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. 2024 Mar-Apr;43(2):183-187.
doi: 10.1002/zoo.21820. Epub 2024 Jan 17.

Female long-term sperm storage results in viable offspring in the Himalayan Mountain Pitviper, Ovophis monticola

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Female long-term sperm storage results in viable offspring in the Himalayan Mountain Pitviper, Ovophis monticola

Brenna A Levine et al. Zoo Biol. 2024 Mar-Apr.

Abstract

The ability of females to store sperm for extended periods in their reproductive tracts (termed long-term sperm storage, LTSS) has been reported across a diversity of vertebrate taxa. The evolutionary, ecological, and physiological significance of LTSS is wide-ranging and includes the ability to produce offspring when mates may be temporally scarce by way of decoupling copulation from ovulation, inbreeding avoidance, and the generation and maintenance of genetic diversity in progeny. Among vertebrate lineages, nonavian reptiles exhibit a remarkable capacity for LTSS, with the production of viable offspring reported after periods exceeding 6 years since prior contact with a potential mate. Given that female reptiles are able to store viable sperm for prolonged periods, it is important to disentangle LTSS from that of facultative parthenogenesis (FP), a reproductive trait which appears widespread among all reptile lineages. The implications of this distinction are particularly important in the context of the development and management of captive breeding programs. To accurately determine between the two reproductive strategies, genomic screening is highly recommended. Following a period of isolation for 13 months from a potential male mate, a female Himalayan Mountain Pitviper (Ovophis monticola) produced a clutch of three male offspring. Here, through genome-scale analyses of the female and her progeny, we document the first record of LTSS in this genus and exclude FP as the alternative hypothesis.

Keywords: Viperidae; reproduction; reproductive strategy; snake.

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