Understanding the evolution of viviparity using intraspecific variation in reproductive mode and transitional forms of pregnancy

ABSTRACT How innovations such as vision, flight and pregnancy evolve is a central question in evolutionary biology. Examination of transitional (intermediate) forms of these traits can help address this question, but these intermediate phenotypes are very rare in extant species. Here we explore the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society 2022-06, Vol.97 (3), p.1179-1192
Hauptverfasser: Whittington, Camilla M., Van Dyke, James U., Liang, Stephanie Q. T., Edwards, Scott V., Shine, Richard, Thompson, Michael B., Grueber, Catherine E.
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container_title Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society
container_volume 97
creator Whittington, Camilla M.
Van Dyke, James U.
Liang, Stephanie Q. T.
Edwards, Scott V.
Shine, Richard
Thompson, Michael B.
Grueber, Catherine E.
description ABSTRACT How innovations such as vision, flight and pregnancy evolve is a central question in evolutionary biology. Examination of transitional (intermediate) forms of these traits can help address this question, but these intermediate phenotypes are very rare in extant species. Here we explore the biology and evolution of transitional forms of pregnancy that are midway between the ancestral state of oviparity (egg‐laying) and the derived state, viviparity (live birth). Transitional forms of pregnancy occur in only three vertebrates, all of which are lizard species that also display intraspecific variation in reproductive phenotype. In these lizards (Lerista bougainvillii, Saiphos equalis, and Zootoca vivipara), geographic variation of three reproductive forms occurs within a single species: oviparity, viviparity, and a transitional form of pregnancy. This phenomenon offers the valuable prospect of watching ‘evolution in action’. In these species, it is possible to conduct comparative research using different reproductive forms that are not confounded by speciation, and are of relatively recent origin. We identify major proximate and ultimate questions that can be addressed in these species, and the genetic and genomic tools that can help us understand how transitional forms of pregnancy are produced, despite predicted fitness costs. We argue that these taxa represent an excellent prospect for understanding the major evolutionary shift between egg‐laying and live birth, which is a fundamental innovation in the history of animals.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/brv.12836
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subjects Animals
bimodal reproduction
Biological Evolution
Biology
Developmental biology
Eggs
Evolution
evolutionary innovations
Geographical variations
Innovations
Lizards
Lizards - genetics
Oviparity
Oviparity - genetics
Phenotypes
Phenotypic variations
Pregnancy
Questions
Rare species
Reproduction - genetics
reproductive biology
Snakes
Speciation
squamate
Vertebrates
Viviparity
Viviparity, Nonmammalian - genetics
title Understanding the evolution of viviparity using intraspecific variation in reproductive mode and transitional forms of pregnancy
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