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Owlscrying
Indonesian dragons can breed without the benefit of masculine companionship. Researchers reported that the only two sexually mature female Komodo dragons in all of Europe laid viable eggs without insemination from a male. One Komodo, named Flora, lives at the Chester Zoo in England and has never been kept with a male; yet a few months ago she laid a clutch of 11 eggs, eight of which seem to be developing normally. Earlier this year, a now deceased female named Sungai from the London Zoo laid a clutch of 22 eggs, four of which yielded normal male dragons--even though Sungai hadn't had a date in two and a half years.

These "virgin births" raised eyebrows because this asexual method of reproduction, called parthenogenesis, is rare among vertebrates: only about 70 backboned species can do it (that's about 0.1 percent of all vertebrates). Biologists have known that some lizards can engage in parthenogenesis, but nonetheless seeing it among Komodo dragons surprised zookeepers.

Despite having only a mother, the offspring are not clones. That's because an unfertilized egg has only half the genes of the mother. The sperm is supposed to provide the other half. In parthenogenesis, the mother's half-set of chromosomes doubles up to generate the full complement. Hence, the offspring derives all its genes from the mother, but they are not a duplicate of her genome.

Komodos have a curious twist in their sex determination as well. Although we think of females being XX (that is, having two X chromosomes) and males as being XY, it's the other way around in these giant monitor lizards. Two identical sex chromosomes make a male Komodo, and two different ones make a female. Biologists label the Komodo's sex chromosomes as W and Z, so ZZ makes a male and WZ makes a female. Birds, some insects and a few other lizard species also rely on this sex-determination system. (Embryos of some reptiles--notably crocodiles and turtles--don't have any sex chromosomes; rather, the incubation temperature dictates their gender.)

In Komodo females, each egg contains either a W or a Z. Parthenogenesis hence leads to embryos that are either WW or ZZ. Eggs that consist of WW material are not viable and die off (just as YY is not a viable combination); in contrast, ZZ does work. So all the Komodo hatchlings have been and will be male (ZZ).

Evidently, in the case of these Komodos, the doubling of the egg genes occurred when, in essence, another egg, rather than sperm, did the job of fertilization. Oogenesis, the biological process of making an egg cell, typically also yields a polar body--a mini ovum of sorts, containing a duplicate copy of egg DNA. Normally, this polar body shrivels up and disappears. In the case of the Komodos, though, polar bodies evidently acted as sperm and turned ova into embryos.

The ability to reproduce both sexually and parthenogenetically probably resulted from the Komodo dragon's isolated natural habitat, living as it does on islands in the Indonesian archipelago. Researchers have seen other species resort to parthenogenesis when isolated, such as damselflies in the Azores. The ability, researchers speculate, may have enabled the dragons to establish new colonies if females had found themselves washed up alone on neighboring shores, as might happen during a storm.

But as the Komodo dragons' astonishing parthenogenesis feat shows, nature has plenty to teach us about making do without a mate.

go
robbieb
this is nouting new it happens very often in reptiles in fact theres a hybrid of two species of lizard that would be sterile but these reptiles possesed the genes nessicary to do this kind of reproduction so theres a very large population of lizard hybrids that are all females and basicly clones of themselves the body of the animals that do this give birth to clones of themselves fish reptiles and amphibans all can do this its a good way to give a population a boost of females tro help keep species alive
aussiemermaid
Very interesting!
I know that Seahorses and some snakes can actually change their sex IE turn from Male into Female!
Buts its kinda crazy, because its the belif of the "myth" that you need to have a male and female to have offspring...
robbieb
umm i belive u mean certain fish and amphibans havent heard of sea horses or snakes changing sex before although male sae horses are the ones that give birth
aussiemermaid
QUOTE(robbieb @ Apr 5 2007, 05:32 AM) [snapback]1614104[/snapback]
umm i belive u mean certain fish and amphibans havent heard of sea horses or snakes changing sex before although male sae horses are the ones that give birth


The male seahorse changes sex to have the offspring- and i meant worms, not snakes-sorry my bad
Raptor
QUOTE(aussiemermaid @ Apr 7 2007, 08:43 AM) [snapback]1617145[/snapback]
The male seahorse changes sex to have the offspring- and i meant worms, not snakes-sorry my bad


Male seahorses become pregnant, rather than the females. Never heard of them actually changing their sex though.
aussiemermaid
QUOTE(Raptor X7 @ Apr 7 2007, 08:33 AM) [snapback]1617180[/snapback]
Male seahorses become pregnant, rather than the females. Never heard of them actually changing their sex though.

Well maybe i am wrong...but im sure thats what i was taught!


Just found:
Seahorses reproduce in an unusual way: the male becomes pregnant. As stated on The Seahorse Project, "The female inserts her ovipositor into the male’s brood pouch, where she deposits her eggs, which the male fertilizes. The fertilized eggs then embed in the pouch wall and become enveloped with tissues."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seahorse

Your right!! Sorry about that though!!- i knew they were weird some how!, But i thought that what i was told
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