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1.
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In the protogynous coral reef fish Anthias squamipinnis (Peters), all males are sex-reversed females. A sexually mature female can be induced to change sex by removing a male from her social group. The influence of non-sex-changing females on the initiation of sex change was evaluated in 109 social groups in the Gulf of Eilat. When the male and largest female were removed from each of 12 single-male groups, the second-largest female changed sex in 9 groups. This result distinguished between two behavioral hypotheses suggested by previous work and made it tenable that a particular behavioral measure, the profile of behavior-received, that depends on adult females, is critical to the initiation of sex change. This species forms all-female groups as well as bisexual groups. All-female groups can be expected to have some mechanism for the production of a male. The removal of the largest female from each of 8 all-female groups failed to induce sex change in any group. The dominant female in these groups thus does not function in the same way as does the male in bisexual groups, at least in terms of the initiation of sex change. Following the removal of the male from each of 8 bisexual groups containing five or fewer adult females, a female changed sex in only 4 groups. This 50% incidence of sex reversal was lower than the 77–80% incidence in control groups containing more than five adult females. Data suggest that a minimum of four adult females is probably required for the probability of sex change after male removal to equal 75%.  相似文献   

3.
In protogynous sex-changing fishes, females are expected to compete for the opportunity to change sex following the loss of a dominant male and may exhibit growth and behavioural traits that help them maintain their dominant status after sex change. A male removal experiment was used to examine changes in female growth and behaviour associated with sex change in the haremic wrasse Halichoeres miniatus and to test whether any changes in growth associated with sex change were recorded in otolith microstructure. Dominant females began displaying male-characteristic behaviour almost immediately after the harem male was removed. The frequency of interactions between females increased following male removal. In contrast, feeding frequency of females decreased. The largest one to three females in each social group changed sex following male removal and exhibited an increase in growth associated with sex change. Sex changers grew more than twice as fast as non-sex changers during the experimental period. This growth acceleration may enable new sex-changed males to rapidly reach a size where they can defend the remaining harem from other males. An optical discontinuity (check mark) was present in the otoliths of sex-changed fish, and otolith accretion rate increased significantly after the check mark, corresponding with the increased growth rate of sex-changing females. Wild caught males, but not females, exhibited an analogous check mark in their otoliths and similar increases in otolith increment widths after the check. This indicates that an increase in growth rate is a regular feature of sex-change dynamics of H. miniatus. Communicated by Environment Editor Prof. Rob van Woesik  相似文献   

4.
The effect of sex and shoal size on shoaling behaviour in Danio rerio   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Male and female zebra fish Danio rerio were given choices of shoals that differed in sex and size. Male zebra fish preferred to associate with female shoals over male shoals, but had no preference when given a choice between a mixed‐sex shoal and either a male or female shoal. Female zebra fish showed no significant preference when given a choice between male and females shoals, nor between mixed‐sex shoals and either male or female shoals. When given choices between shoals of differing size, females preferred to associate with the larger shoal, whether or not they were composed of males or females. Males, however, had no preference for larger shoals over smaller shoals, whether or not they were composed of males or females. These results showed that male zebra fish were capable of distinguishing between males and females solely on the basis of visual cues. Furthermore, these results demonstrated a significant difference between the shoaling choices of male and female zebra fish, which may indicate a difference in the function of shoaling for the two sexes.  相似文献   

5.
A major hypothesis to explain the causal initiation of protogynous sex reversal is that females change sex upon reaching a critical size. A study of the coral reef fish Anthias squamipinnis shows that the size hypothesis does not hold. Females from two neighbouring, but spatially discrete and probably genetically homogeneous populations on Aldabra Island changed sex at distinctly different sizes. Previous laboratory and field studies in which sex reversal has followed the removal of a male from social groups have been uncontrolled and thus permit the interpretation that sex reversal is caused by non-specific social disruption or by causes other than male removal. In this study, a male was removed from each of eleven single-male and five multi-male social groups in the laboratory ( N = 8 male removals) and in the field ( N = 19 male removals). In each group, the result was that one female changed sex. Laboratory controls made it unlikely that sex reversal was induced by non-specific disruption and field observations showed that sex reversals resulted from male removals and were not coincidental, ongoing events. Previous statements that sex change is controlled by the presence or absence of a male, by inhibition of a female's tendency to change sex, or by aggression or dominance are shown, by an analysis of the complexity of issues, to be premature. Gonadal histology on 130 specimens confirmed that this species is a monandric, protogynous hermaphrodite and provided details of gonadal transformation.  相似文献   

