We Have It All
Forums Rules Register
Go Back   Aussie Pythons and Snakes > The Zoo > General Herps
     
Recent Herp Discussion
Jungles Ahoi: part II
Last post by mysnakesau
Today 07:01 PM
Central Beardie Pics
by Kyro
Last post by Kyro
Today 07:00 PM
Darwin Albino Price
Last post by 888lowndes888
Today 06:58 PM
Online Users: 190
133 members and 57 guests
$N@K3$, 888lowndes888, ad, adelherper, ally_pup, andy23, ANTARESIA1, anzac, Artie, bat088, bella7, billyh, blading, book, boxhead, BrownHash, butters, c moore, chrisso81, Christopher, clarkey, cleopatra2285, Colletts, congo_python, cris, Dan19, daniel0, darkangel, Dave94, daz927, della91, denno, dixilizards, Dmoore, dpeica, dragon lady, Earthling, fishead, frankc, funcouple, Fuscus, garthy, Glider, Glidergirl, Goannas1, hardcorey007, herpkeeper, hobbo, hodges, Homebrand91, hornet, Hsut77, inthegrass, jaih, jaydog818, jd snakes, jimmyd, jonesc1, Jonno from ERD, Joy from S & T, Jungle_Freak, kandi, kane007, Karadiddly, KatanaRamirez, Khagan, Kyro, lauren87, Leigh, levis04, lizzy_reptile, Luke1, male@mynet.net.au, Marto167, Marz, MatE, Matty.B, Matty007, mattyandnat, midnightserval, MrBredli, mrmikk, Mrs I, Mudimans, mysnakesau, Nagraj, Nephrurus, nervous, Nikki_Elmo, nonamesleft, oldmate, omally, opalwood, paleoherp, pete12, pythons73, raged, rage_83, Raptor_Reptiles, reedysreptiles, reptile32, reptilesDownUnder, Reptipal, rowlz, serpenttongue, sevrum, shnakey, Shonfield, shooshoo, steph, Stitched, travie, TURBO8, tympanocryptis, VixenBabe, W.T.BUY, waruikazi, Whimsey, White Wolf, wil, wokka
Closed Thread
 
LinkBack Thread Tools
  #1  
Old 20-Jul-05, 07:19 PM
Magpie's Avatar
Subscriber
Join Date: Jan-03
Location: Cairns
Posts: 5,740
Bynoes geckos - excerpt

Copied from Herpdigest Lite.
11) Australian Geckos Show Surprising Strengths (Australian Bynoe’s Gecko)
Excerpts from article in Red Nova, 6/7/05

Portland, Oregon: Usually when you give up something, there’s a price to pay. Not so in the case of the Australian Bynoe’s gecko. This line of all-female geckos doesn’t need sex or a male to reproduce and, contrary to expectations, these “Wonder Woman” geckos can run farther and faster than their sexually reproducing relatives. The research findings are published in the journal Physiological and Biochemical Zoology (Vol. 78, 3, May/June 2005) by Michael Kearney, Rebecca Wahl and Kellar Autumn.

“This is extraordinary,” said Autumn, associate professor of biology at Lewis & Clark College and member of the research team. “The traditional theory is that when a species gives up sex and reproduces through cloning, the offspring will have reduced performance.”

Parthenogenetic creatures are all-female species. Their “clonal” way of reproducing means that a mother’s babies are genetically identical to her. A further twist to the story is that many parthenogentic species, including the Bynoe’s gecko, evolved when two species crossed, or hybridized, said Michael Kearney. He is a postdoctoral research fellow in the Centre for Environmental Stress and Adaptation Research at the University of Melbourne in Australia. Kearney’s interest in geckos started during his undergraduate years in Australia. As a Fulbright Graduate Fellow, Kearney studied with Autumn at Lewis & Clark College.

“This makes them a bit like mules, which are a cross between a horse and a donkey,” said Kearney. “Mules are very robust animals, but they cannot reproduce.” Kearney’s research suggested that the hybrid forms of Bynoe’s geckos could not only reproduce through parthenogenesis, but were “super tough,” just like a mule.

Kearney shipped Bynoe’s geckos from Sydney, Australia to Autumn’s research lab in Portland, Oregon. There, Kearney, Autumn and Rebecca Wahl put the lizards through their paces on a state-of-the-art lizard treadmill. As the geckos walked in the lab at Lewis & Clark, the researchers precisely controlled the lizard’s speed, body temperature, and measured how much energy the four-footers used to walk. Wahl, an alumna of Lewis & Clark, is now a doctoral student in wildlife biology at the University of Montana at Missoula.

“We found that the parthenogenetic forms were much better athletes than the sexual forms, clearly outpacing them on the treadmill,” said Kearney. “This was a bit of a surprise because a similar study of another kind of parthenogenetic lizard from the deserts of the United States showed the opposite pattern.”
Added Autumn: “If there was an Olympic team of Bynoe’s geckos, there wouldn’t be a single male on it. These geckos outperform their sexual relatives by 50 percent. They are the ‘Xena: Warrior Princess’ of the lizard world.”
__________________
Fool Injected Physhopath
Closed Thread

Bookmarks

Thread Tools


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Bynoes gecko vs golden tail gecko Luke1 General Herps 34 28-Oct-07 09:26 AM
Bynoes (the cloning gecko) Gecko :) Exotics/Other Reptiles 36 29-May-07 01:42 AM
bynoes geckos hornet General Herps 20 31-Mar-07 06:11 PM
bynoes gecko? hornet General Herps 1 03-Jan-07 12:22 PM
Bynoes. dpeica General Herps 10 22-Jun-06 06:29 PM


All times are GMT +10. The time now is 07:03 PM.