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Growth and sexual strategies in the fishThalassoma duperrey (Labridae), a protogynous hermaphrodite
Authors:Robert M Ross
Institution:(1) Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology, P.O. Box 1346, Kaneohe, Hawaii, 96744, U.S.A.;(2) Present address: Department of Biology, Thiel College, Greenville, PA, 16125, U.S.A.
Abstract:Synopsis Adults of the fishThalassoma duperrey, a protogynous hermaphrodite, were collected and growth observed in captivity to study the relationship between growth and reproduction among primary males, females, and secondary males. Sexual maturity is reached at about 60 mm standard length, probably less than 1 year after fertilization. Gonosomatic index in both males and females peaks at about 120 mm, nearly 2 years later. Shortly thereafter females typically change sex, and both primary and secondary males undergo color change. At the same time gonosomatic index falls abruptly and remains low in large fish. The above changes appear to reflect differences in reproductive effort over a lifetime and are interpreted as the optimum strategy given the social and mating system of this fish. Unless they cannot acquire enough food to develop large gonads, small individuals put a much greater proportion of energy into growth than reproduction apparently to minimize the period of low fitness. Intermediate-sized males and females generally invest heavily in gametes, though some retain small gonads. Large individuals (both primary and secondary males) greatly reduce their investment in gametes, probably trading the energy required to maintain reproductive territories for it. This kind of gonad ontogeny involving gonad regression, as inT. duperrey and other labrid fishes, is unique among vertebrates.
Keywords:Gonad regression  Gonosomatic index  Reproductive effort  Sex change  Sex ratio  Sexual maturation
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