monandry

English

Etymology

From mono- +‎ -andry.

Noun

monandry (uncountable)

  1. The possession of only one husband at one time.
  2. (botany) The condition of being monandrous.
  3. (zoology) A mating system in which all of the eggs of a female are fertilized by sperm from the same male (over one breeding season or over a lifetime).
    • 2019, Stephen M. Shuster, Michael J. Wade, Mating Systems and Strategies, page 233:
      Yet monandry does exist in short-lived invertebrates (Shuster 1989a,b; Robinson and Allgeyer 1996; Fischer and Fiedler 2000; Jones 2001), in certain birds (Mauck et al. 1995) and mammals (Sever and Mendelssohn 1985; Brotherton et al. 1997), as well as in protistan species in which sexuality is achieved by the transfer of genetic material from one cell to another (Raikov 1995; Dacks and Roger 1999).

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