The Animals That Can Have Virgin Births | Smartest Year Ever (Dec 26, 2025)

26/12/2025 4 min Temporada 12 Episodio 26

Listen "The Animals That Can Have Virgin Births | Smartest Year Ever (Dec 26, 2025)"

Episode Synopsis

In this episode of Smartest Year Ever, Gordy explores one of biology’s strangest loopholes — parthenogenesis, a rare form of asexual reproduction where an animal can develop from an unfertilized egg.For decades, scientists assumed this phenomenon was mostly limited to insects and invertebrates. But modern genetics has revealed something far stranger: certain vertebrates, including reptiles, birds, and even sharks, can occasionally reproduce without males under the right conditions.This episode dives into the genetic mechanics, evolutionary risks, and survival advantages behind this process — from isolated populations to captivity-triggered adaptations. Along the way, it explores how chromosomes are restored without fertilization, why the offspring aren’t true clones, and why this biological workaround has sharp limits.It also confronts the obvious question: if this exists in nature, why doesn’t it work in mammals? The answer reveals one of the most rigid constraints in human biology and why reproduction isn’t nearly as flexible as it looks.A story about evolutionary improvisation, genetic failsafes, and what happens when nature runs out of options — without giving away the surprise that makes this topic unforgettable.No Days Off. New Fact Daily. #Parthenogenesis #AnimalBiology #EvolutionaryScience #ReproductiveBiology #DailyFacts #FunFacts #DidYouKnow #komododragons #turkeys #sciencefacts #biologyfacts #animalfacts #learnonyoutube #automixisMusic thanks to Zapsplat.Sources:Booth, W., Smith, C. F., Eskridge, P. H., Hoss, S. K., Mendelson, J. R., & Schuett, G. W. (2012). Facultative parthenogenesis in vertebrates. Biology Letters, 8(6), 983–985.Watts, P. C., Buley, K. R., Sanderson, S., Boardman, W., Ciofi, C., & Gibson, R. (2006). Parthenogenesis in Komodo dragons. Nature, 444, 1021–1022.Fields, A. T., Feldheim, K. A., Poulakis, G. R., & Chapman, D. D. (2017). Evidence of parthenogenesis in a captive zebra shark. Scientific Reports, 7, 41314.Lampert, K. P. (2008). Facultative parthenogenesis in snakes. Journal of Heredity, 99(6), 666–669.Olsen, M. W. (1965). Parthenogenesis in turkeys. Poultry Science, 44(2), 462–468.Olsen, M. W. (1960). Performance record of a parthenogenetic turkey male. Science, 132(3440), 1661.Kono, T., Obata, Y., Wu, Q., et al. (2004). Birth of parthenogenetic mice that can develop to adulthood. Nature, 428, 860–864.

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