06/05/2015

Endangered Sawfish Reproduce Asexually

5:26 minutes

Juvenile smalltooth sawfish in the Charlotte Harbor estuarine system, Florida. Photo by Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC)
Juvenile smalltooth sawfish in the Charlotte Harbor estuarine system, Florida. Photo by Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC)

As Destiny’s Child once sang, “All the women who are independent, throw your hands up at me.” Female sawfish could easily adopt the anthem (although, they’d have to throw up their fins). Scientists studying the endangered smalltooth sawfish population in southern Florida found that three percent were the result of parthenogenesis, a form of asexual reproduction. According to marine biologist Andrew Fields, this is the first observed instance of a vertebrate reproducing this way in the wild (birds, reptiles, and sharks have been seen to do this in captivity). The findings were published in Current Biology this week.

Segment Guests

Andrew Fields

Andrew Fields is a Ph.D. candidate of marine and atmospheric science at Stony Brook University in Stony Brook, New York.

Meet the Producer

About Becky Fogel

Becky Fogel is a newscast host and producer at Texas Standard, a daily news show broadcast by KUT in Austin, Texas. She was formerly Science Friday’s production assistant.