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1.
Synopsis The process of sex change in the protogynous wrasse, Thalassoma duperrey, was investigated through histological and ultrastructural observations on the gonads of females changing sex to male. Changes in plasma steroid levels concomitant with structural changes were measured by radioimmunoassay. The process of sex change from ovary to testis was divided into six stages on the basis of changes in the structure of the germinal and somatic elements. Ovaries of females were filled with vitellogenic oocytes during the breeding season, but contained no spermatogenic tissue (Stage 1). At the commencement of sex change (Stage 2), vitellogenic oocytes began to degenerate, and were ingested by macrophagous cells. This stage was accompanied by a rapid drop in plasma levels of estradiol-17. Thereafter, previtellogenic oocytes (Stage 3) also began to degenerate, and aggregations of stromal tissue, and loose connective tissue were observed in the central region of the lamellae. Steroid producing cells (Leydig cells), developed at the border of this loose connective tissue. Presumed spermatogonia proliferated on the periphery of the lamellae, and Leydig cells increased in size and number (Stage 4). Spermatogonia formed cysts, and underwent spermatogenesis (Stage 5). Finally, sex change to male was considered complete, with the beginning of active spermatogenesis and spermiation (Stage 6). Plasma levels of testosterone remained low throughout the sex change, but a second androgen, 11-ketotestosterone increased gradually in parallel to the increased numbers of Leydig cells and spermatogonia. Preliminary in vitro incubation of gonads with salmon gonadotropin, revealed that sex-changed males had higher levels of 11-ketotestosterone production than did females, while females had higher levels of estradiol-17 production than did males. Production of both these steroids increased in a dose-related fashion with increasing doses of gonadotropin.  相似文献   

2.
Synopsis The process of gonadal sex differentiation in Amphiprion clarkii was investigated for 2 years at Murote Beach, Shikoku Island, Japan. Six color phases were discriminated on the basis of the caudal fin coloration, which corresponded well to six gonadal phases. From changes of the color phases with growth, three life history pathways were detected: (1) subadult male subadult female adult female, (2) subadult male adult male adult female, (3) subadult male adult male. Different pathways were due to the difference of timing among individuals in the development of ovarian tissues of the hermaphroditic gonads involving the atrophy of testicular tissues. Irreversible differentiation of ovarian tissues of the gonads occurred more frequently among nonbreeders (10 cases) than among breeders (4 cases). The second pathway, which has been thought the norm of tropical anemonefishes, was therefore not primary in this population. This can be attributed to ecological conditions: fish are able to move between host sea anemones and nonbreeders can escape from social suppression by adult pairs because of high population density of hosts.  相似文献   

3.
Synopsis Parental care in the Malawian cichlid fishPseudotropheus zebra BB is extensive and exclusively maternal; males contribute only genetic material. The costs of searching for multiple mates (in this case risk of predation on orally incubated eggs) suggested that females should be monandrous; microsatellite genetypes of seven brooding females and their young, however, reveal extensive multiple paternity in this species, with a mean of 3.8 paternal individuals per brood. Polygynandry inP. zebra is probably not maintained by selection for genetically diverse offspring; potential explanations include avoidance of inbreeding, and bet-hedging on other male characteristics that females are unable to evaluate when selecting a mate. The observed degree of multiple paternity strongly suggests that females are free to choose mates as they will, a prerequisite of many theories positing sexual selection as a key element in Malawi chichlid evolution. It should also result in elevation of effective population sizes, and thus be antagonistic to runaway evolution of male secondary sexual characteristics, but not necessarily to other modes of sexual selection.  相似文献   

4.
Synopsis Sharp declines in catches prompted a detailed study of the commercially and culturally important terubok Tenualosa toli, which lives in the fast-flowing, turbid estuaries and adjacent shallow coastal waters of Sarawak. Its reproduction, diet, age and growth were investigated. An absence of small females and large males, together with histological data showing transitional gonads, suggest that T. toli is a protandrous hermaphrodite. Ageing based on otoliths indicates that individuals may not live more than about two years. Male fish spawn towards the end of their first year, change sex (transitional gonads were recorded in fish from 14 to 31 cm SL) and spawn as females in their second year. Spawning takes place in the middle reaches of estuaries and females deposit all their eggs at once. Fecundity is linearly related to fish length but shows significant seasonal and site variations. Hermaphroditism is discussed in relation to possible environmental and isolating mechanisms. T. toli is a zooplanktivore eating mainly calanoid copepods. Laser-ablation inductively-coupled plasma mass spectroscopy of trace elements across otoliths revealed that the species does not move into full seawater or freshwater, but completes its life cycle in estuarine and adjacent coastal waters. Therefore T. toli populations in each estuary and adjacent coastal waters may be relatively isolated from one another, and hence particularly susceptible to overfishing.  相似文献   

