Journal article
A high incidence of parthenogenesis in agricultural pests
AA Hoffmann, KT Reynolds, MA Nash, AR Weeks
Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences | ROYAL SOC | Published : 2008
Abstract
Parthenogenetic species are assumed to represent evolutionary dead ends, yet parthenogenesis is common in some groups of invertebrates particularly in those found in relatively constant environments. This suggests that parthenogenetic reproduction might be common in pest invertebrates from uniform agricultural environments. Based on the evaluations of two databases from North America and Italy, we found that parthenogenetic species comprised 45 per cent (North America) or 48 per cent (Italy) of pest species derived from genera where parthenogenesis occurred, compared with an overall incidence of 10 per cent or 16 per cent in these genera. In establishing these patterns, we included only gene..
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Funding Acknowledgements
We thank Ben Normark for his several insightful comments. A. A. H. held a Federation fellowship from the ARC while completing this work.