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| Overview             The
  production of animals from fertilized eggs has been called zygogenesis as distinguished from parthenogenesis which refers to the development of
  an egg without fertilization.             In
  parthenogenesis eggs may develop in any of three ways: (1) they may begin as
  tetraploid or diploid bodies which undergo reduction in chromosome number as
  if in preparation for fertilization; but if fertilization is lacking, the
  males developing from them have the reduced or haploid set of hereditary
  factors; (2) unfertilized eggs may start as haploids and subsequently acquire
  the diploid number of chromosomes in some stage of cleavage, or (3)
  unfertilized eggs may start and end as diploids. In Hymenoptera diploids are
  usually females, all normal males originate as haploids. There are some
  exceptions, which will be discussed later. (Also see Gordh et al. 1999).             The end
  result of all parthenogenetic ontogeny (development) is a fatherless or impaternate animal. These, of course have grandfathers!
  In Types 2 and 3 parthenogenesis above such animals are diploid. In Type 1 we
  have impaternate haploids which pose several problems such as (a) their
  survival with a reduced chromosome number, (b) sex determination and (c)
  spermatogenesis in the haploid male.             Except for
  those haploid males regularly produced in six or seven groups of invertebrates,
  there have been very few known haploid adult animals. On the other hand,
  diploid and polyploid impaternates are known to occur with some frequency and
  as independent events in most of the larger groups of Metazoa. Sex
  determination in these larger Metazoan groups is entirely orthodox, while
  that of haploid males involves an entirely different genetic mechanism.
  Different kinds of animals combine different types of parthenogenesis with
  bisexual reproduction in their life cycles in various complicated ways.            
  Parthenogenesis may be natural or it may be artificial, induced by
  some artificial stimulus. It may be incomplete (rudimentary), the embryo
  dying before maturity, or it may be complete, leading to viability as adults.
  It may be obligatory, occurring from a type of egg that cannot normally be
  fertilized, or it may be facultative if the egg can develop with or without
  fertilization.             Considering
  the sex of the impaternate offspring, parthenogenesis includes arrhenotoky (production of impaternate males), thelytoky
  (production of impaternate females) and deuterotoky (production of both sexes
  parthenogenetically).            
  Parthenogenesis may be constant, occurring in each successive
  generation, or it may be cyclic in which case one or more parthenogenetic
  generations alternates with a bisexual. In cyclic parthenogenesis
  (heterogony), the agamic (or parthenogenetic) generation consists almost
  entirely of females. Individuals of the bisexual generation, both males and
  gamic females, are impaternate.             
  Parthenogenesis may occur as a general condition throughout the range
  of the species, or it may be geographic in which case the parthenogenetic
  form occupies a different area from the bisexual. Males may be absent or rare
  (spanandry) within the range of the parthenogenetic
  form. There are two main cytological processes
  involved in parthenogenesis, apomictic and automictic. In apomixis there is one maturation division in
  the egg that is equational. There is no reduction in chromosomes so that the
  diploid number is maintained. Apomixis is considered the simplest type of
  parthenogenesis. Heterozygosity steadily increases in these species because
  when gene mutations and structural rearrangements occur, the heterozygosity is
  maintained in the following generation. Mutation cannot be homozygous and
  elimination of recessive mutations is impossible. This continued increase in
  heterozygosity allows for greater adaptiveness and dispersal through
  heterosis (White 1954, Smith 1955, Suomalinen 1962). Apomixis is a common
  name for uniparental procreation in which the sexual structures are retained
  (Dobzhansky 1941).  In automixis, the early stages of meiosis
  are similar to biparental species in the production of a haploid oocyte
  through reduction; however, a third division occurs resulting in a diploid.