5.
We present evidence suggesting that some male convict cichlids (Amatitlania siquia) in Lake Xiloá, Nicaragua engage in alternative reproductive tactics (ARTs). These putative ART males were smaller than typical parental males, displayed coloration similar to breeding females, and possessed enlarged gonads. Gonadosomatic indices in these males were 16-fold higher than parental males and three-fold higher than females. This phenotype is consistent with the ‘sneaker’ or ‘satellite’ phenotype reported in other species. A survey of 282 fish in 2014 found three males (1% of all fish, 2% of males) with these characteristics. This finding is significant because convict cichlids are frequently studied in laboratory and field in the context of monogamy and biparental care.  相似文献   

6.
Using tritium as a radiolabel marker of interspecific fluid transfer, we present experimental evidence that the heteromorphic deutonymph of an astigmatid mite (Hemisarcoptes cooremani) acquires materials (at least water) directly from the haemolymph of its beetle host (Chilocorus cacti). This acquisition is above that obtained from atmospheric vapour. The material acquired from the host is necessary for the completion of the ontogeny of H. cooremani and is likely procured through the action of the caudal ventral suckers of the heteromorphic deutonymph (hypopus). On gross morphological criteria, this mite-beetle relationship was previously defined as phoretic (for dispersal). Scanning electron photomicrographs of the physical relationship between the hypopodes and the heetles shed light on the parasitic nature of the hypopus of H. cooremani. Our findings are discussed in terms of the evolution of parasitism from a free-living astigmatid form. This transition into parasitism is facilitated by the heteromorphic hypopus and represents a classic wolf-insheep's-clothing strategy. The heteromorph retains the characteristic phoretic morphology while exploiting the host in transit.  相似文献   

7.
Triploid hybrids have been obtained by crossing individuals of the diploid Warramaba virgo with males of two undescribed related species of Warramaba, P169 (neo-XY) and P196 (X1X2Y). In both cases, offspring which receive a Y-chromosome from the father are males, while those that receive a neo-X from P169 or an X1 and an X2 from P196 are females. The triploids can be distinguished from diploids, even in the earliest nymphal instars, by the larger size of their eye facets. Their gonads are undeveloped and abnormal so that they are mostly sterile (the males absolutely so). Nevertheless, in the case of female hybrids (both the ones between virgo and P169 and those between virgo and P196) a few oocytes do develop and it was possible to obtain a further generation of hybrids by parthenogenesis. These, which are all female, and have karyotypes identical to those of their mothers, are derived from eggs which have undergone the virgo type of meiosis, with a premeiotic doubling of the chromosome number, followed by synapsis restricted to sister chromosomes. — Some diploid hybrids have also been obtained between the bisexual species P169 () and P196 (). In this case the male offspring died in the embryonic stage or immediately after hatching. Female hybrids, on the other hand, were viable but had under-developed ovaries, so that they only laid very few eggs. Some of the latter developed into embryos with a karyotype identical to that of the mother, but the meiosis of these eggs has not yet been studied, so that it is not known whether it is of the virgo type. These hybridization experiments support the hypothesis that virgo originated as a hybrid between P196 and P169. — A single male hybrid between Warramaba picta () and P169 () was obtained; it had active spermatogenesis, but many meiotic abnormalities.  相似文献   

8.
The mating system and sexuality of the gobiid fish Trimma marinae were investigated in aquaria and by gonadal histological examination. The male to female sex ratio in the study aggregation was female biased (14:27), and females were larger than males. T. marinae were monogamous because they established continuous pairs and spawned repeatedly with the same individuals. Observations of aggressive behavior suggested that the monogamous mating system resulted from female mate guarding. We also performed a rearing experiment to test whether sex change occurs in this species. None of the males or females reared separately in aquaria for 63 days changed sex. Additionally, gonadal histology revealed that mature fish had unisexual gonads (testis or ovary). These results strongly suggest that T. marinae is gonochoristic. However, immature fish had a bisexual gonadal structure, indicating juvenile hermaphroditism.  相似文献   

