
SINGLE PARENTA study reveals that blacktip sharks, Carcharhinus limbatus, may be able to reproduce without mating.Matthew D. Potenski
When male sharks are not available, female sharks may have a
back-up option for reproduction — do it themselves.
The same team of geneticists that verified the first-ever
“virgin” shark birth in May 2007 has confirmed a sex-free pregnancy in a
different species of live-birthing shark, Carcharhinus
limbatus. The finding, published in the Oct. 10 Journal of Fish Biology, suggests that many female sharks may have
the ability to reproduce without mating.
Geneticists contacted the Virginia Aquarium after they heard
a resident female blacktip shark — who had lived in isolation from males of her
species for the previous eight years — was pregnant.
The mother-to-be, “Tidbit,” had died during a routine
tranquilization, and the necropsy, or animal autopsy, showed that, unbeknownst
to the aquarium, she was close to term with a well-developed embryo.
Mahmood Shivji of the Guy Harvey Research Institute of Nova
Southeastern University in Dania Beach,
Florida, and his colleagues used
DNA fingerprint analysis to test the embryo’s DNA for paternal markings. The
embryo, which was also dead by the time it was discovered, did not show any
genetic markings of having a father, says Shivji.
Shivji and his colleagues think the pregnancy occurred
through an asexual reproductive process called parthenogenesis, found in
certain types of reptiles, birds and more recently discovered in vertebrates
such as Komodo dragons. In this form of reproduction the mother’s chromosomes
split during egg development and pair with a copy of themselves.
Unlike parthenogenesis in birds and reptiles, which can
result in male offspring (and the possibility of future mates) since females
carry two types of sex chromosomes, in sharks the resulting embryo will always
be female because the mother only has X chromosomes to contribute.
Parthenogenesis also results in decreased genetic diversity
because it only offers the mother’s chromosomes. Lead author Demian Chapman of the
Institute for Ocean Conservation Science at Stony
Brook University
in New York warns
that asexual reproduction could result in more congenital defects and weakened
immune system problems that could be problematic for surviving in the wild.
In both confirmed cases of shark parthenogenesis the shark produced
only one female pup, as opposed to average litters of four to six pups.
Because of these reasons, “This is not the great white hope
for the shark population,” Chapman points out. “This is not a solution to overfishing,”
he says.
Jackie Wilson, a fisheries management specialist with the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Washington,
D.C., says the blacktip shark was included in
the large coastal shark group labeled as “overfished” in the 2002 assessment of
the Atlantic Ocean by NOAA. Since July, large
coastal sharks in the Atlantic have been protected
with new commercial fishing restrictions that place the fishing limit at 187.8
metric tons per year.
Amongst scientists, there is no consensus on what triggers
parthenogenesis in sharks.
“We
still don't know whether it occurs in the wild or would really have any
significant impact on shark population rebounds even if it occurred relatively
frequently,” comments Mike Heithaus, director of the Marine Science Program at Florida International
University in North Miami. Still, he says there is “a lot
of interesting work to be done on shark reproduction — as this study
illustrates — which is important in light of the collapses in populations.”
Chapman thinks that parthenogenesis can occur in the wild,
but that it is less likely because there are more males. “The reason this has
happened in captivity isn’t because there’s a change in their reproductive
biology,” he explains. “It is more likely to happen if female sharks aren’t
having enough dates,” he says. “These females did it because they were in
captivity and ovulating.”
In both confirmed cases of shark parthenogenesis the mother sharks
were born in the wild, caught as young pups and then lived in captivity
isolated from males of their species.
Although sharks have been known to store sperm for as long
as a year, Chapman points out that the pups were caught young and “glands that
hold sperm at that age are not fully developed.”
Last year, when Chapman and his colleagues studied the first
sex-free birth in a bonnethead shark — a small type of hammerhead — he assumed
it was a case of stored sperm until DNA fingerprint analysis showed there were
no male contributions. Even then, he said, he still thought parthenogenesis “only
happens as an occasional fluke.” He now thinks, “It’s definitely more common
and widespread than we think.”
Chapman is currently testing to confirm another reported case
of parthenogenesis in a white spotted bamboo shark with Kevin Feldheim of the Field Museum
in Chicago.
“I think in the next five years we will be able to show many
species of sharks — if not all — [have this ability],” says Chapman.
Found in: Life
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