October 21, 2009 12:18 PM PDT

Scientists: Sex with a partner better than 'selfing'

by Elizabeth Armstrong Moore
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Levi Morran, a graduate student at the University of Oregon, had the pleasure of watching 50 generations of roundworms procreate and concluded that, as problematic as males are, sex with a mate is better than sex alone.

(Credit: University of Oregon)

Sex with oneself in the world of plants and animals is called, fittingly, "selfing." The offspring of selfing females share 100 percent of their mothers' genes, and they can go on to produce their own offspring.

The offspring of "outcrossing" (the sexy science term for mating) males and females, on the other hand, share 50 percent of each parent's genes. Some offspring, naturally, are males that cannot bear offspring.

Of the two systems, it turns out that outcrossing produces offspring whose more diverse genetic codes lead to greater chances for longer lives, lower susceptibility to genetic mutations, and better adaptability to changing environments, according to more than 100 mini-evolution experiments with nematode worms at the University of Oregon. Researchers are reporting their findings, among creatures that can reproduce via both selfing and outcrossing, online on Wednesday in advance of regular publication in the journal Nature.

While selfing females don't have to put up with "pesky males" to reproduce, a problem known as the evolutionary "cost" of males, and they can, in fact, populate twice as quickly when going it alone, the genetic benefits of outcrossing explain why the phenomenon exists at all, the researchers explained.

"Biologists going all the way back to Charles Darwin have been puzzled why sexual reproduction via outcrossing exists at all," said UO biology professor Patrick C. Phillips, who turned to two of his students in the UO Center for Ecology and Evolutionary Biology to help determine what good could possibly come of worms having partners.

Levi Morran and Michelle Parmenter conducted more than 100 mini evolutions for 50 generations, in which 60 populations of nematodes, also known as roundworms, were adapted to new environments, including to the presence of a bacterial pathogen that eats worms from the inside out, according to a statement.

Morran and Parmenter genetically engineered the worms, which normally practice a combination of both selfing and outcrossing, to reproduce just one or the other. Strictly selfing populations, they found, were far more susceptible to accumulating harmful mutations and unable to adapt to rapidly changing environments.

"The inability of selfing populations to adapt to changing environmental conditions helps to explain the observation that selfing populations are much more likely to go extinct than outcrossing populations," says Morran, a graduate student and lead author of the study.

While males are clearly problematic for several reasons, their evolutionarily benefits do outweigh their costs, Phillips concludes. Sound familiar, ladies?

Elizabeth Armstrong Moore is a freelance journalist based in Portland, Ore. She has contributed to Wired magazine, The Christian Science Monitor, and public radio. Her semi-obscure hobbies include unicycling, slacklining, hula-hooping, scuba diving, billiards, Sudoku, Magic the Gathering, and classical piano. She is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) (14 Comments)
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by stepyourgameup October 21, 2009 12:49 PM PDT
It depends on how hot she is.
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by setgo October 21, 2009 12:51 PM PDT
How would they know?
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by tasehagi October 21, 2009 12:58 PM PDT
pesky males?? problematic males??? "cost" of males??? worms???

i love this biology lessons...
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by johnisfun October 21, 2009 1:31 PM PDT
Great title, boring article. But better than Chris Matyskyk (great titles, constipated content).
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by tonari-no-totoro October 21, 2009 1:43 PM PDT
I've always wondered why the best approach wouldn't be to have organisms that reproduce by "outcrossing" but where all of the organisms can produce offspring? Essentially hermaphrodites. All offspring would have two parents (so you get the genetic diversity benefit), but there is no need for half of the population to be unable to get pregnant (the "cost" of males). This seems like it would be such a huge advantage that there must be some major drawback.
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by Er|c October 21, 2009 3:20 PM PDT
Maybe the food source couldn't keep up.
by trilobug October 21, 2009 1:56 PM PDT
But selfing is so convenient, and cheap.
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by stepyourgameup October 21, 2009 2:43 PM PDT
And you don't have to pay for cab fare.
by bvdon October 21, 2009 1:59 PM PDT
Yes.. good title, but not applicable to the story. But if it were... well, selfing is sometimes better if the only choice you have is someone not particularly sexually attractive.
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by kgsbca October 21, 2009 2:42 PM PDT
I tell my wife this all the time.
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by libertyforall1776 October 21, 2009 2:47 PM PDT
No new news here -- this research found out what was already known! How about some REAL news!
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by zjpccc31 October 21, 2009 10:14 PM PDT
?????????? ????????
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by zjpccc31 October 21, 2009 10:15 PM PDT
?????????? ????????
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by PrettyStuzz October 22, 2009 9:14 AM PDT
Muddled and unclear while sounding clear and unmuddled. It relies on our own imprecise naming systems, like how we call all birds 'birds' and all dogs 'dogs' even though birds can't interbreed while dogs can.

The organisms that replicate non-sexually by division never die - it's what replication means. Organisms that reproduce sexually or mate have a definite life cycle which leads to death of the parent organisms. Just another instance of biology plagiarizing the Adam & Eve myth while proving its validity.
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