Clone alone: Who needs sex?
We’re discovering many females can make babies without any
male help. So why do animals bother with the messy business of sex at all?
The baby pit viper is with its only parent, and is a clone of her (Image: Charles Smith)
See more in our image gallery: "Who needs sex? Six
animals that cloned alone"
JUST over a
decade ago, a baby hammerhead shark slipped silently from its mother's belly
into the welcoming waters of the aquarium at the Henry Doorly Zoo in Nebraska,
creating ripples that are still spreading around the world. The mother had had
no contact with male sharks for at least three years, and DNA tests confirmed
that the
pup had no father. "It was unprecedented," says shark geneticist
Demian Chapman of Stony Brook University in New York, who carried out the
paternity test. It was the first virgin birth ever confirmed in a shark.
The pup's
unexpected arrival was swiftly followed by an unexpected departure: it was
killed by a stingray only a few days later. Yet it has since become apparent
that the pup was not
as singular as first thought. In the past few years, many other vertebrates
have been shown to produce offspring by virgin births. All of which begs the
question: why do we animals bother with males at all?
Until
recently, virgin births in animals that reproduce sexually were seen as an
anomaly – something that simply does not happen in the wild. "The dogma is
that this is a captive syndrome only seen in animals in zoos and aquaria,"
says Warren Booth of the University of Tulsa in Oklahoma.
This view is
understandable given that in mammals, virgin birth – or parthenogenesis – is
abnormal and extremely rare. Eggs do sometimes start developing without being
fertilised by a sperm, but the embryos usually die or turn cancerous. One
boy is known to be partly the result of a "virgin birth" – his
body is a chimera
of normal cells and cells formed by parthenogenesis. But full virgin
births do not occur naturally in mammals because our paternal and maternal
genes are stamped with different chemical marks or "imprints".
Without both sets, gene activity is disrupted.
Aside from
mammals, though, virgin births are turning out be surprisingly common. The list
of vertebrates known to be able to reproduce parthenogenetically as well as
sexually now includes several shark species, boa constrictors, turkeys and
Komodo dragons. The biggest surprise is that it seems to happen in the wild,
not just in captivity.
Last year,
Booth and his colleagues analysed 59 litters from two species of North American
pit viper, caught when they were already pregnant (Biology
Letters, vol 8, p 983). Two of the litters were virgin births – the
first recorded cases in the wild (one of these snakes and its offspring are
pictured above right). "We think this type of reproduction is a lot more
common in reptiles and certain other animals than was previously thought,"
says Booth. "It's really changing the way we think about reproduction in
reptiles."
Even more
astonishingly, the pit vipers were caught in areas with plenty of males. So
these snakes do not seem to be reproducing this way only as a last resort when
mates are scarce.
Indeed, as
evolutionary biologists and any girl who has ever dumped her boyfriend will
tell you, there are many benefits to doing away with males. In female-only
species, every individual can produce offspring, so the population can grow
faster than species with males and females. Time spent looking for love means
less time looking for food, and there is the risk of catching a nasty disease
during mating or being eaten while distracted. To top it all, sex randomly
shuffles the genetic deck creating new, potentially flawed blends of genes when
the old ones tend to be working perfectly well. All of which makes the
preponderance of sex in the animal kingdom something of an enigma.
So can
vertebrates manage without males? The first hint they can came in 1932 with the
discovery of an all-female species of fish found in southern Texas and northern
Mexico: Amazon mollies (Poecilia formosa), named after the legendary
tribe of female warriors.
Even though
there are no male Amazon mollies, it turns out that the females still need
males. Their eggs will not develop unless stimulated by sperm. So they court
and mate with males from any one of several related species, but the offspring
inherit only the mother's DNA – a phenomenon called gynogenesis. This peculiar
arrangement means Amazon mollies can only live in the vicinity of one of these
other species.
