Year 11 Binary fission vs mitosis

Year 11 Binary fission vs mitosis

11th Grade

9 Qs

quiz-placeholder

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Year 11 Binary fission vs mitosis

Year 11 Binary fission vs mitosis

Assessment

Quiz

Science

11th Grade

Easy

NGSS
HS-LS1-4, MS-LS3-2, HS-LS3-2

Standards-aligned

Created by

Ultimate Bob

Used 6+ times

FREE Resource

9 questions

Show all answers

1.

MULTIPLE SELECT QUESTION

45 sec • 1 pt

Purpose of cell replication

Restoring cytoplasm in a newly divided cell

growth and development

Repiar and maintenance

Create new energy sources

Tags

NGSS.HS-LS1-4

2.

DROPDOWN QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

Cell replication in ​ (a)   is called ​ (b)   . This form of cell replication​ is an ​ (c)   process which means it doubles after each cycle of binary fission. Binary fission happens every 20 minutes in prokaryotes, which is considered ​ (d)   .

prokaryotes
exponential
fast
slow
binary fission
replication
DNA
plasmid
nucleus
mitosis

3.

REORDER QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

Media Image

Reorder the stages of binary fission in the correct order, use your diagram below. (Use the diagram as a hint, it does not necessarily correspond with the stage numbers)

DNA is moved to seperate poles of the cell

Two new identical daughter cells are created

DNA molecule replicates intro two circular strands

New cell wall and plasma membrane is formed

Cell grows twice its original size

Tags

NGSS.MS-LS3-2

4.

DRAG AND DROP QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

.​ (a)   is a type of cell replication seen in ​ (b)   . This form of cell replication contains several DISTINCT phases where the DNA is ​ (c)   and divided. The end result of this form of cell replication is two ​ (d)   ​ (e)   daughter cells.

mitosis
eukaryotes
duplicated
genetically
identical
meiosis
binary fission
unique
diverse
multiple

Tags

NGSS.HS-LS1-4

NGSS.HS-LS3-2

5.

MATCH QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

Match the following

Chromosomes align at the cell's equator

Anaphase

Nucleus breaks down, chromosome condense

Telophase

Chromosomes reach the poles and the nuclear envelope reforms

Interphase

Cell not undergoing replication

Prophase

Chromatids separate and move to opposite poles

Metaphase

Tags

NGSS.HS-LS1-4

6.

HOTSPOT QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

Identify the cell undergoing interphase in this pictures

Tags

NGSS.HS-LS1-4

7.

HOTSPOT QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

Identify the cell undergoing metaphase in this pictures

Tags

NGSS.HS-LS1-4

8.

LABELLING QUESTION

2 mins • 1 pt

Label the phases of mitosis

d
e
f
c
b
a

Metaphase

Anaphase

Cytokinesis

Telophase

Interphase

Prophase

Tags

NGSS.HS-LS1-4

9.

CLASSIFICATION QUESTION

3 mins • 1 pt

Organize these options into the right categories

Groups:

(a) Binary fission

,

(b) Mitosis

,

(c) Binary fission AND Mitosis

2 hours to fully replicate

Plasmids are used to help generate some genetic diversity

Used by Prokaryotes

nucleus breaks down during replication

Daughters cells are identical

Creates two daughter cells

Form of cell replication

20 minutes to fully replicate

Used by Eukaryotes

Contains multiple stages, pro, meta, ana, telophase

Tags

NGSS.HS-LS1-4