Birds do it, bees do it. According to the classic song of Call Porter on the universal nature of sex, even educated fleas do it.
However, the swell of the baby born in the Louisiana aquarium, which accommodates only women, flammox marine experts and the species does not require such joy on the ground to produce descendants. I did it.
Yoko, Swell Shark's puppy, was HATCH on January 3 after an egg was found eight months ago by an animal breeding team in the US Aquarium. According to the Shrib Port Aquarium, the eggs may not have been detected up to two months before that.
The team says that two women's sharks in tanks have not contacted men for more than three years. This suggests that there may have been a process called Partene, a rare form of asexual reproductive, or delay in fertilization.
DNA analysis, which is sufficiently large for puppies to collect blood samples, determines the truth about mysterious birth, but takes several months.
“This situation is incredible and shows this kind of resilience,” said Greg Barrick, a live animal curator in the Shrevo Port Aquarium. “I am very excited in the coming months to make sure that this is a case of parten formation and whether fertilization has been delayed.”
Baby Shark -Native American Tumache People Sharks.Ono-The aquariums often faced such a reproductive event, but acknowledged that sharks were born, but were prosperous. They said that if Yoko was short, they would leave an unforgettable heritage in research on shark reproduction and conservation.
If Yoko is actually born by parten formation, she will participate in starfish, deep sea bugs, and animals such as insects that can give birth to virginity. Lighting eggs without mating is much rare in vertebrates, but it is found in zebra sharks, saws, and a handful of reptiles. This phenomenon was first recorded in two British zoos and in 2006 at Komodo Dragons, the world's largest reptile. Last year, Stingray, called Charlotte, in an aquarium in North Carolina, was found to be pregnant despite having been in contact with men for eight years.
Scientists assume that vertebrates will change to a percent formation when there are no friends, but many aspects remain unknown, including the reasons why it occurs and why it causes it.
Colin Stevenson, the educator of the crocodile in the Brise Norton world of England, is a zoo that boasts a male Comodo Dragon born in parentheses for women in Prague. “Comodos is famous. They can reproduce them normally, but they sometimes jump out of the side, and tricks are to solve them.”





