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Facultative parthenogenesis: a transient state in transitions between sex and obligate asexuality in stick insects? / Larose, Chloé; Lavanchy, Guillaume; Freitas, Susana et al.
In: Peer Community Journal, Vol. 3, e60, 13.07.2023.

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Larose, C., Lavanchy, G., Freitas, S., Parker, D., & Schwander, T. (2023). Facultative parthenogenesis: a transient state in transitions between sex and obligate asexuality in stick insects? Peer Community Journal, 3, Article e60. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.24072/pcjournal.283

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Larose C, Lavanchy G, Freitas S, Parker D, Schwander T. Facultative parthenogenesis: a transient state in transitions between sex and obligate asexuality in stick insects? Peer Community Journal. 2023 Jul 13;3:e60. Epub 2023 Jul 13. doi: 10.24072/pcjournal.283

Author

Larose, Chloé ; Lavanchy, Guillaume ; Freitas, Susana et al. / Facultative parthenogenesis: a transient state in transitions between sex and obligate asexuality in stick insects?. In: Peer Community Journal. 2023 ; Vol. 3.

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Facultative parthenogenesis: a transient state in transitions between sex and obligate asexuality in stick insects?

AU - Larose, Chloé

AU - Lavanchy, Guillaume

AU - Freitas, Susana

AU - Parker, Darren

AU - Schwander, Tanja

PY - 2023/7/13

Y1 - 2023/7/13

N2 - Transitions from obligate sex to obligate parthenogenesis have occurred repeatedly across the tree of life. Whether these transitions occur abruptly or via a transient phase of facultative parthenogenesis is rarely known. We discovered and characterised facultatively parthenogenetic populations of the North American stick insect Timema douglasi, a species in which only obligately parthenogenetic populations were known so far. These populations comprised three genetic lineages. Females from all lineages were capable of parthenogenesis (with variable efficiency) but their propensity to reproduce sexually after mating varied extensively. In all three lineages, parthenogenesis resulted in the complete loss of heterozygosity in a single generation. Obligately parthenogenetic Timema have also lost all heterozygosity, suggesting that the transition to obligate parthenogenesis did not require a modification of the proximate mechanism, but rather involved a gradual increase in frequency. We speculate that facultative parthenogenesis may often be transient and be replaced by obligate strategies (either sex or parthenogenesis) because of a trade-off between the efficiency of the two reproductive modes. Such a trade-off could help explain why facultative parthenogenesis is rare among animals, despite its potential to combine the known benefits of sex and parthenogenesis.

AB - Transitions from obligate sex to obligate parthenogenesis have occurred repeatedly across the tree of life. Whether these transitions occur abruptly or via a transient phase of facultative parthenogenesis is rarely known. We discovered and characterised facultatively parthenogenetic populations of the North American stick insect Timema douglasi, a species in which only obligately parthenogenetic populations were known so far. These populations comprised three genetic lineages. Females from all lineages were capable of parthenogenesis (with variable efficiency) but their propensity to reproduce sexually after mating varied extensively. In all three lineages, parthenogenesis resulted in the complete loss of heterozygosity in a single generation. Obligately parthenogenetic Timema have also lost all heterozygosity, suggesting that the transition to obligate parthenogenesis did not require a modification of the proximate mechanism, but rather involved a gradual increase in frequency. We speculate that facultative parthenogenesis may often be transient and be replaced by obligate strategies (either sex or parthenogenesis) because of a trade-off between the efficiency of the two reproductive modes. Such a trade-off could help explain why facultative parthenogenesis is rare among animals, despite its potential to combine the known benefits of sex and parthenogenesis.

U2 - 10.24072/pcjournal.283

DO - 10.24072/pcjournal.283

M3 - Article

VL - 3

JO - Peer Community Journal

JF - Peer Community Journal

SN - 2804-3871

M1 - e60

ER -