Growth | Biology - Britannica

In cells

The increase in size and changes in shape of a developing organism depend on the increase in the number and size of cells that make up the individual. Increase in cell number occurs by a precise cellular reproductive mechanism called mitosis. During mitosis the chromosomes bearing the genetic material are reproduced in the nucleus, and then the doubled chromosomes are precisely distributed to the two daughter cells, one of each chromosomal type going to each daughter cell. Each end of the dividing cell receives a complete set of chromosomes before the ends separate. In animal cells this is a pinching off (cytokinesis) of the cell membrane; in plant cells a new cellulose wall forms between the new cells.

During the period of cell life preceding the actual distribution of chromosomes, the mother cell often grows to twice its original size. Hence, a cycle consisting of cell growth and cell division is established. Cell growth—an increase in cytoplasmic mass, chromosome number, and cell surface—is followed by cell division, in which the cytoplasmic mass and chromosomes are distributed to the daughter cells. An increase in cytoplasmic mass does not always occur during cell-division cycles, however. During the early development of an embryo, for example, the original egg cell, usually a very large cell, undergoes repeated series of cell divisions without any intervening growth periods; as a result, the original egg cell divides into thousands of small cells. Only after the embryo can obtain food from its environment does the usual pattern of growth and mitosis occur.

greylag. Flock of Greylag geese during their winter migration at Bosque del Apache National Refugee, New Mexico. greylag goose (Anser anser) Britannica Quiz Biology Bonanza

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