Yuzo Hirano’s scientific contributions

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Publications (2)


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December 2017

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11 Reads

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Yuzo Hirano

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Ai Sakabe

Estimated allele frequencies of Eunectes murinus markers. (XLSX)

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Neonates found in the oviduct of the focal mother (Emu-01) that had been isolated from other snakes for seven years
a. Two fully developed neonates, 2015-OS1 and 2015-OS2 (shown with arrows) were found in the oviduct as well as multiple undeveloped eggs. Unfortunately, both neonates were found dead. b. 2015-OS1 was a fully developed female neonate. c. 2015-OS2 was also a fully developed female neonate.
Eunectes murinus samples analyzed
Characterization of 18 microsatellite DNA loci designed for Eunectes murinus
Genotypes of the mother, four offspring and five unrelated Eunectes murinus
Allele frequencies and probablities estimated from six unrelated Eunectes murinus
Facultative parthenogenesis validated by DNA analyses in the green anaconda (Eunectes murinus)

December 2017

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268 Reads

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22 Citations

In reptiles, the mode of reproduction is typically sexual. However, facultative parthenogenesis occurs in some Squamata, such as Komodo dragon (Varanus komodoensis) and Burmese python (Python bivittatus). Here, we report facultative parthenogenesis in the green anaconda (Eunectes murinus). We found two fully developed female neonates and 17 undeveloped eggs in the oviduct of a female anaconda isolated from other individuals for eight years and two months at Ueno Zoo, Japan. To clarify the zygosity of the neonates, we analyzed 18 microsatellite markers of which 16 were informative. We observed only maternal alleles and no paternal alleles for all 16 markers. To examine the possibility of the long-term sperm storage, we estimated allele frequencies in a putative parental stock by genotyping five unrelated founders. If all founders, including the mother, are originated from a single Mendelian population, then the probability that the neonates were produced by sexual reproduction with an unrelated male via long-term sperm storage was infinitesimally small (2.31E-32 per clutch). We also examined samples from two additional offspring that the mother delivered eight years before her death. We consistently observed paternal alleles in these elder offspring, indicating that the mother had switched from sexual reproduction to asexual reproduction during the eight years of isolation. This is the first case of parthenogenesis in Eunectes to be validated by DNA analysis, and suggests that facultative parthenogenesis is widespread in the Boidae.

Citations (1)


... Facultative parthenogenesis (FP) (i.e. sporadic asexual reproduction by sexually reproducing species) has been reported across four major taxa in the animal kingdom: namely, crocodiles0020 (Booth et al. 2023), reptiles (lizards and snakes) (Schuett et al. 1997;Watts et al. 2006;Germano and Smith 2010;Schuett 2011, 2016;Booth et al. 2011aBooth et al. , 2011bBooth et al. , 2012Booth et al. , 2014Reynolds et al. 2012;Kinney et al. 2012;Shibata et al. 2017;Allen et al. 2018;Miller et al. 2019;Kratochvíl et al. 2020;Seixas et al. 2020;Card et al. 2021), birds (Olson 1960;Schut et al. 2008;Parker and McDaniel 2009;Ramachandran and McDaniel 2018;Ryder et al. 2021), and elasmobranch fishes (Chapman et al. 2007(Chapman et al. , 2008Feldheim et al. 2010;Robinson et al. 2011;Portnoy et al. 2014;Fields et al. 2015;Harmon et al. 2016;Straube et al. 2016). Historically, vertebrate FP was considered to be a reproductive syndrome of captivity, with cases restricted to zoological collections and private breeding facilities. ...

Reference:

ParthenoGenius: A User-Friendly Heuristic for Inferring Presence and Mechanism of Facultative Parthenogenesis from Genetic and Genomic Data Sets
Facultative parthenogenesis validated by DNA analyses in the green anaconda (Eunectes murinus)