9.
The effects of homoeology and sex on recombination frequency were studied in crosses between cultivated pearl millet, Pennisetum glaucum, and two wild subspecies, P. violaceum and P. mollissimum. For the two wild x cultivated crosses, reciprocal three-way crosses were made between the F1 hybrid and an inbred line (Tift 23DB1). The three-way cross populations were mapped to produce a female map of each wide cross (where the F1 was the female) and a male map (where the F1 was the male). Total genetic map lengths of the two inter-subspecies crosses were broadly similar and around 85 % of a comparable intervarietal map. In the P. glaucumxP. mollissimum crosses, the map was further shortened by a large (40 cM) inversion in linkage group 1. Comparison of the recovered recombinants from male and female meiocytes showed an overall trend for the genetic maps to be longer in the male (10%) in both inter-subspecific crosses; however, analysis of individual linkage intervals showed no significant differences. Gametophytic selection was prevalent, and sometimes extreme, for example 121 in favour of wild alleles in the P. glaucumxP. mollissimum male recombinant population. One of the loci which determines panicle type in cultivated pearl millet and wild relatives, H, was mapped 9 cM from Xpsm812 on linkage group 7 in the P. violaceum cross.  相似文献   

10.
Contrary to the generally accepted life history theory regarding sequential hermaphroditism (size-advantage model), we have recently identified mini males in Lythrypnus dalli, the bluebanded goby. These are small (female-sized) fish that appear male based on their external genitalia. We investigated the reproductive anatomy and demography of these mini males. Based on their small size and the sexual plasticity of this species, we expected that mini males are not actually reproductively functioning males. However, when we examined their gonad anatomy, with particular attention to the male-typical accessory gonadal structure (AGS), we found that mini males have gonads that are comparable to those of nesting males in relative size and the percentage of tissue that is male (testicular and AGS). Although this is contradictory to theories of sperm competition in alternative male phenotypes, reproductive strategies of these two types of males were clearly distinguishable based on their AGS content – as described in other examinations of differing ejaculate quality in alternative male phenotypes in the Gobiidae. Regular sampling of the L. dalli population showed that mini males make up a small fraction of the small size classes and that as the breeding season progressed, mini male frequency decreased and standard length increased significantly – thus allowing us to discuss their role within the social system. Based on these findings as well as comparisons with other species with multiple male phenotypes, we can begin to categorize L. dalli males as either bourgeois or parasitic, primarily based on their secondary sex characteristics and AGS contents.  相似文献   

11.
In haplochromine cichlids, female mate choice based on male nuptial coloration has played an important role in speciation. Recent studies suggest that male coloration strongly influences the distribution of these fishes based on male-male aggression; males direct more aggression towards similarly coloured opponents while tolerating differently coloured individuals. We explored the role of male nuptial colour in aggression among the mbuna of Lake Malawi, examining aggression by male Metriaclima mbenjii, the red top cobalt zebra, towards conspecific opponents, similarly coloured heterospecific opponents and differently coloured heterospecifics. In trials in which focal males were offered a single opponent, while the total number of aggressive behaviours did not vary among opponent species, the types of behaviours did; focal males directed more lateral displays towards conspecifics than towards the other opponent species. When focal males were offered two opponents simultaneously, M. mbenjii directed more aggressive behaviours and more lateral displays towards similarly coloured opponents, regardless of species. Furthermore, when offered a conspecific and a similarly coloured opponent simultaneously, there were no differences in behaviour towards either opponent. Thus, nuptial coloration is used by males to identify competitors, and it suggests that male-male aggression may have also been an important diversifying force in speciation in rock-dwelling Lake Malawi cichlids.  相似文献   

