Like all ciliates,
Blepharisma reproduce asexually, by
binary fission, dividing transversally. Fission may occur spontaneously, as part of the
vegetative cell cycle, or it may follow a sexual phenomenon called
conjugation, a process through which genetic material is exchanged between cells. In conjugation, two organisms come into close contact, and a temporary cytoplasmic bridge forms between them. The
micronuclei of each cell then undergo
meiosis, and
haploid micronuclei pass from one individual to the other. This permits the reshuffling of hereditary characteristics, as in other types of
sexual reproduction. Conjugation is immediately followed by binary fission of the two conjugants. In
Blepharisma, as in some other ciliates, chemical substances called gamones are used to induce conjugation by stimulating interaction between compatible mating partners. Although clonal cells of
Blepharisma are sometimes able to conjugate with one another (a phenomenon known as
selfing), conjugation ordinarily involves the interaction of cells of different mating types. In the species
Blepharisma japonicum, there are two mating types (I and II), each type excreting a specific pheromone (termed gamone 1 and gamone 2, respectively). When sexually mature mating-type I cells are moderately starved, they autonomously produce and secrete gamone I. ==Feeding and behavior==