LEVIATHAN

Lovers of Entertainment featuring Various Insurrections of the Abyss Told as Hydrographic Adventure Narratives

Saturday, May 26, 2007

Captive Shark Has "Virgin Birth"!

From the BBC:

Female hammerhead sharks can reproduce without having sex, scientists confirm.

The evidence comes from a shark at Henry Doorly Zoo in Nebraska which gave birth to a pup in 2001 despite having had no contact with a male.

Genetic tests by a team from Belfast, Nebraska and Florida prove conclusively the young animal possessed no paternal DNA, Biology Letters journal reports.

The type of reproduction exhibited had been seen before in bony fish but never in cartilaginous fish such as sharks.

Parthenogenesis, as this type of reproduction is known, occurs when an egg cell is triggered to develop as an embryo without the addition of any genetic material from a male sperm cell.

The puzzle over the hammerhead birth was reported widely in 2001, but it is only with the emergence of new DNA profiling techniques that scientists have now been able to show irrefutably what happened.

Unfortunately, there is a dark side to this tale of wonder. Read on:

Dr Paulo Prodohl, a co-author on the Biology Letters paper from Queen's School of Biological Sciences, said: "Vertebrates in general have evolved away from parthenogenesis to boost genetic diversity and enhance evolutionary potential.

"The concern for sharks is that not only could we be reducing their numbers but we could be making them less fit as well."

"Our findings will now have to be taken into consideration for any conservation management strategy, especially for overexploited species."

The birth of the hammerhead (of the bonnethead species, Sphyrna tiburo) at Henry Doorly was as tragic as it was puzzling.

The new pup was soon killed by a stingray before keepers could remove it from its tank.

But at the end of the day, I can't help but think this lady hammerhead won this particular round of Science vs. Creature:

At the time, some theorised that a male tiger shark kept at the zoo could have been the father - but the institution's three bonnethead females had none of the bite marks that are usually inflicted on their gender during shark sex.

Some even suggested that one of the females could have had sex in the wild and stored the sperm in her body - but the three-year period in captivity made this explanation highly unlikely.

The new tests on the dead pup's tissues now show the newborn's DNA only matched up with one of the females - and there was none of any male origin.

Although extremely rare in vertebrates, parthenogenesis (out of the Greek for "virgin birth") occurs in a number of lower animals. Insects such as bees and ants use it to produce their drones, for example.

Also from the BBC, this helpful diagram:



Discuss.

2 Comments:

Blogger Zak said...

Was the parthenogenetic pup a reincarnated--and almost instantaneously deincarnated--Steve Irwin? What did the Croc Hunter do to be doomed to such a narrow circle of karmic retribution?

And I'm shocked scientists are ignoring the possibility that, far from this being a "virgin birth," the Shark Madonna may have been getting busy with the other female sharks in her tank. Perhaps the erstwhile pup had two (or three) mommies!

10:41 PM  
Blogger Allan Hazlett said...

Surely if the shark had relations with the other females there would be the characteristic pillow-fight marks that are usually inflicted, no?

9:28 PM  

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