Altogether,
around 90 female-only species of fish, amphibians and reptiles have now been
discovered, but like the molly most still need males of other species to be
present. The rest, including some whiptail lizards and geckos, seem to thrive
without any male involvement at all, though they do show signs of mating
behaviour: the whiptail
lizards pseudocopulate with other females of the species, earning them the
nickname "lesbian lizards". "But in my view that's no different
to two dogs mounting. It's about establishing dominance," says Peter Baumann of the Stowers
Institute for Medical Research in Kansas, Missouri, who studies
parthenogenesis.
So a few
species do not need males at all. The question is why the number is so low,
given that in theory females that reproduce only by parthenogenesis should
produce more offspring and outcompete sexual ones. While much remains to be
discovered, there appear to be several reasons why the male of the species is
needed. One could be that all-female species soon go extinct.
All-female species
Models
suggest that unisexual species can do fine in the short term, but in the long run they run
into trouble as their genomes stagnate. Without the ability to reshuffle their
genome and get rid of harmful mutations, their survival time is likely to be
between 10,000 and 100,000 generations (Evolution, vol 44, p 1725).
The whiptail
lizards and geckos have not reached this limit yet, but some all-female species
are much older. The Amazon molly is about 280,000 years, or 800,000 generations
old. And it is a mere whippersnapper compared with another gynogenetic species,
the Ambystoma mole salamanders that live around the Great Lakes region
of North America. This all-female species appeared around 5 million years ago,
so it has survived for about 1 million generations. How do these species manage
it? They cheat by stealing DNA.
After they
mate with males from other species, the DNA in the sperm is usually discarded,
but every now and then part of it is incorporated into the genome of the
offspring. Mollies occasionally steal fragments of chromosomes, while mole
salamanders plunder entire sets. Jim Bogart at the University of Guelph in
Ontario, Canada, has coined the
term "kleptogenesis" to describe the process. He think it allows
the females to get hold of genes that are better adapted to their current
environment and thus compete with sexual animals.
The
unisexual salamanders can dump entire sets of chromosomes, too, which helps
prevent the build-up of harmful mutations, Bogart says. "The system is very
cool and is driven by natural selection – when a clone runs into problems, new
clones evolve."
So unless
all-female species can nick genes from males, they may not survive long. What's
more, the creation of a unisexual species also seems to require unusual
circumstances. There is no evidence that a single sexual species can slowly
evolve into an all-female one. Instead, every unisexual species discovered so
far, with just one possible exception, was created instantaneously by two
species interbreeding. The unisexual whiptail lizard Aspidoscelis
neomexicana, for example, was formed in one fell swoop when a male A.
inornata had sex with a female A. tigris. One mating was all it took
to instantly create a new species.
This is, as
you might expect, incredibly rare: most interspecies hybrids are either sterile
or can reproduce sexually with one or both parent species. But there is no
doubt it does happen. In 2011, Baumann's team managed to create a new unisexual
species in the lab by fertilising eggs from one unisexual whiptail lizard
species with sperm from a sexual species (PNAS, vol 108, p 9910).
This merging
of two different genomes may help unisexual species get off to a good start, by
giving them the hybrid vigour seen when plants are crossbred. What's more,
these hybrids reproduce in a special way. There are different forms of
parthenogenesis, producing either half clones or full clones (see
diagram). Species that have managed to ditch males, like the unisexual
whiptail lizards, produce full
clones.
Abandoning sex
Animals that
only occasionally resort to parthenogenesis almost always produce half clones, however, and these
are likely to suffer from severe inbreeding because they get a double dose of
any harmful mutations. This could be why few survive. Parthenogenic pitviper
litters contain fewer eggs, with the occasional live healthy hatchling but many
more stillborn and deformed baby snakes, for instance. So abandoning sex does
not offer the big advantage in terms of producing more offspring that theory
suggests.
Last but not
least, virgin births do not always produce daughters as you might expect. In
birds and some reptiles, the females possess both male and female sex
chromosomes, which means in theory they could produce both males and females by
parthenogenesis. In practice, boa constrictors only seem to have female virgin
births – but pit vipers and turkeys have only been observed to have male virgin
births (see "A
turkey's tale").
