User:DiligentBunny/Thelytoky

User:DiligentBunny/Thelytoky

Thelytoky is the absence of mating and producing all female diploid offspring.

Advantages of Thelytoky:

Species may encounter a few advantages employing this form of mating system. Thelytoky allows females to pass along genotypes that ensure success in that particular environment, having only daughters increases the species output, and energy that would otherwise be exerted into finding or attracting a mate can directly be invested in reproduction.

Thelytoky can occur naturally, or it can be induced by scientists in a laboratory setting. In some species, thelytoky can also occur through the fusion of two female gametes.

Facultative, accidental, cyclic, and obligate thelytoky

Facultative thelytoky refers to an individual being capable of reproducing sexually or asexually depending on environmental conditions. For example, smalltooth sawfish in Florida populations can be facultatively thelytokous, meaning that they will reproduce sexually when conditions are favorable, but switch thelytoky when resources and mates become scarce.

Accidental thelytoky occurs when a female organism produces offspring asexually due to the absence or failure of fertilization by a male. This can occur in species that normally reproduce sexually but are unable to find a mate, or in species in which mating is unsuccessful due to physical or behavioral barriers. While accidental thelytoky can provide a short-term reproductive solution in the absence of a mate, it is typically not sustainable over the long-term due to the loss of genetic diversity.

Cyclical thelytoky is a form of thelytoky in which organisms alternate between sexual and asexual reproduction in a regular cycle. This type of reproduction is seen in cynipid gall wasps, in which sexual reproduction occurs in alternate generations. The asexual reproduction that occurs in between these sexual generations is typically facilitated by the presence of specific environmental cues, such as temperature or photoperiod. The genetic diversity generated by sexual reproduction in these organisms is thought to play an important role in their ability to adapt to changing environmental conditions.

Obligate thelytoky refers to a form of asexual reproduction in which an individual is unable to reproduce sexually and must rely on asexual reproduction for reproduction. Species that are obligately thelytokous do not have the genetic or physiological mechanisms necessary to produce males, and thus rely solely on female offspring to perpetuate their lineage. Examples of obligately thelytokous species include some members of cerapachys ants and some species of whiptail lizards.