6.
Two experiments tested the hypothesis that adult female-to-male sex reversal in protogynous fish is induced by the loss of close-contact behavioral interactions between males and females, and not by the loss of simple visual cues from the male. Twenty-six laboratory groups of Anthias squamipinnis were manipulated so that females within each group (1) retained chemical and acoustic access to a male, (2) were denied behavioral access to a male, and (3) were either allowed or denied visual access to a male alone or to a male interacting with another female. At least one female subsequently changed sex in each of 22 groups. While acoustic and chemical cues were not completely eliminated as possible causes, sex change is apparently induced by loss of male-female behavioral interaction in combination with continued interaction between females.  相似文献   

7.
Behavioural flexibility allows an animal to adapt its behaviour in response to changes in the environment. Research conducted in primates, rodents and domestic fowl suggests greater behavioural persistence and reduced behavioural flexibility in males. We investigated sex differences in behavioural flexibility in fish by comparing male and female guppies (Poecilia reticulata) in a reversal learning task. Fish were first trained on a colour discrimination, which was learned equally rapidly by males and females. However, once the reward contingency was reversed, females were better at inhibiting the previous response and reached criterion twice as fast as males. When reward reversing was repeated, males gradually reduced the number of errors, and the two sexes had a comparable performance after four reversals. We suggest that sex differences in behavioural flexibility in guppies can be explained in terms of the different roles that males and females play in reproduction.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Synopsis The social and reproductive biology of the sand tilefish,Malacanthus plumieri (Malacanthidae), was studied at Glover's Reef, Belize, where this species occurs in colonies over sand-rubble flats. Individuals each occupy a home burrow refuge and a surrounding home range. Home range overlap among adjacent fish of the same sex is low, and individuals defend exclusive use of much of their home range against all conspecifics except mates (i.e., territoriality). Areas defended by males overlap the territories of up to 6 females; and male territory area is positively related to the number of female residents. Males maintain dominance over females within their territories by aggression, including intervention into some female disputes. Females spawn pelagically-dispersed eggs as frequently as every day. Each female spawns near her burrow, almost exclusively with the male whose defended area encompasses her territory (harem polygyny). Tilefish colonies therefore consist of a mosaic of female territories over which adjacent male territories are superimposed. Histological evidence and observation of behavioral sex change in one female revealed thatM. plumieri is capable of protogynous sex reversal. Females did not change sex in response to removal of one male. Occurrence of small transitional fish indicates that the onset of sex change is controlled by factors other than size-related social hierarchies within harems or colonies.  相似文献   

10.
In most biparental, substrate-brooding species of cichlid fishes, female and male roles differ. Females are usually more involved in direct care of the young while males spend more time away patrolling the territory. This study tested the flexibility of these sex roles with removal experiments in the convict cichlid, Cichlasoma nigrofasciatum. When males were removed, female fanning activity increased. When females were removed, males spent more time fanning and less time away from the brood. Other behavioural variables (frequency of digging, mouthing, foraging and retrieving) were not affected. Being alone or paired during a first breeding episode did not affect parental behaviour during a subsequent episode in which all fish were paired. Observations were carried out during the day and at night, and nocturnal fanning of fry is reported here for the first time. Female role appears less flexible than male role, as befits the more direct care normally given by females.  相似文献   

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The mating system of the gobiid fish Trimma okinawae is one of polygynous hermaphroditism, in which the largest female of a social unit changes sex following the removal of the dominant male. Histological observations of the gonads however, revealed that males have an ovarian tissue within a functional testis. The occurrence of ovarian tissue in the functional male suggests that T. okinawae males should be able to revert back into being functional females. To test this prediction, we placed females in an aquarium and allowed them to change sex. After confirming sex change from female to male, we individually placed new males into another aquarium and added a larger male to each. Our experiments revealed that females change sex and become males upon the removal of dominant males, and that those males changed sex again and became females in the presence of larger males. Sex change in both directions may be advantageous when a male is forced to become subordinate following the take over of the social unit by a larger male.  相似文献   

