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Stringray's 'virgin' pregnancy: How some species can get pregnant without mating

A North Carolina stingray's surprise pregnancy is most likely the product of parthenogenesis. National Geographic's Christine Dell'Amore shared the details of how this works.

A stingray at Aquarium & Shark Lab by Team ECCO in Hendersonville, North Carolina, is pregnant without any mates in sight.

The female ray, named Charlotte, has become an aquatic enigma, as the public questions whether her pregnancy was caused by a male shark or by asexual reproduction.

A shark-ray pregnancy "is really not that strong of a possibility," the aquarium's founder and executive director, Brenda Ramer, told Fox News Digital.

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It is more likely that Charlotte became pregnant through a form of asexual reproduction called parthenogenesis.

Fox News Digital also spoke to National Geographic senior editor Christine Dell'Amore, who noted that sexual reproduction normally involves an egg cell and a sperm cell.

"Each provides half the genetic information necessary to create a living organism," she said. "But in parthenogenesis, the body finds a unique way of filling in for the genes usually provided by sperm."

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The method involves the merging of an egg with "polar bodies," which are a cellular byproduct of meiosis, a type of cell division that creates sperm or egg cells.

This process "slightly shuffles the mother’s genes," according to NatGeo, to create offspring that are similar to the mother but not exact clones.

Parthenogenesis, sometimes called "virgin birth," has been observed in at least 80 species, mostly fish and reptiles, Dell’Amore said.

Some species that can experience virgin birth include sharks, snakes and even birds — but never mammals.

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Other animals that sometimes procreate through parthenogenesis include small invertebrates such as bees, wasps, ants and aphids, according to NatGeo.

Dell’Amore considers parthenogenesis to be "relatively rare."

"Scientists are often observing it in new species, many of which live in captivity," she said. 

In some "very rare cases," species reproduce exclusively via parthenogenesis, Dell’Amore noted.

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This includes the desert grassland whiptail lizard, which is an entirely female species.

It is rare that complex vertebrates such as sharks, snakes and lizards rely solely on asexual reproduction, NatGeo reported.

One of the aquarium’s sharks has laid approximately 900 eggs in the past eight years, Ramer said — and 14 of those eggs have grown into embryos with no fertilization.

If Charlotte’s babies turn out to be the product of parthenogenesis, Dell’Amore projected they "should be fine," since they will likely live in captivity.

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"If they were in the wild, it might be harder for them to breed because they'd be more vulnerable to disease than a genetically diverse population," she said.

Virgin births have occurred for millions of years in the "smallest, simplest organisms," according to National Geographic.

"For more advanced animals like vertebrates, scientists think that the ability to reproduce asexually came about as a last-ditch effort for species facing adverse conditions," a NatGeo report said.

"That may explain why parthenogenesis is possible in so many desert and island species."

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More info on parthenogenesis can be found at nationalgeographic.com.

Fox News Digital’s Andrea Vacchiano contributed to this report.

For more Lifestyle articles, visit www.foxnews.com/lifestyle.

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