med_cat: (SH education never ends)
[personal profile] med_cat posting in [community profile] 1word1day
Semelparous (adj.)

: reproducing or breeding only once in a lifetime

semelparous salmon

Did you know?


The combining form -parous was first used in English by the 17th-century physician and writer Sir Thomas Browne, who wrote about organisms that were multiparous ("producing more than one at a birth"), oviparous ("producing eggs that develop outside the maternal body"), and viviparous ("producing living young instead of eggs from within the body"). The suffix is based on the Latin verb parere, meaning "to give birth to," which is also a relative of the word that gave us parent. Semelparous, the youngest offspring of -parous, was born in 1954. Its other parent is semel, the Latin word for "once."


I came across it the other day while reading about Australian marsupial mice: daily.jstor.org/death-and-mating/

(no subject)

Date: 2024-01-21 08:24 am (UTC)
sallymn: (words 2)
From: [personal profile] sallymn
I've never heard this one before!

(no subject)

Date: 2024-01-22 12:35 am (UTC)
minoanmiss: Minoan lady in moon (Minoan Moon)
From: [personal profile] minoanmiss

Exciting!

IIRC, octopodes are semelparous.

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