13.
Socially controlled sex change in teleosts is a dramatic example of adaptive reproductive plasticity. In many cases, the occurrence of sex change is triggered by a change in the social context, such as the disappearance of the dominant individual. The orange-spotted grouper Epinephelus coioides is a typical protogynous hermaphrodite fish that changes sex from female to male and remains male throughout its life span. In this study, male-to-female sex reversal in male Epinephelus coioides was successfully induced by social isolation. The body length and mass, gonadal change, serum sex steroid hormone levels and sex-related gene expression patterns during the process of socially controlled male-to-female sex reversal in E. coioides were systematically examined. This report investigates the physiological mechanisms of the socially controlled male-to-female sex reversal process in a protogynous hermaphrodite grouper species. The results enable us to study the physiological control of sex change, not only from female to male, but also from male to female.  相似文献   

14.
1. Some syngnathid species show varying degrees of sex role reversal aside from male pregnancy, with females competing for access to mates and sometimes presenting conspicuous secondary sexual characters. Among other variables, brooding space constraints are usually considered a key element in female reproductive success, contributing strongly to the observed morphological and behavioural sexual differences. Nevertheless, a close relationship between sex role reversal and male brooding space limitation has not yet been accurately demonstrated in field studies. 2. The present work, conducted over two consecutive breeding seasons in a wild population of the sex role-reversed pipefish Syngnathus abaster, simultaneously analysed egg number and occupied space, as well as the free area in the male's marsupium. The number of eggs that would fit in the observed unoccupied space was estimated. 3. Contrary to what would be expected, given the marked sexual dimorphism observed in the population studied, where females were larger and more colourful, male brooding space did not appear to limit female reproduction as neither large nor small individuals presented a fully occupied pouch. Interestingly, the largest unoccupied areas of marsupium were found in the larger individuals, although they received more and larger eggs. Laboratory data also showed that larger females lay larger eggs. 4. Together, these results suggest the existence of assortative mating, which may result from: (i) the reluctance of larger males (which tend not to receive small eggs usually laid by small females) to mate with lower quality females, even at the expense of a smaller number of offspring; or (ii) female-female competition, which might strongly reduce the hypothesis of a small female mating with a large male. The potential impact of temperature on reproduction and population dynamics is also discussed in the light of ongoing climatic changes.  相似文献   

15.
The social condition of bi-directional sex change in the gobiid fish Trimma okinawae was investigated at Akamizu Beach, Kagoshima, Japan. Social groups of T. okinawae usually consisted of a large male and one or more smaller females. The number of females in the group was positively correlated with male body size and groups were usually separated from each other by 1–3 m. In total, 22 instances of female-to-male sex change and three instances of male-to-female sex change were observed during the 16 months that social groups were monitored. Two individuals changed sex twice: female to male and back to female. Female-to-male sex change occurred when the male disappeared from a group. Either the largest remaining female changed sex to male or a large female from another group immigrated and changed sex to male. Larger individuals appear to benefit from becoming male because they can monopolize the breeding opportunities with several females, as reported in other protogynous fishes. Sex change from male-to-female only occurred when a solitary male joined another group as a subordinate. Mortality rates are high in these small fish, therefore joining another group and reproducing as a female is likely to increase the reproductive value of a solitary male.  相似文献   

16.
The mechanisms regulating sexual behaviours in female vertebrates are still poorly understood, mainly because in most species sexual displays in females are more subtle and less frequent than displays in males. In a sex-role reversed population of a teleost fish, the peacock blenny Salaria pavo, an external fertilizer, females are the courting sex and their sexual displays are conspicuous and unambiguous. We took advantage of this to investigate the role of ovarian-synthesized hormones in the induction of sexual displays in females. In particular, the effects of the sex steroids oestradiol (E2) and testosterone (T) and of the prostaglandin F2α (PGF2α) were tested. Females were ovariectomized and their sexual behaviour tested 7 days (sex steroids and PGF2α) and 14 days (sex steroids) after ovariectomy by presenting females to an established nesting male. Ovariectomy reduced the expression of sexual behaviours, although a significant proportion of females still courted the male 14 days after the ovary removal. Administration of PGF2α to ovariectomized females recovered the frequency of approaches to the male''s nest and of courtship displays towards the nesting male. However, E2 also had a positive effect on sexual behaviour, particularly on the frequency of approaches to the male''s nest. T administration failed to recover sexual behaviours in ovariectomized females. These results suggest that the increase in E2 levels postulated to occur during the breeding season facilitates female mate-searching and assessment behaviours, whereas PGF2α acts as a short-latency endogenous signal informing the brain that oocytes are mature and ready to be spawned. In the light of these results, the classical view for female fishes, that sex steroids maintain sexual behaviour in internal fertilizers and that prostaglandins activate spawning behaviours in external fertilizers, needs to be reviewed.  相似文献   

