>>31945815Well, so far it's only been documented for that species of insect as far as I know, so it's pretty hard to find information on this, and it doesn't even have its own page on wikipedia.
However, it's been reported to occur on a species of plant too.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cupressus_duprezianaLook for male apomixis.
But if you want to look up some reproduction related things in the living beings, I suggest you'd look for parthenogenesis, ZW sex differentiation, Hermaphrodism. These should take you to an universe of oddities.
I've even seen a case of some animal exclusively female which would reproduce asexually, but only after having sex with an other species.
That sounds so fucking weird, but the sperm of the male from another specied doesn't fertilize the eggs, it simply triggers the parthenogenesis. I wish I'd find it again.