In these
species, then, far from being a way to do without males, virgin birth is a way
of making more of them. "The theory is that if you have a lone female
snake on an island, she can reproduce asexually to produce a male, and then
breed back with it sexually to produce more offspring," says Booth. We do
not know if this is the case yet. Booth is keeping a watchful eye on his pit
viper offspring, to see if and how they reproduce.
But the
evidence so far suggests that males can relax. Some females may be able make
babies without them, but sooner or later their descendants have to resort to
having sex with males again if they want to avoid extinction. Now there's a
boost for the male ego.
This
article appeared in print under the headline "Look, no dad!"
A turkey's tale
Virgin birth appears to be an extremely rare phenomenon in birds. There have been anecdotal reports of it in chickens, but these have not been confirmed.
The only bird that is undoubtedly capable of producing healthy offspring this way is, appropriately enough, the bird eaten to celebrate a mythical virgin birth. Yes, the turkey.
In the 1950s, researchers at the Beltsville Agricultural Research Center in Maryland discovered Beltsville Small White turkeys sometimes produced male offspring by parthenogenesis. Most were able to develop and reproduce normally. The researchers managed to increase the frequency of such births by selective breeding.
Helen Pilcher is a freelance writer based in the UK. Follow her on @HelenPilcher1
- From issue 2906 of New Scientist magazine, page 34-36.
From New Scientist @ http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21729061.600-clone-alone-who-needs-sex.html?full=true
For more information about new views of evolution see http://nexusilluminati.blogspot.com/search/label/evolution
- See ‘Older Posts’ at the end of each section
YOU can help this unique
independent website survive and stay online from a small cabin in a remote
rainforest
Donate any amount and receive at least one New Illuminati eBook!
Please click in the
jar -
Images – https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjokyNuKPLhDOOLr2xTn5ffjng13Aga2r3ATOI3wt8LP_vm-xPKUJoU6cPZ_3G5leYLooL7G_h50vgF-he0RMX2g9auy1REJxtQHP-7b9-_6taUbur_s0gQoGEaDQ3bv3rqKvCM3WNJXvcj/s1600/parthenogenesis.jpg
http://universe-review.ca/I10-82-parthenogenesis.jpg
http://universe-review.ca/I10-82-parthenogenesis.jpg
For further enlightening
information enter a word or phrase into the random synchronistic search box @ http://nexusilluminati.blogspot.com
And see
New Illuminati – http://nexusilluminati.blogspot.com
New Illuminati on Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/the.new.illuminati
New Illuminati Youtube Channel - http://www.youtube.com/user/newilluminati/feed
The Her(m)etic Hermit - http://hermetic.blog.com
The Prince of Centraxis - http://centraxis.blogspot.com (Be Aware! This link leads to implicate &
xplicit concepts & images!)
DISGRUNTLED SITE ADMINS PLEASE NOTE –
We provide a live link to your original material on your site - which
raises your ranking on search engines and helps spread your info further! This site
is published under Creative Commons Fair Use Copyright (unless an individual article
or other item is declared otherwise by copyright holder) – reproduction for non-profit
use is permitted & encouraged, if you give attribution to the work &
author - and please include a (preferably active) link to the original (along
with this or a similar notice).
Feel free
to make non-commercial hard (printed) or software copies or mirror sites - you
never know how long something will stay glued to the web – but remember
attribution! If you like what you see, please send a donation (no amount is too
small or too large) or leave a comment – and thanks for reading this far…
Live long
and prosper!
From the New
Illuminati – http://nexusilluminati.blogspot.com
Make sure you explain to me that you're going to preserve this up! Its so very good and so critical. I cant wait around to read much more from you. I just feel like you know so a lot and know how to make men and women listen to what you have to say. This website is just as well amazing to be skipped. Great things, really. You should, You should keep it up!
ReplyDeleteDriving schools in burtonsville
driving classes in md