Rome (Italy):Italian researchers have noted the first case of "virgin birth", or reproduction without fertilisation, in an endangered shark species, a scientific journal reported this week. The findings published in Scientific Reports concern the first case of the phenomenon in the common smooth-hound shark, Mustelus mustelus, a species threatened by illegal fishing that inhabits the Mediterranean and other warm waters.
Sharks Experiment
Researchers from the Experimental Zooprophylactic Institute of Piedmont, Liguria and the Aosta Valley found that two female M. mustelus sharks under observation in captivity had exhibited parthenogenesis -- in which a female can reproduce asexually without the need of sperm to fertilise the egg -- each year since 2020.
The two 18-year-old sharks have been at the Cala Gonone Aquarium in Sardinia since 2010. "Remarkably, this finding reveals that parthenogenesis can occur annually in these sharks, alternating between two females, and conclusively excludes long-term sperm storage as a cause," the study's authors wrote.
What Is Cycling Parthenogenesis?
Cycling parthenogenesis, in which progeny can be born either from fertilised eggs or asexually with unfertilised eggs, occurs in over 15,000 species, yet is not fully understood.
Parthenogenesis, which is more common in invertebrates than vertebrates, has not yet been seen in mammals. Reptiles and some sharks, rays and skates are able to "modify their adaptive strategy according to the surrounding circumstances", the authors wrote.
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