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Title

Parthenogenesis in Komodo dragons.

Authors

Watts, Phillip C.; Buley, Kevin R.; Sanderson, Stephanie; Boardman, Wayne; Ciofi, Claudio; Gibson, Richard

Abstract

Parthenogenesis, the production of offspring without fertilization by a male, is rare in vertebrate species, which usually reproduce after fusion of male and female gametes. Here we use genetic fingerprinting to identify parthenogenetic offspring produced by two female Komodo dragons (Varanus komodoensis) that had been kept at separate institutions and isolated from males; one of these females subsequently produced additional offspring sexually. This reproductive plasticity indicates that female Komodo dragons may switch between asexual and sexual reproduction, depending on the availability of a mate — a finding that has implications for the breeding of this threatened species in captivity. Most zoos keep only females, with males being moved between zoos for mating, but perhaps they should be kept together to avoid triggering parthenogenesis and thereby decreasing genetic diversity.

Subjects

PARTHENOGENESIS in animals; KOMODO dragon; OVUM; DNA fingerprinting; ASEXUAL reproduction; ZOO animals; REPRODUCTION

Publication

Nature, 2006, Vol 444, Issue 7122, p1021

ISSN

0028-0836

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1038/4441021a

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