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Interesting. To biologists, anyway.
Trying to check on an item in the Grauniad on the subject, I found this in Nature:
In a bizarre war of the sexes, little fire ants have evolved a novel way to fight for their gender's genes, according to new research.
The sperm of the male ant appears to be able to destroy the female DNA within a fertilized egg, giving birth to a male that is a clone of its father. Meanwhile the female queens make clones of themselves to carry on the royal female line.
The result is that both the males and females have their own, independent gene pools, leading some to speculate whether each gender ought to be technically classified as its own species. "We could think of the males as a separate, parasitic species that uses host eggs for its own reproduction," says Denis Fournier of the Université Libre in Brussels, Belgium, who led the work.
The page is here, but I think you may need a sub to see it. Any way up, that's the weirdest thing I've seen for a while. The implications make my head hurt.
In a bizarre war of the sexes, little fire ants have evolved a novel way to fight for their gender's genes, according to new research.
The sperm of the male ant appears to be able to destroy the female DNA within a fertilized egg, giving birth to a male that is a clone of its father. Meanwhile the female queens make clones of themselves to carry on the royal female line.
The result is that both the males and females have their own, independent gene pools, leading some to speculate whether each gender ought to be technically classified as its own species. "We could think of the males as a separate, parasitic species that uses host eggs for its own reproduction," says Denis Fournier of the Université Libre in Brussels, Belgium, who led the work.
The page is here, but I think you may need a sub to see it. Any way up, that's the weirdest thing I've seen for a while. The implications make my head hurt.
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Excellent. I read it (and paraphrased that paragraph) but I'm never sure if I can see it because people generally can see it or because the Uni has a sub.
Thanks.
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I know, depends on how you define species.... I'm working on what may be a single highly-structured species, or 3 hybridising species with all 3 interspecific hybrids coexisting, & all of them largely asexual so it's a bugger trying to breed them in the lab to find out... argh.
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I'm working on[ . . . ]
That sounds at least as mindbending, actually.
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They're still symbiotic though, as the male couldn't reproduce without the female eggs to fertilise, and presumably there's some benefit to the females of keeping the males around (food-gathering, protection etc).
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Does that make sense?
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(Anonymous) 2005-06-30 05:20 pm (UTC)(link)no subject
Yes, indirectly. The queens need males to fertilise eggs to produce workers, without which they couldn't raise more queens. The males need the workers to raise queens for them to mate with & produce more males.
They're not really symbiotic IMHO, more like estranged parents competing for attention from their children...
Very interesting stuff!
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Hmmm.
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*instant earworm*
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