Evidence for viable, non-clonal but fatherless Boa constrictors

Author:

Booth Warren1,Johnson Daniel H.2,Moore Sharon3,Schal Coby1,Vargo Edward L.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Entomology and W. M. Center for Behavioral Biology, North Carolina State University, Box 7613, Raleigh, NC 27695-7613, USA

2. Avian and Exotic Animal Care, PA, Raleigh, NC 27617, USA

3. The Boastore, Sneedville, TN 37869, USA

Abstract

Parthenogenesis in vertebrates is considered an evolutionary novelty. In snakes, all of which exhibit genetic sex determination with ZZ : ZW sex chromosomes, this rare form of asexual reproduction has failed to yield viable female WW offspring. Only through complex experimental manipulations have WW females been produced, and only in fish and amphibians. Through microsatellite DNA fingerprinting, we provide the first evidence of facultative parthenogenesis in a Boa constrictor , identifying multiple, viable, non-experimentally induced females for the first time in any vertebrate lineage. Although the elevated homozygosity of the offspring in relation to the mother suggests that the mechanism responsible may be terminal fusion automixis, no males were produced, potentially indicating maternal sex chromosome hemizygosity (WO). These findings provide the first evidence of parthenogenesis in the family Boidae (Boas), and suggest that WW females may be more common within basal reptilian lineages than previously assumed.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)

Reference20 articles.

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4. Olsen M. W.. 1975 Avian parthenogenesis. Agricultural Research Service USDA ARS-NE-65 1–82.

5. Production of offspring in the absense of males: evidence for facultative parthenogenesis in bisexual snakes;Schuett G. W.;Herpetol. Nat. Hist.,1997

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