The Tree of Sex consortium: a global initiative for studying the evolution of reproduction in eukaryotes

Journal: Journal of Evolutionary Biology
Authors: Jeffries D, Benvenuto C, Böhne A, Fraïsse C, Garcia S, Jay P, Kratochvíl L, McDonough-Goldstein CE, Ruiz-Herrera A, Sotero-Caio CG, Valenzuela N, Wilson MA, Tree of Sex Consortium; Jaron KS.J
Year: 2025
ISBN: doi: 10.1093/jeb/voaf053

Abstract

Reproduction is a fundamental aspect of life that affects all levels of biology, from genomes and development to population dynamics and diversification. The first Tree of Sex database synthesized a vast diversity of reproductive strategies and their intriguing distribution throughout eukaryotes. A decade on, we are reviving this initiative and greatly expanding its scope to provide the most comprehensive integration of knowledge on eukaryotic reproduction to date. In this perspective, we first identify important gaps in our current knowledge of reproductive strategies across eukaryotes. We then highlight a selection of questions that will benefit most from this new Tree of Sex project, including those related to the evolution of sex, modes of sex determination, sex chromosomes, and the consequences of various reproductive strategies. Finally, we outline our vision for the new Tree of Sex database and the consortium that will create it (treeofsex.org). The new database will cover all Eukaryota and include a wide selection of biological traits. It will also incorporate genomic data types that were scarce or non-existent at the time of the first Tree of Sex initiative. The new database will be publicly accessible, stable, and self-sustaining, thus greatly improving the accessibility of reproductive knowledge to researchers across disciplines for years to come. Lastly, the consortium will persist after the database is created to serve as a collaborative framework for research, prioritizing ethical standards in the collection, use, and sharing of reproductive data. The new Tree of Sex consortium is open, and we encourage all who are interested in this topic to join us. Keywords: asexual reproduction; biodiversity; database; ontology; sex chromosomes; sex determination; sexual reproduction.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40336333/