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Abstract
When a female crested newt lays her clutch of about three-hundred eggs, half of these will never hatch. What an incredible waste! It turns out that these newts suffer from a deadly hereditary disease called a balanced lethal system. Here is how it works: in a balanced lethal system, there are two distinct versions of a particular chromosome. Newts need both to live. However, which version a fertilized newt egg gets from its father and mother is random. Therefore, there is a 50% chance that it receives the same version twice—and misses the other half of the critical pair. Hence, half of the eggs end up with the wrong chromosome combination and die. The newts are not the only example; balanced lethal systems are found in some plants and insects as well. Why something so disadvantageous as a balanced lethal system would ever evolve is still a big, evolutionary mystery!