17.
As yet, cooperative breeding has been described only for some fish species. However, evidence is accumulating that it is widespread among Lake Tanganyika cichlids. We studied the cooperative breeding system of the substrate breeding cichlid Neolamprologus savoryi. Breeding groups typically consisted of a large breeding male with one to four breeding females and three to 33 helpers (mean group size: 14.3 members). Group size was significantly related to breeding male and female body sizes, and larger males had more breeding females and larger sized male helpers. The size of the largest female in the group was positively related to the number and sizes of secondary breeding females and female helpers. In case of multiple breeding females, these females usually divided the group's territory into sub‐territories, each with its own helpers (subgroups). Interspersed between groups, independent fish were detected defending an individual shelter (4.4% of all fish). In 9% of the groups no breeding female was present. All group members participated in territory defence and maintenance, and showed submissive behaviours to larger group members. As expected, the level of between‐subgroup conflicts was high compared with the level of within‐subgroup conflicts. We compare these results with data available from other cooperatively breeding fishes.  相似文献   

18.
To examine how a change in an individual's social status could influence its behavioural sex, we conducted male "removal-and-return" experiments in the polygynous wrasse, Halichoeres melanurus. This coral-reef fish is a protogynous hermaphrodite: the largest female (LF) living in a male's territory typically completes functional sex change within 2–3 weeks after the male's disappearance. In this experiment we removed males from their territories just prior to spawning time, about 1 h before sunset. In 12 of 30 trials, the resident LF spawned in the male role with smaller females, 21–98 min after male removal. Previous research suggests the LF should readily adopt male sexual behaviour to retain smaller females as future mates. However, the LFs of smaller body size were less likely to immediately perform male-role behaviour. This could be related to females' preference for larger mates: smaller LFs would be less likely to be chosen by other females, even if they could complete sex change and defend a territory. When a male was returned immediately after an occurrence of female–female spawning, the LF subsequently spawned in the female role with the returned male (6 of 12 trials). It could be adaptive for the LFs to accept a larger male as a mate rather than to fight against it. Thus, behavioural sex is reversible in H. melanurus, changing rapidly with social status. Electronic Publication  相似文献   

19.
ABSTRACT. The mating behaviour of experimentally produced gynandromorphs of the silkworm moth, Bombyx mori L., were observed. Of 232 gynandromorphs, thirty-two showed unusual bisexual behaviours. The bisexual behaviours were classified into four behavioural types: 'dual personality', 'schizophrenic', 'intersexual' and 'sequence-crossed'. The dual personality gynandromorphs behaved like a male at one time and like a female at another. The schizophrenics displayed male and female behaviours simultaneously in different parts of their body. The intersexuals showed a mixed type of male and female behaviours. The sequence-crossed animals performed the wrong sexual behaviour (e.g. female) in the context of one sex (e.g. male) when the behaviour of the other sex (i.e. male) would normally have been appropriate. These bisexual behaviours are discussed in terms of sensory and neural mechanisms.  相似文献   

20.
This study examined three aspects of protogynous sex change in Lythrypnus dalli (Gobiidae): (1) social influences on the rate of sex change, (2) the sequence of behavioural changes, and (3) neuroendocrine changes. Social groups consisted of either four females, or four females with a male who was subsequently removed. Sex change occurred most rapidly in male- removed groups when the sex changer was larger than other females. Sex changers in female only groups and sex changers not larger than other females in male-removed groups changed sex at similar rates. These differences may be explained by two factors that affect dominance: prior knowledge of the social group and greater size. Sex changers were dominant to other females prior to male removal, and larger sex changers increased displacement rates three-fold immediately after male removal. Sex changers in the other groups did not show this increase in displacements. This early establishment of dominance accounts for the overall difference in the rate of sex change. Prior to spawning, however, all sex changers increased displacements and performed male-typical displays. Arginine vasotocin-immunoreactive forebrain cells of sex changers were similar in size to field-collected males, and larger than field-collected females. Previously nesting males also changed sex in male-only groups, but at slow rates. These data are combined with those of existing studies to generate an integrative model of sex change in this goby. Received: 17 March 1999 / Received in revised form: 15 May 1999 / Accepted: 28 May 1999  相似文献   

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