Difference Between Fragmentation and Fission

Difference Between Fragmentation and Fission

Both fragmentation and fission are methods of asexual reproduction, but they occur in different organisms and involve different processes.

1. Definition

  • Fragmentation: A form of asexual reproduction in which an organism breaks into two or more fragments, and each fragment grows into a new, complete organism.
  • Fission: A form of asexual reproduction in which a single parent cell divides into two or more daughter cells, each becoming an independent organism.

2. Type of Organism

  • Fragmentation: Common in multicellular organisms, e.g., spirogyra, planaria, algae, fungi.
  • Fission: Common in unicellular organisms, e.g., amoeba, bacteria, paramecium.

3. Process

  • Fragmentation: The body of the organism splits into fragments; each fragment regenerates missing parts.
  • Fission: The nucleus divides first (mitosis), followed by the cytoplasm, producing daughter cells.

4. Number of Offspring

  • Fragmentation: Usually produces few offspring, depending on the number of fragments.
  • Fission: Produces two or more offspring, depending on the type of fission (binary, multiple).

5. Regeneration

  • Fragmentation: Requires regeneration of lost parts for each fragment to form a complete organism.
  • Fission: Does not require regeneration; each new cell is already complete.

Summary Table:

FeatureFragmentationFission
DefinitionBody breaks into fragments, each grows into a new organismSingle cell divides into daughter cells
Type of OrganismMulticellularUnicellular
ProcessBody splits; fragments regenerateNucleus divides, then cytoplasm divides
Number of OffspringDepends on fragmentsUsually 2 (binary) or more (multiple)
RegenerationRequiredNot required
ExamplesPlanaria, Spirogyra, FungiAmoeba, Bacteria, Paramecium

Key Point:

  • Fragmentation: Multicellular, involves splitting and regeneration.
  • Fission: Unicellular, involves cell division without regeneration.