Have you been following the unfolding drama around Charlotte the stingray's pregnancy in the USA?
Charlotte who lives in an aquarium in North Carolina hasn't shared her tank with another ray in over 7 years, but has managed to become pregnant through ‘parthenogenesis’, developing eggs on her own without fertilisation!
It may sound like she's cloned herself, but according to Kady Lyons, a research scientist at the Georgia Aquarium speaking to Scientific American, Charlotte's young won't be as genetically robust as a clone would be, as they are only getting some of the mother's genetics (check out the full article in Scientific American for all of the hard science).
Charlotte is the first round stingray known to have undergone parthenogenesis.
Stingrays are ovoviviparous, so her young will be hatched from eggs held in the body, unlike many other species of ray which lay eggs, known as oviparous.