Studying the Sex Secrets of a Snail Parasite

Curtis Lively and Jukka Jokela dive to collect snails, Potamopyrgus antipodarum, in Lake Alexandrina, New Zealand.
(Image credit: Kirsten Klappert, Eawag/ETH-Zurich)

Editor's Note: ScienceLives is an occasional series that puts scientists under the microscope to find out what makes them tick. The series is a cooperation between the National Science Foundation and LiveScience.

According to Indiana University evolutionary biologist Curt Lively, scientists have long wondered why clonal (asexual) reproduction does not replace sexual reproduction in natural populations. Recent research by Lively and his colleagues points to parasites as part of the answer, since the genetic variations that result from sexual reproduction may help the organisms avoid disease. Indiana University Bloomington and Swiss Federal Institute of Technology biologists collaborated on the research, which was reported in a July issue of Current Biology. The scientists' report represents direct experimental evidence for the "Red Queen Hypothesis" of sex, which suggests sexual reproduction allows host species to avoid infection by coevolved parasites because the potential hosts produce genetically variable offspring. The Current Biology report also supports the "Geographic Mosaic Theory," which says natural selection need not act uniformly on all members of a species, but can be intense in pockets of a population and absent elsewhere. An Indiana University press release explains the findings, while Curt Lively provides his answers to the ScienceLives 10 Questions below.

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