Hi everyone,
I think this was discussed before...I am not sure.
http://www.bbc.com/earth/story/20141219-spectacular-real-virgin-births********************************************************************
This 6m long (20 ft) python had spent four years alone in Louisville zoo in the US, without ever having met a male of her species. But, somehow, she laid over 61 eggs, producing six healthy babies.
Thelma had become the first reticulated python in the world known to have had a real-life virgin birth.
Scientists are discovering that virgin births occur in many different species; amphibians, reptiles, cartilaginous and bony fish and birds and it happens for reasons we don't quite understand.
Initially, a virgin birth, also known as parthenogenesis, was thought to be triggered by extreme situations; it was only documented among captive animals, for example, perhaps by the stress, or isolation. A way to continue the bloodline when all other options had gone, when there was no other choice.
Not necessarily. It now appears that some virgin females produce offspring even in the presence of males.
What’s more, they do so in the wild, and may have been doing it for hundreds of millions of years.
********************************************************************
Life will find a way. If its not through sexual means...it'll be through 'virgin birth'. Shows that life is not an incidental or chance result of chemical reactions. Life (and reproduction) will happen one way or the other.
Cheers.
Sriram