  This restoration of the diploid number is accomplished in different ways in
  different species (Onions 1912, Whiting 1935, Speicher & Speicher 1938,
  Flanders 1945, Doutt & Smith 1950, S. G. Smith 1955, Tucker 1958, Bacci
  1965). Arrhenotoky
  vs Thelytoky In arrhenotoky males are impaternate and
  females paternate. This is the most common type of parthenogenesis found in
  Hymenoptera. Actually female production is generally regarded as zygogenetic
  and not parthenogenetic. Fertilized eggs result in diploid females, while
  unfertilized eggs yield haploid males (Flanders 1939, White 1954, Bacci
  1965). Several animal groups showing arrhenotoky are the Thysanoptera,
  rotifers, Coleoptera (Micromalthus),
  Acarina (all except the suborder Mesostigmata), Iceryini (cottony-cushion
  scale), and the Aleurodidae. Thelytoky results in the production of
  impaternate females. Males are rare and are considered usually nonfunctional in
  reproduction, although in the laboratory they have been observed to function
  (Legner 1969, Rossler &
  DeBach 1972). Cytological processes may be either apomictic or automictic. Deuterotoky does not differ from thelytoky other than males are more
  common. Some workers favor the elimination of this category entirely. By 1940 Clausen listed 30 or more genera of
  parasitic Hymenoptera that were known with one or more species that
  reproduced uniparentally
  (by thelytoky). Today the number is much larger. Flanders (1945) regarded
  any biparental (arrhenotokous) population to be capable of thelytokous
  reproduction at times. He indicated the difficulties in distinguishing one
  from the other. He observed that the Cynipidae showed bisexuality most often,
  although the family usually reproduced unisexually. Speicher & Speicher
  (1938) noted that uniparental females of Bracon
  hebetor were obtained almost
  entirely from biparental females that resulted from crossing certain strains. The difference between thelytoky and
  deuterotoky is sometimes confusing. Some parasitoids that were initially
  classified as thelytokous, have been found on detailed examination to produce
  an occasional son, although such sons are though to be nonfunctional (White
  1984), which may be based on insufficient evidence (Marchal 1936, Flanders
  1942, Wilson & Woolcock 1960, Bowen & Stern 1966, Birova 1970, Eskafi
  & Legner 1974, Laraichi 1978, Jardak et al. 1979, Stile & Davring
  1980, Sorakina 1987). Males are often found in laboratory populations of
  thelytokous species and their frequency usually depends on the temperature at
  which their thelytokous mothers develop (Flanders 1942, Schlinger & Hall
  1959, Flanders 1965, Eskafi & Legner 1974, Gordh & Lacey 1976,
  Laraichi 1978, Jardak et al. 1979, Cabello & Vargas 1985, Sorakina 1987,
  Luck et al. 1996). Exercise
  15.1--Distinguish zygogenesis from parthenogenesis. Exercise
  15.2--What are three possible fates of eggs in parthenogenesis? Exercise
  15.3--Discuss different manifestations of parthenogenesis. Exercise
  15.4--What principal cytological processes are involved in
  parthenogenesis? Discuss each. Exercise
  15.5--Distinguish arrhenotoky and thelytoky.   REFERENCES:     [Additional references may be found at 
  MELVYL Library ] Bacci,
  G. 1965. Sex Determination. Pergamon Press. 306 p. Bellows,
  T. S., Jr. & T. W. Fisher, (eds) 1999. Handbook of Biological Control:
  Principles and Applications. Academic Press, San Diego, CA. 1046.p. Birova,
  H. 1970. A contribution to the knowledge of the reproduction of Trichogramma embryophagum. Acta Ent. Bohemoslov. 67: 70-82. Bowen, W. R. & V. M. Stern. 1966.
  Effect of temperature on the production of males and sexual mosaics in a
  uniparental race of Trichogramma
  semifumatum. Ann. Ent. Soc. Amer. 59: 823-34. Cabello, G. T. & P. P. Vargas. 1985.
  Temperature as a factor influencing the form of reproduction of Trichogramma cordubensis. Z. angew. Ent. 100: 434-41. Clausen, C. P. 1940. Entomophagous
  Insects. McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc., New York & London. 688 p. Dobzhansky, T. 1941. Genetics
  and the Origin of Species. 2nd
  ed. Columbia Univ. Press, New York. Doutt,
  R. L. & R. A. Smith. 1950. Males and intersexes in a normally thelytokous
  insect, Tropidophryne melvillei Comp. Canad. Ent. 82: 165-70. Eskafi, F. M. & E. F. Legner. 1974.
  parthenogenetic reproduction in Hexacola
  sp. near websteri, a
  parasite of Hippelates eye
  gnats. Ann.
