{"id":40820,"date":"2019-01-04T06:00:00","date_gmt":"2019-01-04T15:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/home\/this-is-how-the-animal-kingdom-reproduces\/"},"modified":"2019-01-04T06:00:00","modified_gmt":"2019-01-04T15:00:00","slug":"this-is-how-the-animal-kingdom-reproduces","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/home\/this-is-how-the-animal-kingdom-reproduces\/","title":{"rendered":"This is how the animal kingdom reproduces"},"content":{"rendered":"
Animals produce offspring by two principal modes of reproduction.<\/p>\n
Vivipary (or viviparity) means producing live young — readily recognized as living because newly produced offspring wriggle, squirm, squall or squeak. The intended contrast is with ovipary (or oviparity) — producing eggs that house an embryo inside a shell; usually the eggs do not wriggle or squall. Of course, fertilized eggs are not dead, as might be supposed by the contrast with living young. Fertilized eggs are very much alive, but early development takes place inside the shell instead of inside a parent. All the nutrition for early development inside an egg must come from the egg yolk and therefore be provided by the parent before the embryo is enclosed in the eggshell.<\/p>\n
(There is an intermediate condition — ovovivpary\/ovoviviparity — in which fertilized eggs are held within a female and hatch inside her. The embryo may be nourished by eating other eggs or embryos or perhaps by a kind of placenta, with a direct connection to the mother. This might indicate ways that, in the course of evolutionary time, vivipary evolved from ovipary. But leave that aside for present purposes.)<\/p>\n
Vivipary and ovipary — these two modes of reproduction are scattered widely in the animal kingdom. It would be convenient if we could make lots of solid generalizations about either of these modes of reproduction, either about their taxonomic distribution or about their advantages and disadvantages. But alas, not so. There are only a few strong generalizations and there are almost always exceptions. Consider first the birds and then the mammals.<\/p>\n