12.
Social control of sex change occurs in a variety of hermaphroditic fishes; upon removal of the dominant individual, the largest individual of the opposite sex typically changes sex and acquires mating priority with the remaining members of the social group. Social control may allow a phenotypically plastic response to social situations that convey cues about the relative advantages of functioning as one sex or the other, and should be advantageous in highly heterogeneous habitats such as coral reefs. Parrotfishes (family Scaridae) are dominant members of herbivorous coral reef fish assemblages, and numerous histological examinations of gonads have demonstrated the hermaphroditic life history of many species in the family. However, social control of sex change has never been conclusively demonstrated in the parrotfishes. To test a new version of the size-advantage model for sex change, we conducted removal experiments of dominant male bucktooth parrotfish, Sparisoma radians, in St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands. A total of seven females from five different reefs changed sex following removals, clearly demonstrating social control of sex change. In addition, all but one of those individuals changing sex were smaller than the largest females remaining in the harems, and this contrasts with nearly all previous studies of sex change in fishes. Sex change proceeds via a novel sequence of events when compared with previous studies. Rather than behavioral sex change preceding morphological sex change, the appearance of male coloration is followed by the development of male behavior that is fully expressed approximately 20 days after removal. We show how differing arrival rates of bachelor males at our study sites may facilitate alternative contexts of sex change, with sex change occurring within social groups in some locations and with bachelor males filling harem vacancies in other locations. Alternative contexts of sex change further illustrate the astonishing phenotypic plasticity in the social and mating behavior of parrotfishes.  相似文献   

13.
Populations ofDrosophila melanogaster that had been subjected to long-term selection favoring either delayed or rapid senescence were compared with respect to age-specific components of male reproductive success involving sperm competition. These components of reproductive success were divided into those related to sperm defense (protection of sperm from other males), and into those related to sperm offense (ability to mate with previously mated females and to displace the sperm of other males). Males were tested at four ages ranging from 1–2d to 5–6 wk after eclosion. Several aspects of sperm defense capability showed clear evidence of senescent decline. Furthermore, males from populations selected for delayed senescence were superior to males from control (rapid senescence) populations with regard to components of sperm defense. The superiority of males from populations with delayed senescence either increased as a function of male age, or was present at all ages tested. These results indicate that the rate of reproductive senescence in maleD. melanogaster can be altered in predictable directions by artificial selection. There were no differences between selection regimes with regard to sperm offense, and most components of sperm offense did not show clear evidence of senescence. The improved late-age reproductive success of males from populations selected for delayed senescence did not appear to entail any cost or trade-off at early ages with respect to the reproductive traits examined in these experiments.  相似文献   

14.
The distribution patterns of keratinophilic fungi isolated from Passer domesticus of a coastal (Puri) and an intercoastal (Dhenkanal) district were compared with respect to three parameters, season, age and sex. Irrespective of the parameters, Chrysosporium tropicum and Rollandina hyalinospora showed the highest frequency of occurrence. Their occurrence in the birds was not determined by any ecological or environmental condition in nature. Thus these fungi exhibited their ecological maturity or firm establishment in nature. The maximum fungal distribution occurred during the monsoon season and was minimal in the summer. Juvenile birds were active carriers of the fungi and the male birds harboured the maximum number of fungi. Thus male juvenile birds carried the maximum number of keratinophilic fungi during the monsoon season. The free-living P. domesticus enhances the degree of dispersal of keratinophilic fungi, it being in frequent contact with human artifacts, breeding in settlements and town gardens Eusynanthropic habit. The fungi so dispersed are called mesoornithochorus as their occurrence in birds is determined to a certain degree by avian habits.  相似文献   

15.
Suggrundus meerdervoortii (Platycephalidae) has been hypothesized to pass through four phases, thus changing sex three times: the first male, first female, second male and second female phases. In this study, gonads of males and females were constructed from developed testis with an immature ovary and only oocytes, respectively. The females in this study were significantly larger than the males. There was no female in the size range of the hypothesized first female phase. Reversed sex change among protandrous fishes has not been reported in any other studies. Thus, the specimens of the hypothesized first female phase may be different from S. meerdervoortii. Therefore, this species should be considered protandrous without reversed sex change.  相似文献   

16.
The process of sex change in the gobiid fish Trimma okinawae was investigated by gonad histology and immunohistochemistry of two steroidogenic enzymes, P450 cholesterol-side-chain-cleavage (P450scc) and 3-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (3-HSD). Irrespective of sexual phase, gonads comprised both ovarian and testicular tissues. Females changed sex to male within 7 days, reverting again to female over an 11-day period. In each sexual phase of the females, the 2nd (2DF-M) and 4th (4DF-M) day after the initiation of sex change to male, the males, and 2nd (2DM-F), 4th (4DM-F), and 6th (6DM-F) days after the initiation of reversion from male to female, histological observations were made. In the ovary during the female, 2DF-M, 4DF-M, and 6DM-F phases, both vitellogenic and previtellogenic oocytes were present, but only previtellogenic oocytes were found in the other phases. The testis contained sperm in all phases, but sperm ducts were not visible in the female phase. In the ovary, P450scc immunoreactivity of interstitial cells was strongly or moderately detected, although weak in the male phase. In contrast, P450scc immunoreactivity in thecal cells was found in all but the male and 2DM-F phases. 3-HSD immunoreactive interstitial cells were detected in all phases, but only weakly so in the male and 2DM-F phases. 3-HSD immunoreactive thecal cells were observed in all stages without the male and 2DM-F and 4DM-F phases. In the testis, moderate P450scc and 3-HSD immunoreactivity was regularly found in the Leydig cells in all the phases. These results suggest that functional steroids including testosterone are produced in any sexual phases.  相似文献   

