Modes of reproduction


Animals make use of a variety of modes of reproduction to produce their young. Traditionally this variety was classified into three modes, oviparity, viviparity, and ovoviviparity.
However, each of those so-called traditional modes covered a wide range of diverse reproductive strategies. The biologist Thierry Lodé has accordingly proposed five modes of reproduction based on the relationship between the zygote and the parents. His revised modes are ovuliparity, with external fertilisation; oviparity, with internal fertilisation of large eggs containing a substantial nutritive yolk; ovo-viviparity, that is oviparity where the zygotes are retained for a time in a parent's body, but without any sort of feeding by the parent; histotrophic viviparity, where the zygotes develop in the female's oviducts, but are fed on other tissues; and hemotrophic viviparity, where the developing embryos are fed by the mother, often through a placenta.

Traditional modes

The three traditional modes of reproduction are:
  • Oviparity, taken to be the ancestral condition, where either unfertilised oocytes or fertilised eggs are spawned.
  • Viviparity, including any mechanism where young are born live, or where the development of the young is supported by either parent in or on any part of their body.
  • Ovoviviparity, covering mechanisms which span the modes of oviparity and viviparity.
It can be seen that so defined, these traditional modes each cover a range of reproductive strategies.

Revised modes

The biologist Thierry Lodé proposed five modes of reproduction based on the relationship between the zygote and the parents:
Thus the definition of oviparity is narrower in the revised scheme, as it does not include the "ovuliparity" found in most fish, most frogs and many invertebrates.