  Ent. Soc. Amer. 67: 767-68. 264.   Etzel, L. K. & E. F. Legner.  1999.  Culture and Colonization.  In:  T. W. Fisher & T. S. Bellows, Jr.
  (eds.), Chapter 15, p. 125-197, Handbook of Biological Control:  Principles and Applications.  Academic Press, San Diego, CA  1046 p. Flanders, S. E. 1942. The
  sex-ratio in the Hymenoptera: a function of the environment. Ecology 23:
  120-21. Flanders,
  S. E. 1945. Uniparentalism in the Hymenoptera and its relation to polyploidy.
  Science 100(2591): 168-69. Gordh,
  G. & L. Lacey. 1976. Biological studies of Plagiomerus diaspidis,
  a primary internal parasite of diaspidid scale insects. Proc. Ent. Soc. Wash.
  78: 132-44. 265.   Gordh, G., E. F. Legner & L. E.
  Caltagirone.  1999.  Biology of parasitic Hymenoptera.  In:  T. W. Fisher & T. S. Bellows, Jr.
  (eds.), Chapter 15, p. 355-381, Handbook
  of Biological Control:  Principles and
  Applications.  Academic Press, San
  Diego, CA  1046 p. Jardak, T., B. Pintureau & J.
  Voegele. 1979.
  Mise en evidence d'une nouvelle espece de Trichogramma.
  Phenomene
  d'intersexualite, etude enzymatique. Ann. Soc. Ent. France 15: 635-42. Laraichi, M. 1978. L'effect de hautes
  temperatures sur le taux sexuel de Ooencyrtus
  fecundus (Hym: Encyrtidae). Ent.
  Exp. Appl. 23: 237-42. 58. 
   Legner, E. F.  1969.  Reproductive isolation and size variation
  in the Muscidifurax raptor Girault & Sanders
  complex.  Ann. Entomol. Soc. Amer.
  62(2):  382-385.   255.   Legner, E. F.  1991b.  Recombinant
  males in the parasitic wasp Muscidifurax
  raptorellus  [Hymenoptera: Pteromalidae].  Entomophaga 36(2):  173-81. Luck,
  R. F., L. Nunney & R. Stouthamer. 1996. Evolutionary Ecology of
  Parasitoids and Invertebrate Predators, Chapter 9, In: Theories & Mechanisms of Biological Control.
  University of California Press, Berkeley. (in press).  Marchal,
  P. 1936. Recherches
  sur la biologie et le developpement des Hymenopteres parasites. Les
  Trichogrammes. Ann.
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  G. W. 1912. South African fertile worker bees. Agr. J. Union S. Africa 3:
  720-28. Onion,
  G. W. 1914. South African fertile worker bees. Agr. J. Union S. Africa 7:
  44-46. Rössler, Y & P. DeBach. 1972.
  The biosystematic relations between a thelytokous and an arrhenotokous form
  of Aphytis mytilaspidis (LeBarron)
  ([Hymenoptera: Aphelinidae]. I. The reproductive relations. Entomophaga 17: 391-423. Schlinger, E. I. & J. C. Hall. 1959. A
  synopsis of the biologies of three imported parasites of the spotted alfalfa
  aphid. J.
  Econ. Ent. 52: 154-57. Slobodchikoff,
  C. N. & H. V. Daly. 1971. Systematic and evolutionary implications of
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  A. P. 1987. Biological and morphological substantiation of the specific
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  parthenogenetic gall wasp Diplolepis
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  K. W. 1958. Automictic parthenogenesis in the honey bee. Genetics 43:
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  M. J. D. 1984. Chromosomal mechanisms in animal reproduction. Bull. Zool. 51:
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