How does this all-female species reproduce? - Susana Freitas and Darren Parker

420,754 views

2023-04-06 ・ TED-Ed


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How does this all-female species reproduce? - Susana Freitas and Darren Parker

420,754 views ・ 2023-04-06

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:07
In 2021, workers at a Sardinian aquarium were stunned by the birth
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of a smoothhound shark, who they called Ispera.
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What shocked them was that, for the last decade,
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Ispera’s mother had been living only with other females.
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But it’s actually entirely possible that Ispera had no father—
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and the reason why that is also explains other biological curiosities,
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like the existence of an all-female lizard species.
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Usually sexual species have sex cells that contain
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half the number of chromosomes required to create a viable embryo.
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So an egg cell must be fertilized by a sperm cell
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to form two full sets of chromosomes.
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But some species that have sex cells can undergo
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a type of asexual reproduction called parthenogenesis—
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meaning “virgin origin” in Greek.
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In parthenogenesis, an embryo develops from an unfertilized egg cell
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that doubles its own chromosome count.
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In fact, some animals only ever undergo parthenogenesis,
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while others can reproduce both sexually and parthenogenetically.
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It's actually more common than previously thought.
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More than 80 different sexual vertebrate species—
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including Komodo dragons and certain kinds of turkeys, pythons, and sharks—
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have surprised us by occasionally reproducing this way.
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These discoveries were usually made when females
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unexpectedly gave birth in captivity.
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Ispera’s birth, for one, may have been the first account
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of parthenogenesis in smoothhound sharks.
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Scientists also confirmed that parthenogenesis was taking place
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in some wild snake populations.
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But just how many fatherless creatures are running, slithering, and swimming
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around out there is unknown:
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it’s a tough thing to track without population-wide genetic analyses.
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So, why is it happening at all?
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Scientists think parthenogenesis could be evolutionarily beneficial
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in some contexts because, well, sex can be a drag.
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Mating and its associated demands and rituals can be time- and energy-intensive,
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leave individuals vulnerable to predators, and even be fatal.
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Parthenogenesis, meanwhile, requires only one parent.
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Mayflies can sometimes default to parthenogenesis
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if there are no males available,
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which is especially handy because they’ve only got a day or so
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to reproduce before dying.
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It can also help rapidly expand a population.
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In the summer, when food is abundant,
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pea aphids can rely on parthenogenesis,
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allowing their population to explode under favorable conditions.
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And in the autumn, they switch back to sex.
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But some aphids, katydids, lizards, geckos, and snakes
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only ever reproduce via parthenogenesis.
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So, why do other animals bother with sex?
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Scientists hypothesize that sex makes up for its shortcomings with long-term gains.
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It allows individuals to mix their genes, leading to greater genetic diversity.
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That way, when the going gets tough,
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beneficial mutations can be selected and harmful ones can be removed
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without ending the entire population.
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In a parthenogenetic population, on the other hand,
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individuals can only reproduce using their own genetic material.
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According to a theory called Muller’s ratchet,
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that’s not good.
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The theory predicts that parthenogenetic lineages will accumulate harmful mutations
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over time and eventually, after thousands of generations,
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will reach a point of so-called mutational meltdown.
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At this stage, individuals will be so compromised that they can't reproduce,
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so the population will nosedive, leading to extinction.
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We haven’t yet seen this entire process unfold in nature.
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But scientists have observed an accumulation of harmful mutations
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in parthenogenetic stick insects that are absent in their sexual relatives.
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Only time will tell whether this will cause their extinction.
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Otherwise, some parthenogenetic species appear to have ways of circumventing
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a mutational meltdown.
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New Mexico whiptail lizards came about
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when two different lizard species hybridized,
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creating this new all-female species.
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As hybrids, their genome is a combination of the different sets of chromosomes
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from their two parent species.
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This gives them a high level of genetic diversity,
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which may allow them to survive long into the future.
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Bdelloid rotifers, meanwhile, have been reproducing parthenogenetically
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for 60 million years.
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They might have managed this by taking in foreign genetic material.
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Indeed, about 10% of their genes comes from other organisms,
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like fungi, bacteria, and algae.
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How exactly they do this is unclear,
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but whatever the trick is, it seems to be working.
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To totally untangle the mysteries of reproduction,
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we’ll need more research—
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and probably a few more surprises like Ispera.
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