Virgin births may be common in the wild

jobberone

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Wild female pit vipers can reproduce without a male, suggesting virgin births may take place in nature far more than before thought.

Asexual reproduction
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is common among invertebrates — that is, animals without backbones. It occurs rarely in vertebrates, but examples of it are increasingly being discovered. For instance, the Komodo dragon
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, the world's largest living lizard, has given birth via parthenogenesis, in which an unfertilized egg develops to maturity. Such virgin births
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have also been seen in sharks
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at least twice; in birds such as chickens and turkeys; and in snakes such as pit vipers
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and boa constrictors
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.


Although virgin birth has been observed in vertebrates in captivity, scientists had not yet seen it happen in the wild. This raised the possibility that such asexual reproduction might just be a rare curiosity outside the mainstream of vertebrate evolution.
 
jobberone;4772887 said:
Wild female pit vipers can reproduce without a male, suggesting virgin births may take place in nature far more than before thought.

Asexual reproduction
external-link.png
is common among invertebrates — that is, animals without backbones. It occurs rarely in vertebrates, but examples of it are increasingly being discovered. For instance, the Komodo dragon
external-link.png
, the world's largest living lizard, has given birth via parthenogenesis, in which an unfertilized egg develops to maturity. Such virgin births
external-link.png
have also been seen in sharks
external-link.png
at least twice; in birds such as chickens and turkeys; and in snakes such as pit vipers
external-link.png
and boa constrictors
external-link.png
.


Although virgin birth has been observed in vertebrates in captivity, scientists had not yet seen it happen in the wild. This raised the possibility that such asexual reproduction might just be a rare curiosity outside the mainstream of vertebrate evolution.

It's a helluva clever evolutionary trick to keep your genes in circulation. If/When the breeding population has become so fragmented that a suitable male cannot be found for faculative reproduction, she does so on her own.

Nature finds a way.
 
Keep this one between lines gentlemen and gentlewomen.
 
justbob;4772923 said:
Keep this one between lines gentlemen and gentlewomen.

Yeah, I didn't post this when I first noticed it several days ago because I was afraid it might cause trouble. We'll just watch it closely.
 

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