Inheritance & EvolutionMemory Aid

Memory Aids

Part of CloningGCSE Biology

This memory aid covers Memory Aids within Cloning for GCSE Biology. Cloning techniques, applications, and ethical considerations It is section 8 of 12 in this topic. Use it for quick recall, then test yourself straight afterwards so the memory aid becomes usable in an answer.

Topic position

Section 8 of 12

Practice

25 questions

Recall

20 flashcards

Memory Aids

Dolly the sheep — NINES steps:

"Dolly NINES her way into life."

  • N — Nucleus taken from donor body cell
  • I — Into an enucleated egg cell
  • N — Nucleus inserted into egg
  • E — Electric shock triggers division
  • S — Surrogate mother carries the embryo

Natural vs Artificial cloning — spot them quickly:

  • Natural: identical twins, plant runners, bacterial division, bulbs, tubers
  • Artificial: tissue culture, adult cell cloning (e.g., Dolly), embryo splitting
  • Memory trick: "Nature was cloning before scientists — twins and runners came first."

Quick Check: Describe how Dolly the sheep was produced. Include the names of the organisms involved and the role of each.

Quick Check: A botanist wants to produce 1,000 identical copies of a rare orchid as quickly as possible. Explain how tissue culture could be used to achieve this and state one advantage over taking 1,000 individual cuttings.

Quick Check: Explain why a cloned organism may not be identical to the original organism in appearance and behaviour, even though it has the same DNA.

Keep building this topic

Read this section alongside the surrounding pages in Cloning. That gives you the full topic sequence instead of a single isolated revision point.

Practice Questions for Cloning

What is the name of the first mammal to be cloned from an adult cell?

  • A. Dolly the sheep
  • B. Woolly the dog
  • C. Nemo the cat
  • D. Rex the cow
1 markfoundation

What is the process called when a plant is grown from a cutting?

2 marksstandard

Quick Recall Flashcards

What was significant about Dolly the sheep?
Dolly (born 1996) was the first mammal cloned from an adult (somatic) cell. This proved that a specialised adult cell could be reprogrammed to create a whole organism — previously scientists thought adult cells had permanently 'switched off' the genes not needed for their function.
What is a clone?
A genetically identical copy of an organism. Clones have exactly the same DNA as their parent. Cloning occurs naturally (e.g. identical twins, bacterial reproduction) and can be done artificially in plants and animals.

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