The biologist
Thierry Lodé proposed (2001, 2012) five modes of reproduction based on the relationship between the
zygote (fertilised egg) and the parents: •
Ovuliparity:
fertilisation is external, the oocytes being released into the environment and fertilised outside the body by the male. This is common in
molluscs,
arthropods and
fishes, and is found in most
frogs. • Oviparity: fertilisation is internal, but the female lays zygotes as eggs with a substantial quantity of yolk to feed the embryo while it remains in the egg. The egg is not retained in the body, or only for a limited time. Oviparity is found in
insects, birds and some other reptiles. Among mammals, the
monotremes are oviparous. • Ovo-viviparity: or oviparity with retention of zygotes in either the female's or in the male's body, but there are no trophic interactions between zygote and parents. This mode is found in the slowworm,
Anguis fragilis. In the sea horse, zygotes are retained in the male's ventral "marsupium". In the frog
Rhinoderma darwinii, the zygotes develop in the vocal sac. In the recently extinct frogs
Rheobatrachus, zygotes developed in the stomach. • Histotrophic viviparity: the zygotes develop in the female's
oviducts, but find their nutriments from other tissues, whether skin or glandular tissue,
oophagy or
adelphophagy (
intra-uterine cannibalism in some sharks or in the black salamander
Salamandra atra). • Hemotrophic viviparity: nutrients are provided by the female, often through a
placenta, as in
mammals except for
marsupials and
monotremes. In the frog
Gastrotheca ovifera,
embryos are fed by the mother through specialized
gills. The lizard
Pseudemoia pagenstecheri and most mammals use this form of viviparity. 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. File:Rana temporaria eggs 4.JPG|
Ovuliparity:
frog development inside soft egg (frogspawn) in pond water, fertilised outside body File:Schleiden-vogel.jpg|
Oviparity:
bird development inside shelled egg, with large food supply in
yolk, after internal fertilisation File:Anguidae.jpg|
Ovoviviparity:
slowworm gives birth to live young, after retaining the eggs inside her body File:CSIRO ScienceImage 2059 A Fiftydayold Kangaroo in Pouch.jpg|Histotrophic
viviparity:
kangaroo embryo at 50 days, feeding in the mother's
marsupial pouch (outside the
womb) File:Elements of the comparative anatomy of vertebrates (1886) (21057027940).jpg|Hemotrophic viviparity: a mammal embryo (centre) attached by its
umbilical cord to a
placenta (top) which provides food ==References==