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Social control of sex change in the Red Sea razorfish Xyrichtys pentadactylus (Teleostei,Labridae)
Authors:Simon C Nemtzov
Institution:(1) Department of Zoology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, 20742, U.S.A.;(2) Present address: Kibbutz Rosh Tzurim, D.N. Harei Yerushalayim, Israel
Abstract:Synopsis The Red Sea razorfish, Xyrichtys pentadactylus, a territorial haremic labrid with dominance hierarchies within the harems. Theory predicts that primary males (fish developing initially as males) should be rare or nonexistent in haremic territorial species because the larger secondary males (males which have undergone sex and/or color change) limit access to females. Histological examination of gonads of 95 specimens showed that all males are derived from females by sex change (i.e. they are secondary males). During five months of field studies 100% of more than 200 observed matings were pair spawnings — the usual mating practice for monandric (having one type of male) species. Sex change in females was induced by male removal in nature. Isolation of four groups of females in aquaria showed that the largest female in the social group changes sex in the absence of a male, demonstrating that sex change is socially-controlled in this species.
Keywords:Mating systems  Monandry  Protogynous hermaphroditism  Sequential hermaphroditism  Sex-reversal
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