As the first stage in the evolution of
sexual reproduction in all known
lifeforms, isogamy is thought to have evolved just once, in a single
unicellular eukaryote species, the
common ancestor of all
eukaryotes. It is generally accepted that isogamy is an ancestral state for
anisogamy. Isogamous reproduction
evolved independently in several lineages of plants and animals into
anisogamy (species with
gametes of male and
female types) and subsequently into
oogamy (species in which the female gamete is much larger than the male and has no ability to move). This pattern may have been driven by the physical constraints on the mechanisms by which two gametes get together as required for
sexual reproduction. Since it appeared, isogamy has remained the norm in
unicellular eukaryote species, and it is possible that isogamy is also evolutionarily stable in multicellular species. == Occurrence ==