Gynogenetic diploids, tetraploids, or octoploids, and a path to polyploidy in Anuran Amphibians.

2021 
Unreduced gametes have been implicated in the evolution of polyploid species of plants and animals and are normally produced by female anuran amphibians. Such eggs may initiate the evolution of polyploid species that have independently arisen in several anuran families. Polyploid females could also produce unreduced eggs that might lead to species with higher ploidy levels or their eggs may develop gynogenetically to reduce the ploidy level. Diploid Hyla chrysoscelis (2n=24) and tetraploid H. versicolor (4n=48) are sibling cryptic species of North American Grey Treefrogs. Artificial crosses using H. versicolor females and genetically distant diploid males were performed to produce haploid H. versicolor and to assess the production of unreduced eggs in this tetraploid species. Gynogenetic diploid (haploid H. versicolor), allotriploid, gynogenetic tetraploid, allopentaploid, autohexaploid, and gynogenetic octoploid tadpoles were confirmed using chromosome counts from tadpole tail tip squashes. Transformation and survival of the different ploidies varied. Gynogenetic diploids transformed but expressed aspects of the haploid syndrome and died before or shortly after transformation.
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