1866[1]

    Divisions

    Green algae
    • Chlorophyta
    • Charophyta
    Land plants (embryophytes)
    • Non-vascular land plants (bryophytes)

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    tree is a perennial woody plant. It is sometimes defined as a woody plant that attains diameter of 10 cm (30 cm girth) or more at breast height (130 cm above ground).
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    A shrub or bush is a horticultural rather than strictly botanical category of woody plant, distinguished from a tree by its multiple stems and lower height, usually less than 5-6 m (15-20 ft) tall.
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    original research or unverifiable claims.
    * It needs additional references or sources for verification.

    Please help [ improve the article] or discuss these issues on the talk page.
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    FERN

    Charity
    Founded 1995, The Netherlands
    Headquarters Brussels, Belgium and Moreton-in-Marsh, UK

    Key people Jutta Kill
    Leontien Krul
    Iola Leal Riesco
    Judith Neyer
    Saskia Ozinga
    Industry Environmentalism
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    A clonal colony or genet is a group of plants (or a fungal mycelium) that has grown in a given location, the "individuals" which are all genetically identical, originating vegetatively and not sexually from a single ancestor.
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    Adventitious, in botany, refers to structures that develop in an unusual place, and in medicine, it refers to conditions acquired after birth. This article discusses adventitious roots, buds and shoots, that are very common in vascular plants.
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    K. daigremontiana

    Binomial name
    Kalanchoe daigremontiana
    Raym.-Hamet & H.Perrier

    Synonyms

    Bryophyllum daigremontianum Raym.-Hamet & H.
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    Cladoptosis (Greek: clados - a branch, ptosis - falling; it is sometimes pronounced with the p silent) refers to the phenomenon in botany of the regular shedding of branches.
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    Salix L.

    Species

    About 350, including:
    Salix acutifolia - Violet Willow
    Salix alaxensis - Alaska Willow
    Salix alba - White Willow
    Salix alpina - Alpine Willow
    Salix amygdaloides
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    Cactus, see Mammillaria, Melocactus, and Opuntia.
    Cacti redirects here. For the software, see Cacti (software).


    Cacti

    Ferocactus pilosus

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    Sedum
    L.

    Species

    Many, see text & for more.
    Sedum is the large stonecrop genus of the Crassulaceae, representing about 400 species of leaf succulents, found throughout the northern hemisphere, varying from annual groundcovers
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