Publication | Open Access
Virgin birth in a hammerhead shark
177
Citations
11
References
2007
Year
Reproductive HealthSexual SelectionAnatomyReproductive BiologyPersonhoodFertilisationEmbryologyGross AnatomyVirgin BirthAutomictic ParthenogenesisPublic HealthHammerhead SharkReproductive SuccessMorphogenesisBiologyDevelopmental BiologyVertebrate DevelopmentEvolutionary Developmental BiologyEvolutionary BiologySphyrna TiburoMedicine
Parthenogenesis has been documented in all major jawed vertebrate lineages except mammals and cartilaginous fishes (class Chondrichthyes: sharks, batoids and chimeras). Reports of captive female sharks giving birth despite being held in the extended absence of males have generally been ascribed to prior matings coupled with long-term sperm storage by the females. Here, we provide the first genetic evidence for chondrichthyan parthenogenesis, involving a hammerhead shark (Sphyrna tiburo). This finding also broadens the known occurrence of a specific type of asexual development (automictic parthenogenesis) among vertebrates, extending recently raised concerns about the potential negative effect of this type of facultative parthenogenesis on the genetic diversity of threatened vertebrate species.
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