17.
The loss of the L-chromosomes from the germ line of a newly-collected strain of Sciara impatiens was used as a genetic marker to test whether the supernumeraries in this genus obey the rule of origin which governs the behavior of the regular homologues at first meiotic anaphase in the male. Reciprocal crosses between a normal strain which possessed L's and the no-L line yielded F1 males whose germ cells contained L-chromosomes of paternal or of maternal origin. Cytological study of the gonads of these males showed that in all instances, irrespective of their origin, the L-chromosomes were conserved. To demonstrate that the L's thus conserved are not lost subsequently during spermiogenesis, the F1 males derived from normal fathers were bred to females from the no-L line; the gonads of the test-cross progeny showed that these individuals had inherited L-chromosomes. The failure of the paternal L's to obey the rule of origin during spermatogenesis indicates that the supernumeraries in this genus are not subject to the reversible imprinting which the regular complement undergoes. And the genetic effects of exclusively paternal or maternal L-chromosomes on germ cell development and maturation are indistinguishable. Concomitant with the loss of L's from the germ line, the newly-collected strain of S. impatiens underwent an abrupt alteration from unisexual families to variable sex ratios. These ratios are discussed in relation to the problem of sex determination in S. ocellaris, a species which sustained L-chromosome loss during the course of evolution. Discussed also are some new unpublished data which reveal, unexpectedly, a genetic affinity between ocellaris and impatiens. The no-L line of impatiens, which has been kept in laboratory culture for approximately four years, provides a unique opportunity to examine the conditions under which the supernumeraries are retained or lost and also to determine more precisely the nature of their genetic effects.It is a pleasure to acknowledge support by the National Science FoundationIt is a pleasure to acknowledge support by the National Science Foundation  相似文献   

18.
Amongst the various developmental pathways ending in a sound mammal, sex determination presents the peculiarity of a choice between two equally viable options: female or male. Therefore, destroying a male-determining gene or a female-determining gene should generally not be lethal. Genetic sex determination is divided into two consecutive steps: construction of the bipotential gonad, and then sex determination per se. The genes involved in the first step are in fact involved in the development of various body compartments, and their mutation is generally far from innocuous. From transgenic and inactivation studies carried out on the laboratory mouse, a complete picture of the two steps is beginning to emerge, where the gonad itself and the necessary ducts are shown to evolve in a very coordinate way, with well-defined sex-specificities. Compared with testis determination, the ovarian side of the picture is still relatively empty, but this situation can change rapidly as candidate ovarian genes for inactivation studies are beginning to be identified.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Summary Immunocytochemistry was used to determine if photoperiod and/or sex have any effect on the pattern of the luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) system in the brain of the Japanese quail. Immunopositive perikarya were found within three major areas of the brain: the rostral paraolfactory lobe, the preoptic, and the septal region. A quantitative analysis of LHRH cell numbers was performed on male and female quail after two photoperiodic treatments: sexually mature birds exposed to 24 weeks of 20 h light: 4 h darkness (20L4D), and birds with a regressed reproductive system (induced by transfer from a photoregime of 20L4D to 25 short days of 8L16D). Two-way analysis of variance showed that short-day males display significantly (p < 0.05) more immunopositive perikarya (607 + 134) than long-day males (291 + 114), short-day females (293 + 103) or long-day females (330 + 92). The density of LHRH-immunoreactive nerve fibres and the intensity of the immunostaining in the median eminence were always greater in long-day sexually mature quail (male and female) than in animals exposed to 25 days of 8L16D. These results demonstrate that the LHRH system of the quail is influenced by photoperiod and mirrors sexual differentiation.  相似文献   

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