California Condors are creatures of superlatives. They're North America's largest bird, one of its longest-lived, and among its most endangered.
Last week, researchers affiliated with the San Diego Zoo announced that condors are special in another way. In a study published in , they revealed genetic data that proved two of the zooās condors, since deceased, were born through parthenogenesis. Parthenogenesis is a rare occurance, more common in lizards, in which a female reproduces by herself without the help of a male mate; in other words, a condor egg grew up into a chick without being fertilized. It was a first for the species, and one of of the phenomenon in birds.
āWe werenāt looking for it,ā says Oliver Ryder, director of conservation genetics at San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance and lead author on the paper. āThe finding came as a complete surprise.ā
This discovery isnāt just completely unexpected: Itās also a sign that occasional parthenogenesis might be more widespread through the reptile family tree than previously thought, even into the realm of relatives like dinosaurs and birds. It likewise extends our knowledge of the sorts of reproductive tricks that birds are capable of.
Nobody was searching for parthenogenesis in condors. The San Diego Zoo had other priorities: recovering the endangered species. By 1982 a perilous combination of poaching, habitat destruction, and lead pollution had caused condor populations to crash to an all-time low of 23 birds. In 1987 the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service captured the remaining birds and worked with zoos, including the San Diego Zoo, to launch an intensive program of breeding and reintroductions. Part of that work entails the careful pairing of condors for mating; the raising of chicks; and, when all goes well, the release of birds into the wild. By the end of 2019, Ryder says, the breeding programs had increased the condor population to 525 birds: 219 in captivity and the rest released to fly free over the Southwest.
Keeping the condor population genetically healthy is paramount for preserving the species. One of the zooās main tasks is carefully tracking the condorsā family tree to make sure they donāt accidentally inbreed relatives. To do so, theyāve built a massive database of the entire speciesā genetics, generated from blood samples going back to the mid-1980s. āThe detailed information we have about condors is unusual,ā Ryder says. āItās an intensively monitored bird population.ā
This database led them to their reproductive discovery. In 2013 Ryderās team undertook an inventory of the entire species. "We decided to confirm all of the pedigree relationships for around 900 birds,ā Ryder says. Two birds stood out. "They glaringly didnāt match up.ā The birdsāmales that had been born in 2001 and 2009āhad both died without reproducing; one died after two years, the other after eight. Both had their mothersā genetic fingerprint, but did not match those femalesā longtime male mates. Nor, as the team was shocked to discover, did they match any other living male condor.
The only possibility, they surmised, was that the birds had reproduced asexually. In that case, condors created solely from their moms, with no help from fertilizing dads, had been hidden in the zoo population all along.
Parthenogenesis is unusual in birds, but it does happen. The first reported instance occurred among pigeons in 1924, and has since been noted in a few additional species: chicken, quail, zebra finches, and turkeys, all birds that humans intensively surveil. The discovery gives bird researchers an interesting theory to test: āAre there other birds out there that are occasionally parthenogenetically producing chicks?ā Ryder asks.
Reshma Ramachandran, a researcher at Mississippi State University who works on bird parthenogenesis, thinks itās possible. Pigeons, zebra finches and chickensāand now condorsācome from distinct bird families, she points out, which suggests the behavior could be considerably more widespread. āThereās no real answer as to why a population might show parthenogenesis, but Iām certain that thereās other instances of parthenogenesis weāre missing,ā she says. āI think the percentage of birds with it will go way higher.ā
The condor discovery is especially surprising because parthenogenesis is usually seen in birds that have no access to mates, Ramachandran says. Both female condors who reproduced on their own had successfully bred with their assigned males multiple times on other occasions. One of them was paired with the same male for 20 years, produced 23 chicks with him via the usual sexual method, and bred normally twice after producing her parthenogenetic chick in 2009. Why the parthenogenesis, then? At present, thereās no way to know.
Finding parthenogenesis in condors also raises the question of how far back the phenomenon could be traced in the bird family treeāpossibly back to dinosaurs, their shared ancestor with reptiles. Parthenogenesis is a well-established trait in some reptiles. Such babies, called parthenotes, make up the majority of some lizard species: New Mexico whiptails and tiny mourning geckos are made up entirely of all-female lineages. In other reptiles, like copperhead snakes and , it happens only occasionally among specific individuals.
We donāt knowāand can likely never knowāwhether non-bird dinosaurs were capable of parthenogenesis, says Darla Zelenitsky, who studies dinosaur reproduction at the University of Calgary, because the genetic evidence needed to test such a hypothesis doesnāt fossilize. If this style of reproduction turns out to be widespread among living birds, āthat could indicate parthenogenesis existed in the extinct common ancestor,ā Zelenitsky says, āan ancestor that would have evolved tens of millions of years ago.ā Alternatively, if examples remain limited to a few bird species, that would suggest the adaptation evolved independently.
While novel, the practical implications of this find are limited. Researchers canāt just stick a female condor in a room and hope it will reproduce itself, after all. Even if one did, it might not help conserve species in the long term because parthenotes donāt often develop successfully. They tend to be sterile and unable to produce their own offspring, and arenāt always healthy. In the case of the immaculately conceived condors, researchers had paired the longer-lived chick with a female to see whether they would produce offspring, to no avail.
Still, Ryder says, never say never. The discovery is a reminder that birds, for all their feathers, still have some things in common with other reptilesāand that even intensively studied species can still surprise us.