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- Apr 19, 2008
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I'm old and cant remember if I've ever heard of this in spiders. Parthenogenic reproduction is documented with some reptiles but I do not know of it in spiders.
Actually they would all be males. I always found that strange that parthenogenesis produces males. One would think they would be females but males are always produced to my knowledge.Not that I know of, no.
That would be cool though if they did though. One female T having nothing but female offspring. That would be awesome.![]()
I think you have it backwards,Actually they would all be males. I always found that strange that parthenogenesis produces males. One would think they would be females but males are always produced to my knowledge.
Oh, sorry my experience is with reptiles so I was basing it on that. With all Parthenogenesis in reptiles the offspring are males.I think you have it backwards,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parthenogenesis
Unless you're referring to Komodo dragons-An interesting aspect to reproduction in these asexual lizards is that mating behaviors are still seen, although the populations are all female. One female plays the role played by the male in closely related species, and mounts the female that is about to lay eggs.
Recently, the Komodo dragon, which normally reproduces sexually, was found also to be able to reproduce asexually by parthenogenesis. Because the genetics of sex determination in Komodo Dragons uses the WZ system (where WZ is female, ZZ is male, and WW is inviable) the offspring of this process will be ZZ (male) or WW (inviable), with no WZ females being born.....It has been postulated that this gives an advantage to colonization of islands, where a single female could theoretically have male offspring asexually, then switch to sexual reproduction with them to maintain higher level of genetic diversity than asexual reproduction alone can generate
I was given some Extatosoma tiaratum (Macleay's Spectre) eggs yesterday so I hope to get them hatched and feeding. I have never kept them before so this should be interesting.Yeah parthenogenesis is females. I used to keep stick bugs that were parthenogenetic.
To my knowledge that's only true with Komodo Dragons. Checkered Whiptails here in Colorado are all female as it is with a few other whiptail species (1 out of 1,000,000 being male). I believe it true of some gecko species as well.Oh, sorry my experience is with reptiles so I was basing it on that. With all Parthenogenesis in reptiles the offspring are males.
Well, he did ask about spiders. I couldn't tell if that's what you were getting at, or if you were just asking. Spiders are spiders to me (i hate that "true" term!)... but yes, it is what some refer to as a "true" spider.Theotima minutissimus is a true spider correct? :?
They are indeed parthenogenic. The owner of the females never had males and some of the eggs are already hatching.Hey Ryan, Extatosoma aren't parthenogenic either...
http://www.exotic-pets.co.uk/macleays-stick-insect.htmlThe eggs of this species can take from 4 months if mating has been successful or up to 9 months if parthenogenesis (none mated females).