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Sharks

Shark makes her own babies — without a mate

Arden Dier
Newser Staff
This is what a zebra shark looks like. A boy and his mother watch as a diver feeds the fish in the Tropical Pacific Gallery at the Aquarium of the Pacific in Los Angeles.

(NEWSER)– Australia's Reef HQ aquarium had hoped to scale back its shark breeding program. Its female sharks had other ideas. Over the course of six years, Leonie the zebra or leopard shark had produced more than two dozen offspring before she was separated from her mate in 2012. But in 2016, Leonie — who hadn't been introduced to another male — laid eggs which produced hatchlings, reports New Scientist. While sharks are known to store sperm for up to four years, per the Guardian, these hatchlings contained DNA from Leonie only. In essence, she made the offspring herself, marking the first time a switch from sexual to asexual reproduction had been witnessed among sharks, researchers explain in Scientific Reports.

Asexual reproduction itself is not so unusual; when males are scarce, it lets species from snakes to turkeys survive until mates can be found, though it "reduces genetic diversity and adaptability" and leads to "extreme inbreeding," says study author Christine Dudgeon. One of Leonie's offspring who'd never reproduced sexually also produced hatchlings using eggs fertilized by a cell known as a polar body. But it was Leonie's switch from sexual to asexual reproduction that was a "really big surprise," Dudgeon tells the Brisbane Times. An eagle ray and boa constrictor are the only known vertebrates to have completed the same feat, which experts now acknowledge could occur more often than they realize. (Read about a snake's virgin birth.)

This story originally appeared on Newser:

Separated From Mate, Shark Makes Her Own Babies

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