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Uncategorized Friday, November 16th 2012 at 7:40 pm

All-Female Species Survives by Stealing DNA of Other Animals

When a class of animal is made up of only one gender, those animals tend to go extinct. That’s not the case with the bdelloid rotifers, which have been exclusively female for around 80 million years. Just like we learned in Jurassic Park, life finds a way. For the bdelloids, that way is by hijacking the DNA of other species for its own benefit. Clever girl.

A study by the University of Cambridge shows that about 10% of the expressed genes in the bdelloid rotifers are from other species. The species it has stolen from include fungi, plants, and bacteria. The introduction of foreign genes is what has allowed the bdelloids to survive for so long without sexual reproduction. Scientists believe reproduction in the usual manner introduces key variations into the genetic code of an animal that lead to mutations, and allows that animal to adapt over time.

Apart from allowing the bdelloids to survive as an all-female class for so long, these stolen genes have made the bdelloids crazy resilient. They live in water, but said water is generally inhospitable to life. Bdelloids can be found in places like tanks at sewage treatment plants and brackish water. They also live in places that sometimes spontaneously dry up. That’s bad news for most aquatic life, but the bdelloids can survive desiccation, or being totally dried out, for a record of nine years.

The bdelloid rotifers are to microscopic life as Rogue is to the X-Men. They basically sap all the best powers from others and use them for their own benefit. The scientists at Cambridge have identified genes in the bdelloid from over 500 species.

The author of the study, Alan Tunnacliffe says, “Every time you investigate these animals… they come out with something weird. It’s like they’re here to keep us entertained and surprised.” An all-female class of animal that can steal DNA and survive nine years of being completely desiccated? Consider us thoroughly entertained and surprised.

(via PLOS ONE, image via ibsut)

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  • Norman Styles

    Why would a species without gender be considered female?

  • Idlethoughts

    My guess is the reception of foreign DNA coupled with technically spawning the offspring. Correct terminology kind of breaks down when your trying to classify something that has heterosexual (hetero-speicial) reproduction and yet also manages to be genderless.

  • http://www.facebook.com/jennifer.rousselle.585 Jennifer Rousselle

    Because they have paired ovaries which are the same as sexually reproducing rotifer females.

  • Anonymous

    Do they have PMS?

  • http://www.facebook.com/jamesr.jacobsen James R Jacobsen

    We make 1st contact with an alien species that is from a solar system where this is the primary method of reproduction.
    What are they like and what is the outcome of this 1st contact event?
    What enviroment would cause this type of carbon based life to thrive and be better survivors than life basedon sexual reproduction?
    Could an Earth like planet in similar solar system with a nearby pulsing source of Gamma-ray radiation be a likely cause?
    What magnitude and how frequent would these Gamma-ray bursts need to be to cause ths form of life to have a distinct advantage over life based on sexual-reproduction?

  • http://twitter.com/Secondhandnerd Holly Feagin

    The microscopic Asari

  • Sam Scotford

    So, what happens if we expose them to our entire genetic structure. Surely its a pretty good set of genes, what with us being the dominant species of the planet. Would these creatures gradually express more human genes, and become proto-humans?

  • Javik

    It’s a bit late in this cycle, but I believe this is the beginning of the Asari.

  • pokeymcgee

    hmmm…

    Looks like somebody doesn’t know what “gender” means.

  • Quandryd

    I can see a new si fi horror movie coming out of this..