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Age,growth, and sex ratio among populations of least brook lamprey,Lampetra aepyptera,larvae: an argument for environmental sex determination
Authors:Margaret F Docker  F William  H Beamish
Institution:(1) Department of Zoology, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario, NIG 2W1, Canada;(2) Present address: Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Pacific Biological Station, Nanaimo, British Columbia, V9R 5KR, Canada
Abstract:Synopsis Sex ratios of least brook lamprey,Lampetra aepyptera, larvae varied widely among 12 geographically-diverse streams of the eastern United States. The extremes were 29 and 71% male, and the proportion of males increased significantly with relative population density, which was estimated among the streams from the number of larvae collected per m2 of substrate. The skewed sex ratios were not likely due to differential mortality between the sexes or differential recruitment to the adult stock, since they were established at the time of gonadal differentiation (at ca. 2 years of age) and remained relatively constant over the subsequent 2–3 years of larval life. Furthermore, although females seemed to predominate in the oldest larval age class, thus appearing to metamorphose later than males, their numbers were small and were omitted from the overall sex ratio. Sex ratio did not vary significantly with water hardness, pH, annual thermal units, or latitude. The possible adaptive significance of density-dependent sex determination in lampreys, however, remains elusive. It has been proposed that growth-promoting conditions might yield female-biased sex ratios as a tactic for ensuring that relatively large individuals become females, thereby increasing their fecundity. As predicted, larval size at a given age was generally greater in low-density populations, but there was no relationship between sex ratio and larval size, and female larvae were not consistently larger than the males.
Keywords:Density-dependent sex determination  Adaptive significance  Sex-specific recruitment  Agnatha  Cyclostomata
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